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  2. Comparison of BitTorrent sites - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_BitTorrent_sites

    Development and societal aspects. By country or region. Comparisons. v. t. e. This is a comparison of BitTorrent websites that includes most of the most popular sites. These sites typically contain multiple torrent files and an index of those files.

  3. rutracker.org - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rutracker.org

    rutracker.org (torrents.ru until 2010) is the biggest Russian BitTorrent tracker. As of November 2023, it has 14.4 million registered active users, 2.362 million torrents (2.336 million of them being active), and the total volume of all torrents is 5.3 Petabytes. History. September 18, 2004 – torrent tracker was created

  4. μTorrent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ΜTorrent

    μTorrent, or uTorrent (see pronunciation), is a proprietary adware BitTorrent client owned and developed by Rainberry, Inc. The "μ" (Greek letter "mu") in its name comes from the SI prefix "micro-", referring to the program's small memory footprint: the program was designed to use minimal computer resources while offering functionality comparable to larger BitTorrent clients such as Vuze or ...

  5. 1337x - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1337x

    1337x is an online website that provides a directory of torrent files and magnet links used for peer-to-peer file sharing through the BitTorrent protocol. [1] According to the TorrentFreak news blog, 1337x is the second-most popular torrent website as of 2023. [2]

  6. qBittorrent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/QBittorrent

    qBittorrent. qBittorrent is a cross-platform free and open-source BitTorrent client written in native C++. It relies on Boost, OpenSSL, zlib, Qt 6 toolkit and the libtorrent -rasterbar library (for the torrent back-end), with an optional search engine written in Python. [9] [10]

  7. RARBG - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RARBG

    RARBG was a website that provided torrent files and magnet links to facilitate peer-to-peer file sharing using the BitTorrent protocol. From 2014 to 2023, RARBG repeatedly appeared in TorrentFreak's yearly list of most visited torrent websites.

  8. YourBittorrent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/YourBittorrent

    YourBittorrent is a file sharing website founded as myBittorrent in 2003, the new site yourBittorrent is the result of a split in ownership in 2009. The site is a torrent tracking website for the P2P BitTorrent network. As such it does not host files, but hosts information about the location of these files in an indexed torrent file. [2]

  9. The Pirate Bay - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Pirate_Bay

    The site commented: "Not having torrents will be a bit cheaper for us but it will also make it harder for our common enemies to stop us." The site added that torrents being shared by fewer than ten people will retain their torrent files, to ensure compatibility with older software that may not support magnet links. Funding