No.52114
A few months ago the admin said something like 300TB for Kemono plus another 900TB for Coomer.
Don't recall the exact numbers, but something of that magnitude.
No.52120
Dear god
No.52163
>>52103I thought of SubscribeStar and SubscribeStar.adult as being the same site. But I think you've got a point as all the artists I've been focusing on are on the latter (even those who don't actually make porn).
>or is Subscribestar.adult the ultimate antipiracy site?THIS is exactly what I'm worried about. That site being so impenetrable that either all artists on SS declare their work as 'adult' even if it's not pornographic (something I'm already seeing happen with some artist though for different more dumber reasons), or all other paywall websites begin replicating the SS-adult model until the entire paywall industry becomes un-scrapeable.
I'd brought up the issue pretty recently (
>>52086 and
>>52116 ), and did get a reply from Meow (
>>52105 ).
No.52185
>>52120if all the ai shil from either/or was removed and banned entirely, along with the react andy content and spam shiller profiles, then i imagine all of the currently used storage space would be cut in half drastically, maybe even more
No.52276
consider the economics of this.
back in the deep dark past, the 00's, the paradigm of the voluntary participant in active piracy circles as a free/no-cost or at worst participatory/sharing model was the standard.
Now, the dynamic can mostly be applied to webmasters operating on a completely vague or opaque business model ("business" here is defined in only the most flimsy terms… I simply mean "revenue to minimize out of pocket costs")
Remember: these people derive their revenue streams from "absolutely anything."
these very same people invented and perpetuate the predatory data harvesting industry. They have industry development conferences and organizations that participate in the development of borderline malware (indeed, plenty of this stuff *is* malware according to the perspective of many users).
It makes you wonder about the usage of sites that are devoted to "grey area" (legally) content like the various lolicon specific forums and scalper repost sites. since they cannot obtain viable advertising money (due, of course, to the content), then where else does that money come from?
If the entire system depends on independently wealthy people engaging in a hobby, it means all of it is a house of cards about to fall over.