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Zhmak2017-08-30 08:51:13
A television
Zhmak, 2017-08-30 08:51:13

Peer-to-peer TV, is it alive?

Somewhere in early 2010, the topic of peer-to-peer TV was on the rise. The ACE Stream protocol was touted as an evolution of the peer-to-peer BitTorrent technology that would bring exotic channels to all who suffer. Now I wondered about searching for channels in HD through the same network, but in a different way. I have a home server under linux, the power of which should be enough for p2p and proxying the collected stream to the recipient in the face of a media set-top box with KODI. I tried to find manuals for the implementation of such a scheme, and, it seems, I even found it. But they are ancient. In general, it was not possible to launch with a swoop. I dug in the evening with breaks for a smoke break.
I played this thing in 2014 when I wanted to watch the opening and closing broadcasts of the 2014 Olympics in HD. Then I installed a Windows all-in-one installer, and at the very least it worked on popular channels.2
It seems that there is an understanding of technology. We have an analogue of the superseed for bittorrent. Clients receive chunks and assemble them into an RTSP stream. To make it all good, we forward the port behind NAT. Everything seems to be good. Information on the topic is scattered and very "rare earth".
In general, the question is: is it worth wasting time trying to launch a variant with proxying the stream to another device in the local area, if the goal is to watch TV for free? Is peer-to-peer TV alive? Are there any working ready-made howtos for setting up a dedicated server for P2P and broadcasting to LAN without paying an insane 250 rubles a month!

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Viktor, 2017-08-30
@Zhmak

Is peer-to-peer TV alive?
Well, if Cloud-TV is what you are looking for, then it seems to be alive.

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