it’s over
But—and as the article I’m embedding below reinforces—I don’t actually remember the last time I ran a search on TPB.  I’ve been on torrentz.com for a long time at this point.
Torrentfreak sez:

Today marks the end of an era, as The Pirate Bay team announces that the world’s largest BitTorrent tracker is shutting down for good. Although the site will remain operational for now, millions of BitTorrent users will lose the use of its tracker and will instead have to rely on DHT and alternative trackers to continue downloading.
In the fall of 2003, a group of friends from Sweden decided to launch a BitTorrent tracker named ‘The Pirate Bay’. It soon became one of the largest BitTorrent trackers on the Internet, coordinating the downloads of more than 25 million peers at its height.
Despite this success, The Pirate Bay operators today decided to pull the plug and close down the tracker permanently. The evolution of the BitTorrent protocol has made trackers redundant they say, as BitTorrent downloads work well with trackerless solutions such as DHT and PEX.
“Now that the decentralized system for finding peers is so well developed, TPB has decided that there is no need to run a tracker anymore, so it will remain down! It’s the end of an era, but the era is no longer up2date. We have put a server in a museum already, and now the tracking can be put there as well,” the Pirate Bay crew write on their blog.
Aside from this shutdown, there is also another major development quietly under discussion.
TorrentFreak has learned that behind the scenes the Pirate Bay operators are talking to other BitTorrent site owners to encourage them to follow suit and completely ditch torrents in the future. BitTorrent has reached a point where trackers and torrents are no longer needed to download files successfully. Supported by all of the major BitTorrent clients, DHT and PEX can handle the transfers and Magnet links can largely replace traditional torrent files.
“We’re talking to the other torrent admins on doing magnet links and DHT+PEX for all sites. Moving away from torrents and trackers totally – like pick a date and all agree ‘from this date, we’ll not support torrents anymore’,” a Pirate Bay insider told TorrentFreak.
Switching to trackerless and torrentless downloading on public BitTorrent sites does indeed seem to be an option. Previously, many people thought that BitTorrent would collapse if a dominant tracker like the Pirate Bay went down, but this doomsday scenario never unfolded. In fact, the recent downtime of the tracker did not slow down or stop many transfers, as DHT and PEX seamlessly took over.
Those BitTorrent users who don’t want to go trackerless just yet can of course still use OpenBitTorrent and PublicBitTorrent, or indeed one of the many other alternative trackers currently available.
Whether or not The Pirate Bay and others will move away from torrent files in the future, the closure of the world’s largest BitTorrent tracker is nevertheless a milestone in the history of the Internet. Starting today, the Pirate Bay has changed its tagline from “The world’s largest BitTorrent tracker” to “The world’s most resilient (magnetic) BitTorrent site.”

<3<3<3

it’s over

But—and as the article I’m embedding below reinforces—I don’t actually remember the last time I ran a search on TPB.  I’ve been on torrentz.com for a long time at this point.

Torrentfreak sez:

Today marks the end of an era, as The Pirate Bay team announces that the world’s largest BitTorrent tracker is shutting down for good. Although the site will remain operational for now, millions of BitTorrent users will lose the use of its tracker and will instead have to rely on DHT and alternative trackers to continue downloading.

In the fall of 2003, a group of friends from Sweden decided to launch a BitTorrent tracker named ‘The Pirate Bay’. It soon became one of the largest BitTorrent trackers on the Internet, coordinating the downloads of more than 25 million peers at its height.

Despite this success, The Pirate Bay operators today decided to pull the plug and close down the tracker permanently. The evolution of the BitTorrent protocol has made trackers redundant they say, as BitTorrent downloads work well with trackerless solutions such as DHT and PEX.

“Now that the decentralized system for finding peers is so well developed, TPB has decided that there is no need to run a tracker anymore, so it will remain down! It’s the end of an era, but the era is no longer up2date. We have put a server in a museum already, and now the tracking can be put there as well,” the Pirate Bay crew write on their blog.

Aside from this shutdown, there is also another major development quietly under discussion.

TorrentFreak has learned that behind the scenes the Pirate Bay operators are talking to other BitTorrent site owners to encourage them to follow suit and completely ditch torrents in the future. BitTorrent has reached a point where trackers and torrents are no longer needed to download files successfully. Supported by all of the major BitTorrent clients, DHT and PEX can handle the transfers and Magnet links can largely replace traditional torrent files.

“We’re talking to the other torrent admins on doing magnet links and DHT+PEX for all sites. Moving away from torrents and trackers totally – like pick a date and all agree ‘from this date, we’ll not support torrents anymore’,” a Pirate Bay insider told TorrentFreak.

Switching to trackerless and torrentless downloading on public BitTorrent sites does indeed seem to be an option. Previously, many people thought that BitTorrent would collapse if a dominant tracker like the Pirate Bay went down, but this doomsday scenario never unfolded. In fact, the recent downtime of the tracker did not slow down or stop many transfers, as DHT and PEX seamlessly took over.

Those BitTorrent users who don’t want to go trackerless just yet can of course still use OpenBitTorrent and PublicBitTorrent, or indeed one of the many other alternative trackers currently available.

Whether or not The Pirate Bay and others will move away from torrent files in the future, the closure of the world’s largest BitTorrent tracker is nevertheless a milestone in the history of the Internet. Starting today, the Pirate Bay has changed its tagline from “The world’s largest BitTorrent tracker” to “The world’s most resilient (magnetic) BitTorrent site.”

<3<3<3

Le livre comme livre, appartient a l’auteur, mais comme pensée, il appartient -le mot n’est pas trop vaste-au genre humain. Si un des deux droits, le droit de l’écrivain et le droit de l’esprit humain, devait être sacrifié, ce serait, certes, le droit de l’écrivain, car l’intérêt public est notre préoccupation unique et tous, je le déclare, doivent passer avant nous.

Victor Hugo discours d’ouverture du congres littéraire international 1878 (via larueeverslyon) / Victor Hugo, Speech at the Opening of the International Literary Congress of 1878

Roughly translated: “The book as a book belongs to the author, but as thought it belongs to—this word is not too broad—mankind. If one of two rights, the right of the writer and the right of human thought, should be sacrificed, it would be, certainly, the right of the writer because the public interest is our only concern and all, I declare, must pass before us.”

Preview image, Exposure Adjustment on a Sunset (2009)

Preview image, Exposure Adjustment on a Sunset (2009)

Preview image, Exposure Adjustment on a Sunset (2009)

Preview image, Exposure Adjustment on a Sunset (2009)

In the good old days of Really Existing Socialism, a joke popular among dissidents was used to illustrate the futility of their protests. In the fifteenth century, when Russia was occupied by Mongols, a peasant and his wife were walking aIong a dusty country road; a Mongol warrior on a horse stopped at their side and told the peasant he would now proceed to rape his wife; he then added: “But since there is a lot of dust on the ground, you must hold my testicles while I rape your wife, so that they will not get dirty!” Once the Mongol had done the deed and ridden away, the peasant started laughing and jumping with joy. His surprised wife asked: “How can you be jumping with joy when I was just brutally raped in your presence?” The farmer answered: “But I got him! His balls are covered with dust!” This sad joke reveals the predicament of the dissidents: they thought they were dealing serious blows to the party nomenklatura, but all they were doing was slightly soiling the nomen­klatura’s testicles, while the ruling elite carried on raping the people Slavoj Žižek, First as Tragedy, Then As Farce p.12 (2009)
graceyrself:

artie:

(via berserker)
This is a screencap from a syllabus I’m working on.
I’m really glad that the things my friends pull out of it are exactly the sentences I was happiest to write.

Can you explain to me how a copyright infringement warning/reprimand is indicative of a person doing good, conceptually sound work?  Obviously I’m seeing this out of context of the entire document, but it doesn’t seem to me that the two necessarily go hand in hand with each other or should be rewarded in the same way.
I guess that is to say, by putting this on a syllabus for an academic course, it implies that copyright infringement is a key to doing this kind of work, which I think isn’t the case at all, and I think you would agree.  So I suppose I’m questioning pedagogy here?  Just some thoughts.

I agree, copyright infringement isn&#8217;t enough to make a project good&#8212;it can add an interesting dimension to the right project, but for the most part it&#8217;s unnecessary unless you&#8217;re intentionally taking a political stance through the act of piracy / filesharing / whatever.
But the syllabus in question is a proposal for a class which would be called Theft, so in this case it&#8217;s an appropriate reward for anyone pushing the boundaries of copyright enough to get some push back.  It&#8217;s kind of bait to keep them from being timid.

graceyrself:

artie:

(via berserker)

This is a screencap from a syllabus I’m working on.

I’m really glad that the things my friends pull out of it are exactly the sentences I was happiest to write.

Can you explain to me how a copyright infringement warning/reprimand is indicative of a person doing good, conceptually sound work?  Obviously I’m seeing this out of context of the entire document, but it doesn’t seem to me that the two necessarily go hand in hand with each other or should be rewarded in the same way.

I guess that is to say, by putting this on a syllabus for an academic course, it implies that copyright infringement is a key to doing this kind of work, which I think isn’t the case at all, and I think you would agree.  So I suppose I’m questioning pedagogy here?  Just some thoughts.

I agree, copyright infringement isn’t enough to make a project good—it can add an interesting dimension to the right project, but for the most part it’s unnecessary unless you’re intentionally taking a political stance through the act of piracy / filesharing / whatever.

But the syllabus in question is a proposal for a class which would be called Theft, so in this case it’s an appropriate reward for anyone pushing the boundaries of copyright enough to get some push back.  It’s kind of bait to keep them from being timid.

plz-gro:

(via sonofgod)
(via berserker)
This is a screencap from a syllabus I&#8217;m working on.
I&#8217;m really glad that the things my friends pull out of it are exactly the sentences I was happiest to write.

(via berserker)

This is a screencap from a syllabus I’m working on.

I’m really glad that the things my friends pull out of it are exactly the sentences I was happiest to write.

thewordunheard:

kindacarsick:

I went as Low Resolution for Halloween.  The shirt took forever to paint, and my face only took slightly forever.

WHAT. WHAT. THIS IS SICK.

thewordunheard:

kindacarsick:

I went as Low Resolution for Halloween.  
The shirt took forever to paint, and my face only took slightly forever.

WHAT. WHAT. THIS IS SICK.