this post was submitted on 07 Mar 2026
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[–] MnemonicBump@lemmy.dbzer0.com 18 points 7 hours ago (16 children)
[–] Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca 24 points 7 hours ago* (last edited 6 hours ago) (14 children)

This was one of my biggest motivations for moving to usenet. I don't like exposing myself by seeding. I have a giant folder full of copyright notices forwarded by my ISP because of it, and I don't want to pay for a vpn as it's far more expensive than usenet and just moves the problem/target to the vpn provider.

But an ssl connection to a usenet server goes unnoticed... Plus WAY faster download speeds, far more consistency in available files, and less spam/garbage content (at least in my experience, anecdotal).


Torrents took anywhere from an hour to multiple days before either completing or giving up and trying a different torrent. And then there's the seeding process ontop.

NZBs (usenet) take at the very most, 5min to finish or fail, at which point a new one can be tried automatically by sonarr/radarr if it had failed. Requests for media are now pretty much always ready to watch within 25min of requesting, and most of that is waiting for the library scan to trigger (I'm using SAMBA so filesystem updates can't trigger scans automatically, they're on a timer instead)

[–] affenlehrer@feddit.org 5 points 6 hours ago (5 children)

I don't understand why usenet is a thing. It really liked it in the early days and it was basically like lemmy. Groups for different topics and also federated. Now it's used to distribute warez but since it wasn't made for it so stuff has to be base64 encoded and split into pieces....

[–] amnesiacsardine@sh.itjust.works 3 points 4 hours ago (1 children)

so stuff has to be base64 encoded and split into pieces…

You say that like it's an issue. With modern Usenet binary downloaders (SABnzbd) and indexers, you don't have to browse groups. In fact you most likely can't. The indexer provides you with the map where the files are located (the nzb files) and SABnzbd finds them, starts downloading them, checks if all files are downloadable and keeps going or stops if there aren't even enough files available to attempt a repair.

All of that is abstracted from the user. You tell Radarr/Sonarr what movie/series you want and it will handle everything, from querying the indexers to passing the nzb along to SABnzbd and to automatically restart the process if somehow the download fails.

It's a shame no one uses Usenet for its original purpose though. It was reddit before the internet itself.

[–] affenlehrer@feddit.org 1 points 2 hours ago

From a user perspective it's not a problem. I'm just sad what an abomination my beloved pre-reddit has become. Also it's super weird like using bicycles for international shipping instead of container ships without telling the user and hiding the whole process in the background.

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