
The photo quickly became a cultural shorthand for the atrocities of the Vietnam War and joined Malcolm Browne’s Burning Monk and Eddie Adams’ Saigon Execution as defining images of that brutal conflict. It also sparked newsroom debates about running a photo with nudity, pushing many publications, including the New York Times, to override their policies. Ut’s photo of the raw impact of conflict underscored that the war was doing more harm than good. So with the help of colleagues he got her transferred to an American facility for treatment that saved her life.

She was screaming, ‘Too hot! Too hot!’” Ut took Kim Phuc to a hospital, where he learned that she might not survive the third-degree burns covering 30 percent of her body. “I took a lot of water and poured it on her body.

Ut wondered, Why doesn’t she have clothes? He then realized that she had been hit by napalm. As the Vietnamese photographer took pictures of the carnage, he saw a group of children and soldiers along with a screaming naked girl running up the highway toward him. On June 8, 1972, Associated Press photographer Nick Ut was outside Trang Bang, about 25 miles northwest of Saigon, when the South Vietnamese air force mistakenly dropped a load of napalm on the village. This was not the case with 9-year-old Phan Thi Kim Phuc. However, if you use any of the following popular torrent sites, you'll have little trouble finding what you need.The faces of collateral damage and friendly fire are generally not seen. To help, you can use a torrent search site like the ones on the list. With that said, finding available torrent files isn't easy. People access these networks using torrent clients like BitTorrent or uTorrent. Downloads take place in pieces so that even if you shut down your computer in the middle of a download, you can continue your download later. If you aren't familiar with torrents, it's essentially a shared file that other nodes (computers) on the network can download. Note that none of these can get you in trouble. The following specialized underground search engines let you access all those hidden areas of the internet, like a legal torrent search engine or public records. It contains information available on the internet that standard search engines don't have access to because they are buried behind query forms or directory requests.

In many cases, these search engines are tapped into what is currently termed the invisible web, also known as the dark web. To dive into the underground internet, you need to use underground search engines. Everyone loves Google and Bing, but normal search engines only brush the surface of the internet.
