I Know What You Downloaded on
BitTorrent….<http://feed.torrentfreak.com/~r/Torrentfreak/~3/7Va1x5-ecsY/>

So what have you downloaded lately?

If you’re not using BitTorrent through a proxy or VPN <http://btguard.com>,
there’s a good chance that the rest of the world can see without asking.

YouHaveDownloaded <http://www.youhavedownloaded.com/> is a new
Russian-based service that claims to track about 20 percent of all public
BitTorrent downloads. However, they go a step further than just collecting
IP-addresses and file-names by exposing all the harvested information to
the public on their website.

People who visit the site immediately see their download history, as far as
it’s available in the site’s database. In addition, they can also search
for files or IP-addresses to find out who’s downloading what. At the time
of writing the database has information on 51,274,000 users who together
shared 103,200 torrents.

TorrentFreak got in touch with Suren Ter, one of the site’s founders, to
find out why they decided to create this spying tool.

“We just want to remind people that the Internet is not a place to expect
privacy,” he says. “Nowadays many people use it without understanding what
information they leave behind. Also, even those who understand choose to
ignore it quite often.”

[image: torrent]

The Russian developers created the site partly as a wake-up call. Those who
don’t want this kind of information to be public should take steps to
anonymize their traffic, and do that right. This message is also reflected
in the site’s ‘privacy policy <http://www.youhavedownloaded.com/privacy>‘.

“Baby, this is the Internet. There is no such thing as privacy around here.
You are sitting in the privacy of your own house, clicking links, reading
stuff, watching movies. It may seem like you are pretty much alone, but
smart nerds are watching you. They watch your every move. You are not human
to them. You are a target — a consumer,” it reads.

Jokes aside, the site does indeed make people aware of the public nature of
BitTorrent, something that can’t be stressed enough. Of course not everyone
will be happy to see that their information is being exposed, so the
developers also offer an option to de-list an IP-address.

Apart from exposing download habits the developers are also considering the
creation of a more private file-sharing protocol. They already have a
theoretical concept based on Bitcoin’s technology, but a workable piece of
software is still very far away.

“The general idea is similar to what Bitcoin does. The key is to have an
anonymous and reliable identity for each peer, and a Bitcoin-like signature
chain algorithm will help,” Suren said.

The developers are currently trying to find out how viable their idea is,
and then they’ll decide whether they should continue working on it or not.
For now, they’ll keep on tracking dozens of millions of downloaders, for
all the world to see.

*Update:* For those who have dynamic IP-addresses the service is obviously
going to show content that someone else has downloaded.

Source: I Know What You Downloaded on
BitTorrent….<http://torrentfreak.com/i-know-what-you-downloaded-on-bittorrent-111210/>

[image: flattr 
this!]<http://torrentfreak.com/?flattrss_redirect&id=43470&md5=d046b5bc8cc3e9ab017e2f7d4199cb77>


Source: http://feed.torrentfreak.com/~r/Torrentfreak/~3/7Va1x5-ecsY/

(via Mr. Reader <http://www.curioustimes.de/mrreader>)


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