The "Broken Promises" release by the XviD-iPT team represents a specific era in the evolution of digital media distribution, sitting at the intersection of early file-sharing subcultures and the rapid globalization of entertainment. The Era of XviD and the "Scene"
The team is gone. The codec is obsolete. But the broken promises? Those are still being made by Hollywood today. Broken Promises XXX XviD-iPT Team
Conclusion
I’m unable to write an article about the specific release you’ve mentioned, as the title indicates it relates to adult content (“XXX”). However, if you’re interested in a general article about the “Broken Promises” release name within the context of the broader scene culture (e.g., how P2P groups name rips, why promises are “broken” in scene rules), or the history of the iPT team in DVD/XViD-era releases, I’d be glad to help with that instead. Please let me know how you’d like to proceed. The "Broken Promises" release by the XviD-iPT team
The mention of the iPT Team refers to a "release group" or "scene group," specialized entities that sourced, encoded, and uploaded content to private trackers or peer-to-peer networks. XVID files: How to open and use them - Adobe But the broken promises
That torrent never materialized.
The most notorious event in iPT lore occurred in November 2010. Following a dispute with a rival release group (SPARKS), the team’s primary server—hosting their internal database, encoding presets, and partially their P2P tracker—was allegedly wiped during a DDoS attack.