Msg # |
User |
Message |
Date |
1
|
Karup (0) Webmaster
|
Standard, you are correct that there are absolutely NO download limits and the links do indeed expire. They expire 10 minutes after a page is opened/accessed, which is a reasonable solution to protect our content from non-members getting access to it. That said, as long as you begin a download within that 10 minute window of you accessing a page, you should have no problems completing the download. The 10 minute page expiration does not apply to a file that is already in the process of being downloaded.
If you're using a download manager, perhaps even a multi-part download manager and that download manager tries to launch a download for a new part after 10 minutes, etc... that would of course cause a problem. Or if your download breaks and you click again after 10 minutes to resume it, that will obviously cause an issue because the link will have expired.
If you are having problems I would suggest that you reach out to our support address and they will be able to help determine why you're experiencing problems - support@eentsupport.com .
We understand that members want to access our content as easily and with as minimal restrictions as possible. We do our best to accommodate that desire while still offering our sites some protection against the infinite amount of surfers/members that share links, share passwords, etc... etc...
|
12-06-17 11:48pm
Reply To Message
|
2
|
PinkPanther (0)
|
Not sure what issue you're running into or why - I've been a member of the Karups combined network for over 1 month and haven't had any problems downloading new or older videos.
|
12-07-17 05:45pm
Reply To Message
|
3
|
standard (0)
|
REPLY TO #2 - PinkPanther :
What are your internet speeds if you don't mind me asking?
With the ten minute cutoff, I can certainly understand drastically different user experiences for someone on a 25.6 Mbps pipe vs the majority of rural American's on what is regarded as dial up these days.
100MB file at 25.6 Mbps = 34 seconds
100MB file at 2 Mbps = 7 minutes
Ten minute limits would yield huge variations in paid user experiences between someone who can get a set of their favorite actress in that ten minutes, and someone who has to babysit the downloads literally all evening for the exact same set.
(FWIW, I doubt pirates are bothered by any of it.)
|
12-09-17 12:30am
Reply To Message
|
4
|
PinkPanther (0)
|
REPLY TO #3 - standard :
I'm getting 3.5+ mb/sec download speeds on this site - so an 850 mb vid is taking just a few minutes to download.
|
12-11-17 07:26pm
Reply To Message
|
5
|
standard (0)
|
REPLY TO #4 - PinkPanther :
Thanks. I could certainly see a difference in experiences when compared to users that are downloading at 500 KB/s and needing 30-45 minutes for that same clip.
|
12-12-17 08:54am
Reply To Message
|
6
|
standard (0)
|
REPLY TO #1 - Karup :
So that I don't misunderstand and misrepresent what I'm reading when I write a future review:
I set my download manager to only download one file at a time. I start my first download and queue another download 30 seconds later. If my first download takes 12 minutes to complete then my second download will fail?
|
12-12-17 09:03am
Reply To Message
|
7
|
Karup (0) Webmaster
|
REPLY TO #6 - standard :
In the example you provided, if any/all of the sets/movies/links that are in the queue have already been generated, then yes, they will indeed fail to even begin because your first download took 12 minutes (2 minutes longer than it takes links to expire).
Does your download manager require that you provide links of all of the sets/movies that you want to download prior to running it? Or can it be set to open URLs on its own after a movie completes downloading? If so, that seems like it would solve the problem.
Another option is that you could download 3 movies at a time and all three would start at the same time so all would work, just slower as the three split your connection. But if one at a time, the 2nd one would fail unless the first one finished in less than 10 minutes, as by the time the 2nd file started, the link would have expired.
|
12-14-17 12:04am
Reply To Message
|
8
|
standard (0)
|
REPLY TO #7 - Karup :
"Does your download manager require that you provide links of all of the sets/movies that you want to download prior to running it? Or can it be set to open URLs on its own after a movie completes downloading? If so, that seems like it would solve the problem."
I'm not sure I'm following. A download manager that opens URLs on its own before they have been generated to queue into the download manager?
I'm unfamiliar with that technology, but I'd certainly be interested in a recommendation for a download manager that functions that way.
|
12-15-17 10:05am
Reply To Message
|
9
|
Karup (0) Webmaster
|
REPLY TO #8 - standard :
Please check your PMs.
|
12-19-17 02:06pm
Reply To Message
|
10
|
standard (0)
|
REPLY TO #9 - Karup :
Thanks, but I'm not sure that moving the discussion to customer service would be helpful to other users who may be interested in the topic, especially when the pay site being discussed is clearly working as designed. Downloads are intentionally and very specifically designed to fail after ten minutes to discourage paying customers from downloading content, and download managers that queue properly and work perfectly fine at all other sites will necessarily obey these ten-minute download restrictions as designed.
Thanks for the input, and for the willingness to participate on the review site. Would you mind if I post the meat of your PM regarding the site's position on download managers?
|
01-08-18 03:00am
Reply To Message
|