navigatron,

Wireguard creates a new network interface that accepts, encrypts, wraps, and ships packets out your typical network interface.

If you were to create a kernel network namespace and move the wireguard interface into that new namespace, the connection to your existing nic is not broken.

You can then use some custom systemd units to start your *rr software of choice in said namespace, rendering you immune to dns leaks, and any other such vpn failures.

If you throw bridge interfaces into the mix, you can create gateways to tor / i2p / ipfs / Yggdrasil / etc as desired. You’ll need a bridge anyway to get your requester software interface exposed to your reverse proxy.

Wireguard also allows multiple peers, so you could multi-nic a portable personal device, and access all your admin interfaces while traveling, with the same vpn-failure-free peace of mind.

Pulptastic,

I know some of these words

kalahlora,

me too, but not many

milkytoast,
@milkytoast@kbin.social avatar

I counted a whole 3 that I knew!

djmarcone,

Maybe if they drew a picture

Lemmchen,
@Lemmchen@feddit.de avatar

Yeah, or just do it properly on your router and be done with it network-wide.

undefined,

Have a good guide on this? I am very interested…

crossover,

I’ve personally found it better to pay for a seedbox and connect to it via encrypted FTP than to worry about VPNs and downloading torrents locally. I share the cost between a couple of friends and we all access the seedbox and download/stream what we need from it. I don’t have to worry about keeping my computer running either.

webhead,
@webhead@lemmy.world avatar

So my question is, whose name is on the seedbox? I’ve seen people say this…is it one of the special hosts that will just send you a notice and not tell the complaint filer who you are? Connecting to a VPN or proxy has been easy enough and cheaper lol.

Shere_Khan,

I havent used one, but thats what it seems like to me. someone sets up a server in a country that doesn’t care about dmca, and you pay for them to download torrents and handle the encryption, etc.

PolarisFx,

Mine is in the Netherlands, I only use private tracker and Usenet and haven’t had any issues. I also have 4TB storage so I run my Plex server off it. Great setup. No notices, or any bullshit really

crossover,

I signed up using an anonymous email address and paid with bitcoin. I get an email from the seedbox provider when an “abuse notification” is receiving which recommends I stop the torrent. They claim no personal information is given out.

Shere_Khan,

Yeah, but i hate like messing around with docker and setting it up myself, lol

traches,

Personally I switched away from a seedbox to a VPN, but only after building up a stupid ratio on several trackers. It’s annoying to manage two copies of everything, you have to download everything twice, and drive space on seedboxes is expensive.

CmdrShepard,

Plus longterm seeding is impossible with a seedbox unless you pay those high storage prices. This is bad for sustainability as a whole.

undefined,

How big is your seedbox that you split it with friends? I have a seedbox with 4 TB and it’s like $17/month. That’s a lot of content…

crossover,

Yeah mine is about the same. More than enough for what I need.

fraydabson,

Since not many seem to know about it. Plex_Debrid is an awesome program and works on more than just plex!

Shere_Khan,

Thats crazy, does it work well? I havent gotten into the debrid scene, but this is neat

fraydabson,

I think it does work great. Just one dev I think and he’s been busy so some things need added/fixing. Active on the discord. I love it. Just search movies in plex and they’re available immediately if cached on real Debrid and so much content is cached. Anything remotely popular.

Shere_Khan,

Hm. What do you run it on? I could see an nivida shield running that well, but a firestick?

fraydabson,

I run it on a docker on my headless Linux server. I imagine a shield can run it but prob not a fire stick.

jeanofthedead,
@jeanofthedead@lemmy.world avatar

Fwiw, similar apps already exist for the Shield, Firestick, etc. Syncler & Stremio.

drekly,

I use jellyfin, should I be using this instead?

fraydabson,

Plex Debrid works with Jellyfin too. You just also need to setup Trakt for the watchlist. As you add movies and shows to Trakt watchlists, plex Debrid will grab them and add to real Debrid and then refresh your jellyfin library.

Plex is just a little better since you can use the plex discover feature to add items to your watchlist

drekly,

Hmm, ok I’m using sonarr, radarr, prowlarr, and jellyfin server, hooked up to my imdb/tmdb watchlists, so I just like something online and it appears on my PC.

Does this essentially provide the same service, If I’ve already set mine up how I like it?

fraydabson,

Yeah pretty much. With the extra advantage that everything is on real Debrid so don’t need vpn (if you normally use one or don’t have a seedbox) and using their storage you don’t need local hard drive space. Also a slight disadvantage right now since real Debrid is down for maintenance so I cannot access a majority of my content. This is very rare as real debrid usually has like a good 99% uptime. Usually’ll locally download my favorite shows or movies from Debrid so i can access it if there is an outage or a local internet outage.

With your setup there may not be many pros to switching to this setup. I had an identical setup to yours years ago but this time around decided to stick with real Debrid and plex Debrid.

Mugmoor,
@Mugmoor@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Plex Debrid doesn’t actually download the file to your computer, it just streams it. It tricks your OS into thinking it’s locally stored, but it isn’t.

neomis,

Usenet is worth every penny

Shere_Khan,

Is it? I never used it, i went down the torrent path. Usenet would have to be super easy to use for me to consider paying for it

Pacers31Colts18,

It is. I torrented for years, Usenet is so much better once setup with radarr/sonarr. So much faster

Shere_Khan,

Yeah but sonarr/radarr works for torrents too. I can see the speed argument tho.

Derproid,

I hear the big downside with Usenet is availability of old or obscure content. Not sure how true this is though as I’ve never used Usenet myself.

rustic_tiddles,

I’ve used it for 15+ years and it’s a huge downside. Older content used to be widely available, but more often then not anything popular is removed within a few months of posting. It is actually pretty great for obscure content that won’t get taken down. It’s cheap but a whole new thing to learn. It is faster than torrenting directly to your own computer but a seedbox blows usenet out of the water as far as speed. 50-100 MB/s easily (at least using private trackers).

Derproid,

I wonder what the reason for that speed difference on a seedbox is. I’d like to set up a custom server for other things at home so I’d prefer to use that over a seedbox.

rustic_tiddles,

They’re running in a datacenter in the netherlands with a ridiculous amount of bandwidth. I did find out they’re classified as an “isp and web hosting company”.

All our Dedicated Servers have 1Gbit connections with a dedicated 1GigE uplink.

I’d also guess that many of the seeds on any torrent (on a private tracker) are going to also be coming from seedboxes. That might explain why it’s so fast too, there is tons of bandwidth between the datacenters themselves. I’m definitely throttled at 100MB/s regardless of how many torrents I’ve got running (1 or 100), but if they’re running 50-100+ instances along with dedicated servers they must have tbps of bandwidth.

So long story medium, unless you can install your home server into a datacenter with a multi terrabit link to the backbone, it will be tough to replicate

CmdrShepard,

Plus the cost of the subscription. You should be using a VPN with torrents which has its own fees, but at least the VPN is useful for more than just that one thing.

TragicMagic,

I feel you on the difficulty. Mostly it took me just taking a leap into it and deciding that if I lost a little money on it no biggie as I’ve gotten so much for free over the years. Biggest thing that tipped me into finally trying was black Friday sales from Usenet providers. Getting a pretty dang cheap deal and then fiddling with sabnzb, getting my first download going was awesome. Especially the speeds. And 99% of the things I’m looking for being available. Even really old stuff that is pretty hard to find active torrents of. Would highly recommend.

snekerpimp,

Just jumped into Usenet a year ago, been torrenting for decades. I concur, worth every single cent spent, and I messed up and overspent when I was setting up…. Still worth it.

cutitdown,

Any tips on jumping in? Recommended services, etc

snekerpimp,

If you are familiar with docker and compose, I would start there with a servarr stack. There is a docker-compose I use called -arr-compose. Has the complete arr stack, including sabnzbd for Usenet downloads. Usenet is a bit weird, you need a server like Newshosting to actually connect to Usenet, that is what you point sabnzbd to. Prowlarr from the servarr stack connects to your indexers. Then you just search and the stack takes care of the rest. Other useful links:

servarr wiki

trash-guides

cutitdown,

This is super helpful, thanks so much

Kolanaki,
@Kolanaki@yiffit.net avatar

I miss when Usenet subscriptions just came as part of your ISP package. What the hell ever happened with that?

TragicMagic,

Dang, that’d be cool. Didn’t even know that was a thing. Probably before my time on the internet. Mostly got connected in the late 2000s and haven’t ever heard that was a thing.

WheeGeetheCat,
@WheeGeetheCat@sh.itjust.works avatar

Seems like it was a mix between usenet being a magnet for piracy, which all the ISPs were getting pressure to combat, and demand for usenet cratering - as newer users came on the internet they went to other places (myspace had started which appealed more to young users)

Aatube,
@Aatube@kbin.social avatar

Is there a very good guide somewhere for usenet?

amprebel,

Also curious

SIGSEGV,

If you’re completely new, familiarizing yourself with any guide would be beneficial. A basic search resulted in this and this, which are better than nothing, I suppose. I’d appreciate someone skilled adding their two cents, however, especially concerning common pitfalls and anonymous payment for Usenet providers.

teamevil,

This comment 100% … You get popped uploading not downloading.

rustic_tiddles,

Usenet was great 10-15 years ago but nowadays it’s flooded with fake / private downloads and retention is shit simply because the few remaining backbone providers comply with takedown requests. Absolutely useless for older content by any major studio. It’s all new stuff which is mostly garbage anyway. We were able to get a ton of “this old house” recently though.

PolarisFx,

Its important to have a supplemental block account, that won’t generally accede to DMCA requests. The big guys will of course, but they don’t get rid of the whole file, so you can grab the remainder from the block account. I can’t even think of the last time I wasn’t able to download something between my main and block account.

rustic_tiddles,

appreciate the advice, would make it less aggravating. Which one do you recommend? I’m on newshosting and have no problems that aren’t just general usenet problems.

I’m just gonna to invite you to google this and see where it takes you. Might not be up your alley, might be a compete gamechanger: InviteHawk

Acid,
@Acid@startrek.website avatar

100% get 2 providers 2 indexers and setup the Arr stack and never touch it again

Jivebunny,

Make sure they’re not from the same company though.

krolden,
@krolden@lemmy.ml avatar
Acid,
@Acid@startrek.website avatar

One of the first things I made sure of

krolden,
@krolden@lemmy.ml avatar

I used to agree but retention is a killer for a lot of older content.

For new releases its pretty great though.

tok3n,
@tok3n@lemmy.world avatar

I have a tracker on standby for this reason. What indexers were you using? I haven’t had too hard of a time finding some older stuff so far.

krolden,
@krolden@lemmy.ml avatar

I was on geek, dog, and a few others. Been considering going back because I’m sick of seeding a bunch of shit.

No matter how good your indexers are you still might not get retention no matter the provider.

escapedgoat,

Google searches show the DMCA takedown notices that list the sites that illegally stream content. It seems to me that if an interested party were to search for something on google and happened to see the DMCA take down notice, they might peruse that takedown request and see a number of sites that might illegally host such copyrighted content - so they know what sites to avoid of course.

😉

worfamerryman,

OMG! What a great way to stay safe online. This is a great tip. Guys remember, you wouldn’t download a car!

root,

Unfortunately they’ve recently stopped doing this. It was a great way to stick it to the man though

escapedgoat,

Just checked, you're right! When did they stop this and is there any report on why? I was seeing these up until just a few months ago.

quirzle,
@quirzle@kbin.social avatar

Must depend on the search. I just checked, and the links were still there same as always.

noodles,
@noodles@lemmy.world avatar

Flatpaks in Linux (for isolation)

Aatube,
@Aatube@kbin.social avatar

When running kinda unknown things? Maybe, but I don't see why we need that for anything else.

ICastFist,
@ICastFist@programming.dev avatar

Yandex is currently the best search engine for pirate stuff. You might need to change the language setting to only show english results, tho, as it gives preference to russian stuff.

If you’re on Windows, you can block any address “forever” by running Notepad as an admin and opening the file C:WindowsSystem32driversetchosts

  • Any line starting with 0.0.0.0 will automatically “fail” to find the page. For instance, 0.0.0.0 www.whatever.com will completely block that domain. It won’t block www.whatever.co.uk or whatever.com, so you’ll have to add one line for each top level domain. It’s great for blocking the worst ad networks (the ones that leave 6 clickjacks per page)
eroc1990,
@eroc1990@lemmy.parastor.net avatar

Docker, if you can run it on your hardware (either your normal system or on dedicated hardware) is a Swiss army knife that can help level up your acquisitions, and provides you with an isolated application environment if you don’t want to install the applications directly to your device. For media specifically, there is a suite of applications under the same *arr naming scheme that allows you to index, monitor for releases of, and acquire different television shows, movies, music, and books.

Some container maintainers build in different capabilities into their torrent client containers, such as Binhex’s qBittorrent and Deluge applications, that have VPN connectivity built in, so any network traffic running through that container will automatically use your VPN provider’s WireGuard or OpenVPN capabilities, depending on who you use. Once you have that running and your tags tuned in the *arr apps, you have a headless, mostly independent machine constantly working on acquiring and upgrading your media.

Sidenote: the *arr apps can be controlled by mobile apps like LunaSea on iOS, and nzb360 on Android. The latter can also integrate with your torrent clients.

Semi-Hemi-Demigod,
@Semi-Hemi-Demigod@kbin.social avatar

And if you get it working you can put Docker Experience on your resume

eroc1990,
@eroc1990@lemmy.parastor.net avatar

Yup! Something I’m absolutely going to leverage whenever I move onto my next job.

CmdrShepard,

Don’t forget to include your seed ratios! Employers don’t want to hire leechers

0x4E4F,
@0x4E4F@lemmy.fmhy.ml avatar

Did you know the contacts to the head, preamp and the motor on regular spinning disks are not soldered nowadays? That’s right, after some clever PLM engineering, companies decided NOT to do this. Why? It shortens the life span of the disk, thus, your disks die and you go and buy new ones.

Mitigation of this problem: Remove the controller board from the drive and solder (add solder) to all of the contacts that connect to something to the aluminium chassis of the disk.

https://lemmy.fmhy.ml/pictrs/image/ce0a1e41-5cac-4c4c-949e-fd21bcd1a51f.jpeg

Shere_Khan,

This is nonesense

0x4E4F,
@0x4E4F@lemmy.fmhy.ml avatar

Try it, then comment.

Shere_Khan,

What part should i try

0x4E4F,
@0x4E4F@lemmy.fmhy.ml avatar

What do you mean what part… all if it, lol 😂. Solder all the pins.

mikezila,

Try what? Add some pointless solder to a disk and then what? Wait years to see how long it takes to die? How many do I need for a sample size? Do I need to test the same model? What about workloads the drives should be under?

This is pure untestable unverifiable snake oil.

0x4E4F, (edited )
@0x4E4F@lemmy.fmhy.ml avatar

You can take my word for it and try it. Cuz I’ve done it numerous times and have extended the lives of many many disks. Sure, they all eventually fail, no doubt there. But, at least it will fail later, rather than sooner.

Test any model you like, doesn’t make a difference, they all perform better after the surgery. And they will be more stable under workload as well, that can be guaranteed.

Double_A,
@Double_A@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

How do you know you extended the life?

0x4E4F,
@0x4E4F@lemmy.fmhy.ml avatar

Because some of these disks were proclaimed worn out and not to be used. I still use all of them in 3 custom NAS builds. I sold 2 of them, the owners still haven’t reported a disk failiure, that was 2 years ago. I use one of the NASes as my personal storage, mdadm in RAID5, I still haven’t had a single disk fail on me. They were all full of “bad sectors” (logical, because of the bad contact between the head/preamp and the control board, bad data was being written to them, passed them with DRevitalize, all of the bad sectors were “reparied”), and yet, somehow, they still work.

Not to mention the numerous primary (OS) drives I’ve done this operation through the years and most of them still work fine, even though they have fulfilled their purpose (with the advent of SSD and all that). I’ve also compared the life cycle of identical drives that didn’t get this treatment and ones that did. Most of the ones that didn’t get this treatment are dead now (head crash in most cases).

Do this surgery to all of your drives as soon as you buy them (or at least after they’re out of warranty), disable AAM/APM (wdidle3 in case of WD) (you can do this even if in warranty, it’s a software/firmware tweak) and the disk will practically last forever.

the_third,

Yep. Solder flows, oxidizes and even occasionally grows needles in case of the new low lead variants. Not a material to make contact surfaces from.

DarkTides,

Interesting, but I’m confused how it can be applied to piracy.

Shere_Khan,

Gotta be a bot post, right?

DarkTides,

Nothing would surprise me these days after seeing a Skyrim mod with an AI companion you can talk to.

nevernevermore,

who said you can’t teach an old dog new tricks

Flatworm7591,
@Flatworm7591@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

I’m not sure it’s a bot, but it’s very questionable advice, and completely off topic. But I’m inclined to wait and see just how many downvotes it can accumulate just for the lolz 🤣

0x4E4F, (edited )
@0x4E4F@lemmy.fmhy.ml avatar

Meeh, just thought I’d share 🤷.

Plus, you gotta save your pirated data somewhere, right 😁.

dontblink,
@dontblink@feddit.it avatar

You can also host deluge with the scheduler plugin on a raspberry and set your torrents to only download/seed at night!

Shere_Khan, (edited )

Oh thats cool, i wonder if Transmission has something similar. Edit: It does. Deluge is a good client, but i prefer transmission

nevernevermore,

haugene/transmission is great for when you have 250+ active torrents

Shere_Khan,

Lol, one time i forgot to disable one of my HD trackers in jackett, and when *arr scanned for any higher quality media, it downloaded like 130 torrents

mp3,
@mp3@lemmy.ca avatar

You can also use ghe YaRSS2 plugin to monitor RSS feeds with torrent files/magnet links and have each rule downloads to a specific directory. Quite useful for TV shows.

DarkTides,

Thanks to lemmy.dbzer0.com/u/ober found that ipleak.net can be used to check if you VPN is leaking your IP before proceeding with torrenting.

And also using Qbittorrent to tie the client to the VPN by going to Tools > Preferences > Advanced and changing network interface to your VPN.

Shere_Khan,

I used ipleak when setting up my seedbox, super cool resource

FoxBJK,
@FoxBJK@midwest.social avatar

Somewhat related, you can use iknowwhatyoudownload.com to check and see if your IP address was part of a torrent download recently

uninvitedguest,
@uninvitedguest@lemmy.ca avatar

This is great, thank you.

worfamerryman,

That is pretty cool. I just checked it from my cellular connection. Obviously it’s not stuff that I downloaded, it’s still cool to see.

worfamerryman,

That is pretty cool. I just checked it from my cellular connection. Obviously it’s not stuff that I downloaded, it’s still cool to see.

bblfrnz,

That’s because you are not the only one who is using that ip address, generally you share it with other people. But if you download something, you’ll definitely see that downloaded thing among others.

worfamerryman,

I’m excited to check this out when I get home. I wonder what will show up. Hopefully nothing haha. But we often have guests that stay for a week at a time. My building may also put me behind a cgnat.

rustic_tiddles,

Nothing for me. Not sure how historical their data is but I’ve been using a VPN (exclusively) for about a year and a half and about 6 months ago switched to a seedbox.

andreluis034,
@andreluis034@lm.put.tf avatar

If you use [email protected] to link a user, lemmy will instead create a link for the instance you are currently using.

imapuppetlookaway,

For some reason i don’t know ipleak.net won’t load for me. These work too though: ipleak.org, browserleaks.com/ip.

Shere_Khan,

huh, works for me, detects my vpn. Is it blocked in your country or something?

imapuppetlookaway,

I can’t reach it on my Windows 11 computer when the vpn is turned on, but can reach it using Windows when the vpn is turned off (i tried servers in Europe, Americas, Asia).

But on my linux computer i can reach it with the vpn on or off (same vpn company, login, servers). So … weird.

aloeha,

What am I looking for on there to know if my VPN is working as intended or not?

BronzedBonobo,

I like to use this. It generates a custom torrent. Then shows the IPs connected to it. Whatever it shows should not be your public/home IP torguard.net/checkmytorrentipaddress.php

aloeha,

Thanks. What results am I looking for to make sure it works?

CmdrShepard,

While connected to the VPN you shouldn’t be able to see your real IP address. There is a torrent magnet link near the bottom left of the page that you can download and run on your client (qbit, transmission, etc) which will check whether that’s leaking anything too.

GBGB,

I get a big red exclamation point and “The address 140...** is not in the database” Is this a sign that I have NordVPN set up correctly or not? Thanks for mentioning ipleak.net!

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