uTorrent is the Most Used BitTorrent Client By Far (torrentfreak.com) 60
Ernesto, writing for TorrentFreak: With help from iknowwhatyoudownload we looked at over 25 million logged BitTorrent connections on a single day last week. This reveals that more than two-thirds (68.6%) of these were using uTorrent's desktop version. The vast majority of these users were updated to the most recent 3.5.5 release, but dozens of older versions are in use as well. Although no longer officially supported, there are also hundreds of thousands of people who still use uTorrent for Mac.
The most popular Mac client, however, appears to be Transmission. This is a notable change compared to a decade ago when its market share was much lower. Although Transmission also has a beta Windows release, that userbase is believed to be relatively small. Below is an overview of all software with at least 0.1% market share -- which translates to roughly 25,000 logged connections.
The most popular Mac client, however, appears to be Transmission. This is a notable change compared to a decade ago when its market share was much lower. Although Transmission also has a beta Windows release, that userbase is believed to be relatively small. Below is an overview of all software with at least 0.1% market share -- which translates to roughly 25,000 logged connections.
Nobody uses BitTorrent? (Score:2)
I like the stock version still.
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its 2020 (Score:1)
Re:its 2020 (FTFY: it's 2020) (Score:1)
Apparently it meets a need for its users.
Perhaps you can tell us what it is, if you know.
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"okay thanks please keep us informed of the other things you like or don't like"
I don't like you.
Re: Nobody uses BitTorrent? (Score:1)
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Deluge for me. Remote control via browser is a winner.
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That can also be done in uTorrent and qBittorrent.
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I replaced transmission and utorrent when I found that they couldn't fix the security issues reported by project-zero within the 90 days embargo, even though fixes where suggested https://bugs.chromium.org/p/pr... [chromium.org]
Re: Nobody uses BitTorrent? (Score:1)
Last I checked Transmission was the only *usable* OSX client. That may have changed, but tracker banning may still confound.
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Deluge (Score:1)
MacOS says it's evil (Score:2)
somehow MacOS doesn't like the new uTorrent update agent. =/
Re:MacOS says it's evil (Score:5, Informative)
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Yeah... I'm surprised there are still so many using it. Once bitten, forever shy.
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"I thought that uTorrent has been basically malware for years by now?"
It's just a few settings, you're doing it wrong.
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I meant to switch off the suggestions, ads and other crap that ruins it.
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qBittorrent (Score:5, Insightful)
I am using qBittorrent. Rock-stable, works very well, graciously deals with high-speed downloads (gigabit fiber) and has a very nice WebUI.
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and no adverts or trackers in it. Unlike uTorrent.
To be fair (Score:2)
uTorrent only installs a tracker if you install the optional software, and the ads can be disabled.
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Or you could just avoid a bittorrent client that includes that junk.
Qbittorent gets my vote too, easy to use and moving torrent files is easy.
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Another vote for qbittorent. It's open source, cross platform, and solid. I've been using it for years, after switching off uTorrent.
I wanted something i could trust, and uTorrent just wasn't that something.
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Re: qBittorrent (Score:1)
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I switched to qbittorrent too. I ran the last non-malware version of utorrent for a while, but it became increasingly unusable: it'd hang if it ran for too long, or after adding new torrents.
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That's actually a possibility.
Never underestimate that data can be wildly off. But it can also be a correlation between greater volumes and which client that's used.
At one time uTorrent also had a bit of a questionable reputation, but that doesn't seem to have impacted the numbers.
I am still using IRC (Score:2)
They still got a great library.
Dubious claims (Score:1)
I just looked at what iknowwhatyoudownload has for my IP the last couple of weeks. Allegedly, I've downloaded Westworld (the movie), a Westworld episode from season 3, Picard and an eclectic mix of Asian slut porn amongst many others.
Except I'm currently on my phone and never tether, so, no I haven't. So much for any LE attempting to identify people by IP with that dataset...
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Not dubious here. I just looked at my peer list and 2/3rds seems about right for clients identifying themselves as uTorrent. Deluge is quite common in my list, and libtorrent (as a catch all for several Linux programs) features prominently too.
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I'm not disputing the identification of a program, but that my phone (at a particular IP) is using any of them. Based on the last timestamp, for example, I was actually reading this site...
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Thank carrier-grade NAT for that. LTE connections are exclusively IPv6 - the carrier is responsible for mapping your phone's IPv6 to an IPv4 at the gateway. 3G did allow IPv4 connectivity but most carriers started installing CGNAT due to the amount of phones and data being transferred.
So all t hose other things happening
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If I had a decent speed, I might well too. Or at the least, tether. Sadly, 12Mbps (on a good day) doesn't cut it.
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I haven't downloaded anything from that list.
Oh god why! (Score:5, Insightful)
uTorrent was a fantastic client back in the day. Unfortunately like all fantastic clients it turned into a bloated smelly turd. I held onto an older version as long as I could until some private trackers banned that version due to bugs that allowed it to skew the seeding statistics.
Moved on to Deluge now and couldn't be happier. In addition the client/server architecture of Deluge is great for headless leechboxes. That said I realise the irony of complaining about uTorrent being bloated while praising Deluge. It's back end is far from the leanest.
qBittorrent FTW (Score:2)
I used to love Azureus... (Score:2)
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I think Vuze has an interesting idea. You're absolutely right, as a torrent client, it's been long-exceeded by uTorrent, qBittorrent, Transmission, and Deluge...but as a torrent-based CDN and content provider, I think it's an interesting idea. I keep it around for expressly that purpose.
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ktorrent (Score:2)
Default torrent app for KDE and I suspect I'm just a statistical blip....
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uTorrent 2.2.1 (Score:2, Interesting)
uTorrent was bad on Android last I looked... (Score:2)
I remember trying uTorrent on Android quite a while ago and it was the most horrendously buggy torrent client on that platform I'd ever seen in my life. Switched to Flud fairly quickly after that, which works well on Android.
On my Linux desktop, qBittorrent rules the roost and is just a great torrent client, easily surpassing uTorrent, IMHO. And, yes, you can get it for other platforms like Win/Mac if you really must.
Too bad Leechcraft never took off. (Score:2)
Transmission as a service on Windows (Score:2)
uTorrent became bloated, moved to qBittorrent. Then got a fiber connection and qBittorrent just killed the new router, even at a few connections, moved to Transmission (running as a service with serman).