Below is the full list of the top ten most-visited (unique) torrent sites at the start of the new year. The list is based on various traffic reports. Please note that this list is created to keep track of the popularity of these sites over time. We do not recommend or endorse using any of these sites. Some are known to link to malicious ads, at least incidentally.
Downloading torrents is risky for you: your IP and leaked private data being actively tracked by your ISP and Government Agencies. Protect yourself from expensive lawsuits and fines NOW! You must use a VPN. It is the only way to download torrents fully anonymous by encrypting all traffic with zero logs.
North Shore full movie torrent
Before entering art school, Rick Kane sets out to surf the big wave season on the north shore of Oahu, Hawaii, after winning a surfing contest in an Arizona wave pool by his home. Once in Hawaii, he immediately finds out that he knows nothing about the local habits, customs, or pecking order which cause him some starting problems. After being robbed by the local surf gang, he has a chance meeting with famous surfboard shaper Chandler, and after figuring out they have an artistic connection, Chandler offers Rick a place to sleep and something to eat. Chandler teaches him how to "read" the big waves and the difference between 'soul surfers' and those who surf for fame and money. He also manages to get the attention of a beautiful young native, which further stirs the pot with the "locals" but in the end gives him the courage and determination to take what he has learned from Chandler and surf the big waves like he had dreamed he could.
NordVPN has specially configured servers designed to provide the best-possible torrenting experience, so there's no reason you wouldn't be able to use popular P2P clients like uTorrent and BitTorrent.\nHowever, it's important to note that you have to use the full app, since NordVPN's browser extension (like most others) only encrypts traffic sent to and from your web browser.","author":"@type":"Person","name":"Sam Cook","description":"Samuel Cook is a freelance writer who covers a wide range of topics, including internet privacy, security, data journalism, and digital content streaming. He can often be neck-deep in data visualizations.\n","url":"https:\/\/www.comparitech.com\/author\/sam-cook\/"}},"@type":"Question","name":"What should I do if my ISP is throttling my bandwidth?","answerCount":1,"acceptedAnswer":"@type":"Answer","text":"ISPs tend to throttle bandwidth when the user is doing something they don't like, usually a data-intensive task like streaming or torrenting. It's easy for them to target specific activities too, since P2P traffic has a different data pattern than say, day to day web-browsing.\nA VPN helps by encrypting every piece of data you send, making it impossible for your ISP to tell what you get up to online. Since they can't tell what you're doing, it becomes much more difficult for them to justify throttling your speeds.\u00a0","author":"@type":"Person","name":"Sam Cook","description":"Samuel Cook is a freelance writer who covers a wide range of topics, including internet privacy, security, data journalism, and digital content streaming. He can often be neck-deep in data visualizations.\n","url":"https:\/\/www.comparitech.com\/author\/sam-cook\/","@type":"Question","name":"Does NordVPN use obfuscated servers?","answerCount":1,"acceptedAnswer":"@type":"Answer","text":"The good news is that NordVPN does offer various specialty servers including obfuscated servers. These serve to bypass VPN blocks by disguising your VPN traffic as regular web traffic (this is done by changing your data packets). To connect to one of NordVPN\u2019s obfuscated servers, all you need to do is locate \u201cspecialty servers\u201d in the app\u2019s menu. Under this, you\u2019ll find \u201cobfuscated servers\u201d and have various locations to choose from.","author":"@type":"Person","name":"Sam Cook","description":"Samuel Cook is a freelance writer who covers a wide range of topics, including internet privacy, security, data journalism, and digital content streaming. He can often be neck-deep in data visualizations.\n","url":"https:\/\/www.comparitech.com\/author\/sam-cook\/","@type":"Question","name":"Can I torrent on non P2P servers of NordVPN?","answerCount":1,"acceptedAnswer":"@type":"Answer","text":"You can torrent on any NordVPN server. However, NordVPN\u2019s specialty P2P servers are optimized for torrenting and better equipped to handle large transfers of data. As such, you\u2019re likely to encounter higher speeds for much faster downloading of files. Regardless of the NordVPN server you use (P2P or non P2P), you\u2019ll benefit from unlimited bandwidth so you\u2019re free to torrent as much as you like.","author":"@type":"Person","name":"Sam Cook","description":"Samuel Cook is a freelance writer who covers a wide range of topics, including internet privacy, security, data journalism, and digital content streaming. He can often be neck-deep in data visualizations.\n","url":"https:\/\/www.comparitech.com\/author\/sam-cook\/","@type":"Question","name":"Which torrent clients work best with NordVPN?","answerCount":1,"acceptedAnswer":"@type":"Answer","text":"Most torrent clients will work fine with NordVPN, particularly because it offers optimized P2P servers. The most popular torrent clients include BitTorrent and uTorrent, both of which work well with NordVPN. Regardless of which torrent client you use, we recommend you follow the step-by-step instructions laid out in this post in order to ensure you can safely torrent with NordVPN.","author":"@type":"Person","name":"Sam Cook","description":"Samuel Cook is a freelance writer who covers a wide range of topics, including internet privacy, security, data journalism, and digital content streaming. He can often be neck-deep in data visualizations.\n","url":"https:\/\/www.comparitech.com\/author\/sam-cook\/","@type":"Question","name":"Which devices can I torrent on with NordVPN?","answerCount":1,"acceptedAnswer":"@type":"Answer","text":"NordVPN offers apps for all major platforms (Windows, Mac, Android, iOS, and Linux). Furthermore, popular torrent clients such as uTorrent and BitTorrent are also available on these operating systems. This means that once you\u2019ve installed the appropriate NordVPN and torrent client apps, you can use all of your desktop and mobile devices to safely torrent with NordVPN.","author":"@type":"Person","name":"Sam Cook","description":"Samuel Cook is a freelance writer who covers a wide range of topics, including internet privacy, security, data journalism, and digital content streaming. He can often be neck-deep in data visualizations.\n","url":"https:\/\/www.comparitech.com\/author\/sam-cook\/"]} "@context":"http:\/\/schema.org","@type":"BreadcrumbList","itemListElement":["@type":"ListItem","position":1,"name":"Home","item":"https:\/\/www.comparitech.com\/","@type":"ListItem","position":2,"name":"Blog","item":"https:\/\/www.comparitech.com\/blog\/","@type":"ListItem","position":3,"name":"VPN & Privacy","item":"https:\/\/www.comparitech.com\/blog\/vpn-privacy\/","@type":"ListItem","position":4,"name":"Can I use NordVPN for torrenting?","item":"https:\/\/www.comparitech.com\/blog\/vpn-privacy\/nordvpn-torrenting\/"]BlogVPN & PrivacyCan I use NordVPN for torrenting? We are funded by our readers and may receive a commission when you buy using links on our site. Can I use NordVPN for torrenting? How to safely torrent with NordVPN Not every VPN is suitable for torrenting. Some don't allow it, others are too slow and then there's those that fall short on privacy. So is NordVPN a good choice for torrenting? Sam Cook Data journalist, privacy advocate and cord-cutting expert UPDATED: January 19, 2023
NordVPN is offering a fully-featured risk-free 30-day trial if you sign up at this page. You can use this highly-versatile, no-logs VPN without any restrictions for a month. That's plenty of time to try out its torrenting-optimized servers and see what all the fuss is about!
By Fred Barbash and Caren Bohan WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. House of Representatives has rediscovered the formula for peace, harmony and an end to gridlock after a month of partisan warfare: $8 billion worth of harbor dredging, dam and lock construction and other federal waterway improvements. The bill got only modest attention in the aftermath of a government shutdown and the technological woes of President Obama's health law when it passed last week by a vote of 417-3. No error there: 224 Republicans and 193 Democrats, at each others' throats for the past five years, joined together in what Representative Virginia Foxx called a "love feast." Pork it was not, members insisted, rejecting the old pejorative term in favor of "infrastructure" spending, and garnishing the title with another word, "reform," that's also in vogue. Nor, by members' definition, were these earmarks, the pet projects inserted by individual members that have become taboo symbols of lavish Washington spending. Whatever the jargon, the Water Resources Reform and Development Act was a reminder of the allure of traditional home-district spending and its healing power in an age of division. The bill included projects that would benefit about half of the state delegations in Congress, by a rough count. For Georgia, there was an expansion of Savannah Harbor; for Florida, improvements to the ports of Jacksonville and Canaveral, not to mention the Everglades Restoration Plan. Texas and Louisiana won approval for the dredging of the Sabine-Neches Waterway, 79 miles billed as America's "energy gateway," and "the artery of southeast Texas." Authorizations went to North Carolina, California, the Mississippi Coast, Maryland, Florida, Illinois, Ohio, Kentucky, Tennessee and the entire Great Lakes region. In voting for the measure, small-government Tea Party faction members bucked conservative organizations, like the Heritage Foundation, that held sway over them during the October showdown that shutdown the government. And liberal Democrats bucked environmentalists, who expressed concerns about provisions designed to speed up the environmental impact assessments that sometimes slow down water projects. What is more, the Senate has already approved similar - though not identical - legislation and the White House, though skeptical, is not threatening a veto. "For all the hand wringing about the inability of Republicans and Democrats to get along in Washington, there is definitely one area in which they continue to get along and that is parochial projects," said Tad DeHaven, a former Capitol Hill policy adviser and now a budget analyst at the Cato Institute. BIPARTISAN REDEMPTION A dominant theme during the debate last week was redemption. Even those who said they had concerns about the bill said they would support it because of its bipartisan sponsorship, "something all too rare in Washington these days," said Elizabeth Esty, a Democrat of Connecticut. "I am proud to say that this bill reflects the bipartisan action that my constituents expect from Congress." But Americans in search of a do-something Congress should not get their hopes up. Water bills are unique: Tea Party or not, a member of Congress cannot go home and tell the locals that he voted against a deeper port or a shored-up beach. Most vote yes, issue a press release and if possible, go down to the jetty or the dam for a photo op. "The Peoria Lock and Dam is becoming a popular place for federal legislators to conduct news conferences," the Pekin Times reported in Illinois over the weekend after the third visit from a member of Congress in a few months. So powerful are the forces behind water bills that when President George W. Bush vetoed a $23 billion version in 2007 as "fiscally irresponsible," Congress overrode him, one of only six veto overrides in 25 years. Water bills are "not inherently" partisan, said Patrick Griffin, a former White House aide and now associate director for the Center for Congressional and Presidential studies at American University. "I'm not sure I would be betting a new era of cooperation simply on that vote," he said. Plus, authorizing projects is but the first step toward actually funding them. Actual spending must be approved by appropriations enacted separately by both houses of Congress. With the appropriations process broken down and replaced by temporary crisis-mode funding showdowns, it is possible that only a fraction of the money promised will ever be spent. PROJECTS ALREADY BACKLOGGED The Army Corps of Engineers, for which the money was authorized, already has a $60 billion construction backlog, as a skeptical White House pointed out in its response to the bill's passage. Indeed, the bill passed by the House deauthorized dozens of projects that had languished for years, enabling House conservatives to say they were offsetting the cost of the new projects by sacrificing the old, justification for adding the word "reform" to the title of the bill. But the questionable future of the newer projects got lost in the torrent of press releases that poured forth from members in the days following Thursday's House vote. Hailing the Savannah project, designed to deepen the Georgia harbor for supertanker use, Georgia Representative Tom Graves, a Republican Tea Party favorite, predicted that in no time, "those supertankers will arrive at the harbor full of goods, and Georgia business will make sure they leave full." The legislation "will allow larger ships to reach our ports and energy and manufacturing centers," said Texas Representative Randy Weber of the Sabine-Neches Waterway project, which aims to deepen the channel from 40 to 48 feet to accommodate larger ships. Still, the measure brought back nostalgic glimpses of the way Congress used to operate, for better or worse, in the days when they actually appropriated money, much of it "earmarked" for pet projects of individual members. Though some members pine openly for a return to earmarks, arguing that they allowed Congress rather than the president to decide where money is spent, earmarks stand condemned, especially by conservatives, as a corrupting contribution to exploding deficits. THE UNEARMARK BILL Representative Daniel Webster of Florida contrasted this water bill with the one portrayed in the movie, "Mr. Smith Goes to Washington," about a naive new member who fights against a dam, and the system. Unlike the water bill in the movie, said Webster, these were not "pet projects" but rather taken from a list provided by the Army Corps of Engineers. "Gone or the days of inserting earmarks at the last minute," he said. And "gone are the days of wasting taxpayer money on pork barrel spending." Only one member, Democrat Emanuel Cleaver of Missouri, had the temerity to call the projects earmarks, mostly, he admitted, because he didn't get one. "I support all of these projects," said Cleaver, but I don't have an earmark in it - and I want one." Democratic Representative Collin Peterson of Minnesota, one of the three lawmakers to vote against the bill, also felt left out. It failed to include reauthorization for a flood-control project in Roseau, Minnesota, said a spokeswoman. The bill mobilized the big-time lobbyists, hundreds of them, according to lobbyist registration data, from power-houses like Exxon Mobil, the American Petroleum Institute and the National Corn Growers Association to every county, city and even villages that stood to gain. Their show of force gave them a rare victory over the new breed of small-government ideological lobbying group, like Americans for Prosperity, which called it a "giant spending bill" and the Heritage Foundation, which condemned the measure as "an abyss of spending." Progressive Democrats came out in force to support the bill as well, despite the concerns of environmental organizations about provisions designed to speed up time consuming environmental reviews required for water projects. "This is something Congress has done many times in the past, going back almost 200 years," said Steve Ellis, vice-president of Taxpayers for Common Sense, which urged a 'no' vote. " "It's sort of a reflexive activity in many ways." It also benefited from the "hangover" of the fight that shut down the government earlier in October and nearly risked a default. "People were so fatigued by that," Ellis said. "If you read the transcript of the Congressional Record, it was everybody touting how bipartisan this is. It was "almost like they were trying to convince themselves that they can do things on a bipartisan basis and wanting to make sure that their constituents and other people thought that Washington could work." In the aftermath of the government shutdown, said American University's Griffin, there may be slightly more inclination to cooperate. On a water bill, said Griffin, it "is probably not a mortal sin to vote on the same side as the other party. It's probably just a venial sin." (Editing by Tim Dobbyn)
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