Side-by-Side Comparison
| Usenet | BitTorrent | Cloud Storage | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Architecture | Client-server (you ↔ provider) | Peer-to-peer (you ↔ swarm) | Client-server (you ↔ host) |
| Speed | Maxes out your connection consistently | Depends on seeders; popular = fast, old = slow | Depends on host; often capped or throttled |
| Privacy | IP hidden; SSL encrypted connection | IP visible to all peers unless VPN used | Account-based; host sees everything |
| Availability | Articles stored on servers for years | Dies when last seeder leaves | Lasts until host or uploader removes it |
| Cost | $3-12/month (provider sub) | Free (client + tracker) | Free tier limited; paid $5-15/month |
| Setup Effort | Provider + newsreader + indexer | Torrent client + find a .torrent | Browser or app, sign in |
| Content Longevity | 5,000-6,000+ days on good providers | Entirely depends on seeders | At the mercy of host's ToS |
| Legal Exposure | Private connection (SSL, no IP sharing) | IP logged by monitoring firms in swarms | Account tied to identity |
How Each One Actually Works
Usenet
You connect to your provider's server over an encrypted connection. The provider stores articles (posts and files) on its own infrastructure, typically for thousands of days. When you download, you're pulling directly from those servers. Nobody else is involved in the transfer. Other users can't see your IP, can't see what you're downloading, and play no role in the process. If you're not familiar with the basics, our Qu'est-ce qu'Usenet page covers them.
BitTorrent
You download a .torrent file or click a magnet link, which tells your torrent client where to find other people who have the file. Your client connects to a "swarm" of peers and pulls pieces of the file from multiple people at once while also uploading pieces you already have. The more popular a file, the more seeders, the faster it goes. The catch: every peer in the swarm can see your IP address. Monitoring firms regularly join swarms to log IPs. And once the last seeder disconnects, the file is gone.
Cloud Storage
Cloud services (Google Drive, Dropbox, Mega, etc.) store files on centralized servers owned by a single company. You upload through their app or website, and anyone with a link can download. Simplest setup of the three, but the company controls everything. They can scan your files, enforce terms of service, remove content, or shut down entirely. Your account is tied to your identity, and the host has full visibility into what you store.
Vitesse
This is where Usenet has the clearest edge. You're downloading from a dedicated server farm, not from random people's home connections. If you have a 1 Gbps internet connection and your provider can handle it, you'll get close to 1 Gbps. NewsDemon members on gigabit connections regularly max them out using 30-50 simultaneous SSL connections.
Torrents can be fast for popular, well-seeded files. A new Linux ISO with 5,000 seeders? You'll probably max your connection. A niche file from 2014 with 2 seeders on DSL? You might get 50 KB/s, if it downloads at all.
Cloud storage speeds vary. Free tiers are often throttled. Paid tiers are usually decent but rarely saturate a fast connection. And if a popular file gets too many simultaneous downloads, the host may throttle or pull it.
Confidentialité
With Usenet, your connection runs between you and your provider's server. If your provider supports SSL (NewsDemon does, on every plan), it's all encrypted. Your ISP can see you're connecting to a Usenet server but can't see what you're doing. Other Usenet users have no idea you exist. Our security and privacy page has the full breakdown.
BitTorrent works the opposite way. Your IP address gets broadcast to every peer in the swarm. Anyone can join a swarm and log IPs. Copyright enforcement firms do this routinely. A VPN helps, but that's an extra cost and an extra step. Usenet doesn't need it because the protocol is private by design.
Cloud storage ties everything to your account, which ties to your email, payment method, and often your real name. The host has full access to your files and metadata. Some providers encrypt at rest, but they usually hold the keys themselves.
Content Longevity
Usenet providers store articles for years. NewsDemon keeps over 5,695 days' worth, and that grows daily. Once an article is on our servers, it stays. We even recovered articles from 20-year-old tape archives that exist nowhere else. None of that depends on other users being online.
Torrents have zero built-in longevity. A file exists only as long as someone is seeding it. Popular files can last years. Obscure files often die within weeks. No central store is keeping anything alive.
Cloud storage lasts as long as the company and uploader want it to. Files get removed for ToS violations, accounts get suspended, whole services disappear. Remember Megaupload? Everything on it vanished overnight.
Where Each One Wins
Usenet wins when you want:
Consistent maximum speed, privacy without extra tools, access to old content, and a setup that doesn't depend on other users being online. It costs money, but the tradeoff is reliability and privacy that the other two can't match.
Torrents win when you want:
Free access to popular, well-seeded content and you don't mind the privacy tradeoffs (or you already run a VPN). The BitTorrent protocol is elegant and the ecosystem is mature. For very popular files, it works great.
Cloud storage wins when you want:
Simplicity. Upload a file, share a link, done. No special software, no protocol knowledge needed. For personal file sharing with specific people, it's hard to beat on convenience.
A lot of experienced users combine all three. Usenet as the primary source for speed and privacy, torrents as a fallback for well-seeded content, and cloud storage for sharing files directly with known people. They solve different problems and complement each other well.
Frequently Asked Questions
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