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  2. Gnutella - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gnutella

    Gnutella is a peer-to-peer network protocol. Founded in 2000, it was the first decentralized peer-to-peer network of its kind, leading to other, later networks adopting the model. [1] In June 2005, Gnutella's population was 1.81 million computers [2] increasing to over three million nodes by January 2006. [3]

  3. Privacy in file sharing networks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Privacy_in_file_sharing...

    A Quantitative Analysis of the Gnutella Network Traffic - Zeinalipour-Yazti, Folias - 2002; Crawling Gnutella: Lessons Learned - Deschenes, Weber, Davison - 2004; Security Aspects of Napster and Gnutella Steven M. Bellovin 2001; Firewalls and Internet Security: Repelling the Wily Hacker, Second Edition; Daswani, Neil; Garcia-Molina, Hector.

  4. Distributed hash table - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distributed_hash_table

    Distributed hash tables use a more structured key-based routing in order to attain both the decentralization of Freenet and Gnutella, and the efficiency and guaranteed results of Napster. One drawback is that, like Freenet, DHTs only directly support exact-match search, rather than keyword search, although Freenet's routing algorithm can be ...

  5. A guide to network security keys, the password for your ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/guide-network-security-keys...

    A network security key is basically your Wi-Fi password - it's the encryption key that your password unlocks to allow access to the network. A guide to network security keys, the password for your ...

  6. Shareaza - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shareaza

    Shareaza is a peer-to-peer file sharing client running under Microsoft Windows which supports the Gnutella, Gnutella2 (G2), eDonkey, BitTorrent, FTP, HTTP and HTTPS [citation needed] network protocols and handles magnet links, [5] ed2k links, and the now deprecated gnutella and Piolet links. [6] It is available in 30 languages.

  7. LimeWire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LimeWire

    LimeWire automatically received a cryptographically signed file, called simpp.xml, containing an IP block list. It was the key technology behind the now defunct cyber security firm Tiversa which is alleged to have used information from the network to pressure prospective clients into engaging the company's services. [40]

  8. Phex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phex

    Phex supports most of the recent features of the gnutella network. [2] [3] Additionally it enables the creation of private networks over the internet, [4] has a powerful search result filter, [5] shows client country flags, and can export the list of shared files into multiple formats, some of which can also be read out and downloaded directly by another Phex.

  9. List of historical Gnutella clients - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_historical...

    Mutella was a Gnutella client developed by Max Zaitsev and Gregory Block. It had two user interfaces, one for textmode use and another called remote control, which ran on an integrated web server and was used by a web browser. The first public version of Mutella was published on October 6, 2001.