Hide your personal activity in torrents

There is no secret many of users are downloading movies and other stuff using more and more popular P2P technology – torrent. There is one small problem with torrents – some anti-piracy organizations can track IP address of party, and make some problems… Today we will show, how to hide IP address and download anonymously using TorrentPrivacy.com.

TorrentPrivacy.com – that’s the home page of the service, they make nice video tutorial, how to communication is done. They offer modified pre-configured uTorrent client, which uses SSH protocol with 128 bit encryption, so nobody can see what are you really downloading, and also helps against P2P traffic shaping. All P2P communication is done with TorrentPrivacy servers located in Europe, USA and Canada, your IP is completely hidden, so you are safe while downloading torrents.

They also configured web-proxy, so you can visit more than 300 torrent sites anonymously.

It is not free service – which basically cannot be free, but we thing prices are fair – for 100 Mbit/s and no bandwidth capping. Prices:

  • 3 months of service 24,95 USD
  • 6 months of service 44,95 USD
  • 12 months of service 79,95 USD

TorrentPrivacy offers 2 payment systems for all types of subscriptions at the moment. They are CommerceGate billing (it allows to pay using the credit card) and PayPal.

We confirm that TorrentPrivacy.com is real service which helps torrent users get private while downloading through Bittorrent. We tested Torrentprivacy’s software solution and found it stable, user friendly and virus free.

We believe that in the age when all of us are being pushed for using Bittorrent TorrentPrivacy is the right thing in the right time. If you wish to hide your personal activity while downloading through Bittorrent, then TorrenPrivacy.com is what you need for sure!

Start the discussion at forum.opensubtitles.com

Show archived comments ( 29 Responses )

Read more

90fm trivia

The Role of Subtitles in Trivia Mastery

The 90FM Trivia Contest, hosted annually by the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point’s student-run radio station WWSP 90FM, stands as a testament to the enduring allure of trivia. Established in 1969, this 54-hour marathon challenges participants with a relentless stream of questions, demanding not only vast knowledge but also strategic resourcefulness. As teams gear up for “Trivia 55: NO LIMIT,” scheduled for April 11-13, 2025, the importance of diverse research tools becomes ever more apparent.

What can global subtitles reveal about how often – and how meaningfully – films say ‘I love you’?

New research by film data expert Stephen Follows uses subtitle data from OpenSubtitles to explore how often films include the phrase “I love you” and how characters respond when they hear it.

Drawing on over 72,000 English-language subtitle files from fiction feature films made between 1911 and 2022, the analysis reveals patterns in cinematic declarations of love across genres and decades.