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BitTorrent May Prove Too Good to Quash

gollum123 writes "There is an article on washignton post on bittorrent where the author discusses why BitTorrent is here to stay. According to the author it is being increasingly used to distribute software and entertainment legally. It also mentions that in BitTorrent, unlike many other file-sharing programs, legitimate use doesn't amount to a token minority. It's central to this program's existence. It concludes by saying that the MPAA may be able to drive BitTorrent movie downloads into what Green called "the dark corners of the Internet," but this program isn't going to go away. It might, however, be just what movie studios and record labels need to market and distribute their own content efficiently on the Web."

50 of 484 comments (clear)

  1. Yeah, We figured that one out... by ShadowBlasko · · Score: 5, Informative

    Over at Empornium...

    150k member max, and still beating them away with a stick!

    No leechers rocks!

    Just as long as admins remember to lose those logs... I just *hate* hardware failures...

    dont you?

    --
    There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order- Ed Howdershelt Via Tass
    1. Re:Yeah, We figured that one out... by ShadowBlasko · · Score: 3, Informative

      Most likely because of the intensified server load that results from account analysis, throttling, and "upload only" limiting to prevent leeching.

      If you are running without that kind of tracking, sure, open it up and go hog wild. With it, you need to keep an eye on your capacity. It's a pretty big load.

      That and the hardware is somewhat expensive.

      I know the Big E tracker is handwritten, and babied, it could probably handle many more, but stability seems best at a cap of around 150K

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order- Ed Howdershelt Via Tass
    2. Re:Yeah, We figured that one out... by Tackhead · · Score: 3, Funny
      > Over at Empornium...
      > 150k member max, and still beating them away with a stick!
      At least you're not beating them off with a stick.

      Not that there's anything wrong with that. I just don't need a .torrent of it.

    3. Re:Yeah, We figured that one out... by Slack3r78 · · Score: 5, Informative

      Most home connections are asynchronous and have a far higher download rate than upload rate. Leeching is when someone finishes a download, and doesn't seed back at least as much as they took.

    4. Re:Yeah, We figured that one out... by Manchot · · Score: 3, Informative

      Almost all BT clients allow you to adjust your maximum upload bandwidth. You probably just need to lower it a bit, until you find that "sweet spot" where your download rate = your upload rate.

    5. Re:Yeah, We figured that one out... by jascat · · Score: 3, Informative

      Use Azureus with the AutoSpeed plugin. This dynamically changes your global upload speed depending so you are always in that "sweet spot".

    6. Re:Yeah, We figured that one out... by aardvarkjoe · · Score: 4, Informative
      With BitTorrent it's difficult to do this, because unless you upload (and peers report packets coming from you to the tracker) then your download speed is gonna suck.
      This is only the case when you are trying to download from a torrent where there isn't enough bandwidth available on the torrent to serve all of the downloaders. In that case, those who are uploading will tend to get better rates than those who are not (or who are severely limiting it.) However, when the available bandwidth starts increasing compared to the number of downloaders, they can start getting their downloads for "free." This often happens after the torrent is a few days old, and there are a bunch of people sitting on the torrent.

      If you have too many people with low upload rates, then the people who aren't restricting their uploads won't end up connected to each other -- and so will frequently end up uploading significantly more than they eventually download. That's one likely explanation for the parent poster's experience of uploading much more than he downloaded.

      One other thing that can affect this is that most of the popular clients -- the last time I looked at them, anyway -- normally try to take as much bandwidth as they can for each torrent that you are uploading/downloading. Imagine that you are on two torrents, one popular and one unpopular. A bunch of people are connected on the first, and only one on the second. Often, half of your upstream will be used to upload to the one person on torrent 2, regardless of whether he is uploading or not.

      --

      How can we continue to believe in a just universe and freedom to eat crackers if we have no ale?
    7. Re:Yeah, We figured that one out... by InvalidError · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The BT tracker does not know jack about how much you uploaded to / download from everyone... ... all it knows is how much your client claimed it uploaded and downloaded.

      Here is all that a peer sends to a tracker while doing tracker updates:

      GET [InfoHash]?peer_id=[PeerID]&port=[Port]&uploaded=[ Amount Uploaded]&downloaded=[Amount Downloaded]&left=[Amount Left]&key=[Private ID]

      The rest is the usual generic HTTP header stuff such as application name, encoding and compression options.

      Since I did write a BT client in late 2003 (and currently am in the middle of rewriting it), I probably know what I am writing about.

      Normal BT trackers only know how much a peer claimed to have uploaded and downloaded. The only real way to detect leeches would be to get feedback from specially written BT clients about actual peer behavior and report to the tracker. Generic BT clients do not do any of this so anyone who knows a tiny bit of python or Java could modify a BT client to report 10X as much upload as actual and be virtually freed from upload/download ratios.

  2. Thoughts of a "token minority" on slashdot... by daveschroeder · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It might, however, be just what movie studios and record labels need to market and distribute their own content efficiently on the Web.

    Well, at least someone realizes this, instead of tacitly - or overtly - arguing that it's okay for them to be unabashedly ripped off, coupled with myriad ridiculous justifications and semantic acrobatics about how it's not really "stealing".

    Frankly, the content industry convincing major ISPs to enable multicast on their networks may go a lot further toward efficiently distributing non-"on demand" content than something like BitTorrent.

    But backing up a bit:

    One reason for this change of heart may be that in BitTorrent, unlike many other file-sharing programs, legitimate use doesn't amount to a token minority. It's central to this program's existence.

    Not that I don't recognize that BitTorrent is currently used for many legitimate applications (whereas that was extremely difficult to argue with a straight face with P2P), but I think this statement is a little overboard. I'd say that, currently, "legitimate" use of BitTorrent is a "token minority" of its use. The vast, vast majority is pirated software, pirated movies, and pirated TV shows (and, to a lesser extent, music, just because of the nature of BitTorrent being more conveniently applicable to small amounts of large files, rather than large amounts of small files).

    Anyone not admitting that at this particular point in time is lying to themselves.

    Note that I agree wholeheartedly that BitTorrent isn't going to go away. Neither did P2P. But the content owners will continue to rightfully go after people and sites who distribute copyrighted content unlawfully, no matter the mechanism (please, no fringe examples of 83 year old grandmothers and dead people). But yes, I get the point - and agree with it - that BitTorrent could potentially have much more legitimate use than traditional P2P.

    The point is valid: the fundamental distribution mechanism of BitTorrent is a novel and good one; there is no reason that BitTorrent couldn't, for example, be made even more robust and further "protocolized", and integrated into browsers and other download clients, allowing content distributors of any stripe to take advantage of its clear benefits. And in order for it to be a compelling solution for real content providers, that's exactly what will have to happen.

    1. Re:Thoughts of a "token minority" on slashdot... by garcia · · Score: 4, Informative

      Not that I don't recognize that BitTorrent is currently used for many legitimate applications (whereas that was extremely difficult to argue with a straight face with P2P), but I think this statement is a little overboard. I'd say that, currently, "legitimate" use of BitTorrent is a "token minority" of its use. The vast, vast majority is pirated software, pirated movies, and pirated TV shows (and, to a lesser extent, music, just because of the nature of BitTorrent being more conveniently applicable to small amounts of large files, rather than large amounts of small files).

      Anyone not admitting that at this particular point in time is lying to themselves.


      Maybe that was true when SuperNova and LokiTorrent were around. We are sorta heading back into the "time before torrents" when stuff wasn't easily available on a huge online database available on the web.

      Have you take a split second to look at the legitimate uses of torrents recently? easytree, Etree, etc? HUGE repositories of legal music for download?

      It's obvious to me that you haven't.

    2. Re:Thoughts of a "token minority" on slashdot... by tabkey12 · · Score: 4, Interesting
      A brilliant post here, but missing one problem...

      Bittorrent is being actively discriminated against by ISPs, e.g. slowing down long-term Bittorrent seeding. You rightly point out that this could be illegal but this in turn stops the legitimate use of bittorrent in, for instance, distributing large linux distros, as the upload speed is limited...

      At one point, the Bittorrent devs threatened to make their packets unidentifiable to combat this - I do hope they would.

    3. Re:Thoughts of a "token minority" on slashdot... by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Uh, they do provide bandwidth of their own. But it's a fact that downloading the WOW beta or WOW patches via BitTorrent is a lot faster than a direct download, and no amount of bandwidth that Blizzard could establish would make a blind bit of difference to that reality.

      You seem to be forgetting the huge installed user base of WOW players. Were talking about approaching 1 million (if not already past that figure) players worldwide. Can you imagine the chaos that would ensue if 1 million people were to try to directly download even a modest patch (say, 5MB) on the day it was applied?

      By the way, I have no doubt that $15 a month leaves Blizzard with some profit, but I think you (and others with fixations about how much Blizzard is or isn't making from WOW) forget that a large chunk of that will go on the infrastructure (bandwidth, servers, big realtime databases, GMs, technical and other support) that's required to keep the game running.

      Bottom line: patching via BitTorrent is the best solution for WOW or any other game with such a large installed user base.

      --

      "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
  3. Not a brilliant article... by tabkey12 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    as it doesn't mention the plethora of brilliant '3rd party' clients like Azureusand BitTornado which have been offering a variety of these features for a very long time.

  4. Speed by giginger · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I've noticed a distinct speed decrease in torrents lately. Surely the only person who's had a decrease in torrent speed when they upgrade to 2meg. Seriously though, I don't know if my ISP is catching on to torrent use but I've gone from 100k+ to 20/30 average.... Not good.

  5. The possibilites by Kimos · · Score: 4, Insightful

    BitTorrent is a very powerful protocol. It's a shame that so many businesses automatically associate it with illegitimate filesharing. They miss out on a nearly-free way of distributing large files. Not to mention that most corporate networks block BT traffic making it impossible for employees to take advantage of legitimate torrents that are available.

  6. Gee Wiz by jester22c · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...You think a protocol that contributes a third of all internet traffic is being found useful? Hmmm... yeah I think so.

  7. I don't think so by WormholeFiend · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The MPAA will still want to charge about the same price for a download as a store-bought movie.

    Unless they prove me wrong, their torrent distribution model is not viable.

    1. Re:I don't think so by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

      I don't know where you're getting your music but the majority of the CDs I've purchased have anywhere from 10-18 songs on them. They were purchased for roughly 10-$20 an album, at $1 a song those are pretty even costs.

  8. Of course they aren't, it's different! by garcia · · Score: 5, Insightful

    But the Washington-based lobby hasn't sued BitTorrent's developer, Bram Cohen of Bellevue, Wash., nor has it gone after individual BitTorrent users.

    How could they go after him? The software is open-source and its intentions are nothing less than noble. If Cohen was looking to *directly* make money on BitTorrent he wouldn't have released the source to it.

    As far as going after individual users... They rarely did anyway. BitTorrent isn't as easy as Kazaa for finding "mass sharers". Most people are maxing their upstream on a single torrent instead of offering up their entire personal library in one place. That is why they are going after the sites linking to the trackers.

    Independent musicians can also use BitTorrent to provide free samples. The Web site of the South by Southwest music festival (2005.sxsw.com/
    geekout/sxsw4pod/) uses BitTorrent to offer a 2.6-gigabyte compilation of songs by artists playing at this Austin event. (In an unplanned demonstration of how BitTorrent doesn't always function at top speed, that torrent was more of a glacier Tuesday night, with too few users to serve up bits of the file.)


    And the author of this article just proved how posting links to torrents on a highly trafficked site will get him his music faster. ;-)

    The MPAA may be able to drive BitTorrent movie downloads into what Green called "the dark corners of the Internet," but this program isn't going to go away. It might, however, be just what movie studios and record labels need to market and distribute their own content efficiently on the Web.

    And what? Put all those popcorn salesmen and ticket rippers out of their after-school jobs? Nope, at least not for now.

  9. Distribute & Pay? by l0rd · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Am I the only one here who has a problem with bittorrent being used as a distribution medium for legally sold movies & albums?

    Don't get me wrong, I LOVE bittorrent and don't mind using it for isos or distros. The problem I have is with someone makeing a big profit out of me AND using my upstream to limit their bandwidth costs.

    Am I the only one who has a problem with this?

    1. Re:Distribute & Pay? by Homology · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Don't get me wrong, I LOVE bittorrent and don't mind using it for isos or distros. The problem I have is with someone makeing a big profit out of me AND using my upstream to limit their bandwidth costs.

      Then, of course, you don't mind paying more to cover the cost of a direct download only connection. Right?

    2. Re:Distribute & Pay? by Lomby · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Simple answer.

      Option 1:

      direct download -> 5$

      Option 2:

      torrent download -> 3$

      Option 3:

      DVD by mail -> 15$

      You can obtain a cheaper price if you use Bittorrent, since you pay a part of the distribution costs (with your bandwidth).

  10. Re:Sources ? by Scoria · · Score: 3, Funny

    Look, everybody, it's Jack Valenti on Slashdot!

    --
    Do you like German cars?
  11. Unavailable movies. by Hiro+Antagonist · · Score: 4, Interesting

    One of the things for which I love BitTorrent is the ability to get movies and television programs not available in the 'States. I'm studying Japanese, and don't like most of the Japanese media that is available in the US, as it is marketed, by and large, for the otaku crowd. I mean, yeah, there's some good stuff in there, but most of it is crap.

    Having access to BitTorrent means that I can download regular TV shows, dramas, historical programs, and recorded news broadcasts, all of which would be completely unavailable in the U.S. I can download anime that I like, but which isn't popular enough to make it into the U.S. market. These are all very effective study tools, and have helped me improve my listening comprehension markedly.

    --

    --
    I Hit the Karma Cap, and All I Got Was This Lousy .sig.
  12. That's not the critical difference by Have+Blue · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There is no "the BitTorrent"- no single point of failure. If you have a copy of the tracker, you can torrent anything you want and only what you want. Set up a complete torrent infrastructure on your own site and use it to serve only your (legitimate) content. It's just another type of server that anyone can use independent of anyone else on the net. They may as well try to kill FTP.

  13. Re:Sources ? by turtled · · Score: 4, Informative

    Sources are all over. Just do a google search for torrent, and you have pages and pages of results. I use
    http://isohunt.com/
    http://www.novatina.com/
    m y fav: http://www.btefnet.org
    or a shit load here:
    http://www.slyck.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t =8690

    --
    "I cannot think of any need in childhood as strong as the need for a father's protection." -- Sigmund Freud
  14. Re:Sources ? by AnonymousCowheart · · Score: 4, Informative

    suprnova.org was used mostly for illegal content, this is about LEGAL uses for bittorrent.
    Check out legaltorrents.com

  15. Suggestion: Legit use for BT by CdBee · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It's increasingly likely that in the years to come it will be possible to rent videos by having a set-top box coupled to a DSL or Cable broadband pipe, which downloads DRM-enabled video files from a central server.

    What better way to save bandwidth - the single killer cost when each film might sum a gigabyte - than by having the box download the film using a restricted version of bittorrent, and use a proportion of the available upstream bandwidth on the local connection to supply other people renting the same film? As the file's encrypted piracy wouldn't be a concern as the key to play it would only be issued by the central server, over an encrypted channel.

    This would have the effect - exactly opposite to a DVD-rental shop - that popular videos would be available more quickly than rarely demanded ones. The system has the same priorities as the company behind it.

    --
    I have been a user for about 10 years. This ends Feb 2014. The site's been ruined. I'm off. Dice, FU
    1. Re:Suggestion: Legit use for BT by garcia · · Score: 4, Insightful

      What better way to save bandwidth - the single killer cost when each film might sum a gigabyte - than by having the box download the film using a restricted version of bittorrent, and use a proportion of the available upstream bandwidth on the local connection to supply other people renting the same film? As the file's encrypted piracy wouldn't be a concern as the key to play it would only be issued by the central server, over an encrypted channel.

      What better way to waste my money than to require me to pay for an Internet connection to download a movie that I paid for! Not only that but I don't get it instantaneously and I have to slow down the rest of my home network while maxing my upstream helping the content distributer not spend so much on bandwith costs.

      This would have the effect - exactly opposite to a DVD-rental shop - that popular videos would be available more quickly than rarely demanded ones. The system has the same priorities as the company behind it.

      More quickly? You haven't been to a large video chain recenty have you? I have never had a problem getting a "new" movie. In fact, I have a harder problem getting something that isn't "new". They have racks and racks of their latest releases and only one or two copies of the older stuff.

      If I can't get it at Blockbuster I can walk across the street to Hollywood and get it there.

      YMMV ;)

    2. Re:Suggestion: Legit use for BT by An+Ominous+Cow+Erred · · Score: 3, Insightful

      This is basically what Steam does. ...and it's a crock, because it's basically paying the company to use YOUR resources.

      Plenty of people are willing to donate the upstream bandwidth they pay for to support noncommercial uses (be it legally for open source software, or illegally for liberated/copyrightinfringement software).

      It's a whole different kettle of fish when your upstream goes to pay for THEIR costs.

      A fairer scheme would be that they'd give you the material for free in exchange for you hosting their torrent long enough, so that people who have more money than time (executives, doctors, bankers) can pay for convenience, and people who have more time than money (students, minimum wage workers) can get what they want for free in exchange for taking the time and bandwidth to host stuff.

    3. Re:Suggestion: Legit use for BT by Vitriol+Angst · · Score: 5, Interesting

      The networks are going to move to H.264 very quickly. It compresses HD (High Definition) into about the same bandwidth as current "Standard" definition channels now. That may leave some excess capacity, because I think that there will be a lot of SD content for a long time to come.

      I think it is more expedient to adapt "burst mode" video transfer (faster than real time data download) that would cover a huge selection of content, so that 90% of what customers want to see can be downloaded on existing cable and satellite networks in a day. I think the BitTorrent model will be a good idea and a stepping stone. It will have to exist in the margins with the "hard to get" video on demand like NetFlicks.

      I think they should jump the gun and build an iTunes like experience for video downloads. If they don't immediately (in the next 6 months) get a customer base, then they will never take off.

      Look for Apple to jump into the fray as well. It would be easier for them to create a filesharing network on Akamai then it would be for BitTorrent to build an iTunes and micropayment system.

      At CBIT, various companies will be demoing multi-channel, high-demand H.264 video compression hardware. I expect anyone delivering video will make the fastest transition in history to the new format because it essentially gives them 4x the bandwidth they currently have. Whether customers really have to have HD to see Hollywood squares isn't really the issue. It will be culturally embarassing for a broadcast to NOT be HD in about a year. It was kind of the same thing with companies having web sites during the '90s.

      Plus, really High Quality TV might distract the population from drought destroyed crops and an oil shortage this summer. Expect to see more nudity on TV, since this also worked in the USSR. No, I'm not kidding. Nobody believed Cassandra either. ;-)

      --
      >>"ad space available -- low rates!!!"
    4. Re:Suggestion: Legit use for BT by moonbender · · Score: 3, Informative

      This is basically what Steam does.

      Steam? As in Valve's distribution mechanism? That Steam, at least, doesn't do anything like that. There is no P2P mechanism in steam, clients are pure clients. Updates are downloaded from a network of mirrors distributed geographically ("Total Available Bandwidth: 14,635.00Mbps"). Come to think of it, I wonder what protocol is used to transfer data from the content servers... it might be some Steam-proprietary protocol, but chances are it's simply HTTP or FTP.

      Anyway, maybe you're thinkink of Blizzard's World of Warcraft. They used to rely heavily on BitTorrent to transfer the beta client and major updates. These days, it seems that all updates are downloaded from the servers, at least from the looks of it. Maybe that will change with the next major update. (And maybe it's different in the US, I'm in the EU.)
      That was a disaster for me and many other people, because Blizzards were too dumb to limit the upstream either manually or by some sort of algorithm, which lead to extremely slow downloads on asynchronous connections. You could extract the .torrent file, though, and download with your favorite client, which I did getting, oh, about 1000x the download rates.

      --
      Switch back to Slashdot's D1 system.
    5. Re:Suggestion: Legit use for BT by tomhudson · · Score: 3, Interesting
      When are people going to get a clue?

      I look at a satellite Tv image, I see a crappy picture, especially when there's a lot of motion. So do some other people. Others don't see/notice/are bothered by the image artifacts, so your mileage definitely WILL vary. There's a loss of quality that really bugs me.

      H.264 is not going to be that great in terms of quality. I've been using it for over a year on developmental video hardware, and, while it does give better compression/smaller files, it's not the same quality you're going to get from a dvd.

      Besides, the cable networks are already streaming live video directly to ppv customers. Why would they want to pay a licensing fee for H.264, as well as obsoleting their current boxes?

      So, back on-topic: As for legit uses, every few weeks I download another linux distro, and leave the torrents open for a couple of weeks. So far this month, I've uploaded 60 gigs worth of linux distros.

      Besides, with the internet, who has time to watch TV any more? [tt]

  16. Irony of bittorrent by Lelon · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The irony of bittorrent is that while the technology is designed to be somewhat decentralized, from a piracy standpoint it actually works better when everyone goes to one site. In order for a file to remain healthy for an extended period of time, a minimum number of people have to be always downloading/uploading that file. So if you want to download a ten week old episode of The OC, the only way you're going to find that is if the 8 other people in the entire country are looking for it in the same place. A real replacement for suprnova has yet to emerge, indicating that the lawsuits are working.

  17. The Floodgates are Open by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 4, Interesting

    BitTorrent is a really big change, because with it we can finally upload data directly to "the network". The physical location of the data is immaterial. It's a really distributed database, where the schema is determined by the content, unlike the previous top-down schema designs. And it works - especially well on large media objects.

    It's just getting started. A few changes will make it the global distributed computing system we've each been coming at like blind men at a seeming menagerie that's really just one elephant. Distributing the catalog, so any centralization is redundant. Ensuring that any bit is always replicated at least once. Implicit hyperlinks among data chunks for content-specified traversal of the infospace (like HTTP/HTML/URLs). Search engines full of metadata. Asynchronous, realtime streaming protocols layered atop the application - including multicasting.

    Maybe it won't be "BitTorrent" that gets these revs - after them, it would hardly be recognizable as BT. But BT has gotten us across a major watershed, the way the CERN HTTPd v1.0 did in 1990. Like anything else that hundreds of millions of people are doing simultaneously, throughout the day and night, it's too late to stop.

    --

    --
    make install -not war

  18. Rubbish! by aug24 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If Debian and others are putting their ISOs out on BT and I and others are relying on them, then it's hardly 'token'.

    BT is becoming the distribution method of choice for plenty of legitimate stuff. Sure there's vastly more illegal stuff, but the legal stuff is definitely not 'token'.

    Justin.

    --
    You're only jealous cos the little penguins are talking to me.
  19. If you can't beat them, join them by Dark+Paladin · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm surprised that the MPAA hasn't learned from the RIAA's lessons. We have the iTunes Music Store, the Napster store, and others, all proving that people will pay for downloads. Would they be better without DRM and if they also offered Lossless music? Sure - but there are some third party independents that are doing that, so perhaps they'll pressure the other "major" stores to do so.

    So why hasn't the MPAA tried it? Open up an online store with a bittorrent back end much like Valve's Steam: able to distribute data to the hard drive that uses Bittorrent like technology to speed up the downloads, encrypt as it writes to the hard drive and let people watch it from there on their computers or portable devices or stream media (like Tivo, for example). Charge more for higher bit downloads, so if you order the HD quality movie you'll pay more for the download (but you should be able to have that compressed down onto your portable devices without having to buy again), or if you just buy the portable device only version you can pay less (but will look crappy as hell on your TV, so you get what you pay for).

    There's no good technological reason why someone hasn't done this - only fear of loss of control and fear that someone will replace their distribution model from production companies -> theaters -> DVDs -> TV. But if they don't replace their production models themselves to production companies -> theaters/home use downloads (expensive, spending more for "just released" movies) -> DVD/home downloads (less expensive), someone else will do it for them, and they'll be worse off for it.

    The author makes some good points about how currently MPAA/RIAA fights are to keep technologies down or even products off the marketplace (see the mobile carriers and the Motorola iTunes phone as an example), rather than embracing the technology and being the service company that makes it work for you.

    Maybe that's the problem. The MPAA/RIAA/mobile carriers see themselves as seller of widgets, instead of services. They can make a lot more money by providing services with less costs of widgets (cost of pressing DVD and shipping is probably greater than bandwidth and creating once, in the long run), but it's that fear of "new" that keeps them from seeing that they're killing the goose that keeps wandering around their yard looking for food - without realizing that it keeps squirting out golden eggs.

    Of course, this is just my opinion. I could be wrong.

  20. BitTorrent has also become more managable by sjvn · · Score: 3, Informative

    With the new version, 4.0, now available

    http://www.bittorrent.com/index.html

    for both Windows and Linux (MacOS real soon now), it's a lot easier for both users and network administrators to manage the protocol's bandwidth hungry ways. It's so much easier now that I think that you'll be able to talk organizations, which have banned its use, on the grounds that it eats up too much bandwidth, into rethinking their positions.

    Heck, for that matter, I think that since BitTorrent bandwidth use is now mindlessly simple to manage, it will become a popular tool for businesses that need to move large data files back and forth between offices.

    For more on all this see:

    http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,1759,1775223,00. as p

    Steven

  21. it'd be nice by mattyrobinson69 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    if the bittorrent protocol would be updated to look like HTTP or FTP or something else, to make it impossible for ISP's to filter it.

  22. Re:Sheesh, enough BT already by Chris+Burke · · Score: 3, Funny

    Next week on /.

    Your Rights Online : Google and BitTorrent apply for new patent on using RFID to mirror Wikipedia


    Ha! And I didn't even need to subscribe!

    --

    The enemies of Democracy are
  23. I call bullshit by Deep+Fried+Geekboy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I don't think 'token minority' means what you think it means.

    Legitimate users may be a minority -- maybe even a tiny minority -- but they are not a 'token minority' by any means, in the sense of only there for symbolic purposes to legitimize the non-legitimate use.

    I use BitTorrent *all the time* legitimately. Whether it's for some student movie or a big whopping disc image (like X-Plane). I might be in the minority but my uses are not token.

    --

    I'm not wrong. You haven't thought about it hard enough.

  24. Re:I'm still waiting... by cpghost · · Score: 3, Insightful

    if you take the entire net down

    The Internet is much more resilient against this than you may think. Remember: even in war zones, the last communication channels that break down are internet links. IP is designed in such a way that it can use ANY kind of link whatsoever in a pretty ad hoc manner. Taking down big ISPs may slow down the masses, but it won't take the Internet down!

    --
    cpghost at Cordula's Web.
  25. Huh? by bonch · · Score: 3, Informative

    It might, however, be just what movie studios and record labels need to market and distribute their own content efficiently on the Web

    Now why would it be in their best interest to distribute movies and music so that everyone else could get it without compensating them for it? Is this more of the silly "free advertising" argument? Seriously, how would you expect them to get paid if they did that? I guess a recording artist is expected to spend three months renting out a studio and equipment, just to have the music blasted onto Bittorrent where he won't get paid for his work.

    Are you telling me the Bittorrent system has DRM or some other way of preventing people from getting the material without paying for it? If not, is there a way to graft on such a system? Only then would studios even consider using it. Otherwise, it's silly wishful thinking on the part of people who are, shall we say, used to the convenience of downloading whatever they want and so invent reasons for everything to be on P2P.

    1. Re:Huh? by farnz · · Score: 3, Informative

      BitTorrent is just a file transfer method; like HTTP or FTP, it transfers files. DRM is applied at the file level, and is not related to the file transfer method, whether it be BitTorrent or HTTP (iTunes can use HTTP to download purchased music; I don't know if it uses it exclusively, or only when behind a strict firewall).

  26. Use ports your ISP won't expect by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    You might want to forward and use a set of 10 consecutive ports starting from an arbitrary number between 50000 and 60000. Some ISPs use packet shaping or throttling on the standard ports. A number of Other people I know have noticed a marked increase after following this advice.

  27. bandwidth useage by Matey-O · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It may also be the lever ISP's use to raise rates. Face it 3 mb/s down is cool and easy to over commit when the end users are surfing the web and readin email.

    Central to Bit Torrent is maxing our your pipe, then leaving it up long enough to let others have what you've got. That kind of allocation wasn't planned for when broadband was originally mapped out.

    --
    "Draco dormiens nunquam titillandus."
  28. Re:BitTorrent is flawed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Actually this is not at all how it works, BitTorrent downloads chunks of the file in any order. The 90% you reffer to isn't the first 90% of the file it's just 90% of the file, the reason this happens is the seeder may disconnect before giving out a complete copy of the file and the sum of the stuff the connected peers have is only 90% of the file.

    Who the hell modded you up?

  29. Random First / Rarest First by Daverd · · Score: 5, Informative

    http://sailes.co.uk/sy22/bittorrent.htm

    What you said is completely false. BitTorrent uses either Random First, i.e. selects a random chunk to download, or Rarest First, i.e. downloads the chunk that the fewest clients have. It definitely does NOT go linearly from beginning to end of file. If it stalls around 90%, this is only because there are some chunks which are much more rare than others.

  30. BitTorrent is not that flawed by Daverd · · Score: 3, Interesting

    That's the fundamental problem of BitTorrent: no incentive for seeds to stay. This isn't really a *problem* at all. Sure, it means that your BT download might not go as fast as if they seeds stuck around. However, in the worst case, BitTorrent speeds simply break down to FTP levels (i.e. everyone is getting their chunks directly from one central copy.) Anyway, it's their bandwidth, they don't have to seed if they don't want to. To review, worst case: as good as FTP best case: WAY better than FTP

  31. you're ignoring the word "token" by Xtifr · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I agree that the legitimate use of bittorrent is probably a minority (although it's ~100% of my use), but saying that it's a token minority is a whole nuther story. In general, a "token minority" implies that it's just there for show ("look, we don't discriminate against blacks - we even hired one!"). The illegal uses of BT may be a vast, vast majority, but that doesn't contradict the claim that the legitimate uses go far, far beyond merely being token.