· Ideally, you should seed a torrent as long as possible. If you are the last owner of the fully downloaded torrent, it dies after you stop seeding. Of course, if no one is downloading it for months, it’s probably not worth continuing. What is the best ratio of seeding and downloading? Your seeding and downloading ratio should be one to one or higher. If it’s lower, you became a leecher who takes Estimated Reading Time: 9 mins. · Hey guys using Azereus here and I finished the download of a huge file now it is in the seeding section and says 'seeding + checking' what is this? Do i need to wait for it to stop. · Torrent Completes but it is not complete. Lately when I've been downloading I've noticed that the file will finish. It says % finished and switches to seeding. Then if I try and use the file, very often I get errors. If I reload the torrent and force a recheck, the torrent comes up as incomplete and starts downloading again.
Right now nearly all of my torrents are "queued seed" with zero kb/s uploading when I know for a fact that at least a dozen of those torrents should be seeding. I can confirm this by changing the maximum allowed active torrents from 8 to and all of my torrents will change to "seeding" and very quickly I will be uploading 1mb/s+. Answer (1 of 2): Thanks for A2A. After a torrent is downloaded, it becomes a seed and starts uploading to help others who are downloading the file.. For each part of the file uploaded, there's a synchronisation or conformation bit sent back for the seeder also there will be request to upload f. However, you can do the world a favor after you finish downloading it. Create a new unlocked torrent for the same content, add some open trackers, then publish and seed it. by Guest on /05/11 PM.
Torrents can't exist without at least one person, or server, out there seeding it. So yes they can die, potentially forever. Torrents have a weird knack for reviving however. Sometimes years later. They can also be revived, tho that can be tricky. If a torrent is dead, but you find the exact same file contents of that torrent elsewhere, you can. A few days back when I was seeding fine, this same torrent had a similar ratio of seeders to peers. I have at least like torrents with similar ratios that worked before, but do not any longer and also a couple new ones (from different trackers too). So I'm thinking it's more likely something on my end, rather than the torrents. Torrent is a P2P file sharing system, i.e, whenever you download a file from torrents, your downloading that file from some people (some = 1), these ppl are the ones who have completed downloading the file and hence have left it for seeding rather than stopping the torrent. Thus seeding implies leaving it for other to download, so when other are downloading, it implies that you are uploading.
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