All posts in Announcements

Reports Of Our Death Have Been Greatly Exaggerated

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Like many of you, we’ve been following Netflix with great interest. We are subscribers. We are fans. We believe in the work that they are doing. And we support their effort to innovate and evolve digital distribution, in ways that are sustainable for creators, other rights-holders and fans. That said, we were surprised by some of the comments made by Ted Sarandos recently during an interview with Stuff.tv.

We strongly agree with his perspective that making more good content more accessible will curb piracy. However, we want to take a moment to correct two of his comments. The first issue is the application of BitTorrent as a synonym for Internet piracy. The second is the assertion that BitTorrent traffic drops as Netflix is introduced to new markets. Neither statement is true. Continue reading →

BitTorrent Sync Crosses One Petabyte Milestone

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On April 23, we opened up a little Alpha project called BitTorrent Sync. The response from users has been: awesome. Together, they’ve been helping build a better way to sync.

BitTorrent Sync was designed to solve for what we see as real, fundamental challenges to data synchronization: limitations on speed, size, and space; limitations on file security and dependency on cloud infrastructure. Because BitTorrent Sync is based on distributed technology, you can sync as many big files as you want. Transfers are encrypted, and information isn’t stored on any server, or in the cloud. Your content belongs to you, and stays on devices of your choice. That’s the way syncing should work.

Turns out, it’s working for you guys, too. To date, more than a petabyte of anonymous data has been synced between BitTorrent Sync users. A petabyte! To put that into context, the Internet Archive, one of the world wide web’s largest repositories of media, houses 10 petabytes of data. Sync is massive. And it’s growing. Over 70 terabytes of anonymous data are synced daily.

But Sync isn’t just working in ways we imagined. It’s working in creative ways that we never could have predicted. A hacker team at TechCrunch Disrupt built a private distributed blog platform off Sync. Users are sending us on scavenger hunts. We’re inspired. And we’re excited about what’s next for Sync.

If you haven’t yet tried BitTorrent Sync, you can grab the open Alpha here. Happy Syncing, people.

Update

Sync was built for secure sharing. While we have general statistics about the app, we don’t have any access to private information.

The client reports back anonymous usage statistics in the same way our other clients do. Sync uses this call to check if there’s a new build available. This call also contains some anonymous statistics that allow us to understand how Sync performs, and how it’s being used; data transferred directly, through relay, size of folders, and number of files synced.

This is the only information we collect, and we left it open intentionally – so that people could see the data we’re collecting. That way, it can be easily verified that we don’t have access to any private information. Read more here.

The BitTorrent Acceleration Program: Supporting Startups

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Brave inventors, intrepid tinkerers, awesome doers, and startups everywhere: we’ve got a job for you.

Over the course of the past few months, we’ve been busy in the Lab. We’ve been hard at work on a solution for personal file management; opening up an Alpha version of BitTorrent Sync. We’ve been looking at ways to streamline creative collaboration; using a simple file delivery service we call SoShare. We’ve been exploring search prioritization; helping artists find visibility via BitTorrent Surf. And we’ve been experimenting with the storytelling and monetization potential of BitTorrent publishing; via content releases with media innovators: authors like Tim Ferriss, studios like Cinedigm.

Our goal is to create a more sustainable distribution model for the Internet’s creators and fans.

We’re in this together.

And we want your help.

We’re opening up our innovation lab to new media startups. If you have a publicly available product in sound, film, live streaming, media sharing, or peer-to-peer technologies, we’ll work with you to accelerate your idea’s success. Continue reading →

BitTorrent Sync Alpha Now Open To All

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In January, we opened up a pre-Alpha program for a new syncing tool called BitTorrent Sync. (We are unapologetic literalists here.)

Sync is unlimited, secure file-syncing. You can use it for remote backup. Or, you can use it to transfer large folders of personal media between users and machines; editors and collaborators. It’s simple. It’s free. It’s the awesome power of P2P, applied to file-syncing.

20 thousand people signed on to help us test Sync out; syncing over 200 terabytes of data along the way. With thanks to our intrepid pre-Alpha users, we’re ready to open up the Sync to everyone. Here’s the deal. Continue reading →

Arthur Newman, Independent Film, And How Hollywood Can Work With BitTorrent

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On April 26th, Arthur Newman, starring Colin Firth and Emily Blunt, hits theaters. And you’ll be able to catch an exclusive preview five days early, right here on BitTorrent.

In partnership with Cinedigm, we’re giving BitTorrent users a first look at the film; marking the first time we’ve ever worked with a major studio to distribute media. It’s about to get real. Curious about how BitTorrent can work to help filmmakers? Tune in on Monday for more.

20 Million BitTorrent Mobile Users, And Counting

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Just a few short months ago, we hit ten million mobile users. Whew. Just a few minutes ago, we hit twenty million. Internet high five, y’all. Especially you, lucky downloader number 20,000,000. And thanks to everyone who’s joined our mobile family along the way.

Today, we have two top 20 free media and video applications in the US Google Play store: the µTorrent Beta App (#6), and the BitTorrent App (#20). Our µTorrent Beta App is currently the top 5 free media and video app in 16 countries, and listed in the top 10 in 27 countries.

20 million people are now getting their downloads to go. Care to join them? You can grab the µTorrent Android app right here. Give it a shot, and let us know what you think. We’re still in Beta. Your feedback and ideas will help us build something (even more) awesome.

Happy downloading,

The BitTorrent team.

BitTorrent Surf Beta Launches Today On Chrome And Firefox

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In early January, we launched an Alpha of BitTorrent Surf, a Chrome plugin that brings BitTorrent to your browser.

Today, we’re ready to catch bigger waves. Yep. Puns. We went there. With big thanks and props to our Alpha users, we’re ready to release the Beta version of BitTorrent Surf. Continue reading →

BitTorrent Remote: Access BitTorrent On iOS And Android Devices

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Got a torrent you want to download, but you’re away from your home PC? Want to grab a documentary for movie night, before you check out of work? This happens to us all the time. And that’s why we made BitTorrent Remote.

BitTorrent Remote is a remote control that lets you access BitTorrent on your home computer, from any Internet-connected device. You can manage downloads wherever you are, and even shift them over to play on your iPhone, iPad, or Android tablets.

Continue reading →

SXSW Update: BitTorrent Live Now An Open Beta

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For anyone with mobile video or webcams, for anyone in the moment, on the ground, or on the front lines; for everyone with the need to break news or break it down in real time: BitTorrent Live is now open. Get involved.

Continue reading →

SF Music Tech: The Challenge To Creative Sustainability

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Earlier this week, we got the chance to hang out at SF MusicTech, talk shop, and demo some new projects. The theme of the conference may have been unofficial, but it was everywhere: how can technology support the arts?

And it was probably less of a question than a mandate.

Continue reading →