I know that private trackers require users to maintain a good seed ratio. How exactly does that work out mathematically? If a bunch of users have seed ratios above 1, does that mean that there are some users who will forever be below 1, and thus end up getting kicked out, thus resulting in the private tracker just… shrinking over time?

  • WeirdGoesPro@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    5 months ago

    That is simply not true. I’m a member of many private torrent sites, and the key is to simply seed all of your content for as long as you have it in your collection.

    Freeleech events allow you to build a large library of content that you expended no credit to download, but will get credit for uploading. Most sites have some kind of bonus point system for seeding content long term, and those points can often be used to buy more credit.

    At this point, I have so much credit building up on a regular basis that I like to put terabytes worth of it towards requests just to spread the love around. I have managed all of this through simply perma-seeding everything with a computer that is on 24/7. My current internet speed isn’t even stellar, but the sheer size of my seeded content gets the job done. I tend to be actively uploading multiple things every second of the day now.

    • interdimensionalmeme@lemmy.ml
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      5 months ago

      Did that, seedbox full, idle, near zero traffic for month, barely reach 1.0 ratio. Big waste of my resources.

      Nobody downloading because they know they can’t seed their ratio back up.

      Tracker operator sold ratio passes at 1$ per GB…