

You don’t need a private tracker. I use one because I have music needs that public trackers cannot satisfy.
In fact, I DO NOT recommend a private tracker unless you’re ABSOLUTELY sure that public trackers cannot satisfy your needs.
You don’t need a private tracker. I use one because I have music needs that public trackers cannot satisfy.
In fact, I DO NOT recommend a private tracker unless you’re ABSOLUTELY sure that public trackers cannot satisfy your needs.
But I don’t need the entire “carefully curated library”? I only need the music that appeals to me, that is, the music I’ve already downloaded and seeded. Even if the tracker goes down, at least I’ll have access to the files I’ve stored to my local storage.
With Spotify, unless you paid for Premium to download the songs, you don’t even have that guarantee. If the service/your account is gone, you lose everything.
What exactly do you mean by “a single point of failure”? Do you mean that if the tracker goes down, I cannot pirate more music?
How is that different from Spotify? Does Spotify not have “a single point of failure”? At least with RED, I keep all my FLAC files even if the tracker gets busted.
Servo is an experimental browser engine developed by Mozilla Research using Rust to enhance performance, safety, and parallel processing in modern web rendering. The project showcased features like a concurrent layout system and asynchronous JavaScript execution.
Around 2017, Mozilla shifted focus to other projects and laid off several developers, leading to the gradual abandonment of Servo. However, a dedicated community later formed the Servo 501©(3) nonprofit to continue developing Servo’s technology and ideas.
Verso is an experimental browser built on top of the Servo browser engine. Currently, both softwares are experimental and pre-alpha developer software at best.
Fair enough, I forgot to explicitly mention that 😅
Here’s the interview site if anyone wants: https://interviewfor.red/. It’s actually quite easy.
Personally, I just pirate the FLAC files from RED, and play them with VLC. Several advantages to this:
I’m sorry if this isn’t the response you’re looking for, but as other people have already given recommendations for alternatives, I thought I would just give my 2 cents.
BiglyBT is also open source and available on Android (never used it myself).
BiglyBT is advertised as the most feature-rich free-as-in-freedom option for Android. However, it seems unmaintained, especially when compared to the desktop version.
Also, it has a HORRENDOUS UI. I prefer function over form so it isn’t important for me, but some folks might find that important.
I once did an extensive investigation into this topic, and the only maintained, free-as-in-freedom option I could find was LibreTorrent.
Tried it, would not recommend.
New response just dropped.
That’s when you switch to an even more obscure kernel
Really hoping Dark Mail actually becomes a thing at some point.
The last commit was 2 years ago: https://github.com/lavabit/magma/graphs/code-frequency
redacted.sh, no time machine needed
Yes, some parts of the project were integrated into Gecko. But the project itself was abandoned. The original goal was to replace Gecko, not to patch some parts of it.