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Torrent Users Coming to Grips With Demonoid Shut Down

Torrent Users Coming to Grips With Demonoid Shut Down

For a lot of Torrent users, Demonoid was a one stop shop for a lot of different kinds of content. It was one of a handful of sites that had such name recognition. Billed by many as a “semi-private” tracker, the site introduced a number of users to the world of private BitTorrent trackers. Now that it has shut down, some users have found themselves asking where to next.

Trouble for the BitTorrent site started with a mysterious DDOS (Distributed Denial of Service Attack). While the initial reports were of general detail, few predicted what was to come next.

Days later, the reports became more serious as word came that authorities in the Ukraine had shut down the website initially as a gift to appease US authorities.

Some held out hope that the site would eventually return given that, at the time, there were no reports that the administrators were in any danger at the time. Unfortunately, as time wore on, the news kept getting progressively worse as reports surfaced that there was a further raid in Mexico with many operators getting arrested. As if to finally seal the site’s fate, the domain name was eventually put up for sale. It was at that point that many observers began to say that a come-back for the website was very unlikely.

Some began to panic over the fact that servers were taken. With users IP addresses now in the hands of the authorities, there were worries that numerous other people would b next on the copyright police’s cross hairs. Of course, conventional wisdom would indicate that the amount of resources required to go after hundreds of thousands of people would completely overwhelm existing resources to go after the sites themselves. In fact, history tells us that when a tracker that made some efforts to be private is taken down, only administrators and the heaviest uploaders would have anything to really worry about. If you were a casual user, chances are, the data on you would simply be thrown to the wastebin so to speak.

The question then becomes, would this have an impact on file-sharing in general?
The answer would be no.

Sure, numerous users would be displaced and the shut down is very noticeable, but it’s like throwing a rock into an ocean. Water is displaced temporarily, you hear a splash and see ripple effects, but that rock isn’t going to completely drain the ocean. Other general torrent sites already exist and if some are willing, other torrent sites will also probably pop up to fill any gap left by Demonoid if need be.

I would say that the effects on users themselves might, at most, cause some to begin wiping their hard drives. Some might temporarily stop file-sharing while a very select few might take the dramatic step of stopping their file-sharing activities altogether, but a vast majority will probably simply either find other sources of content or simply place more emphasis on their other sources of content.

As for rightsholders, all they’ll score is a few arrests, the ability to publish a few press releases, maybe hold a news conference or two and the take down of a prominent BitTorrent website. Beyond that, the victory is an extremely hollow one because within weeks, they’ll ultimately be no further ahead then they were since before Demonoid was initially taken down. The authorities have, in the grand scheme of things, accomplished nothing with this latest move. That’s not simply a pro-piracy opinion or wishful thinking, that’s just reality.

If the takedown of OiNK didn’t kill piracy, neither will the takedown of Demonoid.

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Drew Wilson
Drew Wilson is perhaps one of the more well-known file-sharing and technology news writers around. A journalist in the field since 2005, his work has had semi-regular appearances on social news websites and even occasional appearances on major news outlets as well. Drew founded freezenet.ca and still contributes to ZeroPaid. Twitter | Google Plus
whocares
whocares

those are alternatives like warez-bb.org which is a good site. astraenet used to be good but they went lame.

NewWorld
NewWorld

For all that are looking for a replacement, RuTracker.org is still the biggest (and best, imo) non-public general tracker, with 1.2 million torrents and 11m seeders. Only con is site is in Russian, but get a translation extension for your browser and you WON'T be disappointed :)

fastball
fastball

Demonoid was the best site around for downloading books. I never really gave a crap about movies or music...but I really miss the books. Nobody else has anything CLOSE to demonoid's book setup.

10pound
10pound

I am SO with you on this one Fastball.  Other sites have books, true, but none that I have found subcategorize their major cats by genre.  I dont want to wade through 1000 fitness, cooking and Warhammer titles if I'm looking for Philosophy books.

xxnonamexx
xxnonamexx

What are others that are similar to warez-bb? Astraenet used to be good. Bayw is still around

gus
gus

on Demonoid , the compilations of graphic design packs (vector tuts, pdf's and templates) that uploaders had put together were amazing and epic, i cant thak you enough -  hats off to  demonoid and its uploaders

Technolust on Demonoid
Technolust on Demonoid like.author.displayName like.author.displayName 2 Like

Part of the love for Demonoid for me as a content poster was putting money aside to buy that out-of-print CD or VHS, rip it, encode it, and submit it to the community.   I would lurk Discogs, Ubid and Ebay waiting for that rare gem that I myself could never find to download anywhere else.  I had a great many friends on Demonoid that I found through shared interests and I had privately contributed to other people's posts by messaging them and sending them missing bits so they could revise their post as complete.   I shared the priceless, the stuff that could not be bought at any price in a local store.  It was my mission to preserve culture and art in spite of laws that would have us discard our history.  I feel like I'm looking for a new home, and like my virtual family has been scattered. 

tempusfugit
tempusfugit

Thank you. Demonoid was the place to go for the 'never-released' on DVD in North America. I really appreciated the time and trouble Demonoid uploaders went to.

DrDebaser
DrDebaser

Me too! I really appreciate your efforts, thanks to you etal for the VHS etc that I could never ever afford or find.

Steil
Steil

And that really was the beauty of it. I never shared it for things you'd buy in a shop (online or otherwise). It was the things that you just couldn't buy and there was a lot of that on Demonoid. Recordings of LPs and 12" singles that have never been released on CD. TV series that weren't released or made available outside certain countries. Forgotten films that you just can't buy on DVD. Ultimately they've stopped something that really wasn't taking any business away from them.

Michael D. Stocker
Michael D. Stocker

Plenty of other fish in the sea! Actually, on a bright side, found some I didn't even know about cause I never bothered looking

BrutalDan
BrutalDan like.author.displayName 1 Like

Where is our Demonoid phoenix that will rise again from the ashes?? 

Saddybit
Saddybit like.author.displayName 1 Like

DEMONOID! COME BACK!

BASiQ
BASiQ

Warez-bb.org and Real-Debrid as a pair Folks. Beats the pants off of demonoid any day.

xxnonamexx
xxnonamexx like.author.displayName 1 Like

agree with warez not sure about real-debrid. Astranet used to be good.







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