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Bram Cohen to Release BitTorrent Search Engine

AI Playground writes "Within two weeks, a BitTorrent search engine will be available at BitTorrent.com. From the Wired News article: 'Bram Cohen and a small cadre of developers and entrepreneurs are in the final stage of launching an advertising-supported search engine dedicated to cataloging and indexing the thousands of movies, music tracks, software programs and other files for download over Cohen's popular BitTorrent protocol.'"

9 of 420 comments (clear)

  1. Google isn't enough! by Palal · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is not sufficient. I totally agree, release a search engine!

    --
    -Palal
    1. Re:Google isn't enough! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Every time someone points out their favourite BT site on Slashdot, it gets that much closer to being shut down. Then you can pat yourself on the back. SA people should keep this in mind as well.

  2. As cool as this might be... by Marnhinn · · Score: 5, Insightful

    As nice as this might be, to be able to simply search various torrents, I have a feeling that this will not do anything to enhance Bittorrent's image with the media. If anything, they will use it as a tool to show that people "pirate" tons of stuff over BT. (As mentioned in the article - when the "reporter" requests a search done for The Interpeter.)

    It's a good idea, and probably going to be a nice piece of software... but right now is probably about the worst time you can release something like this.

    --
    There is always a frontier where there is an open and willing mind
  3. .Torrent distribution via Usenet? by costas · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Has anybody tried/implemented distributing .torrents (not the payload, the .torrent file itself) over Usenet? It seems that with trackerless torrents, Usenet would be the perfect distribution medium for the torrents themselves, just as decentralized as BitTorrent itelf... TorreNTSP so to speak...

  4. Search != Napster by asv108 · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I've noticed quite a few posts already mentioning napster and that the RIAA would shut this down, but based on what law? A search engine specializing in torrents is completely different then a centralized P2P file sharing network(Napster) or the common torrent portal.

    The MPAA has maneuvered to get some torrent sites pulled offline, almost all of the sites are places where users publish content to the site manually.(PUSH) A search engine pulling content from existing locations (PULL) is a completely different type of system.

  5. Re:RIAA to release lawsuit in two weeks. by ZephyrXero · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Does anyone else wonder what's going on in Bram's head right now? I thought they were trying to legitimize Bit Torrent as a perfectly legal tool for bandwidth sharing....but with the decentralized version and now this it's starting to look more and more just like another File Sharing system, and as the parent said, expect the **AA to have a field day with this...

    --
    "A truly wise man realizes he knows nothing."
  6. Re:RIAA to release lawsuit in two weeks. by lambent · · Score: 5, Insightful


    A lot of people said this sort of thing when DeCSS hit. To sum up:

    Cat's out of the bag, and ...
    You can't have your cake and eat it too.

    That is ... BitTorrent is either a file-sharing system or it isn't. It obviously is.

    There's nothing anyone can do about it anymore. He's not fooling anyone. Dude obviously needs to eat, and he's making a sponsored search engine. All I can say is "kaching".

  7. Does anyone see the irony here? by hacker · · Score: 5, Insightful

    As contradictory to the "Cause" as this may seem, doesn't anyone see that Bram is probably doing this because the RIAA/MPAA and other major industries are blaming his project, a project that produces a protocol, for the rampant copyright infringement on the Internet?

    The irony here in recent news is that the RIAA/MPAA are directly blaming BitTorrent for the Star Wars EP3 leak, but its been repeatedly shown that the leaked copy came from inside, and was released before the movie hit the public.

    ...and somehow BitTorrent is to blame?

    Are we blaming Boeing for the 9/11 tragedy too? Or blaming Kabar for making high-quality blades, because someone killed with one?

    This is ridiculous, and I personally applaud Bram's efforts here to absolutely saturate the mainstream media and dark corners of the Internet with as much media as possible, using his legitimate tool. I personally don't care for any of the copyrighted dreck on television or the radio these days, but others might.

    Also, whenever you can, please keep correcting people who regard this as "piracy", "stealing" or "theft". It is nothing of the sort. It is "copyright infringement", plain and simple. If I "steal" your bicycle, I have deprived you of something you previously owned, which I now posess. Making digitally-perfect copies of a work is not "stealing" or "theft", though it is very much illegal in most countries.

    You can't steal profits that weren't already earned. You can't steal "projected" profits. Keep up the pressure on these companies who continue to misunderstand the terms they're spewing in public. There's a certain Heinekin commercial that is grossly misrepresenting the nature of copyright infringement.

    I corrected a Wall Street Journal reporter for a front-page article in the Marketplace section of the dead-tree version for promoting the "sharing of music" by burning copies of music and handing it out.

    He wrote a story that included how some woman (which he named), was bored with the looping music playing in her resort in the Caribbean islands and decided to use her laptop, complete with burner, to burn several CDs of her favorite music to give to the resort to play instead. He was promoting the "advance of technology" for "enabling" people to do these things. This is disgusting.

    THIS is where we need to start directing our angst... at the mainstream media misrepresenting these technologies.

  8. It all makes sense! by aggies11 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You have two choices when it comes to torrents. Either disown the sharing of copyrighted material "Piracy is Bad. We don't support piracy at all. Torrents can be used for GOOD!".

    Or, you can try to legitimize "piracy" itself. Ie. Make the downloading of copyright material, so widespread, and so common, that the content providers have NO CHOICE but change their business models. Essentially force a revolution.

    I'd guess, thats what Mr. Cohen is up to. The MPAA and RIAA aren't going to be convinced that Torrenting is "good" or "just a protocol". So rather than try in vain, he's gonna play by their rules, open the gates wide open, and legitimize piracy.

    Remember, content providers are not gonna change by choice, they are not going to do the right thing because we ask nicely. The only way they will smarten up is if they are given no choice "change, or die".

    So the plan isn't to deny piracy. It's to embrace it, make it so big it's unstoppable, to induce a paradigm shift in the industry. To bring on the revolution.

    Heck, it might even work.

    Aggies