Technology Tales

Adventures in consumer and enterprise technology

TOPIC: INC.

A collection of legal BitTorrent sites

19th October 2014

It was an article in a magazine that revealed these legal BitTorrent download sites to me, so I thought that I'd keep them on file for future reference while also sharing them with others who might need them. As far as I am aware, they are all legal in that no copyrighted material is on there. If that changes, I am happy to know and make amendments as needed.

My own interest in torrents arises from their being a convenient way to download installation disk images for Linux distributions, and at least one of the entries is devoted to just that. However, the distribution also lends itself to movies along with music and books, so that is reflected below too. Regarding downloading actual multimedia content, there is so much illegal downloading that a list like this is needed and has blackened the reputation of BitTorrent too because it only ever was conceived as a means for distributing large files in a peer-to-peer manner without the use of a single server. Of course, any use can be found for a technology, and it never has to be legal or morally acceptable either.

Archive.org

Bt.etree.org

FrostClick

Linux Tracker

Public Domain Torrents

Removing advertisements from uTorrent

12th July 2014

BitTorrent may have got some bad press due to its use for downloading copyrighted material such as music and movies, but it does have its legitimate uses too. In my case, many a Linux distro has been downloaded in this way, and it does take the weight off servers by distributing the load across users instead.

Speaking of Linux, my general choice of client has been Transmission and there are others. In the Windows world, there is a selection that includes BitTorrent, Inc. themselves. However, many favour uTorrent (or μTorrent) so that's the one that I tried and there are free and subscription-based options. To me, the latter feels like overkill when an eternal licence could be made available as an easy way to dispatch the advertisements on display in the free version.

As much as I appreciate the need for ads to provide revenue to a provider of otherwise free software, they do need to be tasteful and those in uTorrent often were for dating websites that had no scruples about exposing folk to images that were unsuitable for a work setting. Those for gaming websites were more tolerable in comparison. With the non-availability of an eternal licence option, I was left pondering alternatives like qBittorrent instead. That is Free Software too, so it does have that added advantage.

However, I uncovered an article on Lifehacker that sorted my problem with uTorrent. The trick is to go into Options > Preferences via the menus and then go to the Advanced section in the dialogue box that appears. In there, go looking for each of the following options and set each one to false in turn:

  • offers.left_rail_offer_enabled/left_rail_offer
  • gui.show_plus_upsell
  • offers.sponsored_torrent_offer_enabled/sponsored_torrent_offer_enabled
  • bt.enable_pulse
  • gui.show_notorrents_node
  • offers.content_offer_autoexec

In practice, I found some of the above already set to false and another missing, though setting those that remained from true to false cleaned up the interface, so I hope never to glimpse those unsuitable ads again. The maker of uTorrent needs to look at the issue or revenue could get lost, and prospective users could see the operation as being cheapened by what is displayed. As for me, I am happy to have gained something in the way of control.

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