this post was submitted on 18 Jun 2023
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Piracy: ꜱᴀɪʟ ᴛʜᴇ ʜɪɢʜ ꜱᴇᴀꜱ
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I don't intend to sound mean, but to be frank, you're far off ever starting such a website. Given your knowledge, I'd also recommend staying away from such a project until you have more experience in the relevant fields. The reason for this is that there's a number of intricacies you need to be careful of when building a piracy streaming platform (both technicalities, logistics, and what sort of negative attention you could bring), which you probably won't pick up if this is your first project.
Having said that, I'd start at looking at back-end dev - this will give you a greater amount of knowledge. After that, you can decide how to approach the problem, e.g. if you're scraping another website, you'll need some way of pulling data on the back end (either on the fly, or via some periodic task).
Another aspect to consider would be the logistics, e.g. if you want to host the video files yourself, what sort of bandwidth would be necessary for a certain degree of traffic.
Then assuming you can solve all the technical problems, next to consider is maintenance, promotion and funding.
Yeah you are right! I honestly just want to understand how it works. I need to know that I have the skills to make it. I am looking for those skills. What you said made me question my skills as a full stack tho 😂 I am gonna have to learn more stuffs about backend.
Now, taking in account the fact that I am not trying to make money out of it of build a website that can replace Zoro or 9anime. Suppose, I am trying to build that website just for me and a few friends. You mentioned scraping, should I use a language like python or puppeter (nodejs). Or a software or tool that can do it?
Language is mostly a concern that newbies have. Experienced developers will often say it doesn't matter much, so just use whatever suits you.
There's all sorts of tools/libraries out there that can assist with scraping, or you may decide to roll everything on your own. Every developer will have their own preferences, so find what works for you.
A big part of this would depend on what you're aiming to get out of the experience. If it's just for personal education, you might want to take an approach that's more conducive to learning what you want to know. On the other hand, if you're more interested in completing a project, you might focus less on learning and more on getting the project done.
If you're aiming for a private site, it removes a lot of concerns you need to have with a "real" (public) site, simplifying things greatly.
You should look in to Usenet + Indexers + Sonarr + Plex.
There are quite a few different guides on the subject. Basically, you would use Usenet as the backend source. Sonarr would be the application to grab all the files and automate downloading. Plex would be used for sharing. It's a whole rabbit hole.
I would recommend jellyfin over Plex because jellyfin doesn't have a premium mode.