Show HN: Every single torrent is on this website

infohash.lol

131 points by tdjsnelling 2 days ago


recursive - 2 days ago

I don't understand why so many people seem so fascinated by constructions like the library of Babel. Yes it contains the answers to all your questions, but there are some significant drawbacks.

* It has more wrong information than right information, with no way to tell the difference.

* If you had an oracle that could tell you how to get to the book you need, the navigation instructions to get to the book will be at least as long as the book, on average.

hackingonempty - 2 days ago

> There is no validation that an infohash corresponds to a real torrent—any client can announce anything. Many crawlers and indexers continuously pick random or sequential infohashes and announce themselves so they can later detect other announcers, and malicious clients or poorly written bots can spam the network with anything they like.

There are also valid clients for completely unrelated protocols using the BitTorrent DHT to find each other.

gwbas1c - 2 days ago

I think this would be an even better joke if the site was a setup for plausible deniability for piracy.

"I didn't share that! It was on infohash.lol first!"

wongarsu - 2 days ago

For a more practical version (containing only infohashes that are observed on the dht) there is bitmagnet [1]. No public instances though, you have to self-host

1: https://github.com/bitmagnet-io/bitmagnet

mk12345 - 2 days ago

Very cool, reminds me of the library of Babel (of which you also made a version! [1]).

I made something similar a while ago, the Hdd of Babel [2], which contains all possible files(*) , and wrote down some thoughts on it [3].

I really like how it makes us think about the nature of information.

[1] https://libraryofbabel.app/

[2] https://mkaandorp.github.io/hdd-of-babel/

[3] https://dev.to/mkaandorp/this-website-contains-pictures-of-y...

freetonik - 2 days ago

Love this idea of generating pages based on some strictly defined enumeration. Reminds me of https://everyuuid.com/

bArray - 2 days ago

Does anybody know what they are using in the browser to perform DHT?

In theory this could be used to share torrent links by a different reference (ideally you could also add an anchor too). Somebody else could have a page that takes keywords and points you to pages hosted on the site.

avidiax - 2 days ago

> Many crawlers and indexers continuously pick random or sequential infohashes and announce themselves so they can later detect other announcers

I can't follow the logic here. How does this detect other announcers?

mikepurvis - 2 days ago

I wonder how many times on average you'd need to click the "random" button in order to stumble on a page that contains a real torrent.

ratelimitsteve - 2 days ago

shades of my younger days on kazaa, excitedly download a file called 'hacking-tool-every-possible-ip-address.txt"

throwaway894345 - 2 days ago

Is this legal? I’m of the impression that publishing infohashes to copyrighted content is illegal under DMCA?

lxe - 2 days ago

So there is almost zero chance that opening up a particular page is going to land on an actual torrent.

noman-land - 2 days ago

All the torrents are in π.