IPFS powers the Distributed Web A peer-to-peer hypermedia protocol designed to preserve and grow humanity's knowledge by making the web upgradeable, resilient, and more open. The web of tomorrow needs IPFS today IPFS aims to surpass HTTP in order to build a better web for all of us. Today's web is inefficient and expensive HTTP downloads files from one server at a time — but peer-to-peer IPFS retrieves pieces from multiple nodes at once, enabling substantial bandwidth savings. With up to 60% savings for video, IPFS makes it possible to efficiently distribute high volumes of data without duplication. Today's web can't preserve humanity's history The average lifespan of a web page is 100 days before it's gone forever. The medium of our era shouldn't be this fragile. IPFS makes it simple to set up resilient networks for mirroring data, and thanks to content addressing, files stored using IPFS are automatically versioned. Today's web is centralized, limit...
[Username@<Server> ~]$ nmap -p 8101 <Target Server>
Starting Nmap 5.51 ( http://nmap.org ) at 2020-12-08 02:01 MST
Nmap scan report for <Target Server> (xxxxx)
Host is up (0.00076s latency).
PORT STATE SERVICE
8101/tcp open unknown
Nmap done: 1 IP address (1 host up) scanned in 0.06 seconds
[Username@<Server> ~]$
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