this post was submitted on 18 Oct 2024
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I'm an older GenZ born in the late 90s and I've had to show a few younger peers how to torrent recently.
The idea of you needing a "special" program just for downloading a file seems to throw some of them off.
I do know a few young people are tech/programming wizards but "generally tech savy" people seem to be declining. It's either you're really into it or barely know anything outside popular apps.
One other thing I've noticed, People just seem to be more paranoid about downloading stuff not already installed on their devices. Which its good people give at least a bit of a shit about security but convincing people Firefox isn't a virus gets a bit annoying (Yes I've had that conversation).
Why can't browsers treat torrents as just another protocol for downloads, so that if you haven't got a default set for torrent out magnet mimetypes, it just downloads it in the included download manager?
Because then your browser would itself have to be a torrent client.
The way torrents download is fundamentally different from how a standard http download works, which is why they have a specialist implementation. Browsers dont want to bother bringing a whole load of new code and associated bugs into the browser to do a job which isn't really connected with the browser's main responsibility, which is browsing the web.
Just because torrents come from the web shouldn't make it the browser's responsibility to deal with them.
I think pocket and quite the slew of unrelated features disagrees with you. Seems like most browsers are happy to be the everything app.