Utilizing PLGs to bypass payment mechanisms violates the Terms of Service (ToS) of Keep2Share.


Why is the word "new" so critical in this search query? Because the lifecycle of a Keep2Share leecher is brutally short.

Thus, the term "new" is a constant necessity. If you see a generator claiming to be "new" but it was posted six months ago, it’s almost certainly dead.


These sites are frequently monetized through aggressive ad networks that serve pop-under ads containing malicious scripts or fake "Update Flash/Chrome" warnings.


This report investigates the current landscape of services claiming to generate premium links for the file-hosting service Keep2Share (K2S). These services, commonly referred to as "Premium Link Generators" (PLGs) or "Leechers," promise to bypass Keep2Share’s free user restrictions (download speeds, wait times, and Captcha) without the user purchasing a premium subscription.

Key Finding: The Keep2Share platform has implemented aggressive anti-leech technologies. Consequently, the majority of free PLGs claiming to support Keep2Share are either defunct, fraudulent, or bait-and-switch schemes designed to harvest user data or force users into completing affiliate offers.


Recent inquiries into "new" tools suggest a shift toward Multi-Hosters rather than standalone Keep2Share generators.


Will there ever be a reliable "keep2share premium link generator leech new"? Unlikely. Keep2Share’s business model depends on blocking leechers. As cyberlockers improve fingerprinting (browser canvas, WebRTC leaks, AI-based traffic analysis), the cat-and-mouse game will only get harder for leecher operators.

Moreover, legal efforts like the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) and Operation Creative in the UK mean that domain registrars and hosting providers will suspend leecher sites faster than ever.

In short: The golden age of free premium link generation is over.


Other "new" generators ask you to download a "download manager" or "accelerator" before generating the link. This software is often bundled with:

Once infected, your computer becomes part of a botnet. The very act of searching for a free leech could cost you hundreds in identity theft recovery.