this post was submitted on 06 Jul 2023
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Piracy: ꜱᴀɪʟ ᴛʜᴇ ʜɪɢʜ ꜱᴇᴀꜱ

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I was a happy Netflix user until 2018, before that I haven't really pirated any movies (with very rare exceptions) for almost a decade but I recently started again. I'm was doing my monthly budgeting and realized I was paying for too many subscription services. Netflix, Amazon Prime, Shudder, Disney+, Hulu and Crunchyroll. My family likes to watch different types of content that is distributed on many different platforms.

I was never subscribed to these many services until a couple years ago. I was thinking which service I should cancel when I realized I had the option to cancel all of them this entire time. I'm torrenting again and I started saving a considerate amount.

The only service I'm paying for is Spotify which I think it's fairly priced and offers all the music my family listens too (and it's convenient). All the competitors pretty much offer the same content and that's how streaming services should be.

I remember back in the day using eMule and BitChe (to look for torrents). Now I'm using Deluge as my torrent client and I I get my torrents from 1337x. What sites are you guys using?

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[–] finestnothing@lemmy.world 43 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (4 children)

Expanding from just torrents - I highly recommend looking into usenet! Downside, you have to pay for a good indexer. You can get a one time purchase depending on what site you go to, mine is ~$80 per year. After that, set up your nzb/Usenet download client (I recommend sabnzb, these are all free), then you can troll through that for movies, tv, etc like a torrent site. Generally it's more reliable, and if you find something on there you can download it and it'll max out your download speed (if you let it) instead of getting single seeder torrents that get stalled.

Want to get (slightly) techier but much better? Get Radarr for movies, Sonarr for TV shows, lidarr for music, and readarr for books. (There's also whisparr for porn, mylar3 for comics, Bazarr for subtitles and others, but I haven't felt a need to run these yet) Basically you can find movies, tv, etc that you want and "monitor" them, and let the program do the rest. They scan multiple sources (Usenet and torrent sites) that you setup for the content you want, compare it to filters you put in place (quality, number of seeders, age, number of other downloads, etc) and download it for you. New movie that isn't hd yet? It can grab a webrip or lower def version for you, and automatically replace it with a 1080p version when it's available. You can also grab prowlarr to manage your indexers (nzb site torrent sites) across all of your apps so you have one source of truth.

My setup:

  • Indexers in prowlarr Nzbgeek (paid, mentioned above) 1337x Pirate bay (Some other misc torrent sites)
  • Download clients Qbittorrent (for torrents) Sabnzb (for usenet)
  • Frontend apps Radarr - movie manager Sonarr - tv manager Readarr - book manager Lidarr - music manager - no longer use, switched to paying for Tidal Plex - media server to aggregate and stream the video files from above Calibre - media server for ebooks only

I may be a pirate, but I do it with class and comfort.

[–] dutchkimble@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Add Nzb360 to this and your pirate life will truly be class

[–] ellesper@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)
[–] RanceMcGrew@infosec.pub 2 points 1 year ago

Forgot all about LunaSea, thanks for the reminder!

[–] abbadon420@lemm.ee 2 points 1 year ago

Comfort is so easy. I'v only started using Plex, which is not much effort at all, but it gives so much comfort. My subtitles are always in sync now!

[–] assa123@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

What did you use as your music manager before Tidal?

[–] finestnothing@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I used lidarr for getting and maintaining the music, and Plex for streaming it. I switched to tidal since the effort of individually selecting songs/albums to download before I could listen to them was far more than the $9/month cost of streaming the music. If you don't like expanding your music library then downloading it is fine (like if you only listen to a few artists and it doesn't change) but my taste in music changes with my mood so I was having to download classic rock, blues and jazz, pop, and classical. Steaming is just a hell of a lot easier than downloading, at least for discovering new music

[–] assa123@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago
[–] Chuckleberry_Finn@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Do you have a good guide for setting up your qbittorrent with the arrs? Ive had NZBget working flawlessly for about a year now but haven't had the time/focus to figure out the right way to handle the torrent side of things.

[–] finestnothing@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

I didn't use a guide actually, but here are the steps!

Get qbittorrent configured for normal use (up/down limit, root folder, etc

Enable the webui in qbittorrent. Once done, you should be able to access it at localhost:{port} from your browser, or from {host_ip}.{port} from any other device on your network

Add qbittorrent as a download client for your arr apps just like your nzb downloader (but selecting torrent). I can't remember if you have to do this individually or if prowlarr can handle it, I think prowlarr can handle it so you don't have to do it multiple times though.

Pass in localhost or the IP of the host machine and the port when you're setting it up so it knows where to connect it. You may also need the username and password you made (unless you use bypass on localhost or whitelisted ips)

And that's about it! It will submit the torrent downloads to qbittorrent for you and manage them like sabnzb/nzbget do for nzb.

Hope this helps! It is a super easy process to setup thankfully, if you run into any roadblocks that a basic Google can't solve I'd be happy to try to help