R/piracymegathread -

The irony is delicious. The safest place to learn about not getting viruses is a piracy forum. The Megathread explicitly bans "Tier 1" unsafe sites. It warns you never to download executable files from YouTube rippers. It tells you to avoid cracked antivirus software (the ultimate oxymoron). For a newbie, the Megathread is safer than Googling "free movie."

For the average user, you don't even need to pirate anything to benefit from the Megathread. Read it for the security tips. Read it for the VPN reviews. Read it to understand why 2 million people have decided that if buying isn't owning, then piracy isn't stealing. r/piracymegathread

But in the underground ecosystem of Reddit, the term has evolved. Welcome to the . The irony is delicious

Always use an adblocker, and never, ever run a .exe from a site you don't trust. Have you used the Megathread for safety tips, or do you think the golden age of streaming has made piracy obsolete? Let us know in the comments (but keep it legal). It warns you never to download executable files

For the uninitiated, this isn’t a subreddit where users simply trade links to the latest Marvel movie. It is, in fact, the most meticulously curated, obsessively updated, and fiercely protected digital safety manual on the internet. The r/Piracy subreddit (which recently survived a high-profile ban scare and resurrection) hosts a living document simply known as "The Megathread." If you visit r/piracy and sort by "Hot," the very first post is a link to this wiki.

These users aren't cheap; they are archivists. They argue that if a streaming service deletes a show for a tax write-off (looking at you, HBO Max), or if a video game has Denuvo DRM that ruins performance for paying customers, piracy is the only way to preserve digital history.

Let’s address the elephant in the server room. When you hear the word "piracy," you likely picture a shadowy figure in a hoodie, cracked software from a sketchy torrent, or a lawyer knocking on your door.