FilecoinGreen-tools
tribler
FilecoinGreen-tools | tribler | |
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1 | 65 | |
12 | 4,696 | |
- | 5.0% | |
0.0 | 9.8 | |
6 months ago | 4 days ago | |
Python | ||
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
FilecoinGreen-tools
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Library Genesis Desktop app, now with IPFS support
I think it's worth separating what IPFS provides from what Filecoin offers (note that I work at the Filecoin Foundation/Filecoin Foundation for the Decentralized Web, but I'm hopefully being sufficiently technical here that the description is as objective as I can be.)
IFPS is a model for providing a content-addressable storage system -- so if you have a particular hash (the CID) of a piece of content, you can obtain it without having to know where or who (or how many people) are storing it. Obviously one site on the IPFS network you're using has to have stored that data, but it only needs to be one site. More sites make it easier and quicker to access. Almost all IPFS nodes are run and offered for free, either by volunteers, major services like Cloudflare or Protocol Labs' dweb.link (which act as gateways so that you can access that file network over http/https) or web services that you pay to host your content on IPFS and manage it through a traditional API, like Textile or Fleek, or Fission.codes.
The key point here for someone with your use case, is that you have lots of flexibility as to who is hosting your files. You can start off just running your own node, or pay someone else, or pay lots of providers that are geographically diverse, or just do it among a bunch of volunteers. You're not tied to a single provider, because wherever your data is stored, you or your users will be able to find it.
Filecoin is a project to fix the incentive issues that can affected historical decentralizing projects like bittorrent, and can lead to decentralizing attempts like this collapse into just a single centralized service like AWS.
Storage providers on the Filecoin network negotiate directly with customers to store files -- they receive payment directly from those customers, but they are also incentivized to offer storage, and also store those files over the long term, because Filecoin has a proof-of-storage setup where storage providers get utility coins in return for proving that they're either making space available, or storing customers' files. It's all very zero-knowledge-proof and fancy, but the important thing is that with this in place, and a flat, competitive market for storage, storage provides on this network have good commercial reasons to offer low prices, and don't care if you're not tied directly to them (in the way that Amazon and other traditional storage providers are tempted to lock you in.)
Filecoin isn't so much a derivative of future declines, but a way to establish pricing in an environment where there actually is a free(r) market for online storage. And IPFS is a protocol that establishes one part of that freer market, which is to decouple who is storing your files, from how you might access them in the future. So far, this seems to be working, with prices being much cheaper than the alternatives, and with some degree of geographical and organizational diversity: https://file.app/
Storage providers are also now also competing on other aspects, such as ecological impact (see https://github.com/protocol/FilecoinGreen-tools ), speed of access, etc, which is what you might expect in a flatter market. We also see larger storage providers providing separate markets for large, >1 Pebibyte customers.
Happy to talk about this more, I'm [email protected]. Big fan of your work, etc, etc.
tribler
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Tribler: An attack-resilient micro-economy for media
I noticed that too:
https://github.com/Tribler/tribler/wiki/%22TrustChain%22-arc...
But not much else about it. Would be interested to read more. Using torrent seeding as a form of Proof-of-Work that rewards tokens is actually an interesting use case for cryptocurrency, and not as energy-hungry.
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Tribler 7.13.0
> Towards making Bittorrent anonymous and impossible to shut down.
> We use our own dedicated Tor-like network for anonymous torrent downloading. We implemented and enhanced the Tor protocol specifications. Tribler includes our own Tor-like onion routing network with hidden services based seeding and end-to-end encryption.
https://github.com/Tribler/tribler#readme (GPLv3 although also LGPL)
I first thought "Is Justin Bieber gay?" in their release was some kind of vandalism of their release, but no, they pose that question as a vehicle for how their software is attempting to solve(?) trusted tagging
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Iconic Torrent Site RARBG Shuts Down, All Content Releases Stop
Tribler is made exactly for decentralized sharing of torrents. Wikipedia describes it as an overlay network for content searching. It doesn't seem to have enough content the few times i've tried it, but it should exactly be the solution for centralized tracker/torrent sites.
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Having a 20GB file that lets you ask an offline computer any question is amazing
[2] The Global Brain - the roadmap, https://github.com/Tribler/tribler/issues/7064
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Is it okay to download Torrent files over TOR?
There's a torrent client called tribler that is basically Tor but built for torrenting
- Hei, postiluukusta tipahti kirje joka syyttää minua elokuvan lataamisesta laittomasti. Kuinka toimia?
- Avis d'atteinte aux droits d'auteurs
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Email Canadian Netflix sent to me today. Bought puts. Cancelled subscription.
You kid, but our research group developed Tribler which is a safer, more privacy-oriented torrenting client for BitTorrent networks. We have many Ph.Ds who literally are professional pirates :D
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Best Private Trackers
Wish more people would use Tribler.
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To PirateBay or not to PirateBay
Tribler does it all, and anonymously.
What are some alternatives?
books - Library Genesis (libgen) CLI/TUI/GUI client (mirror from private repo)
qBittorrent - qBittorrent BitTorrent client
lbry-sdk - The LBRY SDK for building decentralized, censorship resistant, monetized, digital content apps.
searxng - SearXNG is a free internet metasearch engine which aggregates results from various search services and databases. Users are neither tracked nor profiled.
zotero-scihub - A plugin that will automatically download PDFs of zotero items from sci-hub
torrent-paradise - Decentralized DHT search site for IPFS
Alexandria - A modern Library Genesis book browser.
torsocks - Library to torify application - NOTE: upstream has been moved to https://gitweb.torproject.org/torsocks.git
i2p.i2p - I2P is an anonymizing network, offering a simple layer that identity-sensitive applications can use to securely communicate. All data is wrapped with several layers of encryption, and the network is both distributed and dynamic, with no trusted parties.
LibgenDesktop
py-ipv8 - Python implementation of Tribler's IPv8 p2p-networking layer