: Using the x264 standard, YIFY encoded high-definition movies (720p and 1080p) into files roughly one-tenth the size of a standard Blu-ray rip.
: Initial uploads began on KickassTorrents, notably a DVD rip of Toy Story 1 & 2 . As traffic grew, the official YIFY Torrents website was launched.
The original YIFY/YTS operation was shut down permanently in after a legal settlement with the Motion Picture Association (MPA) . Although the original founder settled out of court and remained confidential, the group's "prototype" for movie distribution was immediately adopted by numerous clones and imitators. Sites like YTS.mx continue to use the YIFY branding today, though they are unaffiliated with the original 2010 group. The Prototype YIFY
: While elite torrent groups ("The Scene") focused on high-bitrate quality for enthusiasts, YIFY bypassed these traditional standards to deliver content directly to public torrent sites like The Pirate Bay and KickassTorrents . Evolution and Rebranding
: Following Swery's retirement, the group rebranded to YTS (YIFY Torrent Solutions) and moved to new domains (yts.re) under a new management team. Legacy and Shutdown : Using the x264 standard, YIFY encoded high-definition
The brand (later rebranded to YTS ) originated in 2010 as a peer-to-peer movie release group founded by Yiftach Swery in Auckland, New Zealand. Before it became a global household name for digital piracy, it existed as a "prototype" of modern movie distribution—pioneering a specific model that traded audio-visual fidelity for extreme accessibility. The Core Methodology
The "YIFY" model was built on three pillars that served as a blueprint for casual movie piracy: The original YIFY/YTS operation was shut down permanently
: Every release followed a rigid template—consistent naming conventions, built-in subtitles, and small file sizes (typically ~700MB for 720p) that allowed users with slow internet to download full films quickly.