[HorribleSubs] Sword Art Online - 07 [480p].mkv


Source LinksNyaa | Torrent Download | Magnet Link (146.6 MB) | Website
Date Submitted18/08/2012 19:32
SeriesSword Art Online - Episode 7 (of 25): The Temperature of the Heart
File Name (Size)[HorribleSubs] Sword Art Online - 07 [480p].mkv (146.6 MB)
DownloadBitshare | FileFactory | Freakshare | JumboFiles | Minus | Rapidshare
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17 comment(s):
06/09/2012 07:55 — Anonymous
media fire link is deleted from host
06/09/2012 08:15 — yumm91
=.=
06/09/2012 15:53 — divan
i meant , take a look at mediafire mirror link and you'll see ^_^
06/09/2012 16:35 — Anonymous
seriously, many remaining download options are shit, i had to look at other alternative sites now...
MF, Jumbofile, Peeje are now unreliable; And not all files get successfully uploaded in Bayfiles.
06/09/2012 16:53 — A_Registered_Trademark
There are a lot of forces out there trying to make it difficult for us these days.  Here's the implementation of a new response by admin: Encrypted downloads which require a password to unscramble.  The logic: Anyone can scan the entire contents of any download service, either with Google if you know how, or with other specialty search facilities.  And if they see titles for clients they represent, they can order MF or whoever to delete those files, or else.  So admin first implemented zipped files to hide the filenames.  But the file deletions continued probably because anyone could unzip these and see what they were.  So now we have the next step from admin, encrypted zip files with a password.

Here's how it works for this example.  Click on DropBox Part1 and Part2.  Choose to "Save" these two files, if your browsers asks.  Then, if you have 7zip already installed, highlight these two files, right click, choose "7zip, Extract Here".  It will ask for a password.  Highlight and copy the tiny print in the Password box under Dropbox on this AT page.  Paste that into the 7zip password box.  It will extract and join the two files.  It's a bit of work for us here, but it should be a major headache for those trying to kill download links.  Anyways, we'll see if these links stick around.

Note to admin: FileCloud already deleted the file.  Some archives have policies against password protected files.  I don't know if that's why.  DropBox however, was fast and worked great.  Thanks for all the effort to put this together.  I hope it works out.  (Is it AES-256 bit encryption?  That should be tough enough I think, as of last time I looked at such things.  There used to be a great site called TrueCrypt.org.  They worked against worst case scenarios, such as encrypting, hiding and creating a false replacement archive on your disk, in case you are kidnapped and tortured for your drive's password.  -Hardcore.)
07/09/2012 06:28 *alpeia2
I think you got the logic wrong, the logic is to protect the files from being deleted by the download provider who checks their own files, not the content owners. All the content owners have to do is visit this site to find the links, just like you do. Most of the stuff posted here isn't licenced outside of Japan yet, therefore as long as the download server is not in Japan and the person downloading isn't in Japan it is currently not illegal (or at least two years ago it wasn't).
07/09/2012 08:08 — A_Registered_Trademark
Thanks for the note, but many sources can tell you that I explained the situation properly.  If it is on CrunchyRoll, Hulu, Funimation, or any of several other sites or it is streamed, these are the people who can assert rights under the Digital Millenium Copyright act and similar trade laws.  They might be asserting rights incorrectly, but it would take a court to decide that and no download service wants to go to court to find out.  The download providers don't care what's on their sites.  They want maximum downloads and traffic.  They respond to DMCA orders.

At a minimum, if Horrible-Subs has a version of a program, it is on CR, Funimation, etc.
07/09/2012 13:36 — Anonymous
Another side note, a lot of titles are also licensed by Sentai, so those eventually get taken down.
07/09/2012 18:17 — A_Registered_Trademark
There are a lot of other companies I didn't mention.  And not all of them agree with Funimation et al's way of doing things, even as just a matter of good business policies.  In 2005 Funimation was purchased by Navarre Corp for $100 million plus.  Last year, it was sold to another group of investors for $25 million.  This year it's largest cable carrier Verison-Fios dropped them, according to Wiki.  Maybe antagonizing the fanbase isn't the best way to do things.  Or maybe it was other problems.  And maybe they'll succeed, eventually.
07/09/2012 19:49 — Anonymous
Interesting to know. I'll look into them more when I can. Thanks for that.
08/09/2012 00:04 — admin
Thanks for the note. FileCloud seemed to have deleted files that haven't even been shown yet, so I decided to ask them why, and here's their response:

"I am not sure maybe the filename tripped one of the filters, or md5 was same

Or more than likely because we lost a hard drive last week on one of the servers (and theres no error code for that ), we do not offer redundant storage of a free service"


The "encryption" itself is actually fairly weak. But to my knowledge, there isn't any publicly available tool to extract the file without a password so it's good enough to serve as a means to make it difficult to see the contents. I don't see the point in really trying to make it secure since it's not particularly difficult to find the password anyway.
7zAES doesn't seem to support encryption in CTR mode, thus this compromise. As for 256-bit encryption, that seems to be the claim, but I can't see the code using more than 16 byte blocks (thus AES-128); perhaps I'm missing something.
08/09/2012 01:29 *A_Registered_Trademark
No error codes for dead drives!  I think they should change their name to FileFog.  They're not in the clouds yet.

Encryption: As you say, any encryption is fine for starters.  If it works, meaning links aren't deleted, it works.  Thanks for setting it up.  Users will probably stay with the simplest options as long as they work, but they will appreciate having this option when they need it.
---------------------------------------
PeejeShare seems to be losing a lot of links very quickly these days.  Should this procedure be implemented on services which are coming close to auto-deleting everything anyway?  I suppose sending an encrypted and an unencrypted version of any one file to a download service would be...? difficult? useful?  As long as encrypted file links are listed separately, as you have already set it up, users would know what their choices are.  If the encrypted file links persist at a given service where the unencrypted ones disappear, that would be a pretty good test of whether encryption does what we hope.
11/09/2012 10:24 — admin
Well clouds can be quite temperamental...
The command line 7z isn't used to create the archives. ZipCrypto is generally the encryption used for ZIP archives, where AES is actually a somewhat less supported extension.
11/09/2012 10:36 — A_Registered_Trademark
"Blows and flows of angel hair, and ice cream castles in the air",  ...something....something..."It's cloud's illusions I recall.  I really don't know cliouds at all."  (I can't remember the song's author.  Old.).

I meant to check if you had gone with zipcrypto or actual AES-something.  There appear to be plenty of tools for cracking zipcrypto.
11/09/2012 10:48 *admin
Literature? Count me out.

The header is AES-128 encrypted in CBC mode, with an unsalted password key strengthened with 1024 rounds of SHA-256. The content is just delta encoded, but you somewhat need to decrypt the header to be able to extract the content.
Typical encrypted 7z archives are stronger, with AES-256? in CBC, password through 2^19 rounds of SHA-256 and 64-bit salt. The entire contents are encrypted, where header encryption is optional.
I hope that was detailed enough.
11/09/2012 20:47 — A_Registered_Trademark
Thanks, now I know exactly what did or didn't do what it did or didn't do.
12/09/2012 21:49 *admin
Always glad to replace one's curiosity with unanswered questions.
Feel free to ask for more whenever you please.
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