Where The Bandwidth Goes
An anonymous reader writes "An often overlooked fact about network bandwidth utilization is that the bandwidth consumed on networks is more than the sum of the data exchanged at the highest level; it's data+overhead+upkeep. In the early 90's I worked for a large multi-national company whose software engineering department had a transatlantic x.25 circuit connection to it's European engineering headquarters. It was necessary that the connection be 'on' 24x7 due to the spanning of a large number of time zones, disparate working hours and tight contractual requirements. Very large data transfers were sometimes operationally essential. But the financial people used to scream constantly about the circuit costs (charged per packet, IIRC) of several thousand dollars/month. The sys admin realized that if he just reduced the frequency of keep-alives, he could shave something like 10% off the monthly bill. This article points out that p2p applications are greater bandwidth hogs than one might think because of the foregoing and more - they also search, accept pushed advertising and do other transactions that are transparent to most users, but add up. I doubt that developers of those free p2p applications have gave much thought to efficiency. This will be no surprise to many of you, but helps explain why ISP's rushing to put caps on transfers."
This is an optional way of logging into Slashdot. Go to your preferences, then to the password page.
There is a line of text that says
"You can automatically log in by clicking This Link and Bookmarking the resulting page. This is totally insecure, but very convenient."
If you look at the link, it is pretty much the URL that you have noted. It looks like this is not a bug, but rather a very poor feature that the authors know is insecure, but have chosen to retain. At least using it is completely optional.
Back in the heyday of "X.25" networks, there were a lot of illegitimate users. There was inadequate technology to protect and track.
It is rumored that there are accounts on public x.25 networks, belonging to large corporations, that have worked for over 13 years.
And why are YOU replying as an AC?