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Demonoid Down For a Week, Serving Malware Laden Ads

hypnosec tipped us to reports that Demonoid is still down after a suffering a massive DDoS last week, and that the domain is now redirecting to a malware-ridden spam site. Notable for surviving a CRIA mandated shutdown, this may be lights out for the torrent tracker: "To begin, while Demonoid’s admin told us that he would eventually bring the site back online, he clearly has other things on his mind. A really important family event puts a torrent site nowhere near the top of his priorities. ... Demonoid has been experiencing staffing issues this year. As we mentioned in an earlier article, there were rumors that one or maybe more Demonoid staffers had been questioned by authorities about their involvement in the site."

12 of 144 comments (clear)

  1. Who was going to sites like Demonoid... by BlastfireRS · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ...and not using some form of AdBlock anyway?

    1. Re:Who was going to sites like Demonoid... by s0nicfreak · · Score: 5, Insightful

      People that want sites like Demonoid to survive and therefore support them by viewing ads?

    2. Re:Who was going to sites like Demonoid... by Skarecrow77 · · Score: 4, Funny

      I've never gotten a virus from warez.
      got one from a porn download once, but that was my own fault. i was about 99% sure that it contained a virus, i opened it anyway to see what my anti-virus would do.

      took me about 5 minutes to clean up the mess, and that was that. turned out to be pretty good porn too.

      but warez? no, never gotten anything from warez.

  2. Re:fuck all you by present_arms · · Score: 5, Funny

    fuck all you pirate assholes anyway. I hope you get a virus that blows up your hard drive, you anti-business pricks.

    you forgot to add yours sincerely MPIAA :D

    --
    http://chimpbox.us
  3. I remember the good old days when by Stirling+Newberry · · Score: 5, Insightful

    stopping people from getting information about sex and contraception was supposed to solve some problem or other.

  4. Re:fuck all you by fluffythedestroyer · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I usually pirate software before I try them. If it's worth it, I will buy it. Same thing with games. Is it worth it to spend 60 for a 8-16 hours game that I will trow away in the garbarge or let it gather dust in my cabinet cause I only played it once ... or is it worth 60$ cause I still play today and the replay value is very strong. With software, is it worth 50$ and more depending on the usage I need from it. lots of software are just overpriced for my needs. That's bad cause I know some software that I would buy the their price is very questionable.

    Prove to me..or us here, people of /. that piracy is anti-business. Give me stats, hard numbers to make me shut up. Afaik, piracy helps business in an indirect way like it or not.

  5. Re:Don't I know it (warning post contains grumpine by RogueyWon · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Because when you're working full-time, have been doing so for a decade and are generally pretty successful, it really rankles to have people who you only see at Christmas and who only pick up the phone when they have a PC problem expecting you to jump to their aid in the way that you did when you were a teenager or student with plenty of free time.

  6. i started missing demonoid when chris marker died by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    i went to download some of his more obscure movies (and they're all pretty obscure) and without demonoid i had to pause for a second and think where will i get them? especially since only a few have been released on DVD. well i still found them but it really remind me what a wonderful culture resource demonoid was. i mean any obscure movie from anywhere in the world was probably on there, likewise for music. although i'm still looking for a copy of communist Polish camp classic Hydrozagadka with english subs. wasn't even on demonoid! at least not with subs..

  7. Re:I supplement custom hosts files w/ better DNS t by LodCrappo · · Score: 3, Informative

    good info and something I'll have to check out, but I'd add that at least OpenDNS is practically malware in itself due to their screwing around with dns records to advertise to you. they even break SMTP by returning MX results for *everything*, which point to them.... a user on your network fat fingers an email address and the message ends up with opendns? I don't think so.

    the others might be great tho, will try them.

    --
    -Lod
  8. Update by twocows · · Score: 5, Informative

    According to the article in TFA, which has been updated, the ads were put in place deliberately by the site admin to recoup some of his costs. Presumably, he didn't know they were full of malware.

  9. Re:the kick in the pants I needed by JMJimmy · · Score: 3

    What's needed is decentralized p2p indexing so taking down any given site doesn't affect the ability to locate files. How to accomplish this is beyond me but I'm sure it's possible.

  10. Re:the kick in the pants I needed by SuricouRaven · · Score: 4, Interesting

    As I proposed. It can be done - and we know it can be done, because Freenet is exactly that. But Freenet is made for dissidents and activists, and it's anti-tracking measures are accordingly paranoid: Performance is sacrificed in order to make it near-impossible to tell what anyone is either publishing or retrieving. This makes Freenet slow. Really slow.

    What you want can be done - it'd have to involve hashes, or better yet hash trees. All it needs is someone with the skill and will to impliment it.