Can Pirate's Bay be considered "safe" if it is used only for non-executable multimedia content? - eviltoast

Basically I want to download a serie in a specific language and absolutely nowhere I can find it and recently I saw that the serie is available in the language I want in The Pirate’s Bay but I know the bad reputation of the site and I have never used it.

I ask if it can be considered “safe” in quotes because at least in this specific case the files are not executable, they are only .mkv and in fact I don’t even plan to play them on my PC, I plan to play them on a computer I use as a media center that has no internet access (and it’s Linux). And although this setup should be considered “safe” enough, the question itself makes me curious.

In the torrent there is only the chapters of the serie and nothing else, or so it seems, I would analyze the files in VirusTotal before playing them but each chapter weighs more than 1GB (they are in 1080p and last more than 40 minutes) and VirusTotal does not allow to upload files of a certain weight.

I am sorry for the generic question about a site with a bad reputation, but although according to my knowledge everything should be fine, there are always things that one does not consider or go unnoticed due to ignorance or lack of knowledge.

  • amio@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    There’s no such thing as safe safe. While unlikely, even media/data files could contain exploits. They’d need to target specific issues in specific software, but that happens all the time.

    WinRAR had a recent high publicity mistake earlier, where a “specially crafted” archive can make executables seem like other files so it’s easy to accidentally run them. Big no.

    I also recently saw an (old) exploit analysis: some Linux thing got wrecked specifically because of vulnerabilities in a media player/codec - in fact opening the folder was enough to trigger the exploit, which could give someone unrestricted access to your system. Very, very big no.

    Back in the day, I think Windows Media Player had some idiotic license download thing that was also used as an attack vector.

    Basically: executables are just a slam dunk malware delivery vector. Media files are safer in general but not safe.