[-] toxictenement@lemmy.dbzer0.com 3 points 11 months ago

Bitsearch.to lets you upload anything, and its searched by jackett. Same with the sister site solidtorrents.to. Solid actually has a python plugin for qbittorrent so its even easier to search/discover.

Search for DVDRip, filter by upload date and check for ones that aren't well seeded. See if you can find ones that don't have any other rips available, and seed whatever looks at-risk. Godspeed!

[-] toxictenement@lemmy.dbzer0.com 13 points 1 year ago

Lots of crossover between 4chan and the general piracy community. First place I actually heard about soulseek was on the 4chan music board. I don't really go there anymore. So yeah, its 4channers thinking they're in good company.

.sfv is a text file that lists the crc32's (hash) of the scene release rar files to verify if they are broken/modified in any way. They can sometimes have ascii art in them, or vague info on what topsite the release last went through, but thats rather rare these days. .srr files are created by a program called PyReScene which records exactly how a scene release is rar'd, and with what winrar version to re-create the original release format (rar'd) at a later date. Super useful program for reseeding and cross seeding stuff.

[-] toxictenement@lemmy.dbzer0.com 55 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Start with doing simple disc rips, like cd's(Exact Audio Copy), dvds(MakeMKV, DVD decryptor, eac3to), blurays(MakeMKV, eac3to).

Figure out how to encode and compress video so that it still looks good, you can still find some old scene rule nfo's to have a better idea on what settings to use to encode. I use a gui called qvs to do encodes, theres also another one called staxrip, you can also learn how to just use command line arguments and just use x264 or x265 from the command line.

If you're not just wanting to just make remuxes with makeMKV, you're probably going to want to use mkvtoolnix to put everything back together as a video file.

You can use SubtitleEdit to convert PGS or VOB subs into the plaintext format SubRip(SRT) which has more compatibility with media servers like jellyfin.

Consider trying to find some obscure titles which may only have dead torrents, no torrents, or only low quality ones (old ~700mb VCD rips) to track down a physical copy to make a new torrent from.

Pick out some dead torrents to camp indefinitely. A seeder may one day return. Also, if you're on a private tracker, a lot of the time you can download the same torrent that also exists as a dead public torrent, and bring the public one back to life. This can be a bit tricky sometimes.

If you have a beefy computer, you could consider making encodes in the new AV1 codec, which is really good at preserving quality but is rather intensive to encode in.

If you join a private tracker, a lot of the time their forums will have some educational resources on making rips yourself.

Actually cracking new drms requires skill, and the skills you need are called reverse engineering. You're going to have to learn the ins and outs of assembly language, specifically decompiled binary represented as assembly language. Theres a site which has simple tutorial programs called crackme's for dipping your toes into this sort of thing. Theres not going to be any public tutorials on how to crack xyz drm because if those existed, the drm would just be patched. Speaking of that, if you're doing software cracks you'll need to learn how to obfuscate your crack to keep the origin company from figuring out how you did it, or else it will just get patched before you do your next one. That doesn't really apply to audiovisual drm since that is all about extracting a stream, and is a bit more straightforward.

I may update this post if anything else comes to mind, good luck to you!

Edit 1: Make your own ascii art NFO's with PabloDraw

[-] toxictenement@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Found it

Why eac3to and not something like MakeMKV? Yes, MakeMKV is really easy to use because it's basically a one-click program. However, it does have its shortcomings when it comes to detecting and correcting authoring errors on Bluray discs.

Take that for what you will I guess. They didn't elaborate at all.

If you're interested in using a command line tool to demux, you can get it here, at the original thread on doom9.

eac3to will let you extract the mt2s files into their individual parts (video, audio, subtitles). You can then use mkvtoolnix to remux them into an MKV. MakeMKV works fine imo, but I read some vague waffling on a private tracker forum that it messes something up that eac3to doesn't.

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submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by toxictenement@lemmy.dbzer0.com to c/piracy@lemmy.dbzer0.com

Hey folks, I know we like encoding urls with base64 to keep the automated bots off our hindquarters, I figured out a neat little trick. As I'm sure you are aware, you can share a torrent with the infohash only, without the need to have all the formatting of a magnet link.

The infohash is a 20 byte string represented with hexadecimal, and can be stored as both its ascii string or as just bytes. The interesting thing about base64 is that not only can it be used to encode an ascii string, it can also be used to encode bytes.

As an example, I'm going to use an archive.org torrent, using cryptii.com as the translator, since it allows me to encode bytes. So, we start with our infohash 62ae55f2329e29f79a8d1ed245c84818b5cf84e9 and we're going to set cryptii to encode to base64, with our input view set to bytes grouped by 'none'. Out of this, we get Yq5V8jKeKfeajR7SRchIGLXPhOk= Simply mirror the process for decoding.

This produces a base64 string which is actually shorter than the original infohash! This process always seems to produce the = at the end, which does make this unmistakably base64, but if encoded with the base64url standard this will disappear.

I thought this would probably be useful for the future when infohashes get shared on here, just in case automated bots start looking for infohash sized hexadecimal length strings.

I miss the old malwarebytes. Used to actually be good, and the serial keys I found actually used to work :( CommonSense 2023 works a lot better for me these days though, that and ublock origin.

[-] toxictenement@lemmy.dbzer0.com 20 points 1 year ago

From what I have read on the upcoming implementation on i2p in qbit, I do not forsee it being adopted by the core torrent user base. The main issue I have with it is that while you can download from clearnet peers, you are only able to seed to other i2p peers. This completely eliminates any adoption by anyone using private trackers. Its not like the guys in brazil are going to jump through an extra hoop to hide their ip since they never needed to in the first place, so they can be ruled out for adoption as well. What I really fear is that its going to create a completely unnecessary schism in the userbase with a sort of 'leechnet' walled garden of i2p users which would hurt the greater availability of seeders. I also haven't gotten a straight answer from anyone how ports are going to work in i2p, since normally its imperative to have a forwarded port in order to be a full participant. Unless i2p users can seed to clearnet users without issue, I am going to be worried about the impact on torrent health as a whole.

Yes. Usually your VPN will be something akin to the name of the vpn or the vpn client.

So, you have content of the torrent, but don't know the original torrent it goes to, right?

The first place I'd look would be bitsearch.to. It's a pretty extensive dht network crawler that actually has a lot of rarbg archived. Be warned, you can't use .'s or a few other 'special' characters, just replace them with spaces. If that fails to find anything, theres also btdig, but at this point you will probably want to install a program called jackett to search all public sites at the same time. Hopefully that would be a good tool for you.

When you find the torrent the file is from, you may need to find additional files, like advertisement txt files for dead torrent trackers. You may have some luck finding these in other torrents, you just have to match the filesize really.

If there aren't any seeders whatsoever, magnet links won't work. You will have to try and find the .torrent manually. You can pretty often find these on caching sites. The three I know of are itorrents.org, torrage.info, and btcache.me. Hopefully one of these still has the file.

When you go to add the torrent, set the stop condition in qbittorrent to files checked. This checks the integrity of the files you have on disk against the torrent you opened. Just be sure to save it to the same folder. If it checks without a hitch, you should be able to start seeding. Remember to port forward!

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toxictenement

joined 1 year ago