Decentralized

Since the internet is filled with uncertany and doubt around file-sharing. It is a relief to know that their is an alternative that seems persistant.

Tribler - A unique BitTorrent client, based on a decentralized network of users.
Tribler is designed to keep BitTorrent alive, even when all torrent search engines, indexes and trackers are pulled offline.

Tribler doesn't rely on torrent sites to find or download content, as it is based on pure peer-to-peer communication. No cetralized servers.

Tribler has achieved zero-seconds downtime over the past six years, all because they don't rely on shaky foundations such as DNS, web servers or search portals.

Tribler is based on the standard BitTorrent protocol and uses regular BitTorrent trackers to communicate with other peers. But, it can also continue downloading when a central tracker goes down.

The same is true for spam control. Where most torrent sites have a team of moderators to delete viruses, malware and fake files, Tribler uses crowd-sourcing to keep the network clean. Content is verified by user generated "channels", which can be "liked" by others. When more people like a channel, the associated torrents get a boost in the search results.

The latest addition to Tribler is a Wikipedia-style editing system dubbed "Open2Edit," where users have the option to edit names and descriptions of torrents in public channels. All without a central server, totally decentralized.

According to Dr. Pouwelse, Tribler is fully capable of resisting any pressure from outside, and it will still work when all torrent sites and trackers are gone. It simply can't be shutdown, blocked or censored, whatever laws politicians may come up with"The only way to take it down is to take The Internet down." Pouwelse told us.

One thing that could theoretically cause issues, is the capability for starting users to find new peers. To be on the safe side the Tribler team is still looking for people who want to act as so called bootstraptribler peers. These users will act as superpeers, who distribute lists of active downloaders.

"Together with software bugs and a code cleanup, that is now our last known weakness," says Pouwelse.

While the Tribler client only has a few thousand users at the moment, for avid file-sharers it must be a relief to know that it's out there. No matter what crazy laws may pass in the future, people will always be able