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Macproxy lifehacker
Macproxy lifehacker







macproxy lifehacker
  1. #MACPROXY LIFEHACKER HOW TO#
  2. #MACPROXY LIFEHACKER UTORRENT#
  3. #MACPROXY LIFEHACKER DOWNLOAD#
  4. #MACPROXY LIFEHACKER TORRENT#

uTorrent (for Windows) and Vuze (for Windows, Mac and Linux) both support proxies, but sadly Mac and Linux favourite Transmission does not. Lastly, proxies aren’t supported by every client, which means you’ll have to use one with more advanced features.

#MACPROXY LIFEHACKER TORRENT#

How much depends on what torrent you’re downloading, who from and a lot of other factors, but just know that it’s a possibility.

#MACPROXY LIFEHACKER DOWNLOAD#

The other potential downside is that piping your downloads through another service may decrease your upload and download speeds. A lawsuit settlement, if it comes to that, will cost you at least a couple thousand dollars, which equals a couple of decades of BTGuard subscriptions, so keep that in mind, too. At $US7/month (as little as $US5 if you pay for a year in advance), it isn’t very expensive, and we think it’s well worth it if you want to torrent anonymously. Sounds great, right? Now the caveats: First, BTGuard isn’t free.

macproxy lifehacker

You still have to be careful of going over your ISP’s bandwidth cap, however, if that exists.īTGuard offers you both a proxy (to combat spying) and encryption (to combat throttling) - though many torrent clients have encryption built-in as well. They’ll see that you’re downloading lots of information, but they won’t be able to see that it’s BitTorrent traffic, and thus won’t throttle your connection.

macproxy lifehacker

When you encrypt your BitTorrent traffic, your ISP can’t see what you’re using your connection for. Your ISP can still see what you’re doing, and if they detect that you’re using BitTorrent - even if you’re using it for perfectly legal purposes - they may throttle your connection so you get unbearably slow speeds. If you subscribe to an ISP that throttles BitTorrent traffic and aren’t using an anonymiser service, you have an additional problem. All the piracy monitors see is BTGuard sharing a file, and all your ISP sees is you connecting to BTGuard - but not what data you’re downloading, because it’s encrypted. That way, those anti-piracy groups can’t contact your ISP, and your ISP has no cause to send you a harrowing letter.īut wait, can’t the piracy groups then go to the anonymiser service (BTGuard) and requisition their logs to figure out that you’re the one downloading the new Harry Potter? Theoretically, yes, but the reason why we chose BTGuard is because they don’t keep logs, so there’s no paper trail of activity leading back to you. A proxy (like BTGuard) funnels your internet traffic - in this case, just your BitTorrent traffic - through another server, so that the BitTorrent swarm will show an IP address from a server that can’t be traced back to you instead of the address that points to your house. Piracy monitoring groups (often paid for by the entertainment industry either before or after they find violators) also join BitTorrent swarms, but instead of sharing files, they’re logging the IP addresses of other people in the swarm - including you - so that they can notify your ISP of your doings.

macproxy lifehacker

That’s all very handy when you’re sharing files with other netizens, but file sharers such as yourself aren’t necessarily the only people paying attention. When you download or seed a torrent, you’re connecting to a bunch of other people, called a swarm, all of whom - in order to share files - can see your computer’s IP address.

#MACPROXY LIFEHACKER HOW TO#

Below, I’ll explain what it does, how it works, and how to set it up to privatise and anonymous your BT traffic. BTGuard is a BT-focused proxy server and encryption service, and it’s my service of choice. Either way, if you really want to keep your activity private, your best bet involves routing your BitTorrent connection through an external service. Maybe you just want to keep Big Brother out of your business and stop your ISP throttling your connection. Heck, you don’t even need to be doing anything illegal, either. Here’s how to set up a simple proxy to keep your torrenting safe and anonymous.We’ve talked about how to boost your BitTorrent privacy before, but those measures aren’t quite enough anymore to keep you anonymous, because copyright holders are getting more vigilant at tracking down people who share their content. If you’re using BitTorrent without taking special measures to hide your activity, it may be just a matter of time before your ISP throttles your connection, sends you an ominous letter, or you find yourself the target of a file-sharing lawsuit.









Macproxy lifehacker