The Torrent Butler: A Conceptual Framework for Automated, Rule-Based Bandwidth Management in Peer-to-Peer Networks
The proliferation of high-bandwidth peer-to-peer (P2P) file sharing, particularly via the BitTorrent protocol, presents a paradox of efficiency and inconvenience. While the protocol excels at distributed data transfer, it often monopolizes network resources, requires manual oversight for seeding ratios, and lacks integration with external automation triggers. This paper introduces the conceptual model of the Torrent Butler —an intermediary service layer that operates between a user’s BitTorrent client and their broader digital ecosystem. The Butler acts as an autonomous agent, managing downloads, seeding obligations, disk space, and scheduling based on predefined user rules. This paper explores the architectural requirements, potential rule sets, security implications, and quality-of-life improvements offered by such a system. torrent butler
[Generated AI] Date: April 14, 2026
The Torrent Butler is best implemented as a lightweight daemon or container (e.g., Docker) that communicates with a standard torrent client (e.g., qBittorrent, Transmission, Deluge) via their respective RPC APIs. The Torrent Butler: A Conceptual Framework for Automated,