How big is your porn folder?
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about 800GB
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I'm something of a collector. I like to grab whole collections even though I may not like all the vids. As such I'm currently at about 27TB, which according to my StashApp database equates to 3.5 years of playtime. That's actually come down in recent weeks as I'm going through large chunks of it and deleting duplicates and whole batches of stuff I never liked in the first place, plus it means I can get it all organised properly so I can upload a bit and also find stuff to fulfill reseed requests.
Oh, and that 27TB is AFTER I've run everything through Handbrake to fix playback issues and shrink everything down to a maximum of 720p. LOL

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@frostycab
I know what you mean - I recently ditched several studios that I just don't enjoy anymore... I am "limited" to my 32TB storage array... I was at 29TB and didn't want to invest in new disks...
I'm back down to 25TB in use...I also run all of my videos thru Handbrake - I recode them to .x265 (aka h265) and limit to 720p as well (who wants to see the stubble on that pretty boy's ass??? Let me revel in the fantasy that it's as smooth as silk!
) But, that limits what I can reseed to essentially my own torrents... which I need to upload more of. (Side effect: all of my re-coded videos no longer match the signatures used to detect piracy - no match makes it MUCH harder for them to prove I have their content!)I use a self-managed seedbox (though, for the life of me, I haven't been able to get RSS feeds to work off of this site under qBitTorrent on Linux) for this and 3 other torrent sites I subscribe to (not all porn: my 32TB porn array has a brother... another 32TB array for non-porn... enough movies & TV shows to last well into my retirement!)
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too much... My nas is sitting at 16tb
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About 2TB
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I have about 2TB of files that are extremely messy and uncategorized, so Iβm looking for ways to organize them. It feels like a huge project. Are there any good methods, software, or information about relevant studios/companies that can help with manual sorting and categorization?

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I have about 2TB of files that are extremely messy and uncategorized, so Iβm looking for ways to organize them. It feels like a huge project. Are there any good methods, software, or information about relevant studios/companies that can help with manual sorting and categorization?

Have a look at StashApp, which link to StashDB. I've been using it for a while now, and it will catalogue your entire library. It generates perceptual hashes for every video and can compare them to entries in the StachDB database to fill in details such as actors, studios, dates, descriptions, tags etc. If info is still missing then you can scrape websites for the data, though that's not always successful. There are plugins for it that will rename the usual "987632490yio1h418y3b-fc9812.mp4" files to match your entries in the app, and even organise them into folders based of studio or actor or user-defined tags. I haven't been able to get some plugins to work, but when I have enough time I'll have a proper go at it.
Once you've got everything scanned and added some of the info then running a search on the whole database is lightning fast. I've save myself so much in terms of duplicate downloads now as I can quickly check if I have a file that looks familiar before downloading. I run it on my little N100 mini-PC and its incredibly simple to stream to my iPad, TV, gaming PC or whatever.
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@frostycab Thank you so much! Iβll organize it following this method, and itβll be much easier to share once Iβm done!!
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@skygrind You do need some spare drive space for the database though. When you scan your library it can generate all sorts of stuff. At the moment all mine is doing is scene covers and phashes. It can generate previews, scrubber sprites and all sorts if you want, but it will eat space. A lot of space, depending on the size of your collection.
Mine is only about 10GB right now, but I seems to remember it growing to about 400GB when I had a few more options turned on.
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For the first time I can use this,well,it's must be 400 G already.
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I have 1.08 TB in my porn folder
I have downloaded 1.15 TB from here on GTAm I an addict?
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How big is your porn folder? Wrong
data Storage ...- Not all of us are collecting porn, all mix up ...
music.video/.movies/photos etc ...
I have 60 TB Total ... all external drives HDD ranging from 5 - 2 TB each ...
- Not all of us are collecting porn, all mix up ...
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@frostycab +1 for Stash, an actual game changer. Legit turns porn collections into your own personal porn Nextflix. And with scrapers, most major studios have one or you can use one of the community driven Stash Box databases like stashdb.org which 90% of the time already has a scenes details ready to go. Other than scenes and movies I've downloaded myself (not torrented) I dont even bother with organizing my physical files, I only need to really now view and organize with Stash
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@john32123666 i mean if we're talking total my last calculations were around 80TB across various storage that I have
IT SUCKS RENEWED HARD DRIVES ON AMAZON ARE SO EXPENSIVE NOW
if anyone has tips on getting the best deals on hard drives let me know please.
Ive loved getting the enterprise level renewed drives on amazon. i always by them in sets to have an identical backup.
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@cp2000 if you live in U.S. try main store like Walmart or Best Buy ...
Amazon External HDD or SSD drives are expensives ...
I am using those portable Toshiba/Canvio & SeaGate External HDD not SSD ... They have highest capacity however I'm not into ... { I prefer 2 TB - 5 TB individual }-
https://www.walmart.com/c/kp/toshiba-external-hard-drives |
https://www.walmart.com/browse/electronics/seagate-external-hard-drives/3944_1089430_132959_1956376_3011786
They are portable cheaper and save space ...
Edit :
AI Overview
The highest capacity external storage towers currently available feature massive capacities, with HDD towers reaching 28TB+ (e.g., Seagate Expansion 28TB) and high-end enterprise SSD solutions reaching 60TB-100TB (e.g., LaCie 60TB, Nimbus ExaDrive 100TB). Desktop HDD towers like the WD Elements are best for cost-effective, high-capacity archival, while external NVMe SSDs provide superior speed for active editing.Highest Capacity Options by Type
External SSD Towers/RAID (Highest Performance): LaCie 6-bay/8-bay rigs are among the highest capacity, offering up to 60TB or more using SSDs for extreme speeds in a tower format. Enterprise-grade drives like the 122TB Solidigm D5-P5336 are also available but designed for specialized data center use.
External Desktop HDD Towers (Highest Capacity/Value): The Seagate Expansion 28TB (single drive) offers some of the highest single-unit consumer capacity. For multi-drive towers, options typically hold 20TB+ per bay.
Best High-Capacity Choices:
Best Enterprise/Workstation SSD: LaCie 6big/12big (48TB-60TB+).
Best High-Cap Desktop HDD: Seagate Expansion 28TB or 22TB.
Best High-Cap Desktop HDD: WD Elements 18TB-20TB.When choosing, consider that HDD towers offer the best price-per-TB for backups, while SSD towers provide significantly faster transfer speeds for media production, albeit at a much higher price point.
The highest capacity external storage available currently reaches up to 28TBβ36TB for HDDs and over 30TB for specialized external SSDs. Seagate Expansion offers external HDDs up to 28TB, while enterprise-grade drives like the Seagate Exos reach 36TB. For SSDs, high-capacity enterprise units like the Glyph Blackbox Plus offer up to 30.72TB.
Top Highest Capacity External Storage Options (As of early 2026):
Highest Capacity HDD (Desktop/Archive):
Seagate Expansion: Up to 28TB (3.5-inch desktop).
WD Elements/easystore: Commonly available in 14TBβ18TB options.
Enterprise External Units: Specialized units can house 36TB+ drives.
Highest Capacity SSD (Portable/Production):
Glyph Blackbox Plus: Up to 30.72TB SSD.
Common High-Capacity SSDs: Models from SanDisk and Samsung (e.g., T7 Shield) usually cap out around 4TB for mainstream portable use.
Key Considerations:
HDD: Ideal for cost-effective, massive storage (20/TB deals available) but slower.
SSD: Ideal for speed, durability, and portability (1,000+ MB/s), but much higher cost per terabyte.
Form Factor: 3.5-inch desktop drives offer the highest capacity (require power outlets), while 2.5-inch portable drives cap around 5TBβ6TB. -
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around 3 terabytes

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