Without a public notice Google has compiled a seemingly arbitrary list of keywords for which auto-complete is no longer available. Although the impact of this decision does not currently affect full search results, it does send out a strong signal that Google is willing to censor its services proactively, and to an extent that is far greater than many expected.
Among the list of forbidden keywords are “uTorrent”, a hugely popular piece of entirely legal software and “BitTorrent”, a file transfer protocol and the name of San Fransisco based company BitTorrent Inc. As of today, these keywords will no longer be suggested by Google when you type in the first letter, nor will they show up in Google Instant.
To read the rest of the article head over to TorrentFreak.
MirrorCreator provides a simple way to upload the same file you would like to share to 30 different hosting sites: RapidShare, Megaupload, Hotfile, DepositFiles, EasyShare, etc.

If you usually share files in the web, then there’s no way you’ve never used some of the most popular sites: RapidShare, Megaupload, Hotfile, DepositFiles, EasyShare, etc. But you should know also that sometimes the availability and speed of those hosting sites do not offer any guarantees; so why not upload the file to all hosting sites in one step and receive all the possibilities?

MirrorCreator simplifies the task and provides with one step to upload the file to all the hosting sites you would like. The site also gives us the limit upload on each site, so we can avoid any problem within the process.
After selecting the hosting sites and uploading your file, you’ll receive an e-mail (previously set) with all the proper links.
There is one thing for sure: RapidShare, Hotfiles, Megaupload would not have the relevance as they have today if the download managers for these sites never existed. JDownloader represents the main reference between those, but here’s an interesting option: pyLoad.

PyLoad is another great lightweight downloader available for Linux, Mac OS X and of course Windows. And it has all of the necessary features that you are probably wondering: CAPTCHA recognition, Premium user support, “waiting time” sites, link decrypter and many more that really makes this tool to be worthwhile for testing. You can also download YouTube videos.

The tool is written in python, and it already has some step-by-step guides to install it in some particular routers and avoid any computer intervention to start downloading.
You can find the zip package here (only 365KB) and visiting the pyLoad Wiki you’ll get access to the installation tutorial for Windows users.