![]() ![]() Private trackers are all inherently illegal and you are trusting some unknown person or group with a pretty considerable amount of your data. In order to keep track of banned users, banned regions and so on, most private trackers will log everything you do on their platform and keep that data forever. Due to the nature of private trackers, they will often require you sign up for an account using your home IP address. There are two aspects to this: one is your own personal security, the other is the security of the tracker itself. Large prolific piracy groups such as scene or well-known release groups are huge targets for copyright enforcement. Fortunately, leaked screeners are generally very popular and will be easily found on public trackers anyway. As a result, many private trackers do not allow this content. There are some caveats to this though, copyright trolls will aggressively pursue the source of leaked pre-release media, such as screeners. From a monetary point of view, it's more worthwhile to stop 10,000 casuals from downloading two torrents than to stop two neckbeards from downloading 10,000 torrents. The second one is that copyright trolls would rather focus on huge public sites that are easy to fish for peers rather than small communities that are hard to join. The first one is that most of them are obscure enough that no one really knows or cares about them (security through obscurity). Security: There are two reasons private trackers are more secure, albeit they may not apply in the future.This, coupled with a decent site layout, makes private trackers much more orderly than public ones. Trumping rules and the removal of duplicates ensure you only get one, community-approved source for the specific content and format. Members and staff review and approve each torrent. Music trackers will ensure you don't get horrible 92kbps transcodes movie trackers will ensure you only get good encodes, ebook trackers will ensure you get retail quality, etc. Good private trackers have stringent rules on the content format, quality, and organization. Quality control: A major asset of private trackers, albeit one that can vary a lot across trackers.Some trackers specialize in obscure or rare content, ensuring that it doesn't get lost from the Internet. Sometimes you can't even legally buy it at all, ironically. Selection: Some content simply isn't available on any public site and will only be found on private trackers.A few peers on private trackers will seed many torrents for obscure content that you wouldn't normally find any peers for on ThePirateBay or KAT. Retention: Similarly, private trackers usually enforce rules that encourage long-term seeding.Enough to max out anyone's home connection. Not only that, but many members use seedboxes, which are just servers based in data centers, offering very high speeds and excellent peering. Private trackers encourage their members to seed torrents for as long as possible, thus increasing the chances of a torrent having a healthy swarm for longer. ![]()
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