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NZB files are supported by most popular newsreaders, including NZBGet for Mac and Linux, and NewsBin Pro for PC. There are now also several dedicated alt.binaries.nzb newsgroups. More dramatically, NZB allows web searches of files posted to Usenet, making Usenet almost as easy to use as eMule or Kazaa.
This new file format and the rise of commercial high-bandwidth Usenet services -- such as NewsGroups and Usenet.com -- are fueling the revival of Usenet. Pirates now are discovering, to their surprise, that the old newsgroup system, patched with modern technology, outperforms most other P2P networks. "The download speed butchers any other system you use to download data," said Gilgamesh, a U.K.-based downloader currently moving part of his operation to newsgroups. "A lot of new servers can shift data as fast as you're prepared to accept it." Part of the performance boost comes from the way Usenet acts like a bulletin board system. "With standard peer-to-peer, you're a slave to the peer who's making the file available," said Gilgamesh. "Sometimes you have to wait for them to be online. On a newsgroup, once the file is there, it's there all the time -- at least until it scrolls off the server." And best of all, for pirates like Gilgamesh, Usenet kills the inherent socialism of P2P. While BitTorrent and eMule demand that you share data to download it, Usenet imposes no such restriction. "You don't have to share anything," said Gilgamesh. "Everyone downloads. Everyone is a leecher." And this is the big advantage for those seeking to evade the copyright police. "Historically, the RIAA have targeted those who share, not those who download," said Toby Lewis of MusicAlly, a digital music consultancy that advises the record industry on technology issues. "So, yes, technically it could be 'safer' for people to download from Usenet." Whether the RIAA and MPAA actually have their sights trained on Usenet is unclear. The RIAA declined to comment when asked about its policy toward Usenet piracy. But Lewis believes newsgroups are still very much under the radar. "Though the copyright industries boast significantly improved geekery and monitoring technology, Usenet remains relatively unmonitored," he said. Even if the industry groups did turn their attention to it, he said, it's hard to envisage how they could stop it. "Websites hosting BitTorrent files are easy single points for the RIAA to attack and shut down," Lewis said. "Usenet is such a massive sprawling entity, with thousands of points of entry. How would you stop something like that?" Story source: wired.com. |
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