How to Spot Fake Torrent Files and Only Get the Good Torrent Downloads..?? Gratefully, helpful P2P users like 'already_dead' and other longtime supporters of Isohunt.com have built up methods of identifying false torrents and avoiding them...Below are the most important 10 suggestions...
Scammers and dishonest P2P individuals use false torrents to phish people's identities, bilk them for money, or vandalize their computers through trojan infections. Gratefully, helpful P2P users like 'already_dead' and other longtime supporters of Isohunt.com have built up methods of identifying false torrents and avoiding them.
Below are the most important 10
suggestions, rather than your own common sense, on how to spot fake torrent
movie and music files on leading torrent data downloading sites:-
1. Confirm Both the Torrent and the
Movie Release Date with a Third Party
For brand new movie torrents, take a
minute to visit these two sites:
- www.imdb.com to check release dates
- www.VCDQ.com to confirm that the new movie exists as a torrent
2. You Can Trust .AVI and .MKV Files
as a General Rule; Avoid .WMA and .WMV Files
For the most part, true movie files
are either .avi (audio video interleave) or .mkv (Matroska files) format.
Conversely, the great majority of .wma and .wmv files are fake. While there are
some authentic examples, most .wma and .wmv files will link to other sites to
get paid codecs or malware downloads.
3. Check for 'Verified' Status on the
Torrent
Sites like Isohunt and Torrentbox
will actually employ a committee of core users to confirm and 'verify' torrents.
While these verified files are small in number, they are very likely true
torrents that can be trusted.
4. Always Read the Comments
Some torrent sites like Isohunt.com
will capture user comments. Like eBay feedback on other eBay users, these
comments can give you a sense of how legit the file is. If you see no comments
on a file, be suspicious. If you see any negative comments on the file, then
move on and find a better torrent.
5. Beware a Disportionate Number of
Thousands of Seeds, but No Comments
Abusive uploaders will falsify the
number of seeds and peers. By using software tools like BTSeedInflator, abusers
will make their torrents look like 10,000+ users are sharing it. If you see
these massively large seed/peer numbers, but there are no user comments on the
file, then avoid the file! Any true torrent that has more than a few thousand
seeds should also have positive user comments.
6. Beware if Password Instructions,
Special Instructions, or Exe Files Are Included
If you see a file in the movie/music
torrent that says 'password', 'special instructions', 'codec instructions',
'unrar instructions, 'important read me first', 'download instructions here',
then the torrent is quite likely a scam fake. These suspicious files are
telltale signs that someone is trying to sneak malware onto your computer!
Futhermore: if there is an exe executable file included, then avoid that
download! For movies and music, there is no need for an executable file to be
present, nor should there be any passwords or any special download
instructions.
7. Distrust .RAR, .TAR, .ACE Files
Yes, there are legit uploaders who
use .rar archives to share files. But for movies and music, the majority of rar
and archive files are fake. Abusers use the rar format to conceal trojans and
codec scam files. Video is already compressed, so there is no need to compress
further. If you see an attractive torrent movie file that is in .rar, .tar, or
.ace format, distrust it and examine its listed file contents before you
download. If there is no list of the contents, do not trust it. If the file
list is disclosed, but the file list includes an .exe executable file, or text
files with the words 'password' or 'download instructions', do not trust it.
8. Avoid Using the Following Software
These torrent software clients have
earned a bad reputation for seeding malware, fraudulent codec downloaders,
keyloggers and trojans.
Avoid using any of the following:
- BitLord
- BitThief
- Get-Torrent
- TorrentQ
- Torrent101
- Bitroll
Open the published torrent details,
and copy-paste the tracker names into Google. If a tracker is legitimate, you
will see many Google hits where many torrent sites point to the copy-pasted
tracker. If the tracker is false, you will find many unrelated hits at Google,
often with the words 'fake' as P2P users post warnings on that fake tracker.
10. Only Use the Following Media
Players
These are the trusted movie and music
players of 2012. Anything other than these products is a candidate for being a
trojan or malware tool.
- WinAmp
- Windows Media Player
- VLC Media Plyer
- GMPlayer
- KMPlayer
Credits:- www.about.com
This post due to the knowledge and information spread by the above site, www.about.com, but if any question occurs on your end just don't hesitate to contact.
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