There *is* such a thing as legal torrenting, though, which provides a means to easily and quickly share files that are in the public domain.
#Windscribe vpn torrenting download#
You can use a torrenting website or client like BitTorrent to download or share copyrighted material such as songs, shows, and movies, which we don't condone - it's illegal. By sharing the love, so to speak, torrenting begets fast downloads and less demand on any one server. The specific mechanics of torrents are some complicated, advanced-level computer science shit, but the gist of it is this: It's a peer-to-peer (P2P) file-sharing technology in which each downloader distributes pieces of a file to every other downloader (as opposed to everyone downloading the file individually from a single source, which can create a bottleneck). The logic makes sense, TBH: More and more companies are pulling their content from Netflix, Hulu, and Amazon Prime Video to put them on their own streaming platforms as "exclusives." ( Lookin' at you, NBCUniversal.) So, instead of paying for a bunch of different streaming service subscriptions, why not just cherry-pick your favorite titles via torrenting? Wait - what is torrenting, exactly?
That's according to Sandvine's latest Global Internet Phenomena Report, an annual study of the state of internet traffic, which went on to cite the competitive streaming service market as the reason for this uptick in BitTorrent usage (and online piracy in general). Unlike most things that came into being in 2004 - Livestrong bracelets, Napoleon Dynamite, Lindsay Lohan's debut studio album Speak - the popular torrent client BitTorrent (opens in a new tab) is seeing a modern resurgence. This just in: Torrenting is so hot right now. EDT This story has been updated following news that a NordVPN server was breached.