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A BitTorrent tracker is a server that assists in the communication between peers using the BitTorrent protocol. It is also, in the absence of extensions to the original protocol, the only major critical point, as clients are required to communicate with the tracker to initiate downloads. Clients that have already begun downloading also communicate with the tracker periodically to negotiate with newer peers and provide statistics; however, after the initial reception of peer data, peer communication can continue without a tracker.
[edit] Trackers and indexersA tracker should be differentiated from a BitTorrent index by the fact that it does not necessarily list files that are being tracked. A BitTorrent index is a list of .torrent files, usually including descriptions and other information. Trackers merely coordinate communication between peers attempting to download the payload of the torrents. Many BitTorrent websites act as both tracker and index. Sites such as these publicize the tracker's URL and allow users to upload torrents to the index with the tracker's URL embedded in them, providing all the features necessary to initiate a download. [edit] Open trackersOpen trackers can be used by anyone by adding the tracker address to an existing torrent, or they can be used by any newly created torrent. Some of the most popular open trackers include OpenBitTorrent, The HiddenTracker, OpenBitTorrent.kg, PublicBitTorrent [1] and BitTrk. [edit] Private trackersA private tracker is a BitTorrent tracker that restricts use, by requiring users to register with the site. The method for controlling registration used amongst almost all private trackers is an invitation system, in which active and contributing members are given the ability to grant a new user permission to register at the site. Invitations, typically sent via email or an invite code system, are normally granted to active users who have uploaded a pre-determined amount or meet specific upload-to-download ratio requirements. Trading invites for different sites is highly frowned upon in the private BitTorrent community as it allows anti-piracy groups to infiltrate private trackers more easily. Most private trackers monitor how much users upload or download, and in most situations, enforce a minimum upload-to-download ratio. Some of the allure of private tracker versus a public one are: higher speeds, a tighter community, and safer downloads. Private trackers implement a strict set of rules, so generally files containing malware are extremely uncommon. Many private trackers keep in close contact with each other, so bad users (who trade invites or attempt to fake their ratio) can be quickly blacklisted. Almost all private trackers implement a passkey system, where each user is given a personalized announce URL so if there is unauthorized distribution, it can be pinpointed to the user responsible. Some private trackers have a higher level of security than others - many sites[which?] only allow their users to refer to their site as an abbreviation, and never as the site's full name or URL. Other trackers restrict invites to outstanding members, and many trackers, to increase security, have gotten rid of the invite system altogether. An example of a private tracker is Oink's Pink Palace, which was forcibly shut down in late 2007 by law enforcement officials. The downside is that some private trackers are little more than pyramid schemes inviting donations to enable users to bypass the upload-to-download ratio. In a closed community it can be mathematically impossible for all members to maintain the required ratio. Competitions may be offered, with prizes of improved ratios, and forums may suggest other complicated means of doing this. In the pyramid schemes, 'donations' turn out to be the only way to continue downloading. Downloads can then be quite expensive. On the other hand, if they are unobtainable elsewhere, they may be good value for money. Some trackers use "free leech" systems to improve the users ratio. When downloading a free leech torrent only the upload gets logged in, the download is ignored. Usually popular (healthy) and large torrents are offered as free leech. Seeding to a ratio of at least 1 is still recommended even for free leech torrents. [edit] Legal issuesMain article: Legal issues with BitTorrent Many torrent trackers have been the target of cease and desist lawsuits from copyright bodies despite the fact that a tracker does not actually host or distribute any copyrighted data itself. A complicating factor is that torrent tracking websites operate in a variety of countries, including countries with copyright laws that differ from the country of origin of the copyrighted material, and countries in which different actions may be legal or illegal. Further complicating factors are that there are many circumstances under which it is legal to distribute copyrighted material - indeed there are currently some experiments at legally selling content that is distributed over BitTorrent using a "secure" tracker system[citation needed]. For instance, copyright holders may choose to allow their content to be distributed for free, using licenses such as the Creative Commons family, or the GPL. In addition, some countries also have fair use provisions in copyright law, which allow people the right to access and use certain classes of copyrighted material without breach of the law. Besides these complications with copyrighted files using various licenses, there is also the fact that many kinds of data are in the public domain and therefore not subject to copyright at all. Perhaps the most complicated portion of this legal debate is the fact that although Bittorrent indexes and trackers provide means to receive and send copyrighted data between users, they do not host any copyrighted materials, and no copyrighted materials ever traverse these trackers or indexers. [edit] Improving torrent reliabilityTrackers are the primary reason for a damaged BitTorrent 'swarm'. (Other reasons are mostly related to damaged or hacked clients uploading corrupt data.) The reliability of trackers has been improved through two main innovations in the BitTorrent protocol. [edit] Multi-tracker torrentsMulti-tracker torrents feature multiple trackers in the one torrent. This way, should one tracker fail, the others can continue supporting file transfer. [edit] Trackerless torrentsThe original BitTorrent client was the first[citation needed] to offer decentralized, distributed tracking using a distributed hash table (DHT), making torrents more independent from the tracker. Later, Vuze, rTorrent, µTorrent, BitComet and KTorrent adopted this feature. Vuze's "Distributed Database" feature uses its own form of DHT (Kademlia) which is incompatible with the official BitTorrent client's implementation; however, support for the official implementation can be added through the Mainline DHT plugin. Most other clients support the official DHT implementation. [edit] IPv6 supportOne of the options for this HTTP based tracker protocol is the "compact" flag. This flag specifies that the tracker can compact the response by encoding IPv4 addresses as a set of 4 bytes (32bits). IPv6 though are 128bits long, and as such, the "compact" flag breaks IPv6 support. Trackers which support IPv6 clients thus currently ignore the compact flag. There have been mentions of a "compact6" flag, but this mechanism has not been adopted yet by the various BitTorrent clients. The first IPv6 only worked with BitTorrent and is still run by NIIF Intezet. Recently SixXS released their IPv6 only BitTorrent Tracker. This tracker has a permanent set of seeds available on high bandwidth links. The .torrents served by this tracker can be submitted to the catalog, the seeds will then automatically start distributing these .torrents amongst each other, ensuring that the seeds have the full file and providing for high speed downloads for clients. This service makes Open Source distributions readily available over IPv6 in a highspeed way. Recently The Pirate Bay announced that they now support IPv6 and are encouraging the use of IPv6. [edit] Softwareopentracker from Dirk Engling is probably the most important BitTorrent tracker software. Running on the biggest BitTorrent tracker of the world – The Pirate Bay tracker – it is used to serve the most BitTorrent clients. Atrack is a high performance open source tracker designed to run on Google App Engine. See BitTorrent tracker software for a list of BitTorrent tracker software. [edit] See also
[edit] References[edit] External links
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