LBRY is a decentralized peer-to-peer protocol for publishing and accessing digital content. It utilizes the [LBRY blockchain](https://github.com/lbryio/lbrycrd) as a global namespace and database of digital content. Blockchain entries contain searchable content metadata, identities, rights and access rules. LBRY also provides a data network that consists of peers (seeders) uploading and downloading data from other peers, possibly in exchange for payments, as well as a distributed hash table used by peers to discover other peers.
LBRY SDK for Python is currently the most full featured implementation of the LBRY Network protocols and includes many useful components and tools for building decentralized applications. Primary features and components:
* Kademlia DHT (Distributed Hash Table) implementation for finding peers to download from and announcing to peers what we have to host ([lbrynet.dht](https://github.com/lbryio/lbry/tree/master/lbrynet/dht)).
* Blob exchange protocol for transferring encrypted blobs of content and negotiating payments ([lbrynet.blob_exchange](https://github.com/lbryio/lbry/tree/master/lbrynet/blob_exchange)).
* Protobuf schema for encoding and decoding metadata stored on the blockchain ([lbrynet.schema](https://github.com/lbryio/lbry/tree/master/lbrynet/schema)).
* Daemon with a JSON-RPC API to ease building end user applications in any language and for automating various tasks ([lbrynet.extras.daemon](https://github.com/lbryio/lbry/tree/master/lbrynet/extras/daemon)).
Our [releases page](https://github.com/lbryio/lbry/releases) contains pre-built binaries of the latest release, pre-releases, and past releases for macOS, Debian-based Linux, and Windows. [Automated travis builds](http://build.lbry.io/daemon/) are also available for testing.
We take security seriously. Please contact security@lbry.io regarding any security issues. [Our GPG key is here](https://lbry.io/faq/gpg-key) if you need it.
Daemon defaults, ports, and other settings are documented [here](https://lbry.tech/resources/daemon-settings).
Settings can be configured using a daemon-settings.yml file. An example can be found [here](https://github.com/lbryio/lbry/blob/master/example_daemon_settings.yml).