Legal BitTorrent Communities for Class Presentation?
OnBeyondBeing asks: "A few of my friends and I are taking a class at a local university called 'Internet and Society' and we have to do a 'Technology Tour' on innovations that have social aspects or uses (like Google Maps, Kiko (an Internet-based calendar), LiveJournal and Frappr). We chose to do our presentation on BitTorrent. As part of our presentation, we have to do a lab in which the students and teachers use BitTorrent in some way. I was thinking of having people join some BitTorrent community that interests them and join a torrent, but most of these communities contain material that is not suited for an academic presentation. Aside from places like CommonBits and Etree (and others that were mentioned in a previous Slashdot post), what sites have you found that use BitTorrent as the basis of a community that are clean and legal enough for a class presentation? Alternatively, what other interesting, legal uses of BitTorrent have you found?"
There are always Linux Torrents
"Better to be vulgar than non-existent" -Bev Henson
Cringely offers NerdTV as a bittorrent download. As it is legal there's usually a ton of seeds on each download - nothing better to demonstrate the speed possible with bittorrent.
Shh.
http://www.legaltorrents.com
ETree - Legal Bootleg Torrents
Open Source Torrents
It is pitch black. You are likely to be eaten by a grue.
Legal Torrents is quite good. Creative Commons-licensed music, movies, books, and such.
But then again, we had Gopher, not Google, so I'll shut up.
Anyway, off the top of my head, Democracy player is a combination video player, RSS reader and torrent client that hooks up a community of legal (well, most of it) video distribution.
It was also announced this week that Steven Soderbergh will be releasing a short through BitTorrent. (I'll let you find the link, you hard working student.)
www.djmixes2k.com
Does it go on forever?
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