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Poisoned Torrents Plague Mybittorrent

jambarama writes "One of the biggest problems with the Fasttrack network has been poisoning. This is the practice of sharing a file on a P2P network that looks like the real thing, but isn't. Bittorrent until recently has been largely immune to this. Now a new type of torrent is tricking bittorrent sites to rising to the top of the download lists." From the article: "According to Rex, about 50 new torrents have been released from what he calls "fake" trackers (~31 in total.) These trackers are seemingly part of an elaborate plot to infiltrate the BitTorrent community with intentionally corrupt files. These movie and film titles are specifically designed to report false information to trackers, thereby gaining artificially inflated popularity."

5 of 542 comments (clear)

  1. IP addresses for copyright infringement lawsuits? by flowerp · · Score: 5, Insightful


    In addition to fooling unsuspecting users into downloading these broken torrents, it is likely that IP addresses were also harvested - potentially for future lawsuits. So BitTorrent clients will have to add/invent a trust systems for trackers now - not just for files.

    --
    --- Eat my sig.
  2. Law breakers only fall for poisonous files by aussie_a · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Files that impersonate other files (e.g. get the latest britney spears song when it's really just static) tend to only impersonate files that people don't have permission to distribute (and are therefore breaking the law). Most files that are legally distributable tend to not suffer from having poisonous files out there, so therefore people that follow the law don't actually have a problem with them.

    If the past is any indicator (and it normally is), the bittorrent poisonous files will mostly (if not only) be impersonating files that people aren't allowed to distribute. Your garage bands or Linux distributors that use bit-torrent, are most likely not going to have people impersonating their files out there (there may be a little bit of it, but chances are it'll be a very small amount).

    So really, for people that follow the law, this isn't going to be a problem. For people breaking the law, you really have no reason to complain. However what can be a problem is when legit files falsely report information to increase their perceived popularity.

  3. So what is the problem? by KiroDude · · Score: 5, Insightful

    First of all, I cannot read the article because of the corporate proxy filter, so I'm talking "blind" here.

    Ok, so what is the real problem with this???

    If this is being done to prevent "ilicit" files from being spread, then I do not see what could be wrong with it. Some people are getting free stuff and then complaining the file is corrupted or it isn't what they expected to download???

    Another matter would be for example contaminating "licit" files, but I'm sure that this is not the case (again, I couldn't read the article), which could be used from preventing downloading of some linux distros for example. That'd be something to worry about though.

  4. Solution by RasendeRutje · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The solution to this is simple: Moderation on the tracker sites. Let users report what torrents succed and what not. And release lists of poisoned torrents to be used on all sites.

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    If Microsoft was mass, stupidity would be gravity.
  5. Re:IP addresses for copyright infringement lawsuit by schon · · Score: 5, Insightful

    you may have received 98% of actually copyrighted data. So it's copyright infringement nonetheless even if the product turns out to be useless.

    No, it's not actually copyright infringement.

    When you download something from itunes, is it copyright infringement?

    Why not? because it's not copyright infringement if you have permission from the copyright holder, right?

    Now, here's where this example ties into this discussion:

    If the copyright holder puts their work up on a P2P service, with full knowledge that the file will be downloaded and uploaded, how can they claim infringement? They know how the protocol works, they know that copying will occur. By putting the file up, with knowledge of how the protocol works, they are implicitly giving permission for the copying to take place.

    It's not copyright infringement if you have permission.