Excerpt for The Lord of the Uploaders by Umer Shah, available in its entirety at Smashwords


The Lord of The Uploaders

Upload and Earn

SEO + CPA + Uploading


The Lord of


The


Uploaders








LEGAL NOTICE:


This book is © The Lord of the Uploaders All Rights Reserved. You may not sell this book, give it away, display it publically, nor may you distribute it in any form whatsoever.


While reasonable attempts have been made to ensure the accuracy of the Information provided in this publication, the author does not assume any responsibility for errors, omissions or contrary interpretation of this information and any damages or costs incurred by that.


The author does not warrant or represent at any time that the contents within are completely accurate due to the rapidly changing nature of the Internet.


This book is not intended for use as a source of legal, business, accounting or financial advice. All readers are advised to seek services of competent professionals in legal, business, accounting, and finance field.


While examples of past results may be used occasionally in this work, they are intended to be for purposes of example only. No representation is made or implied that the reader will do as well from using the techniques.


The author does not assume any responsibility or liability whatsoever for what you choose to do with this information. Use your own judgment.


Any perceived slight of specific people or organizations, and any resemblance to characters living, dead or otherwise, real or fictitious, is purely unintentional.


In practical advice books, like anything else in life, there are no guarantees of income made. Readers are cautioned to reply on their own judgment about their individual circumstances to act accordingly.


You are encouraged to print this book for easy reading.


Use this information at your own risk.







Table of Content:


Chapter Page


1. Overview of File Hosting …………..……………….. 04

2. Uploading and Downloading Explained ...………….. 08


3. How to Upload and Where to Post ………………….. 12

4. Selection of Most Wanted Files to Upload ………….. 23

5. RDP/VPS/Rapidleech Explained ……………………. 29

6. Search Engine Optimization (SEO) …………………. 33

7. Introduction to CPA (Cost Per Action) ……………… 56

8. Combination of SEO + CPA + Uploading …………... 61










Chapter No. 01:



Overview of File Hosting


1. History


2. What is File Hosting?


3. What is File Sharing?

4. Peer-to-peer File sharing

5. File hosting services

6. One-click hosting

7. Use for copyright breaching











History


Files were first exchanged on removable media. Computers were able to access remote files using file system mounting, bulletin board systems (1978), Usenet (1979), and FTP servers (1985). Internet Relay Chat (1988) and Hotline (1997) enabled users to communicate remotely through chat and to exchange files.


What is File Hosting?


A file hosting service, online file storage provider, or cyber locker is an Internet hosting service specifically designed to host static content, typically large files that are not web pages. Typically they allow HTTP and FTP access. They can be optimized for serving many users (as is implied by the term "hosting") or be optimized for single-user storage (as is implied by the term "storage"). Related services are content-displaying hosting services (i.e. video, image, and audio/music), virtual storage, and remote backup.


What is File Sharing?


File sharing is the practice of distributing or providing access to digitally stored information, such as computer programs, multimedia (audio, images, & video), documents, or electronic books. It may be implemented through a variety of ways. Storage, transmission, and distribution models are common methods of file sharing that incorporate manual sharing using removable media, centralized computer file server installations on computer networks, World Wide Web-based hyperlinked documents, and the use of distributed peer-to-peer networking.

Peer-to-peer File sharing?

Users can use software that connects in to a peer-to-peer network to search for shared files on the computers of other users (i.e. peers) connected to the network. Files of interest can then be downloaded directly from other users on the network. Typically, large files are broken down into smaller chunks, which may be obtained from multiple peers and then reassembled by the downloader. This is done while the peer is simultaneously uploading the chunks it already has to other peers.

File hosting services

File hosting services are a simple alternative to peer-to-peer software. These are sometimes used together with Internet collaboration tools such as email, forums, blogs, or any other medium in which links to direct downloads from file hosting services can be embedded. These sites typically host files so that others can download them.

One-click hosting

One-click hosting generally describes web services that allow internet users to easily upload one or more files from their hard drives (or from a remote location) onto the one-click host's server free of charge.

Most such services simply return a URL which can be given to other people, who can then fetch the file later on. In many cases these URLs are predictable allowing potential misuse of the service. As of 2005 these sites have drastically increased in popularity, and subsequently, many of the smaller, less efficient sites have failed. Although one-click hosting can be used for many purposes, this type of file sharing has, to a degree, come to compete with P2P file sharing services.

The sites make money through advertising or charging for premium services such as increased downloading capacity, removing any wait restrictions the site may have or prolonging how long uploaded files remain on the site. Many such sites implement a CAPTCHA to prevent automated downloading. Several programs aid in downloading files from these one-click hosters; examples are JDownloader, Tucan Manager and CryptLoad.

Use for copyright breaching

In some cases, file hosting services have been used as a means to distribute or share files without consent of the copyright owner. In such cases one individual uploads a file to a file hosting service, which others can then download.

Views on this can be very diverse. For example in the case of Swiss-German file hosting service Rapidshare, the US government's congressional international anti-piracy caucus stated that the site was "overwhelmingly used for the global exchange of illegal movies, music and other copyrighted works". By contrast, in the 2009 - 2010 legal case Atari Europe S.A.S.U. v. Rapidshare AG in Germany, the Düsseldorf higher regional court reached the conclusion on appeal that "most people utilize Rapidshare for legal use cases” and that to assume otherwise was equivalent to inviting "a general suspicion against shared hosting services and their users which is not justified".

Of note as factors in the latter case, the court also observed that the site removes copyrighted material when asked, does not provide search facilities for illegal material, noted previous cases siding with Rapidshare, and after analysis concluded that the plaintiff's suggestions for preventing sharing of copyrighted material were "unreasonable or pointless".





Chapter No. 02:



Uploading and Downloading Explained


1. Concept of Uploading and Downloading


2. Concept of Download and Streaming


3. Sideload


4. Remote upload



5. Download Manager
















Concept of Uploading and Downloading

In computer networks, to download means to receive data to a local system from a remote system or to initiate such a data transfer. Examples of a remote system from which a download might be performed include a web server, FTP server, email server, or other similar systems. A download can mean either any file that is offered for downloading or that has been downloaded, or the process of receiving such a file.

It has become more common to mistake and confuse the meaning of downloading and installing or simply combine them incorrectly together.

The inverse operation, uploading, can refer to the sending of data from a local system to a remote system such as a server or another client with the intent that the remote system should store a copy of the data being transferred, or the initiation of such a process. The words first came into popular usage among computer users with the increased popularity of Bulletin Board Systems (BBSs), facilitated by the widespread distribution and implementation of dial-up access the in the 1970s.

Concept of Download and Streaming


The use of the terms uploading and downloading often imply that the data sent or received is to be stored permanently, or at least stored more than temporarily. In contrast, the term downloading is distinguished from the related concept of streaming, which indicates the receiving of data that is used near immediately as it is received, while the transmission is still in progress and which may not be stored long-term, whereas in a process described using the term downloading, this would imply that the data is only usable when it has been received in its entirety. Increasingly, websites that offer streaming media or media displayed in-browser, such as YouTube, and which place restrictions on the ability of users to save these materials to their computers after they have been received, say that downloading is not permitted. In this context, "download" implies specifically "receive and save" instead of simply "receive". However, it is also important to note that "downloading" is not the same as "transferring" (i.e., sending/receiving data between two storage devices would be a transferral of data, but receiving data from the Internet would be considered a download of data).


Sideload


When applied to local transfers (sending data from one local system to another local system), it is often difficult to decide if it is an upload or download, as both source and destination are in the local control of the user. Technically if the user uses the receiving device to initiate the transfer then it would be a download and if they used the sending device to initiate it would be an upload. However, as most non-technical users tend to use the term download to refer to any data transfer, the term "Sideload" is sometimes being used to cover all local to local transfers to end this confusion.


Remote upload

When there is a transfer of data from a remote system to another remote system, the process is called "remote uploading". This is used by some online file hosting services.

Remote uploading is also used in situations where the computers that need to share data are located on a distant high speed local area network, and the remote control is being performed using a comparatively slow dialup modem connection.

For example:

  • The user remotely accesses a file hosting service at MyRemoteHost.

  • The user finds a public file at PublicRemoteHost and wants to keep a copy in their MyRemoteHost.

  • To have it done they "remote upload" the file from PublicRemoteHost to MyRemoteHost.

  • None of the hosts are located on the user's local network.

Without remote uploading functionality, the user would be required to download the file first to their local host and then re-upload it to the remote file hosting server.

Where the connection to the remote computers is via a dialup connection, the transfer time required to download locally and then re-upload could increase from seconds, to hours or days.

Download manager


A download manager is a computer program dedicated to the task of downloading (and sometimes uploading) possibly unrelated stand-alone files from (and sometimes to) the Internet for storage. This is unlike a World Wide Web browser, which is mainly intended to browse web pages, composed of a multitude of smaller files, where error-free moving of files for permanent storage is of secondary importance. (A failed or incomplete web page file rarely ruins the page.) The typical download manager at a minimum provides means to recover from errors without losing the work already completed, and can optionally split the file to be downloaded (or uploaded) into 2 or more segments, which are then moved in parallel, potentially making the process faster within the limits of the available bandwidth. (A few servers are known to block moving files in parallel segments, on the principle that server capacity should be shared equally by all users.) Multi-source is the name given to files that are downloaded in parallel.


Features


Download managers commonly include one or more of the following features:

  • Pausing the downloading of large files.

  • Resuming broken or paused downloads (especially for very large files).

  • Downloading files on poor connections.

  • Downloading several files from a site automatically according to simple rules (file types, updated files, etc. - see also Offline Browser).

  • Automatic recursive downloads (mirroring).

  • Scheduled downloads (including, automatic hang-up and shutdown).

  • Searching for mirror sites, and the handling of different connections to download the same file more quickly (segmented downloading).

  • Variable bandwidth usage.

  • Automatic subfolder generation.

Download managers are useful for very active Internet users. For dial-up users, they can automatically dial the Internet Service Provider at night, when rates or tariffs are usually much lower, download the specified files, and hang-up. They can record which links the user clicks on during the day, and queue these files for later download. For broadband users, download managers can help download very large files by resuming broken downloads, by limiting the bandwidth used, so that other internet activities are not affected (slowed) and the server is not overloaded, or by automatically navigating a site and downloading pre-specified content (photo galleries, MP3 collections, etc.) this can also include automatically downloading whole sites and regularly updating them (see Mirroring).

Many download managers support Metal ink, an XML file listing mirrors, checksums, and other information useful for downloading.













Chapter No. 03:



How to Upload and Where to Post


1. Chose a Best Host


2. Popular Hosts


3. Start Uploading


4. Use of Remote Upload


5. Use of FTP


6. Where to Post?


7. Making your own Site

















Chose a Best Host


Remember it’s not all about uploading your files and making money. There are thousands of people who download your files so you earn, always think about them as well before choosing a host.


Not all of them buy premium accounts to downloads files with premium features like no wait time, fastest speeds, resuming downloads etc. So before choosing a file host, you must consider few features are available in your desired host like…


  • Wait time between two files are minimum.

  • Download is available in all countries; they don’t trick you by showing your download link only in developed countries and discriminate with others.

  • They provide fastest possible speed to free users.

  • Premium account rate is affordable.

  • They have FTP and Remote upload options.

  • And of course, they pay for all countries.


Popular Hosts


There are some popular file hosts these days…


  • File Serve

  • File Sonic

  • Mega Share

  • Hot File


There are dozens of others like well-known file hosts like FileFactory, Uploading, EasyShare but either people have payment problems or their restrictions are too tight to bear. But you can use any host, it’s totally up to your choice.


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