• benny@reddthat.com
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    10 hours ago

    The only viruses I ever got were on irc warez (pretty harmless too). I got smart by the time torrents came around. lol

    • hexagonwin@lemmy.today
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      12 hours ago

      tbh it’s find to hard good torrents for non-english stuff these days, so those extensions are kinda useful for ripping off local pirate streaming sites

      • Alvaro@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        11 hours ago

        Find a local private tracker, most countries have something like that (I believe) and usually has all the localized content you need

        • hexagonwin@lemmy.today
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          10 hours ago

          i’m not aware of any decent one. torrenting is not popular here anymore, the ones that exist are extremely sketchy, on decline and mostly copies stuff from english language trackers.

      • Fushuan [he/him]@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        10 hours ago

        Dunno, I usually watch stuff with the original voices subbed to Spanish. Most series are pirated from streaming services subtitles included, and for the ones that have no subtitles I have Bazarr linked to opensubtitles and that’s fine.

        If you want dubbed stuff tho, that’s harder I agree.

  • LiveLM@lemmy.zip
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    20 hours ago

    Yeah the viruses live in these wacko extensions y’all are using now

      • yeehaw@lemmy.ca
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        16 hours ago

        The meme suggests extensions. Lol. That’s an odd flex. Sounds manual and tedious as fuck compared to arr/sick rage/etc

        “Move along grandma, your automobile is no good, we use camels”

      • dermanus@lemmy.ca
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        20 hours ago

        Thats my attitude. Torrents have risks but so do random Russian streaming sites. By now I have it going with Jellyfin and *arr and I barely have to think about it

        • glibg10b@lemmy.zip
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          18 hours ago

          Torrents aren’t risky for movies as long as you don’t have “Hide file extensions” turned on. Unless someone’s wasting their zero-day video player exploit on you, which is unlikely, you wont find malware in an mp4 or mkv unless it’s actually an exe in disguise

          • Cassa@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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            15 hours ago

            sry, but that’s just straight up wrong. You can hide malware in video files (both mp4 and mkv are great containers!) and you can disguise your virus as a video.

            • # whoami@sh.itjust.works
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              13 hours ago

              But malware wrapped as video (or any other doc or media format) still needs to be executed, right? So if you don’t give that file execute permission (which Linux doesn’t give by default) and open it through media player or something, could said potential malware still run? I thought it couldn’t unless the player itself is vulnerable

              • Cassa@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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                11 hours ago

                no, these things would try to exploit the program that read them.

                it’s not a likely attack vector, you need both a malware file, and the right program trying to read it. it might not also be transferrable across different os.

                so yes, it needs a media player to attack. https://nvd.nist.gov/vuln/detail/CVE-2021-25801 this one f.ex

    • Naho_Zako@piefed.zip
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      15 hours ago

      I’d be fucking nervous to torrent a game tbh, or at least a game that runs on PC. Like I’m not as concerned about my hacked 3DS getting a virus but, to each their own I guess…

      Also I basically only torrent anime/shows and music so far…

      • Aceticon@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        12 hours ago

        Gaming on Linux via Wine is great in that sense - not only is most Windows software not really designed to connect to the Linux side of things when running on top of an adapter layer like Wine/Proton (which are NOT emulators so don’t sandbox anything) but you have way better security tools and a kernel designed with it in mind in Linux, so for example you can actually start your games inside a proper sandbox like Firejail to block it from accessing stuff outside the wine instance directory.

        On the other hand, forget about all the nice automated configuration scripts that just make the Windows game seamlessly install and work in Linux when installing a pirated repack: you have to actually understand how Wine and Wine-tricks works as you’re likely to have to dig through logs of a game that’s not running to figure out which DLLs are missing from the wine instance and install them yourself.

          • Aceticon@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            8 hours ago

            In all fairness, I’ve had that issue only with the first game I pirated to play in Linux, which I actually own but the official version won’t run in Linux (under Steam, so that was using Proton) hence why I got a pirate version (which, once a couple of missing DLLs were added, worked fine - so the pirated version is the superior product).

            My point does stand that if you’re used to using things like Steam or Lutris to run your games in Linux, with pirated repacks there’s no help from scripts that make sure there are no missing DLLs, so either it’s a recent game from a good repacker like Dodi or you’re probably going to have to check the logs for missing DLLs and add them via Winetricks.

            Switching to proton-ge as the runner in Lutris does often solve the problem running a game in Linux (pirated or otherwise), just not always.

            • mizule@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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              7 hours ago

              Mhm that is fair. For me, with repacks, the only thing i had to do was add WINE_LARGE_ADDRESS_AWARE=0 as an environment variable in my prefix and then i had no more issues.

    • Fushuan [he/him]@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      13 hours ago

      How is it even downloading that? Wouldn’t the sonarr quality profiles grab an actual video file? An exe has no resolution for instance.

      Also in my case most video files are transpiled automatically so jellyfin has to work less when serving, so the transpiled would fail. Shit would never run unguarded.

    • ItsNotImportant24@lemmy.ml
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      22 hours ago

      Go into your torrent client like qbittorrent settings and you can enter unwanted extensions, *.scr, *.exe, etc. Same if you use a usenet downloader like sabnzbd or nzbget. Then if sonarr or radarr attempt to download an unwanted extension your torrent downloader will not download it.