0sec:
As in 0sec access to a release. Means someone has access to a release immediately after it's released.
0hour:
As in 0hour access to a release. Means someone has access to a release within an hour after it was released.
0day [1]:
As in 0day access to a release. Means someone has access to a release within a day after it was released.
0day [2]:
As in 0day which refers to software, videos, music, or information released or obtained on the day of public release.
1080i:
The number 1080 stands for 1080 lines of vertical resolution, while the letter i stands for interlaced or non-progressive scan. 1080i is considered to be an HDTV video mode. The term usually assumes a widescreen aspect ratio of 16:9, implying a horizontal resolution of 1920 pixels and a frame resolution of 1920 × 1080 or about 2.07 million pixels, and a field resolution of 1920 × 1080 / 2 (because it's interlaced) or about 1.04 million pixels. The field rate (not the frame rate) in hertz can be either implied by the context or specified after the letter i.
1080p:
The number 1080 stands for 1080 lines of vertical resolution, while the letter p stands for progressive scan or non-interlaced. 1080p is considered to be an HDTV video mode. The term usually assumes a widescreen aspect ratio of 16:9, implying a horizontal resolution of 1920 dots across and a frame resolution of 1920 × 1080 or about 2.07 million pixels. The frame rate in hertz can be either implied by the context or specified after the letter p (such as 1080p30, meaning 30 frames per second).
1337:
See leetspeak
256MS, 512MS, 1GB and 2GB:
These tags only apply to PSP releases, and they show the required size of an UMD disc. UMD discs can contain 2 gigabyte maximu. When a game is 100mb it fits on every UMD disc, but when a game is 900mb it will only fit on 1GB and higher UMD discs.
480i:
The number 480 stands for 480 lines of vertical resolution, while the letter i stands for interlaced or non-progressive scan. 480i is considered to be an HDTV video mode. The term usually assumes a widescreen aspect ratio of 16:9, implying a horizontal resolution of 640 pixels and a frame resolution of 640 × 480 or about 30.700 pixels, and a field resolution of 640 × 480 / 2 (because it's interlaced) or about 15.400 million pixels. The field rate (not the frame rate) in hertz can be either implied by the context or specified after the letter i.
480p:
The number 480 stands for 480 lines of vertical resolution, while the letter p stands for progressive scan or non-interlaced. 480p is considered to be an HDTV video mode. The term usually assumes a widescreen aspect ratio of 16:9, implying a horizontal resolution of 720 dots across and a frame resolution of 720 × 480 or about 345600 pixels. The frame rate in hertz can be either implied by the context or specified after the letter p (such as 480p30, meaning 30 frames per second).
576i:
The number 576 stands for 576 lines of vertical resolution, while the letter i stands for interlaced or non-progressive scan. 576i is considered to be an HDTV video mode. The term usually assumes a widescreen aspect ratio of 16:9, implying a horizontal resolution of 720 pixels and a frame resolution of 720 × 576 or about 414720 pixels, and a field resolution of 720 × 576 / 2 (because it's interlaced) or about 20.000 million pixels. The field rate (not the frame rate) in hertz can be either implied by the context or specified after the letter i.
576p:
The number 576 stands for 576 lines of vertical resolution, while the letter p stands for progressive scan or non-interlaced. 576p is considered to be an HDTV video mode. The term usually assumes a widescreen aspect ratio of 16:9, implying a horizontal resolution of 720 dots across and a frame resolution of 720 × 576 or about 414720 pixels. The frame rate in hertz can be either implied by the context or specified after the letter p (such as 576p25, meaning 25 frames per second).
720p:
The number 720 stands for 720 lines of vertical resolution, while the letter p stands for progressive scan or non-interlaced. 720p is considered to be an HDTV video mode. The term usually assumes a widescreen aspect ratio of 16:9, implying a horizontal resolution of 1280 dots across and a frame resolution of 1280 × 720 or about 0.92 million pixels. The frame rate in hertz can be either implied by the context or specified after the letter p (such as 720p30, meaning 30 frames per second).
Abandonware:
Software that is no longer marketed or distributed by the company that created it. It's free from copyright.
AC3:
Audio Codec 3. This was the original and more technical name for Dolby Digital. Replaced by marketing mavens when they realized that Dolby's name was not in the title.
Addline:
A textline containing registration information which is used for adding someone to a site. Most common addline format is: site gadduser <group> <username> <pass> <ident>@<host>.
Affiliate:
A releasegroup can be an affiliate at a site. This means that they will pre their releases at that site.
AIO:
AIO stands for All-In-One, means an all-in-one software pack. For example: Microsoft Office, which contains Word, Frontpage, Publisher, Access etc.
Anamorphic Widescreen:
Anamorphic filming technique was developed to make widescreen movies using the original 4:3 film. If they didn't adjust this, the screen would look misshaped. For example very wide (or fat) people. Click here to read more about anamorphic widescreen.
ANSI art:
Similar to ASCII art, but constructed from a larger set of 256 letters, numbers, and symbols.
ASCII art:
ASCII art is an artistic medium that are graphics pieced together from the 95 printable characters defined by ASCII.
Asian Silver:
Put out by eastern bootleggers, they are usually bought by groups to release as their own. These are usually VCD copies of movies which usually are pre-release or some movies that have never been released. There are a lot around in the scene at the moment because silvers are very cheap and easily available in a lot of countries. Mainly smaller groups who don't last more than a few releases go about it this way.
Audio_ts:
Audio_ts stands for "Audio Title Set". Most DVDs have both a VIDEO_TS and AUDIO_TS folder. Ussually the content is located in VIDEO_TS. The AUDIO_TS folder is usually empty. DVD-Audio would be stored in an AUDIO_TS folder when it is a separate format to DVD-Video. Practically this never occurs. Though most DVD's still contain an empty AUDIO_TS folder since older/some dvd-player require this to play the DVD.
Backdoor:
A hidden piece of software that allows it's creator to access the computer. It bypasses normal authentication to the computer system. Using the backdoor, the hacker can get remote access to the computer. The backdoor may take the form of an installed, legimate program.
BDRip:
A rip of the final released Blu-Ray. BDrips are released in the x264 format.
Bitrate:
Bitrate or Bit Rate is the average number of bits that one second of video or audio data will consume. Higher bitrate means bigger file size and generally better video or audio quality while lower bitrate means lower file size but worse video or audio quality.
BitTorrent:
See torrent.
Blu-Ray:
Blu-ray Disc is a next-generation optical disc format meant for high definition video (HD) and high density data storage, and is one of two competing standards for HD optical media. Its competitor is HD-DVD. A Blu-ray Disc can store substantially more data than a DVD, because of the blue laster. A Blu-ray dvd can holod up to 50 GB.
BWCLONE / BWCLONEDVD :
A complete image of an original cd/dvd, same as CLONECD/DVD. Only difference is that this image was created by the burn tool BlindWrite.
BNC:
BNC stands for bouncer. A bouncer is server through which an user can connect to an irc server. This way other users on the irc server can't see his/her real ip.
Bootleg:
Illegally recorded and pressed record.
Buffer Overflow:
An error caused when a program or exploit tries to store too much data into a buffer, than the buffer can handle. This can be exploited by hackers to create and execute a backdoor, leading to system access.
CAM:
A cam is a theater rip usually done with a digital video camera.
C-Band:
A type of satellite transmission with less path loss than other satellite standards such as Ku-band.
CD:
CD (CompactDisc) is a one-sides disk which can hold up to 650Mb of data.
CDS:
CD Single, containing 1-2 tracks.
CDM:
CD Maxi-single, containing 2-5 tracks.
CDR:
A recordable compact disc.
Chanserv:
This is a service provided by many IRC Networks to allow you register a channel.
CLONECD / CLONEDVD:
An complete image of an original cd/dvd. These images do not contain any crack, it's just a copy of an original cd/dvd. Since it's just a copy of the original, it still contains all copyright information.
SFCLONECD / SFCLONEDVD:
Same as above, but the disc's protection is Star Force. StarForce blocks the use of SCSI optical drives when IDE optical drives are present in the system, since most optical drive emulators currently work by simulating SCSI drives. StarForce, however, will authenticate discs from a SCSI optical disc drive if there are no IDE optical disc drives installed in the system; meaning that if you want to run this disc you'll have to unplug your harddisks in order to run the mounted cd or dvd image.
Crack:
Software cracking is the modification of software to remove encoded copy prevention.
Cracktro:
A small introduction sequence added to cracked software, designed to inform the user which releasegroup or individual cracker was responsible for removing the software's copy prevention and distributing the crack.
CVD:
CVD is a combination of VCD and SVCD formats.
DC:
DC stands for Director's Cut. A director's cut is a specially edited version of a movie that is supposed to represent the director's own approved edit of the movie. It is often released some time after the original release of the film, where the original release was released in a version different from the director's approved edit. 'Cut' is synonymous with 'edit' in this context.
DDoS Attack:
A distributed denial of service attack (DDoS) occurs when multiple compromised systems flood the bandwidth or resources of a targeted system, usually a web server(s). These systems are compromised by attackers using a variety of methods.
Demultiplexing:
See demuxing
Demuxing:
Demuxing / demultiplexing basically means, when speaking of video formats, splitting the file that contains both audio and video data (and possible other data streams as well, like subtitles), into separate files, each containing one element of the original file. Opposite of demux is muxing, which basically joins the datastreams back together.
Dir Locking:
The act of locking a directory so people who are not allowed to get into a directory, won't be able to get in.
DirecTiVo:
DirecTiVo is an informal term for the implemented combination of DIRECTV satellite television programming service and the TiVo digital video recorder service.
DiVX:
DivX is a digital video compression format based on the MPEG-4 technology. DivX files can be downloaded over high-speed lines in a relatively short time without sacrificing the quality of the digital video. Often used on the Internet to exchange video files.
Dolby Digital:
Digital Surround Sound is a DVD audio encoding format similar that digitally compresses up to 5.1 discrete channels of audio into a single bitstream.
DoS Attack:
A denial-of-service attack is an attempt to make a computer resource unavailable to its intended users. Typically the targets are high-profile web servers, and the attack attempts to make the hosted web pages unavailable on the Internet.
Dox:
Dox are single keygens/cracks/fixes etc.
DL:
DL stands for Dual-Language, meaning the dvd contains more than one audio language. Synonym: ML (Multi Language).
DSR:
Digital stream rip is a rip that is captured from a digital source stream, such as a HDTV or DVB transmission. Quality is similar to PDTV. Synonym: DSRip.
DTS:
Digital Theater Systems Digital Surround is a DVD audio encoding format similar to Dolby Digital. The quality is better than Dolby Digital and it's used in the cinema.
Dubbed:
If a film is dubbed, it is a special version where the actors' voices are in another language.
Dump:
A dump is a ftp server where releases are stored. Dumps are often faster than regular ftp servers and have a larger harddisk.
DVB:
Digital Video Broadcast The standard for direct broadcast television in Europe and the US Based on MPEG2 Compression.
DVD:
Stands for Digital Versatile Disk. (Formerly Digital Video Disk.) An optic disc with the same physical size as a CD but with significantly greater storage capacity, anywhere from 4.5 Gb (single layer, single-sided) to 17 Gb storage capacity (double-layer, double sided). It uses MPEG2 compression to encode 720:480p resolution, full-motion video and Dolby Digital to encode 5.1 channels of discrete audio. The disc can also contain PCM, DTS, and MPEG audio soundtracks.
DVD5:
DVD5 is an one-sided single-layer dvd disc and can contain upto 4.38 gigabytes of data on it.
DVD disc manufacturers love to use marketing terms and sell their discs as 4.7GB discs, but this is not true -- the 4.7GB
is calculated by using so-called "Japanese gigabytes", where the power of calculations is 1,000 instead of 1,024 (and 1.024 is the correct way to calculate everything in computer world -- so, 1024 megabytes = 1 gigabyte).
DVD9:
DVD9 is an single-sided dual-layer dvd disc and can hold approximately 7.95 gigabytes of data. See DVD5 for an explanation about the dvd size.
DVDA:
Audio tracks which come on a DVD as a bonus.
DVDrip:
A rip of the final released DVD. DVDrips are released in SVCD and DivX/XviD.
DVD Screener:
Same premise as a screener, but transferred off a DVD.
Eggdrop Bots:
These bots can execute script like site annoucements, rss output and more.
EMUDVD:
Stands for EMUlation DVD. It's quite similar to CLONEDVD. You can burn the release, but in order to run it you need an emulation program running in the background such as DT4's RMPS. You can also mount the release, but its still emulation. The scene considers any release that requires a helper program that runs in the background to bypass the protection as emulation, and thus should be named properly as emulation. The only possible exception to this rule is ATIP hiders.
Encode:
Encoding is the process of converting one digital format to another, applying known algorithms to either obscure the content of the file, or to compress or convert it to another format.
EP:
Vinyl Maxi-single, containing 2-5 tracks.
Exploit:
An exploit is a piece of software, a chunk of data, or sequence of commands that take advantage of a bug, glitch or vulnerability in software in order to get access to this computer. When the exploit is succesfull, the computer hacker can gain control of the computer system to use it for a DoS attack, or running a ftp-server.
Filler:
People who put releases on to a FTP-server.
FS:
FS stands for FullScreen, which is a screen size ratio of 4:3 (width:heigth).
Fserve:
Trading system for irc which uses the mIRC client's File Server function and some scripts so users can share their warez directly from their hard drives with eachother.
As in 0sec access to a release. Means someone has access to a release immediately after it's released.
0hour:
As in 0hour access to a release. Means someone has access to a release within an hour after it was released.
0day [1]:
As in 0day access to a release. Means someone has access to a release within a day after it was released.
0day [2]:
As in 0day which refers to software, videos, music, or information released or obtained on the day of public release.
1080i:
The number 1080 stands for 1080 lines of vertical resolution, while the letter i stands for interlaced or non-progressive scan. 1080i is considered to be an HDTV video mode. The term usually assumes a widescreen aspect ratio of 16:9, implying a horizontal resolution of 1920 pixels and a frame resolution of 1920 × 1080 or about 2.07 million pixels, and a field resolution of 1920 × 1080 / 2 (because it's interlaced) or about 1.04 million pixels. The field rate (not the frame rate) in hertz can be either implied by the context or specified after the letter i.
1080p:
The number 1080 stands for 1080 lines of vertical resolution, while the letter p stands for progressive scan or non-interlaced. 1080p is considered to be an HDTV video mode. The term usually assumes a widescreen aspect ratio of 16:9, implying a horizontal resolution of 1920 dots across and a frame resolution of 1920 × 1080 or about 2.07 million pixels. The frame rate in hertz can be either implied by the context or specified after the letter p (such as 1080p30, meaning 30 frames per second).
1337:
See leetspeak
256MS, 512MS, 1GB and 2GB:
These tags only apply to PSP releases, and they show the required size of an UMD disc. UMD discs can contain 2 gigabyte maximu. When a game is 100mb it fits on every UMD disc, but when a game is 900mb it will only fit on 1GB and higher UMD discs.
480i:
The number 480 stands for 480 lines of vertical resolution, while the letter i stands for interlaced or non-progressive scan. 480i is considered to be an HDTV video mode. The term usually assumes a widescreen aspect ratio of 16:9, implying a horizontal resolution of 640 pixels and a frame resolution of 640 × 480 or about 30.700 pixels, and a field resolution of 640 × 480 / 2 (because it's interlaced) or about 15.400 million pixels. The field rate (not the frame rate) in hertz can be either implied by the context or specified after the letter i.
480p:
The number 480 stands for 480 lines of vertical resolution, while the letter p stands for progressive scan or non-interlaced. 480p is considered to be an HDTV video mode. The term usually assumes a widescreen aspect ratio of 16:9, implying a horizontal resolution of 720 dots across and a frame resolution of 720 × 480 or about 345600 pixels. The frame rate in hertz can be either implied by the context or specified after the letter p (such as 480p30, meaning 30 frames per second).
576i:
The number 576 stands for 576 lines of vertical resolution, while the letter i stands for interlaced or non-progressive scan. 576i is considered to be an HDTV video mode. The term usually assumes a widescreen aspect ratio of 16:9, implying a horizontal resolution of 720 pixels and a frame resolution of 720 × 576 or about 414720 pixels, and a field resolution of 720 × 576 / 2 (because it's interlaced) or about 20.000 million pixels. The field rate (not the frame rate) in hertz can be either implied by the context or specified after the letter i.
576p:
The number 576 stands for 576 lines of vertical resolution, while the letter p stands for progressive scan or non-interlaced. 576p is considered to be an HDTV video mode. The term usually assumes a widescreen aspect ratio of 16:9, implying a horizontal resolution of 720 dots across and a frame resolution of 720 × 576 or about 414720 pixels. The frame rate in hertz can be either implied by the context or specified after the letter p (such as 576p25, meaning 25 frames per second).
720p:
The number 720 stands for 720 lines of vertical resolution, while the letter p stands for progressive scan or non-interlaced. 720p is considered to be an HDTV video mode. The term usually assumes a widescreen aspect ratio of 16:9, implying a horizontal resolution of 1280 dots across and a frame resolution of 1280 × 720 or about 0.92 million pixels. The frame rate in hertz can be either implied by the context or specified after the letter p (such as 720p30, meaning 30 frames per second).
Abandonware:
Software that is no longer marketed or distributed by the company that created it. It's free from copyright.
AC3:
Audio Codec 3. This was the original and more technical name for Dolby Digital. Replaced by marketing mavens when they realized that Dolby's name was not in the title.
Addline:
A textline containing registration information which is used for adding someone to a site. Most common addline format is: site gadduser <group> <username> <pass> <ident>@<host>.
Affiliate:
A releasegroup can be an affiliate at a site. This means that they will pre their releases at that site.
AIO:
AIO stands for All-In-One, means an all-in-one software pack. For example: Microsoft Office, which contains Word, Frontpage, Publisher, Access etc.
Anamorphic Widescreen:
Anamorphic filming technique was developed to make widescreen movies using the original 4:3 film. If they didn't adjust this, the screen would look misshaped. For example very wide (or fat) people. Click here to read more about anamorphic widescreen.
ANSI art:
Similar to ASCII art, but constructed from a larger set of 256 letters, numbers, and symbols.
ASCII art:
ASCII art is an artistic medium that are graphics pieced together from the 95 printable characters defined by ASCII.
Asian Silver:
Put out by eastern bootleggers, they are usually bought by groups to release as their own. These are usually VCD copies of movies which usually are pre-release or some movies that have never been released. There are a lot around in the scene at the moment because silvers are very cheap and easily available in a lot of countries. Mainly smaller groups who don't last more than a few releases go about it this way.
Audio_ts:
Audio_ts stands for "Audio Title Set". Most DVDs have both a VIDEO_TS and AUDIO_TS folder. Ussually the content is located in VIDEO_TS. The AUDIO_TS folder is usually empty. DVD-Audio would be stored in an AUDIO_TS folder when it is a separate format to DVD-Video. Practically this never occurs. Though most DVD's still contain an empty AUDIO_TS folder since older/some dvd-player require this to play the DVD.
Backdoor:
A hidden piece of software that allows it's creator to access the computer. It bypasses normal authentication to the computer system. Using the backdoor, the hacker can get remote access to the computer. The backdoor may take the form of an installed, legimate program.
BDRip:
A rip of the final released Blu-Ray. BDrips are released in the x264 format.
Bitrate:
Bitrate or Bit Rate is the average number of bits that one second of video or audio data will consume. Higher bitrate means bigger file size and generally better video or audio quality while lower bitrate means lower file size but worse video or audio quality.
BitTorrent:
See torrent.
Blu-Ray:
Blu-ray Disc is a next-generation optical disc format meant for high definition video (HD) and high density data storage, and is one of two competing standards for HD optical media. Its competitor is HD-DVD. A Blu-ray Disc can store substantially more data than a DVD, because of the blue laster. A Blu-ray dvd can holod up to 50 GB.
BWCLONE / BWCLONEDVD :
A complete image of an original cd/dvd, same as CLONECD/DVD. Only difference is that this image was created by the burn tool BlindWrite.
BNC:
BNC stands for bouncer. A bouncer is server through which an user can connect to an irc server. This way other users on the irc server can't see his/her real ip.
Bootleg:
Illegally recorded and pressed record.
Buffer Overflow:
An error caused when a program or exploit tries to store too much data into a buffer, than the buffer can handle. This can be exploited by hackers to create and execute a backdoor, leading to system access.
CAM:
A cam is a theater rip usually done with a digital video camera.
C-Band:
A type of satellite transmission with less path loss than other satellite standards such as Ku-band.
CD:
CD (CompactDisc) is a one-sides disk which can hold up to 650Mb of data.
CDS:
CD Single, containing 1-2 tracks.
CDM:
CD Maxi-single, containing 2-5 tracks.
CDR:
A recordable compact disc.
Chanserv:
This is a service provided by many IRC Networks to allow you register a channel.
CLONECD / CLONEDVD:
An complete image of an original cd/dvd. These images do not contain any crack, it's just a copy of an original cd/dvd. Since it's just a copy of the original, it still contains all copyright information.
SFCLONECD / SFCLONEDVD:
Same as above, but the disc's protection is Star Force. StarForce blocks the use of SCSI optical drives when IDE optical drives are present in the system, since most optical drive emulators currently work by simulating SCSI drives. StarForce, however, will authenticate discs from a SCSI optical disc drive if there are no IDE optical disc drives installed in the system; meaning that if you want to run this disc you'll have to unplug your harddisks in order to run the mounted cd or dvd image.
Crack:
Software cracking is the modification of software to remove encoded copy prevention.
Cracktro:
A small introduction sequence added to cracked software, designed to inform the user which releasegroup or individual cracker was responsible for removing the software's copy prevention and distributing the crack.
CVD:
CVD is a combination of VCD and SVCD formats.
DC:
DC stands for Director's Cut. A director's cut is a specially edited version of a movie that is supposed to represent the director's own approved edit of the movie. It is often released some time after the original release of the film, where the original release was released in a version different from the director's approved edit. 'Cut' is synonymous with 'edit' in this context.
DDoS Attack:
A distributed denial of service attack (DDoS) occurs when multiple compromised systems flood the bandwidth or resources of a targeted system, usually a web server(s). These systems are compromised by attackers using a variety of methods.
Demultiplexing:
See demuxing
Demuxing:
Demuxing / demultiplexing basically means, when speaking of video formats, splitting the file that contains both audio and video data (and possible other data streams as well, like subtitles), into separate files, each containing one element of the original file. Opposite of demux is muxing, which basically joins the datastreams back together.
Dir Locking:
The act of locking a directory so people who are not allowed to get into a directory, won't be able to get in.
DirecTiVo:
DirecTiVo is an informal term for the implemented combination of DIRECTV satellite television programming service and the TiVo digital video recorder service.
DiVX:
DivX is a digital video compression format based on the MPEG-4 technology. DivX files can be downloaded over high-speed lines in a relatively short time without sacrificing the quality of the digital video. Often used on the Internet to exchange video files.
Dolby Digital:
Digital Surround Sound is a DVD audio encoding format similar that digitally compresses up to 5.1 discrete channels of audio into a single bitstream.
DoS Attack:
A denial-of-service attack is an attempt to make a computer resource unavailable to its intended users. Typically the targets are high-profile web servers, and the attack attempts to make the hosted web pages unavailable on the Internet.
Dox:
Dox are single keygens/cracks/fixes etc.
DL:
DL stands for Dual-Language, meaning the dvd contains more than one audio language. Synonym: ML (Multi Language).
DSR:
Digital stream rip is a rip that is captured from a digital source stream, such as a HDTV or DVB transmission. Quality is similar to PDTV. Synonym: DSRip.
DTS:
Digital Theater Systems Digital Surround is a DVD audio encoding format similar to Dolby Digital. The quality is better than Dolby Digital and it's used in the cinema.
Dubbed:
If a film is dubbed, it is a special version where the actors' voices are in another language.
Dump:
A dump is a ftp server where releases are stored. Dumps are often faster than regular ftp servers and have a larger harddisk.
DVB:
Digital Video Broadcast The standard for direct broadcast television in Europe and the US Based on MPEG2 Compression.
DVD:
Stands for Digital Versatile Disk. (Formerly Digital Video Disk.) An optic disc with the same physical size as a CD but with significantly greater storage capacity, anywhere from 4.5 Gb (single layer, single-sided) to 17 Gb storage capacity (double-layer, double sided). It uses MPEG2 compression to encode 720:480p resolution, full-motion video and Dolby Digital to encode 5.1 channels of discrete audio. The disc can also contain PCM, DTS, and MPEG audio soundtracks.
DVD5:
DVD5 is an one-sided single-layer dvd disc and can contain upto 4.38 gigabytes of data on it.
DVD disc manufacturers love to use marketing terms and sell their discs as 4.7GB discs, but this is not true -- the 4.7GB
is calculated by using so-called "Japanese gigabytes", where the power of calculations is 1,000 instead of 1,024 (and 1.024 is the correct way to calculate everything in computer world -- so, 1024 megabytes = 1 gigabyte).
DVD9:
DVD9 is an single-sided dual-layer dvd disc and can hold approximately 7.95 gigabytes of data. See DVD5 for an explanation about the dvd size.
DVDA:
Audio tracks which come on a DVD as a bonus.
DVDrip:
A rip of the final released DVD. DVDrips are released in SVCD and DivX/XviD.
DVD Screener:
Same premise as a screener, but transferred off a DVD.
Eggdrop Bots:
These bots can execute script like site annoucements, rss output and more.
EMUDVD:
Stands for EMUlation DVD. It's quite similar to CLONEDVD. You can burn the release, but in order to run it you need an emulation program running in the background such as DT4's RMPS. You can also mount the release, but its still emulation. The scene considers any release that requires a helper program that runs in the background to bypass the protection as emulation, and thus should be named properly as emulation. The only possible exception to this rule is ATIP hiders.
Encode:
Encoding is the process of converting one digital format to another, applying known algorithms to either obscure the content of the file, or to compress or convert it to another format.
EP:
Vinyl Maxi-single, containing 2-5 tracks.
Exploit:
An exploit is a piece of software, a chunk of data, or sequence of commands that take advantage of a bug, glitch or vulnerability in software in order to get access to this computer. When the exploit is succesfull, the computer hacker can gain control of the computer system to use it for a DoS attack, or running a ftp-server.
Filler:
People who put releases on to a FTP-server.
FS:
FS stands for FullScreen, which is a screen size ratio of 4:3 (width:heigth).
Fserve:
Trading system for irc which uses the mIRC client's File Server function and some scripts so users can share their warez directly from their hard drives with eachother.
Last edited by Ese Clowner on Tue Sep 02, 2008 3:31 am; edited 1 time in total