You can now download a free Windows 11 Enterprise virtual machine from Microsoft. Microsoft releases KB update to bring Fluent emoji to Windows How to view saved Wi-Fi passwords in Windows IObit releases Malware Fighter 9 with improved performance and protection. Want to know how to speed up Windows 11? You can't watch for what somebody torrents just with their IP address, you have to be watching the torrent itself. LargoLasskhyfv on Jan 21, prev next [—].
Well, not sure what I expected, but my dynamic IP was used about a week ago to download a porn torrent and it's the only item listed. I'm partial towards put. Anyone else finding a crapton of porn? Because I'm finding crapton of porn.
Geee on Jan 21, prev next [—]. Does this work for anyone? It shows some of my torrent downloads tangled with tons of other torrent downloads that are not mine. That's just not cool. Now you have made me think. Every single device got it's own public IP address. That has been the case for ages. Not all ISPs do it though. I mean, it shows me results. I have no idea if its correct. I am really surprised that auto-detection of duplicate downloads by utorrent should not be possible.
The easiest way to implement this would be to keep hash values of all previously downloaded packages. Hash values are unique. When the user starts 3 weeks later the same torrent download then utorrent could at first in advance check the new hash value with the set of old hash values and popup a warning "torrent already downloaded" or similar.
So this should be possible in general. I don't think they will implement that as that would make it more system resource intensive for users of large torrent files. Just imagine it laboring to search your drives to find those files before downloading assuming they didn't move or change name. How would it locate them then. I think for free or paid as it is there are trade-offs here.
How to let uTorrent detect downloads which are already finished in past? Using the site and particularly the tool for contacting friends is not recommended by The Independent , given that it is not clear who the site is run by or what they are doing with the information being collected. The people behind the site appear to suggest that they are running it as a way of marketing their services to content owners and to police. When torrenting, people are both seeding or sending out and leeching or downloading content — all of that happens from other users in the network, and so those computers connect with each other.
If one computer wants to find out the identity of others sending or taking content from it then it can, and that appears to be happening on the new website. Similar tools are already used by the companies that own films, music and TV shows that are being torrented. There have regularly been reports of those companies pursuing people who have downloaded their content either for costs or to force them to stop using torrenting services, likely using the same tools.
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