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Private trackers

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Revision as of 02:16, 4 January 2016 by Cockdicks (talk | contribs) (How secure are private trackers?)
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Private Tracker Flowchart

What is a private tracker?

A private tracker is a torrent website that provides the same functionality as a public tracker, but is generally invite-only. This means you need to be a member to view the contents of the site and download its torrents, but can't just register without having been invited by an existing member (said member must be in turn authorized to give out invitations). Within a tracker, there usually is an extensive set of rules about how much one can download, what kind of content one can upload, what precautions one must take when logging into the sites, etc. Such rules and content vary from tracker to tracker, and go from rather liberal with little enforcement to ultra-paranoid and autistic. Advantages of private trackers include:

  • Speed: if you're familiar with torrents you probably know that the bigger the swarm, the faster you downoad. Private trackers encourage their members to seed torrents as long as possible, thus guaranteeing bigger swarms for every torrent. Not only that, but many members use remote seedboxes with huge upload speeds, thus increasing dramatically the speed for many torrents, often making them available almost instantly.
  • Retention: similarly, private trackers usually enforce rules that encourage long-term seeding. Many torrents for obscure content that you wouldn't normally find any peer for on ThePirateBay or Kat will be still seeded by a few peers on private trackers.
  • Selection: some content simply isn't available on any public site and will only be found on private trackers. Sometimes you can't even legally buy it at all, ironically. Some trackers even specialize in obscure or rare content, ensuring that it doesn't get lost from the Internet.
  • Quality control: a major asset of private trackers, albeit one that can vary a lot across trackers. Good private trackers have very strict rules on content format, quality and organization. Music trackers will ensure you don't get bad 92kbs transcodes, movie trackers will ensure you only get good encodes, ebook trackers will ensure you get retail quality, etc. Members and staff review and approve each torrent. Trumping rules and the removal of duplicates ensure you only get one, community-approved source for this specific content and format. This, coupled with a decent site layout, makes private trackers much more orderly than public ones.
  • Security: there are two reasons private trackers are more secure, albeit they may not apply in the future. The first one is that most of them are obscure enough that no one really knows or cares about them (security by obscurity). The second one is that copyright trolls would rather focus on huge public sites that are easy to fish for peers rather than small communities that are hard to join. From a monetary point of view, it's more worthwhile to stop 10 000 casuals from downloading 2 torrents than stop 2 l33ts from downloading 10 000 torrents.

How secure are private trackers?

This depends entirely on the precautions of the operator. Some are shady and will use your information for profit, some are not. Two precautions to avoid:

  • Never use the same password on two trackers. Operators of shady sites often use that common vulnerability among people to steal accounts to other trackers which they can use to cause further harm (such as leaking peer lists to the public or selling the accounts and its invites on invite forums).
  • Don't tie any personal information to your tracker accounts. This includes email address, identity or any kind of information that could be used to harm you should it fall in the wrong hands. The tracker staff may be legitimate, but the site itself can be busted or defaced by hackers. Don't post about yourself in the forums and for fuck's sake, don't post in these "post a pic of you" threads. Torrent trackers aren't social networks.

Invitations

Registration control is usually maintained by an invitation system. Trusted and contributing members can grant new users permission to register. Classification of a trusted and contributing member varies by sites, leaving some trackers more difficult to join than others.

Some trackers on the other hand maintain an interview system.

General tips

It's recommended to use different emails, usernames, and passwords on each site you join. Refrain from posting on forums, a good percentage of tracker staff are very unqualified and go out of there way to find ban-worthy offenses.

Notable private trackers

Large HD tracker, home to many high-profile encoders.
Large magic tracker, limited to professional magicians only.
Massive music tracker with over 2 million torrents.
Large ratioless television tracker.
Large movie tracker. Content ranging from black and white obscura to the latest blockbuster.
Large book tracker. Overdrive access recommended for users.
Large anime tracker with over 100,000 torrents. Many torrents are freeleech.
Large general purpose tracker.
Medium-sized music tracker. Regarded as what.cd alternative.
Medium-sized movie tracker. Regarded as PTP alternative.
Medium-sized television tracker.
Small up-and-coming ratioless television and movie tracker.
What.CD, Waffles.FM, and other's predecessor.

See also