Resurrecting a dead torrent tracker and finding 3 million peers
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schrieb am 18. Juni 2025, 07:10 zuletzt editiert vonThis post did not contain any content.
Resurrecting a dead torrent tracker and finding 3 million peers
So I was uh, downloading some linux isos, like usual. It was going slowly, so I opened up the Trackers tab in qBittorrent and saw the following:
Kian Bradley’s Blog (kianbradley.com)
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This post did not contain any content.
Resurrecting a dead torrent tracker and finding 3 million peers
So I was uh, downloading some linux isos, like usual. It was going slowly, so I opened up the Trackers tab in qBittorrent and saw the following:
Kian Bradley’s Blog (kianbradley.com)
schrieb am 18. Juni 2025, 07:33 zuletzt editiert vonFunny how the author immediately decided to shut everything down when he realized the number of peer/torrents still sending requests to the domain.
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Funny how the author immediately decided to shut everything down when he realized the number of peer/torrents still sending requests to the domain.
schrieb am 18. Juni 2025, 08:28 zuletzt editiert vonOrphaned domains like this are interesting, there was a defcon talk, I think, where the presenter bought a bunch of blacklisted orphaned domains just to see if anything would try and connect to them. They got hit with so many botnet clients trying to phone home.
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This post did not contain any content.
Resurrecting a dead torrent tracker and finding 3 million peers
So I was uh, downloading some linux isos, like usual. It was going slowly, so I opened up the Trackers tab in qBittorrent and saw the following:
Kian Bradley’s Blog (kianbradley.com)
schrieb am 18. Juni 2025, 09:21 zuletzt editiert vonThat's terrifying.
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This post did not contain any content.
Resurrecting a dead torrent tracker and finding 3 million peers
So I was uh, downloading some linux isos, like usual. It was going slowly, so I opened up the Trackers tab in qBittorrent and saw the following:
Kian Bradley’s Blog (kianbradley.com)
schrieb am 18. Juni 2025, 09:51 zuletzt editiert von ipitco@lemmy.super.ynh.frpaying in crypto is nice partly for this reason
But a lot of uneducated people will spam "crypto is a scam"
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This post did not contain any content.
Resurrecting a dead torrent tracker and finding 3 million peers
So I was uh, downloading some linux isos, like usual. It was going slowly, so I opened up the Trackers tab in qBittorrent and saw the following:
Kian Bradley’s Blog (kianbradley.com)
schrieb am 18. Juni 2025, 09:53 zuletzt editiert vonThat's the kind of thing that would be cool to do actually, but I'm not server savy enough to make a server that won't die easily under attacks
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This post did not contain any content.
Resurrecting a dead torrent tracker and finding 3 million peers
So I was uh, downloading some linux isos, like usual. It was going slowly, so I opened up the Trackers tab in qBittorrent and saw the following:
Kian Bradley’s Blog (kianbradley.com)
schrieb am 18. Juni 2025, 10:11 zuletzt editiert von cupcakezealot@piefed.blahaj.zonewell pls resurrect the struck by lightning torrent because its taking forever to download
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Orphaned domains like this are interesting, there was a defcon talk, I think, where the presenter bought a bunch of blacklisted orphaned domains just to see if anything would try and connect to them. They got hit with so many botnet clients trying to phone home.
schrieb am 18. Juni 2025, 10:17 zuletzt editiert vonOrphaned IPs as well. If you have an IPv4 from your cloud provider and you want to retire it, you should thoroughly scrub your DNS and all other configs before doing so. Otherwise it's trivial for someone else to spin up a machine on that IP address and abuse your domain.
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well pls resurrect the struck by lightning torrent because its taking forever to download
schrieb am 18. Juni 2025, 10:33 zuletzt editiert vonIf you have access to real debrid, sometimes they have insanely old torrents in cache. I've resurrected quite a few decades old bangers from the pirate bay that way.
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paying in crypto is nice partly for this reason
But a lot of uneducated people will spam "crypto is a scam"
schrieb am 18. Juni 2025, 11:00 zuletzt editiert vonWhat reason are you referring to?
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Orphaned domains like this are interesting, there was a defcon talk, I think, where the presenter bought a bunch of blacklisted orphaned domains just to see if anything would try and connect to them. They got hit with so many botnet clients trying to phone home.
schrieb am 18. Juni 2025, 11:45 zuletzt editiert vonYeah those orphaned domains are a goldmine for security researchers, there was a similar talk at blackhat where they showed how expired domains from major companies still recieved auth tokens and sensitive data for months after expiry.
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What reason are you referring to?
schrieb am 18. Juni 2025, 12:22 zuletzt editiert vonI imagine the part in the article where OPP destroyed the vps and cancelled the domain because he realized he paid for the vps with his credit card?
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I imagine the part in the article where OPP destroyed the vps and cancelled the domain because he realized he paid for the vps with his credit card?
schrieb am 18. Juni 2025, 12:35 zuletzt editiert vonCrypto is not anonymous, the entire concept of how it works is to be the worlds most public and distributed transaction ledger. It is more difficult to track than credit card transactions, but that's a very big difference from being impossible to track. There have been multiple papers published at this point on how you can de-anonymize any crypto purchase.
People really need to get over this idea that using crypto to buy things makes you anonymous.
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Crypto is not anonymous, the entire concept of how it works is to be the worlds most public and distributed transaction ledger. It is more difficult to track than credit card transactions, but that's a very big difference from being impossible to track. There have been multiple papers published at this point on how you can de-anonymize any crypto purchase.
People really need to get over this idea that using crypto to buy things makes you anonymous.
schrieb am 18. Juni 2025, 12:43 zuletzt editiert vonExactly. That's why you had to fill out all the KYC paperwork when you create your Bitcoin wallet.
Oh, you didn't?
Crypto is not hidden, but it can be anonymous. You can't hide that you got money from X account and spent it at Y account. But there's no name tied to the transaction.
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Crypto is not anonymous, the entire concept of how it works is to be the worlds most public and distributed transaction ledger. It is more difficult to track than credit card transactions, but that's a very big difference from being impossible to track. There have been multiple papers published at this point on how you can de-anonymize any crypto purchase.
People really need to get over this idea that using crypto to buy things makes you anonymous.
schrieb am 18. Juni 2025, 13:08 zuletzt editiert vonIt's not anonymous, it in fact exchanges everything else from real currencies' good properties to be hard to control.
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Crypto is not anonymous, the entire concept of how it works is to be the worlds most public and distributed transaction ledger. It is more difficult to track than credit card transactions, but that's a very big difference from being impossible to track. There have been multiple papers published at this point on how you can de-anonymize any crypto purchase.
People really need to get over this idea that using crypto to buy things makes you anonymous.
schrieb am 18. Juni 2025, 13:10 zuletzt editiert vonSome crypto, like Monero, is anonymous. Bitcoin/Ethereum is not.
In any case, if you use anonymous crypto, make sure to first sent it to a wallet (preferably with a subaddress in case of Monero), and then send it elsewhere.
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Exactly. That's why you had to fill out all the KYC paperwork when you create your Bitcoin wallet.
Oh, you didn't?
Crypto is not hidden, but it can be anonymous. You can't hide that you got money from X account and spent it at Y account. But there's no name tied to the transaction.
schrieb am 18. Juni 2025, 13:21 zuletzt editiert vonYou can hide it using coinjoin transactions. It's like a mixer but native. It's not perfect but it's nice to have
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Exactly. That's why you had to fill out all the KYC paperwork when you create your Bitcoin wallet.
Oh, you didn't?
Crypto is not hidden, but it can be anonymous. You can't hide that you got money from X account and spent it at Y account. But there's no name tied to the transaction.
schrieb am 18. Juni 2025, 13:21 zuletzt editiert vonWhere did the coin come from? Unless you mined it yourself, you've left a trail that may eventually lead to you. Even using crypto ATMs, you're still on surveillance and hoping the tapes/drives roll over before someone comes knocking (which is a very likely bet to win), and even then, you still have a real world location to tie the wallet to because of where the transaction originated.
Anything that interacts with the real world can anchor your identity to your wallet. Travelling out of state can help obfuscate that to an extent, but a high level adversary will be able to correlate travel with that transaction as well.
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Crypto is not anonymous, the entire concept of how it works is to be the worlds most public and distributed transaction ledger. It is more difficult to track than credit card transactions, but that's a very big difference from being impossible to track. There have been multiple papers published at this point on how you can de-anonymize any crypto purchase.
People really need to get over this idea that using crypto to buy things makes you anonymous.
schrieb am 18. Juni 2025, 13:34 zuletzt editiert vonYou know, except for Monero. Really sucks that real private anonymous internet money is getting pushed out of all places possible, while crap like Bitcoin freely exists.
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Where did the coin come from? Unless you mined it yourself, you've left a trail that may eventually lead to you. Even using crypto ATMs, you're still on surveillance and hoping the tapes/drives roll over before someone comes knocking (which is a very likely bet to win), and even then, you still have a real world location to tie the wallet to because of where the transaction originated.
Anything that interacts with the real world can anchor your identity to your wallet. Travelling out of state can help obfuscate that to an extent, but a high level adversary will be able to correlate travel with that transaction as well.
schrieb am 18. Juni 2025, 14:01 zuletzt editiert von ipitco@lemmy.super.ynh.frEver heard of BTC/any-> XMR -> BTC/any?
If you know your thing, you can churn, buy the initial crypto with gift cards, use VPNs or Tor... yea GL for finding me
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