torrentfreak.com — In a bid to conquer the web bit-by-bit, The Pirate Bay has launched a new feature to allow it to penetrate the social networking site Facebook. With only a single click Facebook users can add their favorite torrents to their profile to share them with friends. The IFPI is not pleased with the new feature, while FaceBook declined to comment.
Mar 28, 2009 View in Crawl 4
colinemersonMar 29, 2009
you have got to be kiddin? i didnt know facebook indexed torrents!! :)
douglasr007Mar 29, 2009
It's not a restriction, it's a feature!
biosfear01Mar 30, 2009
usenet > torrents
meghalcMar 30, 2009
Everyone needs a daily dose of torrents!
Closed AccountMar 31, 2009
***don't misunderestimate* people's stupidity.fiksed it
Closed AccountMar 31, 2009
I believe it was that guy in Austria who trapped his kids in his basement and raped them for years.
fcukthisgameMar 31, 2009
The .torrent file technically isn't illegal to download or link to. Now, granted, if it's Backdoor Sluts 12, you shouldn't be sharing it on facebook.
harvardstud2009Apr 6, 2009
Extremely interesting, relevant clever article on the mischaracterization and underestimation of the Facebook's role in contemporary society, despite its seeming triviality by Greg Atwan, writer of "The Facebook Book" and "Privilege":<a class="user" href="http://bigthink.com/blog_entries/563-One-Poke-Over-The-Line">http://bigthink.com/blog_entries/563-One-Poke-Over ...</a>Excerpt:"Facebook is the largest photo-sharing site on the Internet—easily beating out dedicated snapshot studio Flickr. This is no college-quad feat: Photos are only increasingly critical in spreading information, and Facebook’s photojournalistic capacity is still untapped. (It’s not unreasonable to imagine that this Depression’s Agee and Evans will have nothing but a Facebook album.)More importantly, it’s the youth’s medium of choice for sending messages (it’s more popular than email), planning events, and organizing politically. Other sites (Friendster) have made good in the short-term by offering the sort of space Grigoriadis describes for nugatory gossip and amorous overtures, but Facebook has won the battle by getting its users addicted to its infrastructure."