To combat the "Fuck All Uploaders" epidemic, the community generally follows a few unwritten rules:
While it might seem like a minor grievance over a movie or a game, this imbalance threatens the .
When you see an .mp4 file stuck at 99.8% with dozens of people trying to grab it and nobody sharing, you aren't just looking at a technical glitch—you’re looking at a breakdown of the digital social contract. The Anatomy of the Stalled Download
At a minimum, you should upload as much data as you downloaded.
A user finishes their download and immediately deletes the task or moves the file, stopping the upload process.
When P2P fails, users migrate back to centralized "Mega" hosts or streaming giants. This gives corporations total control over what you can see and how much you pay for it. How to Fix the Ratio
A file with "So Many Downloaders" is a sign of high demand; "Fuck All Uploaders" is a sign of a dying community. If you want the content to exist tomorrow, you have to be the one who leaves the client running today.
Power users rent remote servers with high-speed connections specifically to keep files alive 24/7.