For anyone looking, these are the high-quality releases you want:
The.Flash.2023.2160p.WEB-DL.DDP5.1.Atmos.DoVi.HDR.H.265-FLUX
The.Flash.2023.1080p.AMZN.WEB-DL.DDP5.1.Atmos.H.264-FLUX
For anyone looking, these are the high-quality releases you want:
The.Flash.2023.2160p.WEB-DL.DDP5.1.Atmos.DoVi.HDR.H.265-FLUX
The.Flash.2023.1080p.AMZN.WEB-DL.DDP5.1.Atmos.H.264-FLUX
Uploaders and users with higher user classes get invites. You also get some minor perks if you donate, one of which is one invite. It's $10 to get access to those perks. So technically, you could send a friend 10 bucks and he could invite you in.
I don't think I've ever seen this forum mentioned on any recruitment thread like you would with private trackers, so a direct contact is probably the only way in. They've done a pretty good job at staying out of the spotlight since the domain change. It's a pretty underrated place.
Use a VPN service with a proven track record to connect to a seedbox paid for with crypto, and download only from top-level private trackers. It's about as secure as you can get as a casual user.
In reality, though, a simple VPN is probably enough. Maybe not even that if you're in a country that doesn't give a shit.
I have both spidey books in CBZ and PDF. I'd post them here, but it looks like this place have the same rules as reddit regarding links. Send me a DM if you can't find it and I'll hook you up.
The best trackers have some pretty strict rules regarding IP-addresses for this exact reason. If you're suddenly browsing the site from a completely different location, it could raise flags. If you're moving country or using a server/VPN (for browsing, not downloading), you might need to notify staff about it.
But as a general rule, if someone claims to sell invites to the top-level trackers it's probably bullshit anyway. They are very closed down.
Yes. Don't do it. On the off-chance it's not a scam (it most likely is), you will be banned if you or any of the users connected to the seller are found. If it's also one of the top trackers you buying your way into, you'll be banned on all other top trackers as well. They are very collaborative that way.
If you're willing to spend money, give usenet a shot instead.
Spotify, like most legit streaming services, use Google Widevine DRM, and you don't reverse engineer it. At least not for the level that is required for this kind of content (L3). When you stream something in browser or device, the decryption module of that device is "talking" to the license server. If the identification goes through, the decryption keys are sent and the media gets played. So what you do is you extract that decryption module from a device, and then use scripts to send requests acting as that device, tricking the license server into sending you the decryption keys.
Once set up, and with the proper script, it can actually be even more efficient than other forms of piracy.
As you can see by the AMZN tag, it's from Amazon Video. Its official release date is 18th, but in some markets it's already tomorrow so here it is. Nothing unusual about it.