Most can bind it an IP even if they don’t bind to an interface. I use rtorrent and airvpn/wireguard. Wireguard uses a static IP address for the client and rtorrent can bind to that IP. If the VPN goes down (which is very rare in my experience) rtorrent stays running but it won’t work on any other IP address.
I installed 1.0… all 23 discs that I downloaded at 2400bps because I couldn’t afford a faster modem.
If you prefer usenet, work your way into a few good private trackers. If you prefer torrents, get an invite to a couple of indexers. Backup methods are key to success.
Please don’t torrent over tor. I2p was designed with p2p and torrenting in mind but the topology and routing scheme used in Tor makes p2p file sharing painfully slow and drags down the performance of the whole network.
Airvpn is my go-to. Tho I also have an account with pia. Airvpn for PTP is pretty simple to set up, has great support for Linux, and you can choose from multiple protocols and ports pretty easy. Their port forwarding is way simpler to setup on a server then pia.
Pia is great for me to use on my phone/laptop tho. Their client is much more ment to be interactive as opposed to set and forget.
Airvpn certainly isn’t the fastest but the community is awesome and support is amazing.
It sounds like a lie to me. Everyone knows there are no good parts of JavaScript.