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ISP Rise Against P2P Users

bananaendian writes "Spencer Kelly from BBC's Click program writes about the emerging backslash against high bandwidth P2P users. Apparently it has been estimates that up to one third of internet's traffic is caused by BitTorrent file-sharing program. Especially ISPs who are leasing their bandwidth by the megabyte are more inclined to resort to 'shaping your traffic' by throttling ports, setting bandwidth limits or even classifying accounts according services used. What is your ISPs policy regarding P2P and is it fair for them to put restrictions and conditions on its use."

574 comments

  1. did anyone honestly fail to see this coming? by nowhere.elysium · · Score: 2, Insightful

    also, shouldn't it be a 'backlash', as opposed to a 'backslash'?

    --
    http://xkcd.com/313/
    1. Re:did anyone honestly fail to see this coming? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This article headline is very poorly written. That's not the only mistake I see.

    2. Re:did anyone honestly fail to see this coming? by nowhere.elysium · · Score: 1

      indeed, but i wasn't entirely sure if it was some kind of horrific in-joke pertaining to the name of slashdot, or just plain illiteracy. i'm definitely swinging to the latter.

      --
      http://xkcd.com/313/
    3. Re:did anyone honestly fail to see this coming? by quokkapox · · Score: 5, Funny
      ISP: Backslash
      P2P: Forward slash. Riposte.
      ISP: Touche. QOS Packet Filtering!
      P2P. Lunge. Encryption!
      ISP: En guard. Subpoena compliance.
      P2P: Aahaaah! Ubiquitous Mesh Networks.
      ISP: Arrrgh! [dies].

      Where is BadAnalogyGuy when you need him?

      --
      it's a blue bright blue Saturday hey hey
    4. Re:did anyone honestly fail to see this coming? by bhima · · Score: 1

      actually he's been in a bit of slump lately...

      On your scenario... I think there's a bit more between Encryption and Subpoena Compliance.... Mostly because *no one* wants Subpoena Compliance.

      Honestly all the ISP's need to get out of the unlimited business, because we all know it isn't unlimited. This business model in the US is just plain stupid.

      I have metered access during the day and un-metered at night this is exactly what paid for and my ISP & I don't have a problem with each other. Grant it I probably pay a bit more per month than the average USian Slashdoter (49 Euros) but it's fast and I don't get hassled.

      I've thought "Ubiquitous Mesh Networks" would be an interesting thing for a while... particularly combined with "Ubiquitous Access Points". I'm sure some USian will call me a commie bastard but the more of the network owned by the collective users the less corporations can whine about what we do. I live in a college town, so I'm sure my mesh experience will be limited to freaky German porn, Heavy Metal Electronica music and every warez'd game known to man... oh well.

      --
      Nothing in the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity.
    5. Re:did anyone honestly fail to see this coming? by Saeger · · Score: 4, Funny
      Well, you see... ubiquitous wireless mesh networking is sortof like a car that's efficiently shared by a dozen people in the area. i.e. it's COMMUNISM! And if the mesh links are encrypted with random hops between nodes (like Tor/Freenet) then it's secure and anonymous like a carbomber who can't be tracked down. i.e. TERRORISM!

      I think I've made my point-by-car-analogy quite clear.

      --
      Power to the Peaceful
    6. Re:did anyone honestly fail to see this coming? by NateE · · Score: 1

      Now this parent is QUALITY humor! Not the usual slashdot non-funny drivel.

    7. Re:did anyone honestly fail to see this coming? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Most people expected; but it's interesting. First we had the era when everybody was building networks and it was expensive to use. In those days lots of people built their own. Then there was an "everything is free" era. Why build your own network if other people are willing to do it free. Now we're back to the era of expensive, except they are trying to fix fees in a really anti-social way. Soon the internet will allow only TV stations, and anything which threatens entertainment monopolies (e.g. home web servers / VOIP / even slashdot :-) will be made more and more expensive and difficult to do.

      We need to go back to people building their own again. Like "freenets" (the old meaning..); neighborhood networks; wireless mesh networks etc. but this time (since the old internet exchanges have gone) with an country wide / international layer. Anybody willing? Has anybody already started?

    8. Re:did anyone honestly fail to see this coming? by A10n · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I agree with you. Technology & Freedom is always one step ahead of businesses and corporations.

      One example is DVD Encryption which was cracked by a 15 year old so he can watch movies in Linux. Its going to be the same with p2p software. Users will find a way around any restrictions imposed on them.

      You think bandwidth use is high now? Wait till all p2p traffic is encrypted and then overhead will be noticeable. Who knows, maybe it won't be noticeable since bandwidth lines and router technologies are constantly being updated.

      I heard CISCO has already made routers capable of dealing with optics directly and not having to convert them before interpretation and redirection saving valuable time and obviously increasing bandwidth speeds. Cool... :)

    9. Re:did anyone honestly fail to see this coming? by Have+Blue · · Score: 1

      Actually, the answer to all possible P2P schemes is enforcing a rate cap on your entire connection- If there's 500K/sec going into your port and that keeps up for, say, 12 hours, then it magically becomes 400, then 300, and so on until the network is less strained.

    10. Re:did anyone honestly fail to see this coming? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Popular myth suggests that given enough geeks and enough typewriters, they will eventually write something funny.

      Slashdot proves that the myth is false.

    11. Re:did anyone honestly fail to see this coming? by moro_666 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      now let's assume that the p2p software that i use, uses 'hiding' into other protocols and just to cover it's real purpose, switches the cover now and then. so no connection will stay up longer than ... let's say 30 minutes ... how exactly are you going to track this down ? it is impossible for the isp to understand if i'm downloading tar.gz file of opensource projects over the net as the http headers apply, or is it actually smth else hidden in there :p.

        they can't ever filter this out, even if they could, you can always use a 'massive xorring' encryption that makes it almost impossible for them to discover what you are receiving or sending.

        and since they have no proof that you are doing anything illegal in the first place (well it may seem weird that a person reads 1.2 gbytes of news daily and receives 3.2gbytes of email, but it's not illegal) there's no legal reason to limit the bandwidth that the client has paid for.

      over & out.

      --

      I'd tell you the chances of this story being a dupe, but you wouldn't like it.
    12. Re:did anyone honestly fail to see this coming? by FLEB · · Score: 1

      They don't really have to "track it down" if the strangle rule is based on the total incoming bandwidth.

      --
      Information wants to be free.
      Entertainment wants to be paid.
      You just want to be cheap.
    13. Re:did anyone honestly fail to see this coming? by raju1kabir · · Score: 1
      This business model in the US is just plain stupid. I have metered access during the day and un-metered at night this is exactly what paid for and my ISP & I don't have a problem with each other. Grant it I probably pay a bit more per month than the average USian Slashdoter (49 Euros) but it's fast and I don't get hassled.

      Making this out to be an allegory of some culture clash between profligate Americans and prudent Europeans is childish not to mention factually baseless.

      There is metered access in the USA and there is unmetered access in Europe (not to mention elsewhere). Today I am in the Netherlands using unlimited DSL at 19.95/month (there is also a 9.95/month plan from this ISP). And at home in Malaysia, unlimited DSL is about the same price. A quick read of dslreports.com or lowyat.net forums will confirm that the Malaysian service is in fact unlimited; many people seem to torrent 24 hours a day. From what I can see, metered broadband is rare and getting rarer worldwide.

      --
      "Patriotism is your conviction that this country is superior to all other countries because you were born in it." -- GBS
    14. Re:did anyone honestly fail to see this coming? by petecarlson · · Score: 1

      I don't care what your traffic is, I can still figure out that you are using considerably more then you are paying for and start to throttle your connection. It all comes down to the cost of bandwidth. If you are using a 1536/512 connection all day every day and paying me $25 a month for the connection, I am losing money which is why I will sell you that 1536/512 connection under terms that allow me to throttle your connection after you have moved X traffic in Y days.
      Assume 100 users uploading 512k all the time while averaging 512 down on their 1536 connection. That's ~50 Megs up and 50 down which costs me $2800 per month and I get one hell of a deal on bandwidth. I am now faced with moving that bandwidth to the customer, supporting the customer, running servers, paying for rooftop and tower leases, etc @ $3 per cust. It just wont work so I am either going to have to charge all my customers more, throttle customers who use too much bandwidth, or charge the customers who want more bandwidth more. If you would like an SLA for dedicated bandwidth, it will cost you ~$250 per month for that 1536/512 connection. (I don't actually sell 1536/512 dedicated but will sell 1536/1536 for $300). If you can find a better deal somewhere else and want to close your account, it's fine by me. I was losing money selling you bandwidth anyway.

    15. Re:did anyone honestly fail to see this coming? by petecarlson · · Score: 2, Insightful

      and since they have no proof that you are doing anything illegal in the first place (well it may seem weird that a person reads 1.2 gbytes of news daily and receives 3.2gbytes of email, but it's not illegal) there's no legal reason to limit the bandwidth that the client has paid for.

      Limiting a users use of bandwidth is not about legal or illegal, it is about giving users the bandwidth they have paid for. If you pay for dedicated bandwidth, then there is no reason to filter or shape your traffic except to limit it to the set ammount of bandwidth that you paid for. The problem is that residential users will pay for shared, best effort bandwidth but then try to use dedicated bandwidth at full capacity all day long. When this happens, I will shape their traffic. There just isn't any other way to make the business work.

    16. Re:did anyone honestly fail to see this coming? by hellanacho · · Score: 1

      "I'm sure some USian will call me a commie bastard but the more of the network owned by the collective users the less corporations can whine about what we do."

      hell, im considering calling you a commie bastard just for using the term "USian".

    17. Re:did anyone honestly fail to see this coming? by Beryllium+Sphere(tm) · · Score: 2, Funny

      > Where is BadAnalogyGuy when you need him?

      Right now he's like a car parked on the wrong side of town.

    18. Re:did anyone honestly fail to see this coming? by Money+for+Nothin' · · Score: 1

      This has to be the funniest post I've seen in a long time. Thanks for the laugh. :-)

    19. Re:did anyone honestly fail to see this coming? by TCM · · Score: 1

      And so original.

      --
      Of course it runs NetBSD. BTC: 1NT7QvbetmANwaMzhpVL6
    20. Re:did anyone honestly fail to see this coming? by moro_666 · · Score: 1

      well i usually buy a service that provides me at least 1024down/256up 24/7, i don't like size limiting bastards and neither do i like people that "adjust" my download line that i have paid for.

        if i want to test a few distros of linux out, i download the images and burn them to discs or run the images in an emulator. this means around 2gb per distro average (along with the updates and stuff, probably even more). i'm not doing illegal p2p, i'm not trying to use anything that i didn't buy (i pay for the connection with the specified up and down speed limits).

        but how can the isp tell if i'm doing movie sharing via bittorrent or downloading my .iso images over bittorrent ? they have no right whatsoever to limit the bandwidth that i have paid for.


      for those who buy limited bandwidth packages: sissssssiees, get a few more bucks out of the pocket and live happily ever after

      --

      I'd tell you the chances of this story being a dupe, but you wouldn't like it.
    21. Re:did anyone honestly fail to see this coming? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Spencer Kelly was simply referring to the parallels of the 1981 book "101 Things To Do With DOS Commands: The Emerging Backslash".

    22. Re:did anyone honestly fail to see this coming? by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      Try using that unmetered access as unmetered access, i.e. maxing the bandwidth constantly. Most ISPs won't like that even though they sold you "unmetered" access. I think that's what he means, that his ISP won't make a backdraw and tell him he's using his "unmetered" service too much.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    23. Re:did anyone honestly fail to see this coming? by raju1kabir · · Score: 1

      That's what I'm talking about when I mentioned the people who torrent 24 hours a day.

      --
      "Patriotism is your conviction that this country is superior to all other countries because you were born in it." -- GBS
    24. Re:did anyone honestly fail to see this coming? by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      No, all Slashdot proves is that a million geeks isn't nearly enough.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    25. Re:did anyone honestly fail to see this coming? by fizzyflux · · Score: 1

      Well ... no! It's like this in my country (The Netherlands): ISP: backlash ME: I cancel my account Open networks, free choice and an open market ... Most consumers in Europe (Netherlands, Germany, Belgium ...) have choice in physical network connection (4 or more in my town) and on some of these allow for multiple ISP's with different policies and packets. Don't panic ;-) --- And what about the upstream providers who provide to the last mile ISP's? The economics between Autonomous Systems doesn't work like a draw brige where packets stop at the turnpike. It's much more complex than that. --- As long as thre are multiple networks, peering contracts and open networks there's no need to worry. Or do you think I am wrong?

    26. Re:did anyone honestly fail to see this coming? by Thundersnatch · · Score: 1
      they have no right whatsoever to limit the bandwidth that i have paid for

      Read your terms of service from your ISP... I do not think "no right whatsoever" means what you think it means. If you didn't read your TOS before you signed up for the contract, well, that's your problem.

    27. Re:did anyone honestly fail to see this coming? by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "Try using that unmetered access as unmetered access, i.e. maxing the bandwidth constantly. Most ISPs won't like that even though they sold you "unmetered" access."

      Depends on the type of account you have. My last account was with Cox cable, business unit. I decided to get one of their business accts. and with that you can freely run servers, host content, and no caps up or down, static IP address, and even a basic SLA...for like $70/mo.

      That worked out quite well for me...and it isn't like you have to show them any kind of real proof of a business....this was at my house.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    28. Re:did anyone honestly fail to see this coming? by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "hell, im considering calling you a commie bastard just for using the term "USian"."

      Damn skippy!! We're Americans, always have been....always will be...

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    29. Re:did anyone honestly fail to see this coming? by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "I can still figure out that you are using considerably more then you are paying for and start to throttle your connection. It all comes down to the cost of bandwidth. If you are using a 1536/512 connection all day every day and paying me $25 a month for the connection, I am losing money which is why I will sell you that 1536/512 connection under terms that allow me to throttle your connection "

      Ah, but, there's the catch. I've yet to sign up with an ISP that stated in the agreement that my use of the bandwith was limited in any way. Unlimited usually means unlimited.

      I think 24/7 usage would fall under the unlimited category.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    30. Re:did anyone honestly fail to see this coming? by trentblase · · Score: 1

      I don't necessarily have a problem with using something other than "American". However, USian is just silly. First of all, how the hell do you pronounce it? You-ess-ee-an? Use-ee-an? Second, is there a reason to use something else? Is ANYONE confused by the term? Do Canadians want to claim the term for themselves? I didn't think so. Finally, I think people should, in general, be called what they want to be called. In the same way you wouldn't call a guy named Richard "Dick" unless he asks you to, don't call black guys "niggers", and don't call Americans "USians".

    31. Re:did anyone honestly fail to see this coming? by LunaticTippy · · Score: 1
      That's what I thought, until I got a passport and started travelling.

      When someone asks your citizenship, never say American. Half the time you'll get hassled, extra bs. Just accept the fact you're a US citizen. I didn't believe it after a Canadian Mounty made me feel like an idiot. but he was right.

      There is no such thing as an American citizenship.

      --
      Man, you really need that seminar!
    32. Re:did anyone honestly fail to see this coming? by stinerman · · Score: 1

      I can't speak for the GP, but I think its a tad bit misleading and unethical to advertise your service as "always on, blazing X down/Y up speeds so you can download music, movies, etc in a snap" and then turning around in the TOS and saying something to the effect of "don't actually use your connection or we're going to throttle the hell out of you".

      There is one US ISP I know about which doesn't do this crap -- Speakeasy. I use them at the moment, but can't afford them anymore. Its just a shame that we have to pay $50-60/mo to get nothing while people in Europe (and especially S. Korea) get more for less.

    33. Re:did anyone honestly fail to see this coming? by Thundersnatch · · Score: 1

      Slashdot is filled with anecdotes concerning European ISPs that throttle P2P applications. ISPs know that they don't have the bandwidth to supply all of their users with all of the rated bandwidth; it's simply too expensive based on their upstream bandwidth costs. So that's why they have a TOS which allows them to shape traffic with vague terms of what is "excessive usage".

      You can get guaranteed bandwidth from some ISPs, but it costs more. Which is as it should be. Bandwidth is purchased by ISPs based on the 95/5 rule, and constant file-trading makes that 95th percentile much higher. We pay for 10 Mbps of guaranteed unrestricted bandwidth at my company and it costs thousands of dollars per month more than the same ISP's best-effort 6 Mbps DSL service.

    34. Re:did anyone honestly fail to see this coming? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Really? The page you linked to says otherwise.

      "If you were born in the United States (including, in most cases, Puerto Rico, Guam, and the U.S. Virgin Islands), you are an American citizen at birth (unless you were born to a foreign diplomat). Your birth certificate is proof of your citizenship."

      I am a citizen of the United States of America. A United States citizen, and American citizen, whatever, either works. Only jealous little jerkoffs with inferiority complexes use the term "USian" in a pathetic attempt to denigrate others to make themselves feel better. Next time some Dudley Do-Right tells you you're not an American tell him that he should shut the fuck up about nationalities until he gets the Queen of a foreign sovereign nation off his money.

      it's amazing, I've traveled to over two dozen countries and I've learned douchebags live everywhere, but mostly on the Internet. I've always referred to myself as an American, and the vast majority of people have been gracious and welcoming. Not once did anyone argue about my nationality. Just Internet pissants like you giving your own country a bad name. Grow up.

    35. Re:did anyone honestly fail to see this coming? by quokkapox · · Score: 1

      My joke makes the assumption that you're either aware of the original, or you're a fencing geek, or you're a slashdot geek with no significant prior knowledge of either domain. Any way, you get it. I like to make people laugh. Call it open source humor.

      --
      it's a blue bright blue Saturday hey hey
    36. Re:did anyone honestly fail to see this coming? by quokkapox · · Score: 1
      Thanks, your response makes it worthwhile :)

      Although as others have noted it's an amalgamation of a popular bash.org quote and my own silly cracked-up mind.

      FWIW, quokkapox

      --
      it's a blue bright blue Saturday hey hey
  2. Just so I understand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ISP's are selling you these huge bandwidth rates....5-30Mb/S in the case of Verizon, and then it turns out there's nothing *legitimate* to use that bandwidth on, and then they're shocked just SHOCKED that customers have found a way to use that bandwidth on?

    I mean, seriously, why did they think customers wanted 5Mb/s? So they could download movie previews from the QT website?

    Seriously, somebody explain their business plan to me.

    1. Re:Just so I understand... by ergo98 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I mean, seriously, why did they think customers wanted 5Mb/s? So they could download movie previews from the QT website?

      Ummm, yes? Most high speed users are burst high-speed users, who get on their PC and browse around YouTube and other high bandwidth sites, and then "log off" and go about their life. They don't sit sucking 100% of the capacity around the clock, but when they do the high bandwidth is very beneficial.

      The reality is that it is grossly economically unsustainable for someone to max out their connection perpetually, which is why many high speed providers have had max throughputs per time period since their inception (cue someone complaining about some provider that never did, yet a lot did. Up here in Canada, the major cable providers that operated under the @Home banner always listed a max throughput, beyond which they can assess additional charges, or disconnect you, or force you to upgrade to a much more expensive service if you want to continue).

      My car might have 255HP, and while that helps me pass trucks and merge onto highways better, it doesn't mean that I drive around the clock with the pedal pushed to the floor.

    2. Re:Just so I understand... by ergo98 · · Score: 1

      Seriously, somebody explain their business plan to me.

      Just had to address this, too -- you seem to be under the flawed belief that high speed providers rely upon P2P fanatics for their business, only selling to high-volume torrent users. This is completely untrue, and the overwhelming majority of high speed customers are occasional users, not power users. High speed is quite prevalent you know, and sees a lot of adoption among "mom & pops" and other unlikely-to-torrent users.

    3. Re:Just so I understand... by wazza · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Argh! I can't stand it anymore... Your point is dead on, but then you went and polluted it with a really inappropriate analogy. Seriously, the car-analogy is overused to the point of cliche-death around here.

      Your car's maximum power output not being used all the time (i.e. a mechanical device, that suffers wear and tear, used in a transport system that's controlled by a bunch of independant and variously-skilled drivers) has absolutely nothing to do with not using networking connections full time at 100% data rate. The latter is because of business economic reasons, since networks have:

      a) no loss incurred by running at 100% over 10% capacity (assuming reasonably decent routers, and ignoring the pretty-much-spurious congestion hassles at the routers) - compared to the car analogy, at least, and...
      b) no such things as "poor drivers". "Poor drivers" could only be broken routers, which would be removed from the network and replaced as soon as they're found. On the other hand, you have to live with "poor drivers" in the car system regardless of the fact that *they* should arguably be removed from the system. :>

      Death to the car analogy!!!

    4. Re:Just so I understand... by popeguilty · · Score: 1

      It's best to keep in mind that, from the standpoint of an ISP, the optimal use pattern is a customer who never even hooks up the modem. They'd rather we used as little bandwidth as possible.

      This reminds me of Netflix throttling:

      "Here, take all you can!"
      *takes all one can*
      "NO FAIR!" *throttles*

    5. Re:Just so I understand... by Robotech_Master · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's called "overselling" and it's a common practice in not just the home Internet business, but the webhosting business. Webhosts are happy to sell you a package with umpteen zillion megabytes of storage space and bandwidth, because hardly anyone ever uses that much; if they didn't oversell, they'd have all these resources lying fallow--but on the other hand, let even a significant fraction of those websites actually start to use that much and the host is in trouble.

      Come to think of it, banks work that way, too; they lend out most of what they take in so they actually have relatively little cash on hand. If a run starts on the bank, then they run out of cash very quickly.

      It's a highly efficient way of maximizing use of resources when it is not expected that everyone will want to use those resources to capacity at once--but it only works when there isn't a reason to use them to capacity.

      The irony is that until BitTorrent, broadband was having a hell of a time getting people to sign up--because, after all, what would they need it for? And now that there's actually a "killer app," people are signing up so fast and using so much that it's causing a "backslash" (heh heh). Either feast or famine, nothing in-between.

      --
      Editor Emeritus and Senior Writer, TeleRead.org
    6. Re:Just so I understand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Typical windoz users.

    7. Re:Just so I understand... by caffeination · · Score: 5, Funny

      Trying to kill the car analogy on Slashdot is like trying to ram every bad driver you see off the road. Sure, you can take a few out and maybe make the papers, but you'll never get them all before your car stops working and you're banned from driving.

    8. Re:Just so I understand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Overselling has been happening since the days of dialup. That's what "modem ratios" were all about. Companies would hype that they have a 5:1 modem ratio, which meant they were only oversold fivefold.

      Maybe it is time for ISPs to start publicizing their "bandwidth ratio".

    9. Re:Just so I understand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sorry to be the one to have to tell you, but playing online games IS a legitimate use for high bandwidth.

    10. Re:Just so I understand... by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      They're not expecting people to use the full bandwidth 24/7. The normal user will log on, maybe download a few songs from iTunes while chatting with a buddy over Skype and sharing links to Google Video files. That's why they buy the bandwidth for, so they can do all these things at once. Then (and this is the important part that sets pirates apart from everyone else) they log off and go about their lives.

      Now, I understand the point of your argument that it's stupid to offer unlimited if you don't want people using it unlimitedly, but it doesn't mean your solemn duty as a subscriber is to keep your internet pipe full 24/7. The only thing I keep running close to 24/7 is my IM client, and even it goes off when I sleep. (I'm not counting all the various automatic update systems and such on my computer, of course.)

    11. Re:Just so I understand... by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      The problem with that is the big boys (such as Comcast) advertise always-on unlimited service. Sounds great until you try to use it in any manner approaching what they're promising. This is dangerously close to false advertising. The fact that the majority of users may operate as you described doesn't mean that you can point-blank lie to those who are using the services they were promised. More to the point, the majority is fast becoming a minority. The customer base has spoken: we want real broadband. They should either provide that, or admit that they can't and sit tight for the inevitable consumer backlash.

      ISP propaganda says that "when people abuse (abuse?) their connection we all have to suffer." Baloney. You give me an "unlimited" fat pipe and then tell me I can't use it? That's ridiculous, and the reason this is becoming a problem is that more and more users are becoming so-called "bandwidth hogs". They have a choice: build out their networks and give their customers what they want, what was promised to them or accept that broadband penetration is going to falter. Look, until the advent of P2P services, most people really didn't have much use for broadband: other than the always-on aspect it wasn't worth the money. It simply wasn't. Along comes a set of killer apps from iTunes on down that actually made broadband worth the money, and not just for a few geeks! So what do they do? They complain that those users are abusive, and rather than trying to find ways to serve them they simply them jack them around.

      Pretty much the behavior you'd expect from a bunch of one-time monopolists and monopolist wannabes.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    12. Re:Just so I understand... by Pneuma+ROCKS · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It is true that they shouldn't expect their users to suck all of their capacity around the clock, but I don't think that gives them the right to enforce measures for them not to do it. They offered a service that allowed their users a certain bandwidth, usually around the clock, and the (note: paying) subscribers have the right to use as much as they want from that service.

      I agree that it is not feasible to maintain such a service under the assumption that many subscribers will be sucking the life out of it 24 hours a day, but that is a problem of the ISP. If they want to offer a more restrictive service, then they should inform their subscribers of what they are receiving for their money. As far as I know, they offer a fixed bandwidth which is available throughout the day. If that is so, then subscribers should get exactly that and they shouldn't be blocked or filtered because of their activities.

      If they want to change the rules of the game, they should put them on paper.

      --
      Favorite quote: "
    13. Re:Just so I understand... by NutscrapeSucks · · Score: 1

      The problem with that is the big boys (such as Comcast) advertise always-on unlimited service.

      Maybe back in the 1990s they did use the word "unlimited", but I think you'd have trouble finding any sort of recent examples of advertisements with this term.

      And if you are claiming that "most people" bought broadband to use P2P, that is clearly wrong. (And iTMS is not P2P either.) ISPs might have allowed this behavior during the early-adoptor phase, but that was a long long time ago now. Even customers that hop on Kazaa and download a few songs are small potatos compared to the real P2Pers.

      It seems like you believe that you somehow deserve to use massive bandwidth for a flat fee, using a raft of paperthin justifications and imaginary promises of "unlimited" bandwidth. I agree that it would be nice if it were true.

      --
      Whenever I hear the word 'Innovation', I reach for my pistol.
    14. Re:Just so I understand... by DeadChobi · · Score: 1

      The entire purpose of an analogy is to compare two seemingly unrelated things so that one can draw a logical conclusion. No matter how bad you think the analogy is, if you get his point it's still a good analogy. And I wouldnt call it a "car" analogy so much as an "engine" analogy, whereby the engine isnt designed to continuously be at 100% utilisation because of mechanical constraints. Broadband connections are also not designed to be at 100% utilisation because of the amount of bandwidth the companies would have to lease. Yes, on the engine side of the analogy the reasons are mechanical, and on the broadband side of the analogy the reasons are economic. Doesnt stop the two situations from being similar.

      --
      SRSLY.
    15. Re:Just so I understand... by Glonoinha · · Score: 1

      Online games could also be played on fast dial-up connections, at least until a few years ago (see also : Everquest, Tanarus, etc.) According to the FAQ, even EQ2 was designed to be playable on a 56k dial-up connection. Quake III, CounterStrike::Source, etc - can also function in a dial-up environment (with sucky pings, but still works.)

      What that means is : it is a low-bandwidth consumer that makes the customer happy when he has low-latency connections. You don't move a lot of data, but you want it to get there and back really fast. Plus, when you are doing this you don't do anything to intentionally make your connection slower so you aren't slogging your pipe with massive downloads.

      I envision that the ISPs love online gamers.

      --
      Glonoinha the MebiByte Slayer
    16. Re:Just so I understand... by Mitaphane · · Score: 1


      The irony is that until BitTorrent, broadband was having a hell of a time getting people to sign up--because, after all, what would they need it for? And now that there's actually a "killer app," people are signing up so fast and using so much that it's causing a "backslash" (heh heh). Either feast or famine, nothing in-between.


      Come on now, there has been plenty of bandwidth sucking software apps out there for quite some time now. FTP(among other types of servers) servers hosting large files have been out there forever. Putting that aside, there have been many P2P file sharing apps(Napster,Morpheous,BearShare,DC,etc...) out there for years that predate BitTorrent. And for about the same number of years, Broadband providers have been successfully advertising about the advantages of broadband for downloading music and movies(even before there were legal services like iTunes).

      BitTorrent hasn't done anything for selling broadband outside of what has already been done. In fact, there is data out there suggesting that broadband growth is, at least in the US, leveling off. If you look for the data out there, price and lack of neccessity(e.g. only need internet service for email) seem to be the sticking issues for many people not adopting broadband. The significance of BitTorrent regarding bandwidth usage is that requires a large chain of people downloading and uploading at the same time, often for hours or even days depending on the file. It's not that a ton of people are adopting the program in mass. It's that the protocol requires a lot of bandwidth for it to be successful.

    17. Re:Just so I understand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If 500 customers on a node are adversely affected by 1 or 2 bittorrent maniacs, not meant as derrogatory, then who does the ISP "penalize"?

    18. Re:Just so I understand... by jheath314 · · Score: 1

      Sorry, networks don't work that way.

      Like any other distributed system, the resources in a network (line bandwidth, time slices on the router's processor, etc.) are designed to carry better than average traffic loads, but never the theoretical maximum possible. (Designing a network otherwise would be monsterously inefficient; think a fibre infrastructure limiting everyone to dial-up speeds 'just in case'.) Fortunately, until the advent of file-sharing, this system worked just fine, since most IP traffic was very easy to multiplex: either bursts of high-bandwidth traffic, or sustained low-bandwidth streams. Bit-torrent, on the other hand, gives us the nightmare scenario: sustained high-bandwidth traffic, which is difficult to multiplex. In order to accomodate this traffic, the only option is to ramp up the system's capacity, which involves upgrading and replacing huge amounts of expensive infrastructure. I for one would love to see higher bandwidths, but I don't suffer from the illusion that project would be cheap.

      --
      Procrastination Man strikes again!
    19. Re:Just so I understand... by GregAllen · · Score: 1

      It's that the protocol requires a lot of bandwidth for it to be successful.
      That's just not true. With BitTorrent, a single seeder (server) could deliver data to a single leecher (client), just like in the FTP protocol (among others). If you downloaded 10GB from an FTP server, it would also take days to download on your cable modem.

      BitTorrent enables the transfer of much more data than any of the previous things ever imagined. The sharer doesn't have to pay the expense of fileSize*numDownloads, like FTP. Partial downloads aren't a problem -- they're expected.

      BitTorrent is brilliant because it made the transfer of huge amount of data extremely robust and simple -- that's why it has become a "killer app".

      Multiple seeders just makes it faster than the simple FTP-like model.

      --
      Please help find my missing daughter: FindSabrina.org
    20. Re:Just so I understand... by It'sYerMam · · Score: 1

      Legally, I'm pretty sure they have to put caps and so on in whatever you agree to when you sign up. I don't think yours is a valid complaint.

      --
      im in ur .sig, writin ur memes.
    21. Re:Just so I understand... by drac0n1z · · Score: 1

      its a car pool, multiple ppl using one car and saving gas.

      --
      This is my sig.
    22. Re:Just so I understand... by alienw · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I can tell you have never managed a network. The problem with bittorrent is apparent even if you share your connection with 2 roommates. It is extremely aggressive, does not respect bandwidth limits, and opens a ridiculous number of connections. I have had to resort to blocking popular bittorrent ports on my linksys router just to keep the 5MBit cable connection from choking. Once the connection is close to being saturated, _nothing_ works because too many packets are getting lost or timing out.

      On an ISP scale, you _never_ want to get to the point where you are using 100% of your bandwidth, because the network will slow down to a crawl. All of your customers who play online games, have Vonage, or just browse the web will immediately start complaining, because those services simply aren't usable when the network is congested. Neither car engines nor networks are designed to run at 100% load, all the time. The exact reasons may be different, but the analogy itself is spot-on.

    23. Re:Just so I understand... by molecular · · Score: 1
      My car might have 255HP, and while that helps me pass trucks and merge onto highways better, it doesn't mean that I drive around the clock with the pedal pushed to the floor.


      My car has 160HP and I once drove it for 1200km with the pedal to the metal (after merging onto the highway and except when stopping for gas). Yes, I live in germany, so the traffic rules allow me to do so. It was at night, so the traffic allowed me to do so also.

      It's an older french car and the manufacturer didn't put in any logic to shut down my engine after I had been bursting horsepower for longer than it takes to pass some truck or two.

      The car-maker / autobahn-police offers a 160HP flatrate, I buy, they deliver.

      If they don't feel like delivering that, they have to tell me _before_ I buy. Wether or not they expect such use or not and calculate it realistically is _their_ business. If they didn't, they deserve to go out of business because they screwed up.

      Obviously this comparison is not so accurate (there's no per-kilometer-extra-cost for the car-manufacturer (unless they would pay my gas-bills)), but it's still valid, because the case is so damn simple (Supplier: offer, Customer: order, Supplier: deliver, Customer: pay)

      This whining of ISPs ("oh no, the evil market forced us to sell flatrates, now more customers demand delivery than our statistics-guy expected (under pressure), so we can't comply, hell, we'll just have to disconnect these associal dishonest criminals") is getting on my balls. Why didn't _they_ come up with being honest in the first place and sell some volume tariff or calculate the price-tag more realistically?

      Own fault, ergo: die slowly by evil market force.

      (Unless of course you consider p2p to be higher force, such as a tornado, but then they should have insurance to cover such)

    24. Re:Just so I understand... by SacredNaCl · · Score: 1

      It is true that they shouldn't expect their users to suck all of their capacity around the clock, but I don't think that gives them the right to enforce measures for them not to do it. They offered a service that allowed their users a certain bandwidth, usually around the clock, and the (note: paying) subscribers have the right to use as much as they want from that service. All fine and well, and I can understand some arguements for limiting high bandwidth users at the extreme ends of the sclae. However, I am not a very high bandwidth user. I pay "extra" for a faster higher tier connection speed so its there for the burst of activity when I need it and want it. I don't want to have to sit around all day to wait for a CD's worth of data to move about before I can get back to work. Even though I rarely use Bittorrent, or any P2P, and I'm seldom using more than 10GB a month upstream & downstream combined, whenever I DO use any of these services, or lately even transfer a file through a messenger service or even via IRC/DCC -- my traffic is being shaped by the ISP in a way that is not favorable to me. Quite simply, I am NOT getting what I paid for. I might be more forgiving of this if I hadn't shelled out more money for a faster connecion specifically to have it available for these uses when I want it. I'm not harming their network, I'm not an excessive user with my upsteam & downstream maxed out all day. I do, however, need to occasionally transfer a 700MB-2GB file around. Not only have they been rate limting those task (even FTP) they have been dropping connections randomly in the middle of it (so I know its intentional, my connection never resets otherwise unless the power cycles). My ISP is SBC-Yahoo, recently acquired by AT&T, but this problem started before the merger. It was not a problem at the beginning of my contract, but has since become one - so I know they have implimented some kind of measures to cause this disruption & degredation of service. Quite honestly, I'm not getting what I paid for, and as far as I can tell - unless I'm willing to pay $149 a month more - I'm not going to get the service they advertised & promised me in their contract. If they broke that promise, what is to say they wont do it again even if I did shell out $200 a month. For what? 10GB? It starts getting cheaper to use a courier service at that point.

      So in my case, the method they are using to control traffic, has no consideration for your total cumulative use of the service. I am penalized exactly the same as someone whom uploads and downloads 150GB a month or more. If I have to rate limit my FTP when I'm transferring a file to avoid running into the traffic shaping & disconnection issues - what is the point of paying the extra money for the upsteam if I can't use it? Worst of all, I can't figure out exactly what it flags. Perhaps it isn't monitoring it at all times of the day, or it randomly picks people to monitor. I much prefer being able to walk away from my transfers and know they will complete than having to babysit them due to the disconnection issue.

      --
      Freedom is merely privilege extended unless enjoyed by one and all.
    25. Re:Just so I understand... by alienw · · Score: 1

      Nothing can suck up as much bandwidth as BitTorrent. FTP only taxes the downlink, which is not the congested part in the first place, and you can't max out your connection when downloading from an FTP server. All the earlier P2P apps worked on a filesharing level -- you shared some files, and others could download them from you. This was a bit nastier, but only an issue if you had lots of files other people wanted. In addition, you couldn't download the same file from more than one person, which kept the load down quite a bit. Bittorrent is a whole different animal. It's programmed specifically to utilize as much of the connection as it can. It downloads as aggressively as possible, and actively uploads as much as it can back into the network. The tracker makes it very efficient at matching up peers. The increased efficiency enables it to use up much more bandwidth than all previous filesharing apps.

    26. Re:Just so I understand... by alienw · · Score: 1

      Read your contract. It never says that you can use as much of the bandwidth as you want. In fact, it usually says that the provider can restrict your usage for any reason whatsoever, and that servers are not allowed. Bittorrent is an example of a high-bandwidth server, and almost all standard consumer contracts prohibit this type of usage. You should really be thankful they aren't cracking down on this a lot more.

    27. Re:Just so I understand... by tsm_sf · · Score: 1

      It seems like you believe that you somehow deserve to use massive bandwidth for a flat fee, using a raft of paperthin justifications and imaginary promises of "unlimited" bandwidth. I agree that it would be nice if it were true.

      Huh? He's saying that ISPs shouldn't advertise unlimited services if they won't provide them. You're saying that he has no right to expect unlimited services even if his ISP advertises that. See the disconnect? As far as your "maybe in the 90s, but not today" argument goes, why not just type "unlimited bandwidth" into google and see what comes up on the first few pages?

      Your bizzare "the corporation can do no wrong" mindset might have been acceptable in an alternate reality where Bush won the election, but it doesn't fly in this robust democracy, pal!

      --
      Literalism isn't a form of humor, it's you being irritating.
    28. Re:Just so I understand... by wuzzeb · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Come to think of it, banks work that way, too; they lend out most of what they take in so they actually have relatively little cash on hand. If a run starts on the bank, then they run out of cash very quickly.

      Except with banks, if they start to run out of money they can easily drive a truck over to the next bank, or to the federal reserve bank and get more money. From wikipedia, "To prevent a bank run, the Central Bank guarantees that it will make short-term, high-interest loans to banks, to ensure that, if they remain economically viable, they will always have enough liquidity to honour their deposits." Also, banks are required by law to be members of FDIC (Federal Depository Insurance Corperation), so if your bank goes bankrupt from a run on the bank, the government will pay you the balance up to $100,000.

      Both of these policys make it so you never need to "use" (by withdrawing) the entire amout of money in your bank acount... you an write checks, wire transfer, etc. Thus, it is in the users best interest NOT to use the entire "capaicty" allocated to them (since large amouts of money require vaults, guards, etc...).

      Compare this to bandwith, where there is no incentive for a user to not use the entire bandwith. Also, since you can't have the benifit of bandwith without actually using the bandwith (like a bank, where you can write a check), I don't see how the ISP could create an incentive for the user to not use the entire bandwith besides charging different rates and such.

    29. Re:Just so I understand... by NutscrapeSucks · · Score: 1

      why not just type "unlimited bandwidth" into google

      I see a bunch of hosting providers, where the payment model is totally different than home broadband and therefore irrelvant to the discussion.

      an alternate reality where Bush won the election,

      OK, you're the second weirdo in row who made the bizarre illogical jump from "apolitical statement about the technology industry" to "Bush supporter". As a leftie, I think it's pretty sad that Democrats are so used to being rhetorically bitchslapped that they automatically associate any winning argument with the GOP.

      --
      Whenever I hear the word 'Innovation', I reach for my pistol.
    30. Re:Just so I understand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "An analogy is a comparison between two different things, in order to highlight some form of similarity." -- Wikipedia

      The car analogy works because it conveys a simple tidbit of information: "people are used to buying products based on specifications that are not used 100% of the time."

      Unfortunately, people like you come along and pollute the analogy by assuming that the guy literally equated bandwidth to a car. No, he didn't. Strawman, R.I.P.

    31. Re:Just so I understand... by Nasarius · · Score: 1
      Once the connection is close to being saturated, _nothing_ works because too many packets are getting lost or timing out.

      This is why things like QoS exist. You should never let one user monopolize the network; packets should be appropriately queued.

      --
      LOAD "SIG",8,1
    32. Re:Just so I understand... by ultranova · · Score: 1

      In addition, you couldn't download the same file from more than one person, which kept the load down quite a bit.

      Not true. GTK-Gnutella, for example, downloads the same file from multiple people at once over the Gnutella network. And Getright can download the same file from multiple hosts at once over plain old HTTP.

      Downloading from multiple hosts at once is an old idea, and in no way exclusive to BitTorrent.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    33. Re:Just so I understand... by IvyKing · · Score: 1
      Argh! I can't stand it anymore... Your point is dead on, but then you went and polluted it with a really inappropriate analogy.

      Maybe a more appropriate analogy would be that of electric service in that utilities are rarely sized to handle all customers drawing their maximum rated power simultaneously - which would cause a meltdown of the transmission and distribution networks.

      The telcos were having problems when dial-up service was becoming popular since the networks were designed for relatively brief calls.

      One of the worst AUP's for broadband was Adelphia, that limited total bandwidth usage to 2.5GB a month - which could easily be reached with a dial-up connection with nightly 100MB downloads.

    34. Re:Just so I understand... by tepples · · Score: 1

      This is why things like QoS exist. You should never let one user monopolize the network; packets should be appropriately queued.

      So who decides which traffic to prioritize?

    35. Re:Just so I understand... by Nasarius · · Score: 1

      The router, obviously. If one user (identified by MAC address) starts sending out tons of packets, their future traffic should receive lower priority. These are fairly simple algorithms that are also used in process scheduling.

      --
      LOAD "SIG",8,1
    36. Re:Just so I understand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What happens if there is a run on the entire banking system, say shortly after OPEC changes its trading currency to Euros?

    37. Re:Just so I understand... by Jo+Owen · · Score: 1

      ISPs, in the UK at least, do most in the uk are 50:1

    38. Re:Just so I understand... by billcopc · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Actually with a large enough ISP network Bittorrent ain't all that bad, since you're likely to find many peers within the ISP. It's not local bandwidth that's scarce, it's the uplinks that are strangled because Tier-2 carriers have to pay for bandwidth to Tier-1. Here's a simplified example:

      Example 1: Let's say you're on X-National-DSL provider, and you're linked to 5 people on your torrent. If 4 of those hosts are behind the same peering point (your ISP), and that last one's stuck in Norway, then your ISP only pays for bits going to the Nordic fellow, everything else stays within their private network.

      Example 2: Let's say you have a home network of 5 PC's on a 100mbit switch, and each of those hosts is running Bittorrent. If the data you want is on one of your roommates' PCs, you will download at full speed from the local network, hell you wouldn't even need internet access, you're just using your own bandwidth to its fullest potential. On the other hand if you're getting a file from the outside world, you have to go over the DSL modem which you pay for.

      Bittorrent generates lots of traffic yes, but the only difference now is that the traffic is coming from all over the place. I don't think there's that much more file sharing going on, it's just decentralized whereas in the past things came from FTP servers and Usenet, but they used just as much aggregate bandwidth. There's no way around it, if 100 people download a 700mb ISO, there will be 70 gb uploaded and 70gb downloaded in total. The benefit of Bittorrent is that the 70gb is shared more or less equitably among the participants, instead of serving it all from one central host, which allows it to scale to thousands of clients very easily without hosing the file server.

      There is one main difference with Bittorrent, which is maximizing the total bandwidth. In my previous example, if 100 people downloaded the same file from an FTP server, the combined speed of all transfers was limited by that FTP's uplink, i.e. 10mbit, and everyone got a small slice of that bandwidth so it took longer to finish the transfer. Bittorrent does the opposite, while the initial seeder might only have 10mbit available, there are 99 other peers with anywhere from 1 to 5 mbit each, yielding an aggregate swarm speed that is several times faster than the FTP host could put out. This means the ISP has to deal with more bursty traffic, which for some puny small guys might be cost-prohibitive. It's more expensive to use up 10% of a 100mbit line, than 100% of a full 10mbit line.

      It all points to the flawed model of bandwidth pricing. In my opinion the carriers are artificially restricting the evolution of the network by prioritizing money over progress. A gigabit uplink doesn't cost significantly more than a 10mbit link, you just need a faster router. The only reason we don't have plentiful bandwidth for everyone, is because it's more profitable to artificially limit supply. The flaw in this model is that bandwidth is not a mercantile commodity like oil or produce, so why should it be priced that way ?

      --
      -Billco, Fnarg.com
    39. Re:Just so I understand... by arminw · · Score: 2

      ..... Seriously, the car-analogy is overused to the point of cliche-death around here........

      OK how about the toilet analogy then? If everybody in town flushes their toilet at the same time, the water pressure drops and some firefighters might not have enough water pressure to save your house from burning down. Public works services, are sized for some average usage level. If every user starts downloading gigabytes of data, the network becomes overloaded like the LA freeways during rush hour. Building both physical freeways and the information highway to carry more traffic costs money. Usage based costs therefore are a reasonable way to fund faster networks. The first daily 500MB of data goes at full agreed upon speed and then starts to go down gradually to a dial up rate. This way any user can still at least get their e-mail after they have downloaded the full length movie.

      --
      All theory is gray
    40. Re:Just so I understand... by Robotron23 · · Score: 1

      Come to think of it, banks work that way, too; they lend out most of what they take in so they actually have relatively little cash on hand. If a run starts on the bank, then they run out of cash very quickly.

      Excellent analogy - banks have roughly 1-2% of their total assets in coin and notes stored in ATMs or at counters, rising somewhat during the Holiday season. If many persons rushed to their bank to draw out money, then it would go bankrupt, unless it could sell some assets extremely fast. Same thing would occur if everyone suddenly got tech-savvy and geeky, and thus began using BT a lot - ISPs would simply not be able to afford additional servers for all this load, hence bankruptcy.

      Its intriguing, practically every business thrives on the human condition, our emotions, the many niches, and indeed the "masses" for want of a better term - if the human condition were changed somehow Ie. through gene modification, the world could become dramatically different.

    41. Re:Just so I understand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, the point is that if the ISP tells me I can use massive bandwidth for a flat fee, then they have to honour that.

      No justifications, no imaginary promises. Just a company that doesn't want to follow its own rules.

      I don't see how this isn't clear, yet you don't seem to get it.

    42. Re:Just so I understand... by MarkRose · · Score: 4, Informative

      That's why traffic shaping exists. I even do it on my home router. I can leave bittorrent running with several active torrents, using 95% of my available bandwidth up and down, yet still have snappy ssh, http, vnc, email, dns, voip, etc. All I did was configure my Linksys router to prioritize that traffic over bittorrent, letting bittorrent use the rest. Granted, my home network is nothing major, but anyone who has managed a network should see this as the obvious solution. Anyone who doesn't know about traffic shaping shouldn't be managing a network in the first place.

      --
      Be relentless!
    43. Re:Just so I understand... by Julian+Morrison · · Score: 1

      It's called "overselling"

      Fair enough. I think basically what the real outcome of this is, is that the market will segment:

      * Cheap ISPs explicitly "oversell", with caps, port blocking, gimp masks, whips and chains.

      * Full price ISPs sell on an exactly 1:1 ratio, we have N clients at B bandwidth, so we buy N*B upstream bandwidth, and no messing.

    44. Re:Just so I understand... by timeOday · · Score: 1
      the only option is to ramp up the system's capacity, which involves upgrading and replacing huge amounts of expensive infrastructure. I for one would love to see higher bandwidths, but I don't suffer from the illusion that project would be cheap.
      It doesn't have to be cheap, they're collecting billions in monthly payments every year.

      Anyways, I don't mind throttling if it's done correctly. Think of scheduling processes on a timesharing CPU: you don't artifically limit each process to 1/N of the CPU. You don't guess about what each process is trying to accomplish and penalize it for that. Long-running processes gradually get lower priority, bursty processes get high burst rates. (However, Linux seems to allocate the processor per process, whereas it ought to be per user... in the case of bandwidth, opening a bunch of connections should not create advantage).

    45. Re:Just so I understand... by NutscrapeSucks · · Score: 1

      I get that you imagined that they made that promise.

      --
      Whenever I hear the word 'Innovation', I reach for my pistol.
    46. Re:Just so I understand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you're saying you drive a Maxima?

    47. Re:Just so I understand... by musakko · · Score: 1

      Yeah, just like a car... a car driven by Hitler!

    48. Re:Just so I understand... by aminorex · · Score: 1

      Not only QoS, but every reasonable BT client allows you to set bandwidth limits. Azureus has a plugin that lets you control bandwidth by time of data. There's really no reason not to enjoy the full responsiveness of your low-latency high-bandwidth pipe for interactive use while you share your scientific preprints and home videos.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    49. Re:Just so I understand... by aminorex · · Score: 1

      Until the advent of filesharing? You mean before HTTP? Before FTP?

      The Internet has ALWAYS been used for filesharing. The files used to be smaller. But then the bandwidth was less as well.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    50. Re:Just so I understand... by aminorex · · Score: 1

      BT would actually reduce backbone traffic if (1) ISPs would implement multicast or (2) ISPs would deploy BT caches. ISPs are just dumb fucks. I should know, I used to be R&D director at a regional ISP. If I had a dime for every time I could have said "I told you so"....

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    51. Re:Just so I understand... by aminorex · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Advertise a 5MB pipe for 39.95, and you should provide one. Hiding behind fine print that you had a lawyer write, knowing that 0% of the clients are going to take it to counsel for an interpretation is a slimeball tactic. It's legal, but it is immoral. The real contract is the offer and acceptance. The legal contract is not worth the shit your lawyer has for brains. I know the shit contract is the one the shit courts enforce. That doesn't change the moral picture. When these guys meet the white-throne judgement, they'll all burn in hell.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    52. Re:Just so I understand... by aminorex · · Score: 1

      Wherever there is competition, when one ISP throttles, the other will be happy to get all their business.

      Money talks. Consumers pay the money. What's actually going to happen is that ISPs will realize that they need to offer symmetric bandwidth, and offer it commensurate with their upstream pipe width, or else they lose money.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    53. Re:Just so I understand... by big+tex · · Score: 1

      Cheap ISPs explicitly "oversell", with caps, port blocking, gimp masks, whips and chains.

      Woah, woah - you can get gimp masks and chains?

      Hook me up with some of these people. I've only been able to find providers that only give out plain old beatings.

      --
      I think I need a new sig here.
    54. Re:Just so I understand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly, as a gamer it pisses me off to no end that the n-billionth copy of some retarded paris hilton sex video is being exchanged yet again, resulting in degradation of latency on what is supposed to be a high speed network.

      We need seperate networks, one for porn, one for gaming, one for music... it is the only solution, in analogy to cable TV channel packages.

    55. Re:Just so I understand... by NutscrapeSucks · · Score: 1

      As others in this discussion have pointed out, the actual cost of a fullrate connection is hundreds of dollars a month. So good luck finding that competitior that doesn't cap somehow.

      --
      Whenever I hear the word 'Innovation', I reach for my pistol.
    56. Re:Just so I understand... by alienw · · Score: 1

      Isn't that exactly what the ISPs are doing, however? That's why people are complaining in the first place, is because their torrents are getting a low priority.

    57. Re:Just so I understand... by trewornan · · Score: 1

      Get some perspective will you. It was only a couple of years ago that everybody was on 5kb dialup. Now broadband at 500Mb is common and in another few years, god only know's what sort of speeds we'll be getting. Besides which, gamers are a load of sad lonely wankers, whereas most bittorrent users are . . . never mind.

    58. Re:Just so I understand... by Archangel_Azazel · · Score: 1

      "They don't sit sucking 100% of the capacity around the clock"

      Yes, damn them for using what they paid for. I mean....who do they think they are?

      Last I checked, my ISP didn't tell me "ok...we're going to let you have xK/sec, but only during the times we want you to use it...otherwise it's yK/sec, because we might lose $5..." Nope... they said (and what I pay for is) xK/sec *all the time*, 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. If they wanted to tell me that I could only use it at certain times I'd tell them to politely fuck themselves. I want what I paid for...simple, direct, to the point.

      I thought that was what MAX throughput was....a hard cap on how much bandwidth went through the line...all the time... not just here and now.

      Am I wrong in this?

      --
      Your mind is like a parachute. It works best when it's been opened.
    59. Re:Just so I understand... by Gleemonex · · Score: 1
      Isn't that exactly what the ISPs are doing, however? That's why people are complaining in the first place, is because their torrents are getting a low priority.

      Good point -- however, ISPs are also throttling these connections down below their advertised per-user throughput rates, which is false advertising. If they don't offer me 1.5 megabits for ever second I want to use my internet connection, they shouldn't call it 1.5Mbps, now should they?

      -Glee
      --
      Many a true word hath been spoken in jest -- mod funny posts "Informative".
    60. Re:Just so I understand... by wazza · · Score: 2, Interesting

      No matter how bad you think the analogy is, if you get his point it's still a good analogy.

      Dead right. The thing is, I'd already gotten the point before the analogy. The analogy just made me weep for anyone trying to use it to understand aspects of the network issues they didn't quite have a handle on already.

      The analogy helped me not at all. :>

      Throwing in my opinion as to ways in which the analogy was flawed was probably just asking to have people respond with how my points were technically flawed more than anything else. I had a niggling feeling that people would pick on the 100% utilisation point.

      The real killer for me, perhaps, was that the original poster (whose technical point was spot on, I still state!) used what could be a massively-faceted analogy (is it the mechanics we should note? is it the transport-network vs. computer network similarities? the inherent dangers to life & limb of running flat out all the time?) and unfortunately didn't state what aspects of the car analogy he was particularly pointing at.

      Anyways, it was a glorified rant. I promise to close my end of the discussion on car analogies with this: Arrrgh!

    61. Re:Just so I understand... by wazza · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, people like you come along and pollute the analogy by assuming that the guy literally equated bandwidth to a car. No, he didn't. Strawman, R.I.P.

      No, that's not quite it. Your own words show up my particular point. Bandwidth isn't a car. It might be, in some aspects, but the very fact that you and I both came up with different aspects of the analogy is where it all falls apart.

      You shouldn't just throw out an analogy without indicating which aspects of the nature of the two things are analogous. That's all I'm trying to say - it's not well enough specified as an analogy, and thus could muddy the waters.

    62. Re:Just so I understand... by grahammm · · Score: 1

      Do not forget that the speed of connection and latency are completely different things. It is possible to have very high speed links with large latency and slow links with very low latency.

    63. Re:Just so I understand... by Intrinsic · · Score: 1

      Umm, I dont get it? I use Azuerus which has bandwidth limiting.. I never use all of my available bandwidth when downloading and upload torrents... I can play Counter-Strike Source and bit torrent without a problem. Sounds like more people need to get a better torrent app, and know how to do limiting.

    64. Re:Just so I understand... by ergo98 · · Score: 1

      Am I wrong in this?

      Yes, you are wrong. That max speed is burst speed, and was never sold to be saturated constantly. If you want a constant speed, why don't you call up one of your providers and ask for a dedicated 5Mbps line -- compare that price (in the thousands per month) with your $40 cable modem service, and contemplate why they differ.

      As far as the *all the time* claims that are constantly used to justify antisocial line saturation -- firstly, only something like one provider ever actually made that claim (I believe Comcast), and even then it was ambiguously used (e.g. you do have unlimited connection time, which was the primary comparison at the time with services like AOL). Other services have always used clear wording, such as "Always On", giving specific monthly limits of throughput, beyond which you should be paying for the thousands of dollars connection, not bogarting your neighbourhoods connectivity around the clock.

    65. Re:Just so I understand... by Politburo · · Score: 1

      If they want to change the rules of the game, they should put them on paper.

      They don't have to. That's in the "agreement". Oh and they can change the "agreement" any time they want. How about that for fairness?

      IMO, the "we can change this at any time" clause needs to be eliminated. It's ridiculous. Want to change the rules? Fine. Let's renegotiate the price and everything else at the same time.

    66. Re:Just so I understand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But if the ISP does that then everybody screams about multitiered ISPs and they again look like the bad guy

    67. Re:Just so I understand... by magetoo · · Score: 1
      Actually with a large enough ISP network Bittorrent ain't all that bad, since you're likely to find many peers within the ISP. It's not local bandwidth that's scarce, it's the uplinks that are strangled [...]
      Bittorrent generates lots of traffic yes, but the only difference now is that the traffic is coming from all over the place.
      There is one main difference with Bittorrent, which is maximizing the total bandwidth. In my previous example, if 100 people downloaded the same file from an FTP server, the combined speed of all transfers was limited by that FTP's uplink, i.e. 10mbit, and everyone got a small slice of that bandwidth so it took longer to finish the transfer. Bittorrent does the opposite, while the initial seeder might only have 10mbit available, there are 99 other peers with anywhere from 1 to 5 mbit each, yielding an aggregate swarm speed that is several times faster than the FTP host could put out.
      So, isn't bandwidth throttling via QoS actually a good thing? Why doesn't people realize that?

      I mean, this is the sort of situation that Bittorrent is actually designed to handle. One uploader, who has his own website, but a somewhat limited bandwidth, decides to use Bittorrent for a few big files. He sets up a tracker and creates .torrent files. Now when someone starts downloading one of those files, he'll get a download speed equalling at least the site owner's maximum upload speed, or more if there are others with partial copies.

      (All the nonsense today about "keep your client open", and "always seed at least to a 1:1 ratio" are really results of applying Bittorrent to a scenario it was never really designed to handle. The original goal was to ease the load on the server, and nothing else. Speed is just a bonus.)

    68. Re:Just so I understand... by mediocubano · · Score: 1

      For the network operator this becomes an opportunity to pitch "value added" features like QoS and their own VoIP solutions. Vonage and everything else all gets lumped together as best-effort data, and it works while the network is lightly loaded. Bring on the p2p hogs and Vonage should break.
      Then your cable network just has to advertise: "Vonage broken? You can use our phone-over-cable service (which we prioritize over all data), or you can pay us extra to have your Vonage traffic take priority over your neighbors' goat-porn bittorrents."
      To take it one step farther, the companies want the ability to have different service levels, it is the way to squeeze extra revenue out of its subscriber base. Think about Platinum, Gold, and Standard data plans, where as a Platinum subscriber your data gets assigned a QoS priority higher than what the Gold and Standard users get. If the network gets bad enough then everybody pays extra to get upgraded back to where they should be.

    69. Re:Just so I understand... by magetoo · · Score: 1
      Argh, I hit "Submit" instead of "Preview"...

      Anyway, what I was going to say was that the scenario with lots of peer-to-peer bandwidth "inside" your ISP and lower (choked) bandwidth to the outside is a reasonably good parallel to that original scenario. So your up/download rate is limited. So what? As long as you still can have a decent speed to your closer peers, you're fine. You might get crappy speed to some faraway peers, but you and your closer peers can effectively pool your collective bandwidth and end up with something pretty decent anyway.

      Lets say everyone want to download the just released new movie^H^H^H^H^Hdistro. Instead of N number of customers each using FTP/HTTP and sucking up as much of the ISPs outside bandwidth as they can, slowing it down for everyone to (outside bandwidth/N); or N number of customers peering equally within the ISP network and outside it, generating (outside peers * peer speed) amount of traffic, saturating your uplink, you create a big incentive for "local" peers to exchange data with each other, and only rarely going outside -- just like the Bittorrent protocol wants you to do. What's the problem?

      Of course, I don't know how ISPs operate, but it seems to me that it wouldn't be at all hard to have a system that is both fair to all users and pretty fast for torrent leechers, if that is what you want. And yeah, it (traffic shaping) obviously opens up some evil possibilities too, depending on who owns the ISP, and what else they have to sell.

    70. Re:Just so I understand... by jkmullins · · Score: 1
      It's not that easy. You want dedicated bandwidth you have to pay for it. Your service agreement states that the listed bandwidth is the maximum attainable and that you may not always fully get the advertised rates. I worked for a year at an independently owned and operated cable ISP in a small town, a job I just left a month ago. We had around 1000 customers when I left. We were over 50 miles from the nearest data CO. Data services were oppressively expensive for us. When I first started we were paying over $600 a megabit for dedicated data service by T1. The ISP currently still has a 4.5 Mbps T1 circuit at that rate. In October of last year, we entered an agreement with another area ISP to go in together on a T3 circuit. We went into a business agreement with a direct competitor just so we could get our bandwidth costs down. The cost on that line is $235 a megabit, terminating at the other ISP, and going last mile to us by fiber. Our share of the line was 15 Mbps dedicated.

      Bottom line, no one in town, save a select few, would have been willing to pay for dedicated bandwidth. It wasn't that we didn't have the capability, it was that no one is willing to pay. Total cost after factoring in a transport/service fee and a small profit margin would have easily tipped $300 a megabit for cable modem service. The only solution is oversubscribing, to a greater or lesser degree depending on the situation of the individual ISP.

    71. Re:Just so I understand... by magetoo · · Score: 1
      I have had to resort to blocking popular bittorrent ports on my linksys router just to keep the 5MBit cable connection from choking. Once the connection is close to being saturated, _nothing_ works because too many packets are getting lost or timing out.

      On an ISP scale, you _never_ want to get to the point where you are using 100% of your bandwidth, because the network will slow down to a crawl.

      Wait... Didn't we all just agree, a couple of threads back, that Ethernet (high burst speed, good common case, cheap hardware) was Good Stuff; and that Token Ring (deterministic behaviour, good worst case, expensive) was Teh Suxorz? Did I miss a memo or something?

      (Yeah, I was going for "Funny" there. Sorry.)

      On a more serious note, it sounds like your router isn't really up for the job.

    72. Re:Just so I understand... by powerlord · · Score: 1

      This works within your network at home because you are still the primary user. Your router using traffic shaping and bittorrent getting very few packets through? No problem. It just means you're doing something else with the connection, so you don't mind. If you're ISP starting doing this en-masse, then you have a different situation (not in terms of what is being done, but in terms of whose traffic is getting through).

      Most ISPs are touting how fast they are vs. Dial-Up ... with no mention of minimum guarenteed bandwidth, or "peak theoretical speed" to the customer. To customer's weened on this marketting campaign, they are paying for a big, always available pipe to connect their home/office to the internet.

      If they prioritized all traffic the way you are suggesting, and some people almost always used BT, then would they get ANY bandwidth? Some bandwidth? Does that mean they are paying as much as other people for a given connection but not getting to use anywhere near as much? People won't tollerate that.

      Eventually all ISPs are going to have to move to a new pricing model specifically because of high-bandwidth applications that exploit the architecture (BT, Video-On-Demand, VoIP). The problem with current pricing model is that the ISP is selling based on Burst usage (for cable/DSL), with no minimum guarenteed level of performance. If your ISP said, "Hey, we'll gaurentee you 5mbps, but if you might be able to burst up to 20mbps". People might be more willing to tollerate traffic shaping (and tiered pricing for different guarenteed bandwidths).

      --
      This space for rent. All reasonable inquiries will be entertained at proprietors discretion.
    73. Re:Just so I understand... by jp10558 · · Score: 1

      I still don't understand why ISPs don't save everyone a lot of hassle, and sell service like Usenet providers or cellphone providers do.

      That is $X/GB, or $X/month for unlimited bandwith at a capped speed they can offer 24/7/365 at that price. Now, really, there will be a capped bandwidth in all of the above, but it seems to me they could make everyone happier if they allowed something like this:

      $300/month - 1.5Mbps/1.5Mbps unlimited throughput
      $200/month - 512Kbps/512Kbps unlimited throughput
      $2 per GB at 1.5Mbps/1.5Mbps(or whatever the maximum speed on the link is)
      $50/month best effort service with bursts up to 1.5Mbps/256Kbps - what we have now, but clearly advertised as provided per what the ISP can manage - not guaranteed, or even worked hard to maintain.

      Basically, it would be nice to have block pricing, so someone who just had to get a 2 GB file, could drop an extra $4 that month to get it at full speed...

      That said, all this only works if customers can get SLA backed monitoring software at the router for metering, so they know how much they're using, and can adjust accordingly. The major downside for ISPs is that all the grandma's currently floating the broadband could go to patying $2 a month for the 1GB they use for e-mail, and get it at SLA + full speed.

      --
      Opera, Proxomitron-Grypen,GPG 0x0A1C6EE3
    74. Re:Just so I understand... by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "My car might have 255HP, and while that helps me pass trucks and merge onto highways better, it doesn't mean that I drive around the clock with the pedal pushed to the floor."

      Sounds like you need a car with some real power. I think I'd be maxing out that 255 all the time...

      :-)

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    75. Re:Just so I understand... by spottedkangaroo · · Score: 1

      it's called "overselling" and it's a common practice

      Here at this little ISP, we call it concentrating. The upstream we buy is concentrated, our DSLs are further concentrated, and this is pretty normal. You can purchase unconcentrated bandwidth, but it costs slightly more than $24.95/mo.

      So far we haven't had to install or mention any kind of transfer limit because there's so few people that use their connection 24x7. Even if it were 10% of our users, we probably still wouldn't mention it. However, if it were affecting others we probably would. We call this the pee in the pond approach to rate limiting; but, we don't mention to customers that we call it that.

      --
      Imagine if you weren't allowed to use roads because a bus company complained about your driving 3 times. --skunkpussy
    76. Re:Just so I understand... by crabpeople · · Score: 1

      "I have had to resort to blocking popular bittorrent ports on my linksys router just to keep the 5MBit cable connection from choking."

      wow your crappy off the shelf router cant handle many concurrent connections so you blame the protocol. Funny, my smoothwall handles 1000s of connections fine. I know for a fact that alot of Dlink products are capped at about 50 concurrent connections im sure linksys has a similar restriction. A friend of mine who used to work a dlink tech support told me this. What your describing is probably not bandwidth related, unless of corse they are simply using all the bandwidth. If that was the case, perhaps a program like netlimiter on their PC's would do it. Otherwise you have to get some sort of traffic shaping/qos device.

      Those crappy soho routers arent meant to do anything that a power user or business would do. Thats why you gotta go pro ($$$) or roll your own (smoothwall, dubbele, etc).

      --
      I'll just use my special getting high powers one more time...
    77. Re:Just so I understand... by crabpeople · · Score: 1

      I watched a documentary about banking and the federal reserve and they claimed that for every $1 that a person puts into a bank, the bank, through various invisible hands, counts it as $1000 to lend out/invest or whatever. I firmly believe that if everyone knew how little actual real money is in the system there would be a massive collapse of society.

      --
      I'll just use my special getting high powers one more time...
    78. Re:Just so I understand... by stinerman · · Score: 1

      On an ISP scale, you _never_ want to get to the point where you are using 100% of your bandwidth, because the network will slow down to a crawl.

      There are 2 ways to fix this problem:

      1) Buy more bandwidth (and appropriately raise prices if need be)
      2) Be up front about the fact that you'll be throttling P2P apps; don't hide it in section 1, paragraph 2, subparagraph r, clause 7 of the TOS.

      Also, ISPs often throttle even when congestion is low. Throttling because you don't want to actually deliver the service you agreed you would is different from throttling because you want to make sure VoIP is working correctly.

    79. Re:Just so I understand... by Mitaphane · · Score: 1

      I think you missed my point. I wasn't saying that BitTorrent is just another iteration of file sharing like FTP; it isn't. You're right. It is a solid protocol that allows for much more dissemination of bits than FTP. My argument was against the description of BitTorrent as a "killer app" that has just recently made broadband valuable for many people.

      The point I made was that there have been numerous popular file sharing applications out there before BitTorrent that has made broadband a must have(i.e. killer apps). Many people have already gotten broadband for file sharing on FTP, Morpheous, Napster, and the like.
      I was pointing out was that just because BitTorrent needs a lot of bandwidth to become successful (functional not being synomous with successful) doesn't mean that it's being adopting in mass like a killer app.

    80. Re:Just so I understand... by MarkRose · · Score: 1

      There's more to it than that. Most home DSL and cable connections have a large buffer in the modem (several seconds worth of traffic). If you allow a queue of any sort to build up in there, then time-sensitive packets get delayed as they have to wait their turn in the queue. When you implement traffic shaping, you can limit the outgoing traffic to slightly slower than the modem upload speed, which moves the queue to your router -- which can then put the high priority packets out immediately. This allows me to use bittorrent at 95% of the link capacity with no noticeable slowdown, where before, I had to limit it to about 70% to avoid the queue in the modem. I also use Azureus.

      --
      Be relentless!
    81. Re:Just so I understand... by MarkRose · · Score: 1

      What a lot of ISP's are doing is outright rate limiting, not simply prioritizing. It would be acceptable to put P2P stuff at a lower priority to keep other services fast, but ISPs are simply rate limiting P2P traffic to lower the amount of bandwidth being used.

      --
      Be relentless!
    82. Re:Just so I understand... by MarkRose · · Score: 1

      Yeah, that's definitely a shift that's going to happen.

      From what I hear, some ISP's are having issues with network saturation causing delays: e.g. ACK TCP packets not getting through. Instead of being smart and prioritizing traffic, they're simply rate limiting certain classes of traffic -- not allowing bittorrent users their full share of available bulk-priority bandwidth. It's like using a hammer on a screw.

      --
      Be relentless!
    83. Re:Just so I understand... by aminorex · · Score: 1

      There's a substantial difference between oversubscription and actively harming your customer's traffic. One is an economy of scale. The other is outright malicious. The customers like the first, and despise the second.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    84. Re:Just so I understand... by NutscrapeSucks · · Score: 1

      How about inactively harming your customers traffic by not managing the network? Most customers won't appreciate their webbrowsing being slowed because of "P2P Hog".

      Anyway, I've got a trick that avoids having my BT capped by my ISP, so I don't really care :()

      --
      Whenever I hear the word 'Innovation', I reach for my pistol.
    85. Re:Just so I understand... by billcopc · · Score: 1

      I think this is another example of creative lies from our favorite telecoms/ISP. While you and I know that sharing files with someone on the same ISP is virtually the same as having them plugged into your switch, the typical meatheat does not. They don't know about networks, they only know about the cable going to their wall socket. They don't know about network topology and routing. They don't know there is a cost related with data transfer. They just know they pay X dollars a month and their brain doesn't push any further.

      Limiting P2P traffic to a reasonable speed, or at least relegating it to a low priority class would be nice, but in today's lawyer-friendly world of greedy hatred, the words could be twisted to imply the ISP is enabling rampant piracy by acknowledging and accomodating P2P traffic, rather than blocking or severely castrating it. It's like saying "I know you're selling crack, but instead of detaining you and calling the cops, I'll just set up a small room for you to sell your dope without obstructing my storefront." That's how devious lawyers are, especially when the client is a billion dollar media cartel.

      --
      -Billco, Fnarg.com
    86. Re:Just so I understand... by Intrinsic · · Score: 1

      I see. Makes sense, I guess I have been just limiting Bit torrent traffic to about 70% then.
      I guess it only really matters if you are anal about your bit torrent throughput and want time sensitive apps to work as well.

  3. The way I see it... by wolrahnaes · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They're selling me a TCP/IP connection to a global network with a service level guaranteed to varying degrees of accuracy depending on how much I pay. Unless it's spelled out in the contract, artificial restrictions should not be allowed.

    If I'm on a residential connection, I can expect to not get full speed during peak times due to overselling, but if I can download HTTP at the full 8mbit but only 2mbit from a torrent, something is wrong.

    Hopefully users of the ISPs that do this will choose to switch, though I'd imagine that the choices are limited in many areas.

    --
    I used to get high on life, but I developed a tolerance. Now I need something stronger.
    1. Re:The way I see it... by flooey · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Unless it's spelled out in the contract, artificial restrictions should not be allowed.

      Just curious, have you ever read the service contract with your ISP? I know I haven't. My guess would be that they include a paragraph to the tune of, "If the user is doing something we don't like, we can do whatever we want about it."

    2. Re:The way I see it... by antifoidulus · · Score: 1

      You want people to switch, but to what? The reason they are throttling is because of the high cost. So you think that some ISP should come up and jump up and down and say, "Hey, we can provide you great service for low cost and we will just take it up the ass"

      If you are willing to do so, then be my guest. Otherwise, realize that it is their network, they can do whatever they want with it.

    3. Re:The way I see it... by hunterx11 · · Score: 1
      They're selling me a TCP/IP connection to a global network with a service level guaranteed to varying degrees of accuracy depending on how much I pay. Unless it's spelled out in the contract, artificial restrictions should not be allowed.

      Maybe if you pay an assload for Speakeasy or small business DSL, that's the case. But with most ISPs, they consider that you are paying for the privilege of using a part of their bandwidth. It isn't even analogous to renting--it's more like paying someone money so they let you live in a room in their house, only they can tell you what you can and can't do and you have no recourse if they're an asshole.

      --
      English is easier said than done.
    4. Re:The way I see it... by terrencefw · · Score: 1

      but if I can download HTTP at the full 8mbit but only 2mbit from a torrent, something is wrong. No, that's the way it's supposed to work! If the traffic shaping is working properly, true real-time traffic like VoIP and gaming will be full speed, near real-time traffic like HTTP should be next in line, and the non-time critical traffic like P2P should use what's left of the remaining bandwidth. That way, people who just want to use the web and so on don't get their service degraded by those who chose to download large files by P2P. Let's face it, if I start a large movie download at 10pm, I really don't care if it finishes at 1am or 5am. Interactive applications like web browsing or gaming are a different matter entirely.

      --
      Like tinyurl, but one letter less! http://qurl.co.uk/
    5. Re:The way I see it... by Zarhan · · Score: 1

      They're selling me a TCP/IP connection to a global network with a service level guaranteed to varying degrees of accuracy depending on how much I pay. Unless it's spelled out in the contract, artificial restrictions should not be allowed.

          No, you are most likely not guaranteed anything. At least if you are getting your standard, residential, consumer-oriented connection.

          Even if you are willing to pay up for guarantees (ie. get a connection with a Service Level Agreement that has desired parameters (such as 99,99% uptime)), they hardly ever guarantee bandwidth to anywhere on the global network. You CAN get guarantees for bandwidth within the same ISP (for example, for connecting two offices together and making sure that they always have enough bandwith for 30 VoIP calls).

          The speed of the access line does not mean a thing. My friend has a 1 Gigabit Ethernet connection - and yes, he gets this speed from the ISPs own ftp server at nighttime hours, but you wouldn't expect him to get 1Gbps from anywhere on the Internet, right?

    6. Re:The way I see it... by Haeleth · · Score: 4, Insightful

      realize that it is their network, they can do whatever they want with it

      Well, no, actually. That claim is easily proven to be false: they can't use their network to sell child porn, therefore they can't do whatever they want with it.

      They can do whatever they want within the limits of the law and the constraints of the contract they have signed with you.

      If you have agreed in your contract that they can throttle your usage or restrict certain types of traffic, then they can do that. On the other hand, if they have foolishly agreed to supply you with a certain level of connectivity regardless of what you are using it for, then they cannot simply turn around and say "oops, we've changed our minds" -- they took your money, and that means they are obliged to give you what you paid for.

      I suspect most, if not all, of the contracts people have agreed to do permit the ISP to change the terms of service and do permit the ISP to restrict traffic based on what the ISP decides is reasonable. In which case, yes, they can do that. But please don't spread the dangerous myth that ownership of property allows you ultimate power over that property. It doesn't. Every right has responsibilities attached.

    7. Re:The way I see it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Due to the high wholesale cost of bandwidth in Australia, almost every ISP has a download limit. If you exceed this limit, your access is shaped back to 72Kb/s or so. You can get a higher limit if you opt to pay more, or you can opt to pay per GB for full speed access after you exceed the limit.

      I personally don't like this policy, but I can see why it is in place. Once users reach a certain threshold of downloads per month, the ISP actually starts to lose money on them. This is largely due to the obscene price of wholesale bandwidth in Australia, but I'm sure the same applies everywhere else to some extent.

      However, I really can't see why different forms of communication should be shaped differently. Why should it matter if you are downloading all day from Bittorrent, rather than an FTP site?

      ISPs in Australia are generally good at defining the download limits (with the notable exception of Bigpond and their "Unlimited" plan with a 10GB download limit), and there is a reason behind the limits, so I can't really object. Shaping traffic based on the type of communications is another matter entirely, and I would complain very loudly if my ISP started doing this.

    8. Re:The way I see it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Hopefully users of the ISPs that do this will choose to switch, though I'd imagine that the choices are limited in many areas.

      And in the end, AT&T/Verizon still get paid, because they own the wires from the COs to your house.

    9. Re:The way I see it... by DaHat · · Score: 1

      Wonderful way to put it.

      I currently live in an apartment where all of my utilities are part of my rent and do take advantage of that benefit in using a fair amount of power and water... thing is though I could use more, but I know that there is some... line that if crossed to frequently that the land lord will see fit to raise my rent.

      It hasn't happened yet, but I still expect it one day that could happen so I avoid overly excessive use and getting noticed, the same thing most ISP users should be doing unless they have a SLA that spells out exactly how much bandwidth they get and how much of it they can use.

    10. Re:The way I see it... by bbtom · · Score: 1

      That's not how it works actually. Bandwidth shouldn't be shaped by the ISP at all. If I want to 'shape' my bandwidth or restrict BitTorrent or anything else, I'll do it myself. I can then work out what's going on and why.

      --
      catch (HumourFailureException e) { e.user.send("You, sir, are a humourless idiot."); }
    11. Re:The way I see it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm on Tiscali in the UK. They offer a deal whereby if you knock off any P2P downloading during peak hours (6pm to 11pm), you can download as much as you want outside those hours, for 14.99 GBP a month, 1Mb/s ADSL (17.99 gets you 2Mb/s). They say that you will get a warning (at the end of the month) if you use the service too much during peak hours... three warnings and you get deliberately slowed, but only during peak hours.

      Now, putting aside the fact that Tiscali have something of a bad reputation for reliability in the past, the service has been pretty good. The first two months I got warnings, despite the fact that I barely used the service during the peak period... after I sent some complaint letters querying their measuring system and documenting my usage, they finally seemed to get the message and made a few adjustments. I've heard nothing since, despite doing huge amounts of downloading during off-peak.

      However, their tech support is known for being shit. If you are happy wires-only, and setting up your own software and you don't need hand-holding, then they may be OK for you.

    12. Re:The way I see it... by B1ackDragon · · Score: 1

      Interesting article: http://www.reason.com/links/links041006.shtml

      Arguing that some providers doing crap like this will actually spur competition, in the end making the net better off for the end users. Not sure if I agree, though hearing about the amount of bittorrent traffic there is gives hope to idea that those using it will switch to more open providers, thus giving those providers a market edge.

      --
      The snow doesn't give a soft white damn whom it touches. -- ee cummings
    13. Re:The way I see it... by Firehed · · Score: 2, Insightful
      If I'm on a residential connection, I can expect to not get full speed during peak times due to overselling, but if I can download HTTP at the full 8mbit but only 2mbit from a torrent, something is wrong.
      I totally agree. Unless there's something prespecified before you sign up, any sort of service-throttling should be grounds for a lawsuit! Nevermind the fact that there are terabytes of legitimate files on P2P services (let's start with every linux distro in existance) - it's not all pirated stuff. Maybe me using port 31337 (*strokes nonexistant goatee, grinning*) for P2P traffic helps matters at my end, but these types of moves are almost as unfair as upload bandwidth being an eighth of download bandwidth (which is, by and large, throttling FTP services).

      I'd love to switch from my ghastly overpriced Adelphia (now Comcast?) cable services to Verizon's FIOS since it's both *much* faster and cheaper, but it's not available in my area. But this sort of bandwidth throttling would most definately ensure that I wouldn't sign up. My take is that if I pay for X bandwidth, I expect it to be available to me (within reason) 24/365 however I choose to use it. That could mean ripping huge files off of http servers while uploading something else to my own webserver (severely increasing costs to the servers from which I'm downloading, of course), or it could mean having a couple torrents open.

      As I see it, it's them just trying to shift costs away from themselves, because without piracy, you could honestly expect to see a lot less customers "needing" high-speed internet (Napster classic was originally why I wanted to upgrade, and that was for 5mb files, not multi-gig files). Yes, pages loading faster are nice, but even broadband commercials make a point of how downloading music (with requisite "use legal services only" disclaimer in 1pt at the bottom) is so much faster - the whole "load five times as many pages in a minute than with dial-up" is a thing of the past.

      --
      How are sites slashdotted when nobody reads TFAs?
    14. Re:The way I see it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Nobody (OK, almost nobody) reads those contracts. The people who do read them often don't understand them, and people who read and understand them usually forget in 10 minutes.

      That's why the contracts are invalid.

      Knowing that nobody reads them, ISPs, and many other businesses, routinely put all kinds of obnoxious, one-sided garbage in the "fine print". They deliberately rely on the ignorance of their customers. That is unethical. It also legally invalidates the contracts in many or most places, including every single state in the United States, because the requirement of "meeting of minds" is not met.

      If ISPs want to throttle users, cap their use, shape their traffic, filter particular protocols, or whatever, and have any claim to being ethical, they need to make sure that their customers understand that BEFORE the contract is signed. That means actively publicizing any restriction that "Joe User" wouldn't automatically expect... as prominently as they publicize the "unlimited" claim in their advertising.

      Ready to do that, ISPS? If not, you're con artists.

      Not practical? Too confusing for the customer? Tough shit. Suck it up and adopt a sustainable pricing model.

    15. Re:The way I see it... by cervo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      But if they advertise unlimited bandwidth and then do not deliver, even if it is buried deep in a contract, it is false advertising and fraud. The attorney generals would have a field day with this once they are made to understand the issue. Truthfully, they should not advertise unlimited bandwidth. Or at the end of commercial have to talk really fast saying that they would throttle the bandwidth/cancel and limit the account like many other commercials have to do.

    16. Re:The way I see it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      bbtom wrote: If I want to 'shape' my bandwidth or restrict BitTorrent or anything else, I'll do it myself. I can then work out what's going on and why.

      Yeah, uh huh, you obviously don't have a clue what you're talking about. Nobody's interested in resahping your bandwidth just for your benefit... nobody gives a flying fuck if 'your' P2P is interfering with 'your' browser. If they don't reshape it then everybody's connection gets held up by a handful of people who are P2P'ing like crazy. A broadband connection is not a dedicated connection; you get your bandwidth from the same pool/cloud as everyone else in your neighborhood.

      Moron.

    17. Re:The way I see it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you are correct, up to a point. since they are selling you an always on connection, you should be able to use it without any repercussions 100% of the time. However, Most ISPs have a "reasonable use" limitations, which is that if you have a home connection sold at a discount, you get to share the upstream bandwidth with other customers, since having dedicated bandwidth on an OC3 for some arsehole with a 6meg home ADSL circuit who is paying only(!) 100 a month is completely technically unfeasable. If you want to have that much bandwidth maxed out, pay for it. You can get a Frac DS3 at 6MB/Sec, and I guarantee that your ISP is not going to be bitching about you using your whole bandwidth all the time, since you're paying a lot of money for a real internet connection.

      My ISP has a throughput limit at about 100GB of transfer a month on your ADSL circuit. This is flexible, but if you're in the top 20 or 30 home ADSL users on that point of presence, you're getting a phone call, at least, and maybe disconnected if you don't play ball.

    18. Re:The way I see it... by Rekolitus · · Score: 1

      The way I see it, is that if any ISP engages in any type of traffic discrimination (say, against VoIP or BitTorrent), then they are not providing Internet access and should not be permitted to advertise as such. Rather, they are providing access to a specific subset of the Internet and it's services.

    19. Re:The way I see it... by mOdQuArK! · · Score: 1

      ISPs shape their traffic to optimize bandwidth for _all_ of their customers (and their own profit margins of course), not just you.

    20. Re:The way I see it... by alienw · · Score: 1

      Unless there's something prespecified before you sign up, any sort of service-throttling should be grounds for a lawsuit!

      Why do you think that? The ISP has the right to maintain the integrity of their network by, among other things, restricting or disconnecting those who abuse the network. I've dealt with about 5 ISPs, and all of them specified that servers are not permitted on residential broadband connections, and that they reserve the right to limit or discontinue service. If you use P2P, you have already broken the server clause, and the ISP can impose any restrictions they may find necessary.

    21. Re:The way I see it... by dodobh · · Score: 3, Insightful

      They aren't claiming unlimited bandwidth. No download caps no download limit. And they can very well claim that you are abusing their service.

      --
      I can throw myself at the ground, and miss.
    22. Re:The way I see it... by TheoMurpse · · Score: 1

      attorney generals
      This is just a pet peeve of mine, but it's attorneys general. They are not generals with an adjective "attorney," they are attorneys described by the adjective "general." Attorneys general have no military power, and thus are not "generals."

    23. Re:The way I see it... by Firehed · · Score: 1
      Mine also disallows servers, but P2P isn't acting as a server, per se. It's definately one of those iffy things, but traditionally a server allows a user to download the entire file from the server, and consistantly offers up the same files. While P2P does technically allow for you to download the file from only one source, it's quite rare, and in most cases you'll find that over the course of a week or so, the files that your typical P2P user have changed.

      That's the problem with a lot of tech stuff - there isn't a single specific, universal definition. While I would consider someone who is only seeding a file to be acting as a server, I wouldn't consider a peer to be so, unless that peer contniues to seed for an abnormally long time once the download is complete (say, seeding beyond 3:1). I just fail to see how your use of bandwidth should be allocated - you're given X down speed and Y up speed, what's the difference between maxing it out through P2P or acting as a server or intense FTP? Any server running off of 256kbit upload is going to be worthless to anyone not on dialup, anyways.

      Just seems wrong to me to tell me what I can and can't do with my bandwidth. Provided it's legal (and assume I'm using P2P only for the legal stuff, no piratebay action), I should be able to use all of my allocated bandwidth. This would be like the post office telling me I can't send out CDs in paid-for posted mailers because they don't want me to. I've paid my fees to receive a service, it's their job to follow up.

      --
      How are sites slashdotted when nobody reads TFAs?
    24. Re:The way I see it... by westlake · · Score: 1

      hearing about the amount of bittorrent traffic there is gives hope to idea that those using it will switch to more open providers, thus giving those providers a market edge.p. or more likely driving them into bankruptcy.

    25. Re:The way I see it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      It's always been a pet peeve of mine that they aren't called General Attorneys.

      The title "Attorney General" seems like it was written by someone who didn't understand English well and whose first language was one where the adjective comes after the noun.

    26. Re:The way I see it... by glitch23 · · Score: 0

      Every right has responsibilities attached.

      This is off topic but it would be nice if people realized this same statement is true concerning TV networks and what they put on TV for people to watch. Responsibility does *not* lie entirely on the parents.

      --
      this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom. -- Lincoln, Gettysburg Address
    27. Re:The way I see it... by hankwang · · Score: 1
      if they have foolishly agreed to supply you with a certain level of connectivity regardless of what you are using it for, then they cannot simply turn around and say "oops, we've changed our minds

      Isn't there usually a clause like "The provider can change the conditions; in such a case the customer is allowed to terminate the agreement without the normal notice period"?

    28. Re:The way I see it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://www.sectvonj.com/internet.html claims a 4.0 meg download speed an an upload speed to 384k for 34.95 a month. Nowhere is it mentioned that you cannot use this service all the time, nor is it mentioned that you can be throttled or kicked off. This is deceptive to the consumer. If they want to have these limits, they should show up on all pricing pages, terms of service pages, and advertisements. On television when I see broadband advertisements, they show people streaming movies and dowloading quickly all the time. However if you video conferenced all the time like in the commercials, you would be sucking too much bandwidth. It is very deceptive to the consumer and even unethical to make them think they are getting more than they really are.

    29. Re:The way I see it... by cgenman · · Score: 1

      I have read my ISP service contract. And I used to work at one.

      Basically all consumer-level services are provided without minimum service guarantees. You get no QOS provisions, no minimum speed provisions, no uptime provisions. Basically, you get something similar to what the provider promised you. If in practice it is 1/2 of the advertised speed level or is unavailable for 1 day a week, the person can decide to deal with it or leave.

      DSL is particularly bad about this, as they never reach advertised speed and have frequent outages. 1.5 MBbps may be true if you are sitting on top of the phone company DSL center, but if you're in the outer reaches of their availability region (and most people are by simple geography) you're lucky if you get a consistent fifth of that.

      But unless you're willing to shell out 500 dollars a month for business usage with a static IP, no service guarantees for you. Like it or leave it.

      And yes, of course, the ISP always includes clauses that allow them to do anything they want if they suspect you of malicious activity or activities that deterr the service of others. But they don't actually have to have that clause for anyone except business users: home users have basically no guarantee of anything.

    30. Re:The way I see it... by JeremyALogan · · Score: 1

      Not my service contract. If fact, I don't have one. I guessed Comcast's fone number 1-800-COMCAST and told them I wanted the service installed. The guy showed up the next day and hooked up the line and handed over the modem. All I signed was the peice of paper saying that he did, in fact, show up and do those things. I hooked up the modem and did the setup through the web browser (I don't use Windows and if I did I still probably wouldn't use their software). Sure, a little screen may have asked me if I agreed to such-and-such, but ya know what? I had already paid for and was already receiving the service... doesn't count. Since then I haven't signed anything either. As far as I am concerned I have no contract.

    31. Re:The way I see it... by Sathias · · Score: 1

      Over here in Australia we don't really have unlimited internet (as opposed to unlimited* internet) but at least you know exactly how much you are able to download each month. If an ISP is giving unlimited bandwidth it is impossible for them to do without either limiting the speed of the connection or putting in fine print. My ADSL2+ connection gives me 14000/1000 but I have a 40gig download limit (which I get nowhere near most of the time). I'm not the sort of person that wants to download the entire internet each month so that suits me just fine, and I love having the burst speed. Not to mention that I can download a lot of the stuff I want such as demos and patches from my ISPs file mirror at full speed.

      --
      Blessed are the 1337, for they shall pwn the earth.
    32. Re:The way I see it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The point is that the ISP can't tell which traffic is which, or at least that's their own claim as to why they can't be regulated.

    33. Re:The way I see it... by wolrahnaes · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Of course having no contract means the ISP isn't obligated to anything either.

      --
      I used to get high on life, but I developed a tolerance. Now I need something stronger.
    34. Re:The way I see it... by wolrahnaes · · Score: 1

      What I meant by that was during off-peak hours when the ISP's bandwidth is not saturated.

      If they prioritize traffic so that HTTP and realtime applications get more bandwidth, I have no problem with that. The problem is that some ISPs are artificially limiting P2P traffic even when it's not needed. Some Canadian users I've talked to say that their torrents run at dialup speeds or worse no matter what time of day, where they can max out their lines with HTTP traffic. If the ISP's connection isn't saturated, the only "shaping" that should occur is prioritization for low latency of games/SSH/VoIP. Once the line is peaked, then and only then should bandwidth shaping be applied.

      --
      I used to get high on life, but I developed a tolerance. Now I need something stronger.
    35. Re:The way I see it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Believe me, it's spelled out clearly that you aren't getting a guaranteed rate with your $50 a month ISP. It's explicit with the few major ones I've used. They also reserve the rights explicitly to control your traffic and modify it. Read the agreement. Subsequently, they also usually say you can run services and most P2P could certainly be viewed as a service.

      If you want "guaranteed" bandwidth then you buy a rack at a datacenter and peer to a tier one provider and pay hundreds or thousands of dollars a month.

    36. Re:The way I see it... by wolrahnaes · · Score: 1

      That's why I said varying degrees of accuracy.

      The cable provider around here guarantees that the connection will be at least twice as fast as dialup (their "starter" plan is 128/128, so that's the baseline). Obviously with a 8m/768 plan, that takes "varying degrees of accuracy" to an extreme, but it still is a guarantee.

      If one pays extra for a business plan, the guarantee increases to 256/256.

      --
      I used to get high on life, but I developed a tolerance. Now I need something stronger.
    37. Re:The way I see it... by Vorondil28 · · Score: 1

      (*strokes nonexistant goatee, grinning*)

      It's cool, I do have a goatee, and I'll stroke mine for you.

      --
      This sig rocks the casbah.
    38. Re:The way I see it... by JeremyALogan · · Score: 1

      Wasn't the whole point that they aren't anyways? However, they have to, at least, live up to their advertisement.

    39. Re:The way I see it... by grahammm · · Score: 1

      Interesting that your ISP defines peak as 6pm to 11pm. Mine (also in the UK) defines peak as 8am to 6pm Monday to Friday, and yes it is a home ADSL service not a business one. Usage outside of the peak period is totally unlimited as is uploading at all times. They have different tarrifs for various download limits, ranging from 1Gb to 8Gb per month, during the peak period.

    40. Re:The way I see it... by jp10558 · · Score: 1

      Interestingly enough, I'm on 1Mbps/128Kbps DSL, out of a remote serving station in upstate NY, and usually get a good 1.2Mbps/240Kbps out of it.

      --
      Opera, Proxomitron-Grypen,GPG 0x0A1C6EE3
    41. Re:The way I see it... by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 1

      No ISP has ever advertised "unlimited bandwidth".

      Even the most aggressive cable internet sales pitches I see these days don't make any claims stronger than "up to 100x average dial-up speeds". The "up to" phrase is of course an easy out for them: they could deliver speeds of 80x dial-up, or 20x dialup, and still be delivering as advertised; they could even deliver speeds of 0.5x dialup and still be complying with the letter of the agreement, if not the spirit.

    42. Re:The way I see it... by powerlord · · Score: 1

      Usually it goes more like "The provider can change the terms of this service at any time. The most current copy of these terms can be found at insert url."

      Yeah, you can say "Those weren't the terms I started out with!" or "Did they change?" but, if you are allowed to cancel at any time (or they are at most required to honor the old terms through the current period paid for ... increasingly a month-to-month contract for services), then it essentially means that they can change at any time to anything they want.

      "Oh, and you DID keep a copy of your original Terms of Service ... right?"

      --
      This space for rent. All reasonable inquiries will be entertained at proprietors discretion.
    43. Re:The way I see it... by hankwang · · Score: 1

      Over here in Netherlands all ADSL providers have 12 month contract terms. Getting yourself an ADSL connection takes only 5 days, but getting rid of it can take 364 days if you're unlucky. My provider (xs4all.nl) says that the customer may cancel the contract upon price changes, but you'll have to check their website to find out about that in advance. Funny thing is, they used to have a 'fair use' policy, but since they don't enforce that anymore since there were so few excessive users.

  4. No problem by Falconoffury · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ISPs can do whatever they want, but I will vote with my wallet. If they do anything to limit my bandwidth or IPs, I will simply switch ISPs. Just go to dslreports.com and look at how many companies are out there. I find it unlikely that all companies will unite against P2P.

    1. Re:No problem by QCompson · · Score: 1

      Just go to dslreports.com and look at how many companies are out there.

      Yes, there are a lot of ISPs out there if you're willing to move all over country whenever your ISP begins to annoy you.

      You may live in a densely populated area that enjoys the freedom of choosing between several ISPs, but many people are forced to choose between crappy ISP A or crappy ISP B, if that.

    2. Re:No problem by Professor_UNIX · · Score: 1
      Just go to dslreports.com and look at how many companies are out there. I find it unlikely that all companies will unite against P2P.

      Maybe you have a lot of choices, but some of us don't. The house I'm planning on moving to has only two options for broadband: AT&T DSL or Cox Cable. Since Covad has no plans on putting any equipment in that particular CO I will have no alternative choices like Speakeasy to get DSL from unless I find someone who simply resells AT&T DSL, but at that point what advantage does that have over simply buying it from them?

    3. Re:No problem by mortonda · · Score: 1
      ISPs can do whatever they want, but I will vote with my wallet


      And they are completely happy with that. If you are soaking their bandwidth 24/7, you are costing them money, and so if you leave, they *make* more money.

      Don't let the door hit you on the way out! :)
    4. Re:No problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      ISPs can do whatever they want, but I will vote with my wallet. If they do anything to limit my bandwidth or IPs, I will simply switch ISPs.

      Believe it or not, this is what many service providers would like you to do. If you're the kind of person who wants to eat $200 of steak all week long at the $5.95 buffet, we'd gladly help you go patronize someone else.

      I'm the senior network engineer for a regional broadband operator. We were first to activate service in our region and had many heavy-use customers sign up along with the rest. Because we rate-limit P2P (as clearly explained in the service agreement and website FAQ), we saw about 8% to 10% of our customer base leave when the incumbant local exchange provider (ILEC) finally activated DSL.

      I always found it amusing to see the ILEC do their dog and pony show when they had zero customers on the local DSL network. They'd feed the community with either a fractional T1 or at best, two T1's bonded. The speeds in their little demo trailer were impressive at first.

      Then the P2P abusers would switch. Three months later, you'd see peak hour speeds of around 60 to 110 kbps - instant ISDN! Then we'd start getting calls from the abusers telling us we could have their business back ($35-$40 a month), but ONLY if we opened up P2P. The reality was our rate-limited P2P was ultimately faster than the unpoliced nasty DSL network that died when a handful of P2P servers lit up and consumed most of the bandwidth.

      I've seen some pretty hilarious emails passed on from customer service, from the threats to file a class action lawsuit because we wouldn't permit unrestricted P2P (from people that had left us to go to a DSL network that was a disaster), to explanations that a customer's request should never be ignored if we are a good company. We'll even get the occasional Better Business Bureau complaint because we rate-limit. I've even seen explanations that we should charge everyone more money to subsidize the few abusers - apparently nobody wants to use their own money to pay for their P2P habit.

      The funny thing is that we have a standard response that provides these customers with a connection that doesn't have the rate-limiting for about $200 per Mbps, with a guaranteed SLA. When you're delivering this to rural communities, $200/Mbps is pretty incredible and it's darn near our cost to get it there. Yet we never have takers on it - P2P hogs expect to dine for close to free.

      Ultimately you have a choice: you can please 85% of your customers with well engineered traffic, and send the 10% abusers and 5% financial deadbeats to the competition, or you can please the losers and send away the good customers. If you want to stay in business, you know what the right decision is.

    5. Re:No problem by Midnight+Thunder · · Score: 1

      Mod the parent up. Even though I use P2P from time to time, I totally agree with the arguments of the parent post. Also don't forget that ISPs have to pay for their bandwidth too. As a business they need to make money, or at least stay solvent, and with abusers its hard to do that.

      The reality is that there are costs, and someone ends up picking up the bill.

      --
      Jumpstart the tartan drive.
    6. Re:No problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's "$200 per Mbps" ? I pay $200 and I get 1 Mbps forever? Or do you mean "$200 per month per Mbps"?

    7. Re:No problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Be thankful that you have that option. Where I live, I can choose between either RoadRunner cable, or dialup. DSL (and the dozens of ISP choices that go with it) isn't an option, due to the distance from the CO (not that it stops Qwest from filling my mailbox with ads for their DSL, which, by their own admission, I can't get). And no, I don't live 20 miles from the nearest town; the nearest CO is actually only a few miles away (which curiously doesn't seem to serve my neighborhood; even if it did, it'd be nearly out of range anyway).

    8. Re:No problem by AnotherBlackHat · · Score: 1

      The funny thing is that we have a standard response that provides these customers with a connection that doesn't have the rate-limiting for about $200 per Mbps, with a guaranteed SLA. When you're delivering this to rural communities, $200/Mbps is pretty incredible and it's darn near our cost to get it there.


      If you buy in bulk, transit is availble for under $20 a Mbps.
      A naive assumption would be that cost difference between providing 1Mbps continuous, and 1Mbps burst wouldn't be greater than twice that ($40).

      Presumably there's some other cost that I'm overlooking that makes contiuous traffic much more costly than burst.
      Perhaps someone could enlighten me.

      -- Should you believe authority without question?
    9. Re:No problem by Rekolitus · · Score: 1
      They'd feed the community with either a fractional T1 or at best, two T1's bonded.
      Perhaps I'm just not understanding T1s and so forth here, but how can you run a DSL ISP on a T1? A T1 is 1.544Mbps, and most of the consumer broadband services around nowadays are at the very least 1Mbps. One person would fill up two thirds of the T1 line.
    10. Re:No problem by jb.hl.com · · Score: 4, Funny

      P2P hogs expect to dine for close to free.

      Gee, I'd never expect that people too cheap to buy their own CDs and DVDs wouldn't want to pay more to get them for free. :D

      --
      By summer it was all gone...now shesmovedon. --
    11. Re:No problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually you are the kind of ISP I'd like to see more of. There have been times, I'd have gladly paid a $200 flat rate unlimited use 1Mbps connection. I'm assuming this is 1Mb/1Mb. In fact once I finish work where I'm [cable is available here] at and move back to the outlying area of the city where I live normally, i'd gladly find a way to pay that.

      Now, SBC and now AT&T I guess since they are the same company now I hate. They just spout nonsensicle figures of it costing half a million dollars to activate one dsl line in a remote terminal that is probably a mile from town. [I can't remember the exact numbers now.] Do note, that it is also not allowed for other companies to put equipment into those remote terminal boxes either, but only the central offices.] The end result is the only hardline provider that could do it, the phone company, may be years before they do it, so they can show a profit on their el cheapo dsl. You gotta love how the phone companies that are a publically regulated monopoly that if, i'm not mistaken had their infrastructure originally publically funded, now only do service where the best profit margins are.

      In some ways I hope this tv freedom nonsense gets through, since it would give the phone companies an incentive to get moving on broadband deployments. Of course I also think it would be a good idea to do limited public funding of broadband deployments in rural areas just in the name of economic growth, which I believe the internet does help facilitate to an extent. This is why roads were ultimately publically funded, after all.

      At any rate, if thats all I can get, i'd order $200 1Mb service, although, for best results I'd rather see a much larger variety of plans so people can choose based on what they really need. Of course, my only other alternative is to live with the satellite service, or put up a 100 foot tower and try for wireless. The second would be true broadband, more or less, but, well the $200 a month service would probably end up being cheaper, if such was available.

    12. Re:No problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is like a casino kicking out anyone who is winning more than 50% of the time at their games.

      If you promise me "unlimited internet access" for $50 a month, and you can't realistically provide that to everyone, you, like the casino, or like companies offering rebates, are making a gamble that enough people won't take full advantage of your offer to eat all your profits and put you in debt.

      If you get rid of those cutomers who do actually make use of the offer then you're making it impossible for anyone to actually take advantage of the offer, and that's FALSE ADVERTISING.

      Also, if you have some find print somewhere which allows you to throttle people's bandwidth if they use more than X a month, then again, that's FALSE ADVERTISING, because even though it may be "in the ad", one part of the ad contradicts with the other. You can't have both a limited connection AND unlimited access. If you promise speeds of "up to 6mbps" and you can never actually deliver that speed because you've oversold your network, then that too is false advertising. Otherwise, what is to prevent you from promising speeds "up to 100mbps" when it is physically impossible to actually provide that? The excuse that it says "up to" is not an excuse for a blatant falsehood.

    13. Re:No problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1) That $20/Mb price you are quoting is almost certainly Cogent drainage. If you go with any other "Tier 1" (I use quotes because Cogent is a pseudo Tier 1) you're going to be paying $40-$70 a meg, even if you're big enough for a 1Gbps+ commit.

      2) Even if that Cogent service is sufficient to serve all you're needs, you almost certainly not going to be able to connect with Cogent in the "rural" location that the grandparent is providing service in. It is probably going to cost you quite a bit for that GigE / OC12 / OC48 / whatever from the provider to the middle of Montana (or wherever)

    14. Re:No problem by Shaman · · Score: 1

      > If you buy in bulk, transit is availble for under $20 a Mbps.

      B.S.

      First, you don't mean bulk. You mean *BULK* As in, connecting to a FIX directly.

      But that ignores the real costs. You also have to pay for network infrastructure and maintenance, then amortize the cost of it over some period of years. $20/mo doesn't even begin to represent the real costs, if you can find it at that price - then there's the likelihood that you are buying oversold bandwidth at that price (think: Cogent).

      --
      ...Steve
    15. Re:No problem by nukem996 · · Score: 1

      Since your a network admin maybe you can answer my question. I am fine with my ISP throttling my p2p network traffic its when they throttle everything perminatly that it annoys the hell out of me. If you download from my ISP(optonline) they will throttle every from Bittorrent to HTTP connection, slowing everything down. This happens if I download once from any p2p software. This happened to me when I downloaded knoppix 4.0 from bittorrent and an admin came on saying that if I downloaded again I would be kicked off. Why is it that an ISP has to punish you perminatly for downloading once? Why cannt the throttling just be on the p2p stuff, not everything. I understand that your ISP has in the contract info about p2p software, mine dosnt they just classify it as running a server, how does that make sense when im basicly downing the same thing running any sort of game? As many other have pointed out my ISP adverties all the time that you can "download movies music and games faster then DSL" when infact my gf(who has DSL) now downloads faster with bittorrent.

    16. Re:No problem by lakeland · · Score: 1

      $200/Mbis/month.

      Actually, that's a pretty good rate, better than is offered here.

    17. Re:No problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      that's a nice story.

      but you sound like one man making good decisions.

      in reality, the big isps are bloated companies, slow moving, and getting their ass whipped cause they couldn't come up with a business plan to save their bacon.

      bittorrent users are just showing you "what's to come"

      once highbandwidth apps hit mainstream (it won't be p2p), you'll be wishing for the good ole days of "fighting the bandwidth hogs"

      you see, when highbandwidth hits mainstream, you'll have no choice when 60% of your subscribers demand massive usage....from their perspective "this is why i pay my fucking rediculous isp bill for!!!"

      then what are you going to do? treat them like your bt users?

      and big isps will face paying more for the upstream bandwidth, but not allowed to charge customers more, due to the threat of mass exodus and just plain old complaining by a shitload of people.

      be thankful that right now that you can wear a smug little grin when you tell these current p2p users to take a hike.

      in the dictionary, under short sighted, we'll be a picture of the isps proverbial stupid grinning face.

      (hell, you can already see the endgame with isps failing to come up with a business model as vonage, google, and others give people a reason to USE their bandwidth, but isps try and maintain their monopoly...they've got the stick, but no carrot)

    18. Re:No problem by oh_bugger · · Score: 1
      You raise an excellent point. Yes a lot of P2P is used for piracy which is why ISPs can mostly claim the moral high ground on mass crippling of internet connections, but we're not very far away from high bandwidth apps such as downloadable TV and movies from legitimate sources. Here in the UK we have SkyByBroadband, where you can download movies and sports clips. There's 8 million Sky TV subscribers in the UK most of those probably wont use SkyByBroadband, but that's just today. It wont be long before there's loads of companies offering similar services and these companies, as well as the people subscribing will be saying to the ISPs "What's going on?!". This time the ISPs can't say "Abusers!" this time as it just wont stick when they're advertising "unlimited downloads" and "fast downloads". People wont care about the technical limitations, just that they've been sold a service that doesn't do what it's meant to.

      In my opinion the ISPs are more interested in boosting their top speeds at the moment, so they can brag about their speedy networks, but as soon as people start using that high speed connection all at once then there wont be the capacity to maintain it. What can the ISPs and network owners do? Well they can either start selling their products with limited downloads (which a lot of ISPs already do) and notices to expect low speeds at peak times, or they can charge users more to pay for the extra capacity required. Download caps wont work once there's media download services everywhere, and people wont pay the actual cost of downloading how much they want per month, so things are going to get EXTREMELY difficult for ISPs. The only other option is to get companies that use more of an ISPs bandwidth to pay a fee for more bandwidth, but a tiered internet is potentially dangerous by offering an ISP the option to extort money from service providers so that users can get to their services.

      --
      Go home and shave your giant head of smell with your bad self
    19. Re:No problem by cthellis · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Here's a question, though... Do you rate-limit P2P use, or do you rate-limit an ACCOUNT perpetually when you think P2P use is getting too high?

      I wouldn't mind one bit of P2P use (or any other high-bandwidth/quasi-perpetual bandwidth activity) is choked back, but unfortunately it seems most providers do not put intelligence into it. I've been choked by my ISP before, and when I contacted them to see what was up (and get the restriction removed) I got the following:

      A) Yes, sir, you've been flagged and your bandwidth throttled.
      B) No, we can't tell you why.
      C) No, we can't tell you what bandwidth habits trigger it.
      D) Do it two more times and we can toss you on your ass.

      Basically, they take a hardline and dumbass stance, IMHO, and are trying to fearmonger your bandwidth use as opposed to a more sensible regulation. There are plenty of P2P problems out there, but there still seem to be plenty of problems on the ISP side as well.

    20. Re:No problem by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      you see, when highbandwidth hits mainstream, you'll have no choice when 60% of your subscribers demand massive usage....from their perspective "this is why i pay my fucking rediculous isp bill for!!!"

      The ISPs won't be able to provide for that level of usage; basically, they all over-sell their connections. The idea is that most of the time, most users won't actually be using anything like their full bandwidth, a lot of users won't be using it at all, etc, and so those who actually are trying to use their connection's full speed will get it.

      Once most of the users are trying to use it at the same time, the contention ratio will kick in and slow everything right down, and there's only one thing that can be done about that: lower the ratio. Unfortunately, that means fewer people sharing a pipe, which means fewer people paying for it, so either the pipe has to get a lot cheaper, or those cheap ADSL connections get a lot more expensive.

      Now unless you believe that the average ISP is raking money in hand over fist at the moment, it should be pretty obvious that what'll happen is that those "fucking rediculous isp bills" are going to get a lot higher unless the backbone providers drop their costs significantly.

    21. Re:No problem by AnotherBlackHat · · Score: 1

      First, you don't mean bulk. You mean *BULK* As in, connecting to a FIX directly.

      But that ignores the real costs. You also have to pay for network infrastructure and maintenance, then amortize the cost of it over some period of years.


      Well, yes that is what I was thinking.
      (Is it normal for an ISP to buy less than a gigabit of transit?)
      And I realize that the price you pay once you're at an exchange isn't the full price you pay.
      But the other costs you mention aren't based on utilization.
      You have to pay all that even if your customers only use the internet once a month.
      They don't explain why the marginal cost of bandwidth would be so high.

      Or do ISPs not actually connect to exchanges?

      -- Should you believe authority without question?
    22. Re:No problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      nice responses (both of them). you guys write a lot better then I do.

      as an after thought, as it's been discussed before here on slashdot, I can really see the ISPs traffic shaping to their benefit, prioritizing their traffic vs that of google video, vonage etc.

      I know this is already being done, but I expect them to really go ape shit over it, and make it a fact of life.

    23. Re:No problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So let me get this straight - you're chortling over the fact that you've oversold your network resources?

      The bandwidth you advertise as being available, isn't, in fact, available to your customers (I'm sure, buried somewhere in the fine print of the end-user contract, is a some loophole covering this so your lawyers think you can't get sued).

      And when a customer tries to make use of your advertised bandwidth (you know, the bandwidth you advertise on TV every 30 minutes? The bandwidth you claim makes you better than the ILEC?), you try to extort $200/MB out of them.

      Finally, you chortle over the fact that the ILEC comes in and ridiculously oversells it's bandwidth. Also, surely, with nice fine print buried somewhere in the contract so they think they won't get sued.

      Want to know what I think? I think you're both in dire need of asskicking.

      If you have 6Mb of bandwidth available at the local POP, and you have 1000 customers vying for that bandwidth, it's disengenous at best to tell customers that their pipe is 6Mb.

      Just because customers choose you over the ILEC because you're less of an ass doesn't mean you're not both asses.

    24. Re:No problem by StrawberryFrog · · Score: 1

      If you're the kind of person who wants to eat $200 of steak all week long at the $5.95 buffet, we'd gladly help you go patronize someone else.

      If you advertise a service that is "all you can eat" and then fail to make money when people eat, then be honest about it: restricting the amount that you serve is not "all you can eat", it is at best weaseling out of your promise because you screwed up.

      Did you honestly think that there wouldn't be new ways invented to use more internet bandwidth? Why is P2p "abuse"? you offered them bandwidth, and then when they start to use it, you now want to take it away.

      --

      My Karma: ran over your Dogma
      StrawberryFrog

    25. Re:No problem by shark72 · · Score: 1

      "I've seen some pretty hilarious emails passed on from customer service, from the threats to file a class action lawsuit because we wouldn't permit unrestricted P2P (from people that had left us to go to a DSL network that was a disaster)"

      That is indeed hilarious. I guess they thought that unrestricted P2P is their God-given right, just like all those movies and MP3 files are.

      "Ultimately you have a choice: you can please 85% of your customers with well engineered traffic, and send the 10% abusers and 5% financial deadbeats to the competition, or you can please the losers and send away the good customers. If you want to stay in business, you know what the right decision is."

      Well put. That's a good credo for lots of other businesses, both online and off.

      --
      Sitting in my day care, the art is decopainted.
    26. Re:No problem by crabpeople · · Score: 1

      You know what? I would love to be able to pay more for metered bandwidth, or have it based on use (liek electricity) but ISP's would NEVER do that. Then they try and charge you 4x the amount for a business connection instead (see parent). The reason they would never do it is the rely on people wasting their bandwidth. They sell uber fast highspeed! to everyone, but they count on people using it less. If people use less electricity, they pay less. Its metered. You only pay for what you use. So you would have a situation where most of the users would have an isp bill of less than $10 (they just check email right), instead of the regular $50 a month flat. Obviously this is not in the interests of the isp.

      The charging people flat rate cuts both ways. Would you want a flat rate monthly gas charge? its for POWER drivers! the only catch is you can only drive a car with less than 50hp or your an abuser of the system.. Did you not realize that 'power' and 'unlimited' actually mean the oposite of their classical meanings?
      shame on you...

      --
      I'll just use my special getting high powers one more time...
    27. Re:No problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As numerous other posters have pointed out, it is feasible to limit p2p traffic by both quality of service (QoS) and explicit bandwidth caps. At my employer, we use Allot's NetEnforcer to limit customer's P2P somewhat, but primarily use it to drop its QoS level below that of other traffic (streamed video & audio, http, pop3, etc) that is more dependant on high burst speeds and a steady connection.

  5. Fair? by WombatDeath · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Of course it's fair, with the proviso that the restrictions are made clear before sign-up. Vote with your feet, and all that.

    My ISP doesn't have an anti-p2p policy although, that said, I'm not aware of any in the UK that do. On the other hand most impose a download cap, which can amount to the same thing.

    1. Re:Fair? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pipex does, big time!

    2. Re:Fair? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not aware of any in the UK that do

      watch click online (BBCnews24 or on the site)

      PlusNet are openly bragging they use packet shaping, of course after that nobody in their right mind is going to get a connection from them now

    3. Re:Fair? by mshiltonj · · Score: 1

      Of course it's fair, with the proviso that the restrictions are made clear before sign-up. Vote with your feet, and all that.

      There are only two broadband pipes going into my house: coax and twisted pair ; cable and dsl. My feet and wallet don't have much of a choice in the matter.

    4. Re:Fair? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not quite the same thing. ISPs may want customers to receive routers capable of deep packet analysis to make packet shaping easily implementable.

      This can could mean newer hardware thrust on customers who don't want it (I know my ISP still owns their router in my room, and I want to keep the old one).

      ISPs aren't going to stop overselling, so if they can have a fast and slow lane on the same line to keep cap the protocols that are more likely to be high-bandwidth they'll do that.

      And we're in an age where people are distributing large video files and with podcasts shifting a lot of small audio files regularly. Whatever way ISPs can introduce new items to put on the final bill, they'll do it. This analysis just gives them some more statistics to back up the business model, and ways to 'itemise'.

      It's not just an anti-piracy measure, it's charging you in more ways to give you less service.

    5. Re:Fair? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      really? im pipex and torrent away all day.. :) never had any probs

  6. Mis-Leading Comment by __aalnoi707 · · Score: 1

    But video files are much larger than music files and have slower upload speeds. This Statment is a little mis-leading. What I gather is that the larger the file the slower the upload speed. It should be the larger the file the longer it takes to upload. With My ISP I have 2Mbps/sec upload speed. That remains the same no matter if i'm sending an email or if im FTP'ing a 3 meg to my site

    1. Re:Mis-Leading Comment by topham · · Score: 1

      Didn't you know, the bits are heavier so uploading takes more energy, it's easier to just upload them slower.

      The only time I have a significant problem with Traffic-Shaping, and QoS services is when the same ISP who uses Traffic shaping to limit traffic advertises their Internet as 'unlimited'. There is no such thing and any ISP which uses it should be taken to task.

      I am limited to the maximum bandwidth they will a lot me at any one time, and I am limited by the total data they will allow me to transfer within a given time period. The various agencies involved with regulating advertisements should have put limits on the use of the term.

      Now I'll get back to using my slightly above average internet connection with limits that are high enough I've never reached them. (Although, with the number of 500+Meg demos, videos/trailers I keep downloading to my xbox360 I might just bump a limit. (When combined with everything else I do.) but even then, i doubt it.

      But I wonder how many people will.

      (Average game demos is about 300+Megs, but some are closer to double that.). Trailers depend on the resolution significantly.

  7. My ISP by cazbar · · Score: 2, Funny

    My ISP limits me to 512Kbps download and 256Kbps upload so they don't have much to worry about.

  8. This can be fixed by mcgroarty · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why don't more bit torrent programs preferentially select for other clients in similar subnets, or with the same domain in reverse lookups? Most ISPs could care less about local traffic and this would move P2P apps farther off their radar. This would especially help if torrenting within an organization or on a campus where local connections might be 100mbit or better.

    1. Re:This can be fixed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Azureus does this, at least to some degree, i think, never used it though, so don't quote me.

      -Tim

    2. Re:This can be fixed by FooHentai · · Score: 2, Interesting

      BT protocol already favours the faster seeds and peers in a swarm. Since those closest to you on the network are likely to give you the highest speeds, indirectly it already does what you ask of it.

    3. Re:This can be fixed by _xeno_ · · Score: 3, Informative

      To the best of my knowledge Azureus doesn't yet, but intends to. You can read about their Vivaldi system on their wiki. (Version as of the time I posted.) It's designed to compute nodes that are close to each other so that Azureus can pick closer peers.

      However, they don't actually use it yet, according to that page. But there is work towards it.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little relative jumps, all alike.
    4. Re:This can be fixed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you are talking about Vivaldi, which computes the distance between nodes based on ping time and preferentially selects the closest. Not directly selecting local nodes, but it does in practice.

    5. Re:This can be fixed by Spoke · · Score: 1

      While it doesn't look for the closest peers, it does have support "High Speed LAN Transfers" which gives you unlimited bandwidth between peers on the same subnet. It's a start, anyway:

      http://azureus.sourceforge.net/changelog.php?versi on=2.4.0.0

    6. Re:This can be fixed by NutscrapeSucks · · Score: 1

      Since those closest to you on the network are likely to give you the highest speeds, indirectly it already does what you ask of it.

      Unfortuantely, that's not true of most residential connections. Even though someone is next door to me, their DSL still only uploads at 128kbps.

      Maybe the argument is that ISPs should support uncapped in-network transfers to reduce bandwidth costs, but I think from their perspective they would rather not encourage any sort of P2P.

      --
      Whenever I hear the word 'Innovation', I reach for my pistol.
    7. Re:This can be fixed by lRem · · Score: 2, Informative

      Here in Poland it's quite a popular practice among small ISPs to open internal p2p services within the ISPs network. In the ISP I work for this makes it economically sustainable to have the "p2p hogs" browse the net at 1mbps (up to 2mbps) while downloading something from outer p2p at 0.5mbps (up to 3mbps) and from inner p2p at 30mbps (up to 100mbps) all at the same time for ~15$/month. And yes, the trafic is shaped, but that leaves everyone happy. They can download popular things at great speeds from local. Downloading rare files would always be slow due to limited seeders.

      --
      Always put off dealing with time-wasting morons. If you would like to know how... I'll get back to you
    8. Re:This can be fixed by marcosdumay · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Why don't ISPs support multicast, and remove the need for bittorrent? Oh, yes, because they want us to need (and, so, pay for) the bandwidth, not to use it.

    9. Re:This can be fixed by scibbers · · Score: 0

      I have seen a campus network (10 mbit) brought to its knees by a local, on campus only filesharing network.
      True, the university wasn't paying for the bandwidth, but it was getting to the point where even websurfing didn't work.

    10. Re:This can be fixed by edgr · · Score: 1

      My ISP has data limits, but all traffic between users on ISPs that peer through a particular peering point in my city is not counted. So there are bittorrent trackers and DC hubs and probably all sorts of other things with membership restricted to users on these ISPs. The IP ranges are all published, so its no trouble to set up.

    11. Re:This can be fixed by stinerman · · Score: 1

      There are some experimental settings IIRC that try to search your LAN for peers and use those instead of going to Australia. I don't see how much this would help unless you had a massive LAN (think university). If not, what is the chance that you and your roommate are going to try to download the same file at approximately the same time?

  9. Inevitable by terrencefw · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Speaking as someone who works for a british ISP who traffic shapes, I can definately say that traffic shaping is here to stay.

    Bandwidth isn't free, and while you always have the chance to move to a different ISP if you don't agree with traffic shaping, ultimately there won't be any ISPs left who either a) traffic shape or b) have gone bankrupt.

    Broadband is a contended service and a lot of people seem to forget that. Sure, you can get an uncontended connection to do what you want with, but be prepared to spend £1000+ per month for it.

    Thinking it's reasonable to max out your connection 24x7 is about as reasonable as walking into an all-you-can-eat restaurant with a spade and wheelbarrow. You could hardly complain about being thrown out.

    --
    Like tinyurl, but one letter less! http://qurl.co.uk/
    1. Re:Inevitable by terrencefw · · Score: 1

      oops. s/won't be any/will only be/

      --
      Like tinyurl, but one letter less! http://qurl.co.uk/
    2. Re:Inevitable by Andy+Gardner · · Score: 5, Funny
      But surely if a resteraunt offers me all I can eat, and (assuming I was American) happen to be able to eat a wheel barrows ammount of food. Wouldn't I be entitled to?

      I mean that would be the most blatant case of fraudulent advertising since my suit against the film, ``The Never-Ending Story''.

    3. Re:Inevitable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      NO. They are promising bandwidth and if they can't deliver, that's their own damn fault. "All you can eat" is different than "all you can take home" and for a reason - restaurants know there is a physical capacity limiting your use/abuse of their promise. Bandwidth is an entirely different case; and if they are going to advertise a service, they'd better be prepared to handle the people willing to collect on it.

      It's not the customer's problem for using entirely what they are paying for.
      The only place this should be negotiated is inside of the contract itself, not after being promised X bandwidth and then suprise! you only get Y, and only on certain ports, and only at certain times of day, if the ISP feels nice.

    4. Re:Inevitable by jZnat · · Score: 1

      I know that "bandwidth isn't free", but would you please enlighten us as to how and why your company and others oversell their bandwidth? Why you are traffic shaping? What do you offer as a deal for non-traffic shaping? Is that deal even reasonable? Has your company considered laying down new fibre (or better yet, lighting up dark fibre) as a way to increase the overall bandwidth, get more customers, and lessen the need for traffic shaping?

      All I'm asking is for you to try and explain to us non-ISP chaps what you ISPs are up to.

      --
      'Yes, firefox is indeed greater than women. Can women block pops up for you? No. Can Firefox show you naked women? Yes.'
    5. Re:Inevitable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your analogy sucks. It's like walking into an all-you-can-eat with a wheelbarrow in a world where everyone is able to eat wheelbarrowloads of food. Big surprise, people will consume to their limits.

      Traffic shaping is fine so long as it's arranged such that the pipes are near-maxed out - if the infrastructure is there lets use it! I get the feeling that a lot of ISPs try and keep traffic volume down on principle, or perhaps because they're paying by the megabit somewhere (which is a stupid deal for an ISP to get into, you have limited control over the traffic levels).
      Of course, if you interfere with P2P too much everyone will just switch to encrypted torrents on port 80 or 22 anyway...

    6. Re:Inevitable by Yst · · Score: 1

      "Thinking it's reasonable to max out your connection 24x7 is about as reasonable as walking into an all-you-can-eat restaurant with a spade and wheelbarrow. You could hardly complain about being thrown out."

      This is a rather good analogy. I intend to steal it. Thank you.

      --
      Karma: Chameleon (comes and goes)
    7. Re:Inevitable by mortonda · · Score: 1
      But surely if a resteraunt offers me all I can eat, and (assuming I was American) happen to be able to eat a wheel barrows ammount of food. Wouldn't I be entitled to?


      No. They can refuse service. I worked at a pizza place where some folks were asked to not return... family of 4, ate about 7-8 pizzas off the buffet if I remember right.
    8. Re:Inevitable by MooUK · · Score: 3, Informative

      Ever heard of false advertising?

      "All you can eat" does not mean "all you can take home". "Unlimited use high-speed connection" DOES mean "unlimited use".

    9. Re:Inevitable by flashpaul · · Score: 1

      You sound like a plusnet employee I accept limits may be necessary but not traffic shaping The only isp's who traffic shape are the greedy ones who have sold their products at stupidly low prices and now find that they havent spent enough on their network infrastructure Plusnet are a prime example of the above Zen are a good example of a company who have set a limit but not with traffic shaping

    10. Re:Inevitable by LilWolf · · Score: 1

      Funny how all the major Finnish ISP's seem to chug along just fine without any sort of traffic shaping or even monthly traffic limits on their ADSL-connections. Makes you think now don't it?

    11. Re:Inevitable by SailorFrag · · Score: 2, Informative

      The ISPs oversell bandwidth because otherwise it'd be too expensive for anyone to be willing to use the Internet. Ratios are typically 10:1 or for connections >5mbps, perhaps 20:1. Almost nobody would pay hundreds of dollars per month for their internet connection.

      Ever wonder why business DSL costs so much more? That's because they only oversell those connections about 2:1.

    12. Re:Inevitable by bbtom · · Score: 1

      Of course bandwidth isn't free. We, **THE CUSTOMERS**, are paying you for it. Perhaps we could have it without the side-serving of bullshit and FUD that so many ISPs are giving us.

      --
      catch (HumourFailureException e) { e.user.send("You, sir, are a humourless idiot."); }
    13. Re:Inevitable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thinking it's reasonable to max out your connection 24x7 is about as reasonable as walking into an all-you-can-eat restaurant with a spade and wheelbarrow. You could hardly complain about being thrown out.

      I don't think this is a valid comparison, as you don't pay a monthly fee to the all-you-can-eat restaurant for a contract mentioning "3 steaks/minute" and "unlimited food supply". If the restaurant would offer a contact like that, I would complain. And I don't really want to think about what upstream/downstream would mean in this context.

    14. Re:Inevitable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know that "bandwidth isn't free", but would you please enlighten us as to how and why your company and others oversell their bandwidth?


      I do not work for an ISP, nor do I know anything about it, but isn't this how all shared resources work? Highways work, as long as not everyone tries to drive on them at the same time. The phones work, as long as not everyone tries to make calls at the same time. And so on.

      In the apartment where I live, I get "free" water included in my rent, but I'm sure the implicit understanding is that I use this to wash the dishes, flush the toilet, fill the bath tub, etc., i.e. in short bursts. I don't think my landlord would appreciate it if I tried to convert my kitchen sink into a hydroelectric power station.
    15. Re:Inevitable by hyfe · · Score: 1
      I think the extremely short, general format for doing business is something like:

      1. Agree to terms.
      2. Stick to terms.

      Now, bandwidth-shaping, artificial limits etc are here to stay? Fine, then include it in the deal. Don't advertise Unlimited Internet Access, when you're providing crippled, mangled occasional Internet Access.
      Anything less is dishonest, sleezy and, depending on the specific contract and the specific country, downright illegal.

      In fact, I place the 'oohh, but we'd die without it so we have to' argument in the same retarded spoilt-ass can't-see-beyond-your-own-nose stupid category as 'but I like downloading free music!' (I atleast acknowledge that what I'm doing is illegal though). If you need it, pay up! Set up the terms, and make an agreement. That's how society works.

      Buying a bottle of whisky at the nearest liquer store doesn't give me the right to refill it after it's empty... pretty much regardless of how much I needed it to stay drunk. Reality doesn't conform to our needs. It sucks, but so does life:

      1. Agree to terms.
      2. Stick to Terms.

      --
      "" How about taking the safety labels off everything, and let the stupidity-problem solve itself? """
    16. Re:Inevitable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      oops. s/definately/definitely/

      For the love of God get it right, I swear it's like an icepick through my eyeballs everytime I see that.

    17. Re:Inevitable by linzeal · · Score: 1

      It is not. Bandwidth is getting cheaper and cheaper and so long as the average iso sizes stay the same things will download much faster and cheaper.

    18. Re:Inevitable by Paradigm_Complex · · Score: 1

      Its absolutely nothing like the restaurant analogy. Restraunts don't sign contracts claiming they will provide X service for $Y, and not deliver their end of the deal. ISP's offer the amount of bandwidth they do because they expect most users will not use it all (IMing and eMail don't eat that much bandwidth at all). They're getting worried because people are finally using what they're paying for, and the scam is up. Rather then your restraunt analogy, I provice my own: The all-you-can-eat restraunt kicks you out if you do anything more then drink a cup of coffee and a bowl of soup.

      --
      "A witty saying proves nothing." - Voltaire
    19. Re:Inevitable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know that "bandwidth isn't free", but would you please enlighten us as to how and why your company and others oversell their bandwidth?

      They do this for the exact same reason that no ISP ever had a 1:1 modem ratio in the days of dialup. It was generally assumed that people would not be connected 24/7, and policies were created (such as session limits) to enforce this for people who abused the system.

      It is similar today. Any ISP that buys enough bandwidth to give every customer full speed 24/7 will either be ridiculously expensive or will soon be an ex-ISP. It is assumed that customers will not be downloading constantly, and policies are being created (such as shaping) to enforce this for people who want to abuse the system.

    20. Re:Inevitable by Will+Fisher · · Score: 1

      Like, WTF mate. Why not suggest to whoever decides these things to have a "pay for what you use" system. Charge people £5 + £0.30 per gig used per month, unthrottled. Thats how we pay for phone and electricity. I'm quite happy to pay a fair price for the bandwidth I use. I'm very unhappy when I'm not allowed to use bandwidth how I see fit. Simple when you think about it.

    21. Re:Inevitable by really? · · Score: 1

      Absolutely can deny service; all legislatures _I_ know, but, perhaps not universal. However, once allowed in you can not limit the numbers of pizzas they can eat.

      --

      "Consistency is contrary to nature, contrary to life. The only completely consistent people are the dead." A. Huxley
    22. Re:Inevitable by clydemaxwell · · Score: 1

      Sorry, but just because your clever overselling strategy backfired, i.e. people are actually starting to USE the service they pay for, doesn't mean you can throttle us down.
      We will cancel our contracts, boycott, tell our friends. I've already left one ISP for this sort of behaviour, and I almost left my current until I got them to provide me with a new contract.
      The only thing inevitable here is internet usage is going to keep growing, and you business-folk are going to have to accomodate us. If you can't provide what we pay for, we won't pay for it.

      --
      Browsing with classic discussion, noscript, at -1 and nested
      no hidden comments and I only mod UP
    23. Re:Inevitable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the extremely short, general format for doing business is something like:

      1. Agree to terms.
      2. Stick to terms.


      Really? I thought most broadband ISP's business plans went more like this:

      1. Advertise unlimited high-bandwidth service
      2. ???
      3. Profit!!!

    24. Re:Inevitable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "All you can eat", so I can stay there all day and eat the entire day? I can stay past closing too, right? If there's no explicit restriction to "today", I could just come back the next day for free as well, right? How is that any different than "unlimited usage"?

      Pick a better comparison, because yours only further emphasizes the point.

    25. Re:Inevitable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Doesn't these big companies like Verizon and Comcast own the lines? If so who are they paying for bandwidth. I just assumed they owned the lines and therefore dont pay for bandwidth

    26. Re:Inevitable by alphaseven · · Score: 1
      I remember those sorts of arguments in another form years ago, back in the early nineties. ISPs were complaining that flat-rate pricing wasn't going to last because while they were making money on customers that used just an hour or two a day, they were losing money on "hogs" that were online 5-6 hours or more.

      But the problem with hourly rates is that people want consistent, predictable billing. AOL switched to flat-rate pricing because they were losing too many light users, people who liked the idea of unlimited usage even though it would have been cheaper for them to pay by the hour. I know people were leaving AOL for other reasons (AOL sucks) but the appeal of competing flat-rate ISPs was a big one.

      I think that's the problem ISPs are going to face, if they implement throttling and bandwidth charges they'll lose the unprofitable bandwidth hogs, but they'll lose profitable light users as well, more than they were expecting.

    27. Re:Inevitable by deesine · · Score: 1
      It is assumed that customers will not be downloading constantly

      Bad assumption: filesharing is only getting more popular. It's here to stay.

      Taking a company on its word is not abuse. You're a tool for thinking so.

      --
      damaged by dogma
    28. Re:Inevitable by Glonoinha · · Score: 1

      This guy doesn't agree with you.
      Google nosepilot.

      --
      Glonoinha the MebiByte Slayer
    29. Re:Inevitable by Will+Fisher · · Score: 1

      Hahaha. Funny :)

      Of course my point stands, that guy was paying $70 per GB which is unreasonable. I believe my university pays in the order of £0.44 per GB (about $0.77) for bandwidth, a more reasonable figure.

    30. Re:Inevitable by digitallife · · Score: 1

      They generally say 'all you can eat lunch' or something to that affect. The time restrictions are obviously implied. Furthermore, the practice is common enough that they may not need to explicitly say it at all. All you can eat restaurants often close between meals in order to create a clear border.

      It's hardly the same with broadband.

    31. Re:Inevitable by mnmn · · Score: 1

      Look at all the replies. Notice the frustration?

      Doesnt that give you a new business idea?

      I wont pay 1000 but I can pay 100+ per month. I can also pay per GB if the rate is reasonable. However in no way I want to be 'limited' behind the scenes. The power companies never ask what you do with the power, they just sell it to you in full and take the money.

      --
      "Give orange me give eat orange me eat orange give me eat orange give me you." -Nim Chimpsky
    32. Re:Inevitable by Blackknight · · Score: 1

      Man, I wish I had mod points right now. How dare customers use resources that they pay for?

    33. Re:Inevitable by shmlco · · Score: 1

      Please. You're signing up for a month-to-month service and could literally be a customer for decades. You tell me you expect no changes at all over that period of time? No increase in price? No change whatsoever in service?

      Mind telling me one other utility who's price has remained static over the last decade?

      --
      Any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so.
    34. Re:Inevitable by rayvd · · Score: 1

      Ever heard of an AUP? I would think that especially on /., it would be pretty obvious that an ISP does *not* ensure that they have enough bandwidth for every single one of their customers to max out their connections all the time. And another fact is that while a lot of P2P users are represented on a site like Slashdot, the vast majority of our customers are still sipmly just browsing the web and doing the occasional "non-P2P" download.

      In any case, my suggestion as a sysadmin at an ISP would be to simply use common sense. Yeah our marketing guys may put up some absurd advertisements and claims... but you're not stupid are you? You realize bandwidth is finite. I don't necessarily have a problem with P2P itself, but download your file and close your client when it's through instead of leaving your machine blasting traffic 24x7.

      If our customers begin complaining about not getting their advertised speeds, we are of course going to look at buying more bandwidth ourselves. But if we see that 75% of our bandwidth is being used up by a small group of P2P'ers you better believe we're going to shape those customers down or ask them to go elsewhere.

    35. Re:Inevitable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm in Australia, and I have rarely seen an ISP without a download limit in their terms of service. Even those that advertise "Unlimited" plans state that their plans are "Unlimited, subject to shaping".

      This will only become more common everywhere else, since the only other option is to increase ISP fees by a large amount. Download limits have always been the standard in Australia due to our higher wholesale bandwidth costs. With the advent of filesharing, these limits are now becoming necessary in countries with lower bandwidth costs.

      I've also lived in the Netherlands. They don't have download limits there, but their terms of service typically state something to the effect of: "measures may be taken to curb the activities of excessive downloaders". It is the same thing really, but without the certainty of knowing what "excessive downloads" are.

      If filesharing is here to stay, then so are download limits and shaping, since there is no way an ISP can be cost-effective when a sizeable minority of its users are maxxing out their connections.

    36. Re:Inevitable by arevos · · Score: 1
      Bandwidth isn't free, and while you always have the chance to move to a different ISP if you don't agree with traffic shaping, ultimately there won't be any ISPs left who either a) traffic shape or b) have gone bankrupt.

      I'm sorry, but this is just moronic. The only ISPs that will go bankrupt are those selling more bandwidth than they actually have. The problem is overselling, not Bittorrent, and traffic-shaping an attempt to ductape the gaping holes in the ISPs accounts.

      If you can afford 100GB of bandwidth per month, and promise your customers 1000GB, then obviously you're taking a risk. If your customers take you up on your offer, well that's your own damn fault. The ISPs have no-one to blame but themselves for this mess.

      Further, traffic shaping is very difficult to do when the users don't want you to do it. Once a data stream is encrypted, one can only hazard guesses at it's content from the amount of data being transmitted. Short of banning encrypted streams from your network, there isn't an easy solution to recognising Bittorrent traffic over other data.

      But the solution to this is simple. Don't oversell. Charge people by the MB if needs be, but don't promise more than you can give if there's a good chance you'll be taken up on your offer.

    37. Re:Inevitable by MooUK · · Score: 1

      I have no problem with an ISP limiting things - providing they've not advertised themselves as unlimited. And "Unlimited (see restrictions)" is not unlimited.

      If marketing is saying things that are untrue, then marketing should be fired. And perhaps prosecuted. They shouldn't be allowed to misrepresent your product/service in the first place.

      Your comment about closing your client shows a lack of understanding of how bittorrent and so forth actually work (not in the technical way) - people HAVE TO SHARE/SEED for it to work properly.

      We realise bandwidth is finite - but if you cannot provide what's advertised, don't lie to us and give us something else. If you want to limit customers, fine - so long as they know before they sign up.

    38. Re:Inevitable by deesine · · Score: 1
      I don't know about in Australia, but in the States, there is a long history of companies that make false claims in advertiszing their products/services. The list is so long that you will have no problem finding examples with a quick Google search.

      Many times, our government will step in on behalf of consumers, especially when the results could/do lead to physical harm.

      I'm not arguing about which isp's are/are not specific in their user contracts/agreements, only that some of them are not (I've had both). The ones that are not specific are hoping to lure new customers in with bigger and bolder claims than their competition, all the while banking that they don't get called to task.

      Yes, the isp landscape is changing. I predict more isp's will start to cater to the p2p crowd, along with a contract that enumerates that usage: while other providers will try to get rid of the pipe hogs, because the bulk of the revenue is from light users. Capitalism at its best, and worst.

      --
      damaged by dogma
    39. Re:Inevitable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Doesnt that give you a new business idea?

      I wont pay 1000 but I can pay 100+ per month. I can also pay per GB if the rate is reasonable. However in no way I want to be 'limited' behind the scenes.

      That is the Australian model. Due to our higher international bandwidth costs, "unlimited" ADSL plans have never really been a serious option. The two approaches are:
      - Shaping: Once you go over your limit, your connection drops back to 72Kb/s or so.
      - Excess usage charges: You pay a fixed fee and get a certain amount of 'free' downloads. Any excess downloads cost money, typically AU$3/GB or so. You can opt pay a higher monthly fee and get more 'free' downloads (e.g. pay AU$20 extra to get an extra 30GB).

      ISPs generally seem to prefer one approach to the other. ISPs that promote shaping will have higher excess download fees, while those that promote excess usage charges may not offer shaping.

      Back when ADSL was first introduced, some ISPs experimented with unlimited plans. I was on one of these, and the quality of the service was generally poor and extremely unpredictable. "Peak hour" was an absolute nightmare, as the whole service bogged down.

      I prefer shaping to excess charges, but both of these models are working extremely well. ISPs have long realized that there are certain customers that actually cost them money overall, and with the rise of filesharing this group is getting bigger. I imagine that shaping and excess charges will become commonplace everywhere in the future. (Of course, the cost per GB would be lower than in the UK and US than in Australia, since we have to pay a premium to maintain our expensive pipes to the US).
    40. Re:Inevitable by +_Wizurd_Uv_Odz_ · · Score: 1

      I used to work for Bell Atlantic.net, the pre-cursor to Verizon Online. We used to get comments all the time from disenchanted users who would point out to us that we advertised unlimited usage. We then had to explain that it was actually unlimited access, e.g., meaning you could access any time of the day, 24 x 7. Bear in mind, when broadband first started, many ISPs limited your access time to a set number of hours, usually 150, which worked out to an average of 5 hours per day. So the "unlimited" applied to your online time being unmetered. The Terms of Service for just about any ISP, which most users don't read any more than they read the EULAs for software installs, clearly give most of the rights to the ISP.

      Unlimited never meant you could use your access account for anything you wanted.

      Comcast's Terms of Use are available here: http://www.comcast.net/terms/use.jsp. Section vii: restrict, inhibit, or otherwise interfere with the ability of any other person, regardless of intent, purpose or knowledge, to use or enjoy the Service, including, without limitation, posting or transmitting any information or software which contains a worm, virus, or other harmful feature, or generating levels of traffic sufficient to impede others' ability to send or retrieve information; and Section xxii: interfere with computer networking or telecommunications service to any user, host or network, including, without limitation, denial of service attacks, flooding of a network, overloading a service, improper seizing and abuse of operator privileges and attempts to "crash" a host;

      I could see where, if Comcast wanted to, they could legitimately cut your service off using either of these clauses by claiming your use of a torrent program interfered with other users on their system.

      As always, YMMV

    41. Re:Inevitable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm with Zen 1Mbps - an unlimited service now sadly unavailable thanks to the P2P crowd. I'd much rather have traffic shaping on the line than a cap - apart from anythong, traffic shaping will improve QoS for most apps and users.

    42. Re:Inevitable by MooUK · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If you don't mean unlimited in any of the reasonably obvious interpretations (and entirely unlimited IS an obvious interpretation) then say exactly what you mean. If you mean 24/7 access, then say that.

    43. Re:Inevitable by zakezuke · · Score: 1

      No. They can refuse service. I worked at a pizza place where some folks were asked to not return... family of 4, ate about 7-8 pizzas off the buffet if I remember right.

      Then it's clearly not all you can eat if they refuse service to people who eat more than the limit. I can understand how one might feel offering all you can eat with a few pigs who come in and suck up alot of food, I my self when I was a kid could with some difficulty eat two pizzas at such places. But never once was I asked never to come back... and one place even applauded me for my efforts. "Look at this kid, he can eat all he wants... and you can too for $2.99".

      If they have a limit as to what you can eat, they shouldn't advertise all you can eat.

      --
      There is no sanctuary. There is no sanctuary. SHUT UP! There is no shut up. There is no shut up.
    44. Re:Inevitable by Have+Blue · · Score: 1

      Like another poster said, if the restaurant has to choose between losing the $5 you pay for the AYCA meal or the $100 cost of the food you actually end up eating, that's an easy choice.

    45. Re:Inevitable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Luckily we have the "Australian Competition and Consumer Commission" and "Consumer Affairs" to stop that sort of thing here. Maybe that is another reason why Australian ISPs have always had download limits. They are just more up-front about their policies.

      Some companies still advertise "Unlimited" services despite the shaping, though. These companies have been busted left-right-and-centre by the authorities lately, and ISPs are now avoiding the word "unlimited".

      http://whirlpool.net.au/article.cfm/1516
      http://whirlpool.net.au/article.cfm/1533

    46. Re:Inevitable by 0111+1110 · · Score: 1

      for people who want to abuse the system.
      I also would like to take issue with the word 'abuse' in this context. This would only be true for ISPs which specifically ban all P2P usage. I am not aware of any that actually do that. And, no, "server" does not cover it. They are referring to HTTP or FTP servers, not P2P. ISPs could simply ban all P2P usage and terminate your service after a few warnings if you persisted in using it. That is their right. They would lose a lot of customers, but no doubt their niche internet business would still be very profitable due to their extremely low bandwidth needs from a websurfer only network.

      --
      Quite an experience to live in fear, isn't it? That's what it is to be a slave.
    47. Re:Inevitable by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      Then it's clearly not all you can eat if they refuse service to people who eat more than the limit.

      Sure it is. They just don't get to come back.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    48. Re:Inevitable by Danathar · · Score: 1

      How do they intend to packet shape these apps when they use encryption so they look like standard encrypted web traffic?

    49. Re:Inevitable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Broadband is a contended service and a lot of people seem to forget
      > that. Sure, you can get an uncontended connection to do what you want
      > with, but be prepared to spend £1000+ per month for it.

      "Broadband" is advetised as a high speed internet connection. The adverts do not mention anything about contention ratios.

      Our local telephone monopoly has recently anounced a "new" "super fast" broadband service with a speed of 3.5mb/s. It has contention ratios of approx 150:1 . Under normal operating conditions today it would be very rare indeed for any of those 150 connections to actually get anything even remotely close to the advertised service. And that telephone company only offered a speed of 3.5mb/s when staring down the double-barrel shotgun of regulation.

      Contention ratios are bullshit ratios to enable an ISP to extort even more profit while at the same time not actually improving its infrastructure to match the advertised service.

      If an ISP advertises a service as being able to transfer x amount of data per second (less parity bits less lost packets blah blah blah), then if connected for y seconds one sould be able to achieve a data throughput of x*y (less parity blah blah blah). What data the subscriber chooses to send across that service, and to whom that subscriber chooses to send it to is entirely their own choice - and not the choice of the ISP.

    50. Re:Inevitable by zakezuke · · Score: 1
      Then it's clearly not all you can eat if they refuse service to people who eat more than the limit.


      Sure it is. They just don't get to come back.

      Clearly there is a restriction on how much you can eat there without getting banned, when the they clearly advertise "all-you-can-eat".

      I've never had an issue with any all you can eat place, and i'm esp fond of chinese all you can eat buffets, pizza can be nice too. All you can eat Indian is to die for. I've never known of seen a person who was banned from one who eats too much... with the exception of a fast fish joint known as skippers, and even then they only got mildy moody about people ordering a 6th plate of fish. But after all, they said all you can eat.

      --
      There is no sanctuary. There is no sanctuary. SHUT UP! There is no shut up. There is no shut up.
    51. Re:Inevitable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Simple:

      Finland -- Population: 5,223,442

      United States -- Population: 295,734,134

      Not much thinking involved.

    52. Re:Inevitable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's just it... you are not paying to 20GB/month of tranfers. You are paying for peak speed of ~5Mbps/1Mbps for ~$50 per month. 20-200GB/month in tranfers costs wayyyyyyy more than the average residental account fees. Get real.

    53. Re:Inevitable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would think that especially on /., it would be pretty obvious that an ISP does *not* ensure that they have enough bandwidth for every single one of their customers to max out their connections all the time.

      If you read the previous comments, it looks like the ISPs can't afford to have 5% - 10% of their customers max out their connections.

    54. Re:Inevitable by yndrd1984 · · Score: 1

      So people who get the "unlimited long distance at no extra charge" cell phone plan who talk on the phone 12 hours a day should have their calls dropped?

    55. Re:Inevitable by Heywood+J.+Blaume · · Score: 1

      What you don't understand is that if ISPs didn't oversell bandwidth, they'd have to charge something like $500US/mo for 1 Mb service, not the $30-40US/mo they usually charge here for consumer-grade broadband.

    56. Re:Inevitable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, any business has clauses like "we reserve the right to change anything about this contract with 2 weeks notice"... it is sleazy to bury it in the small print but it's not strictly dishonest.

    57. Re:Inevitable by arevos · · Score: 1

      If the 1Mb line were used continually at full capacity, you might get something approaching that cost. However, I'd contend that even amongst the most avid torrent users, downloading 300GB per month is somewhat excessive.

      As I mentioned in my original post, the most simple way to approach the problem is to charge per GB over a particular limit. For instance, every GB over the set limit might cost an extra £0.56, or $1.00. Thus, the heavier the use, the more the user has to pay. No need to oversell at all.

  10. traffic shapping p2p by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    we've been running a broadband ISP in an African country, and we have a fair amount of bandwidth to our customers.

    Before we controlled peer-to-peer, it was nearly impossible to get any work done. In fact we were forced to invest money in traffic shapping hardware, so to speak.

    Our ratio of customers is also quite atipical, and we have far more bussiness customers. We were also forced to cut the peer-to-peer to our premium services during the day, because we had the EMPLOYEES of the customers running peer-to-peer apps without management approval, and we were getting the blame for the slow connections and huge bills.

    Regards,

  11. Mine, Mine, Mine by Neoprofin · · Score: 1

    I'm sure I wont be the last to say it, but from my point of view it's completely uncalled for. I pay $60 a month because I can't get DSL or naked cable, I'm going to use ever ounce of bandwidth I've paid for. Maybe if the cable monopoly in my town wasn't bending me over my computer desk I wouldn't feel so obligated to get my money's worth from them, but that's what this is really, I've paid for access to a certain amount of bandwidth and given that there were no provisions about the use of that bandwidth beyond what is described by federal law it's mine, mine, mine.

    Yes they can change the ToS at any time, without warning, and they can also find themselves a new shill to collect money from. I wonder if they'd get the point when they day after that I cancel my contract.

    1. Re:Mine, Mine, Mine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I pay $60 a month because I can't get DSL or naked cable,
      ...
      Maybe if the cable monopoly in my town wasn't bending me over my computer desk I wouldn't feel so obligated
      ...
      they can also find themselves a new shill to collect money from. I wonder if they'd get the point when they day after that I cancel my contract.
      You're not going to cancel your contract, and they know it. Don't even pretend to act like you'd rather go without high speed.
    2. Re:Mine, Mine, Mine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most here seem to assume that they've "paid" for 3Mbs of bandwidth on their 3Mb line. I understand that there is marketing that confuses this -- but do you believe that PEPSI actually makes you young?

      I think it's fair to say that most people's experiences here are limited to residential connections. Well, just so everyone knows: Dedicated bandwidth costs a lot more than your tiny $60 a month.

      The actual cost of that bandwidth is at least an order of magnitude higher than that, you're simply getting a deal because of the over-subscription model used by your ISP. They keep residential bandwidth costs low by sharing them among lots of burst-bandwidth users. That's right: they're providing you a service.

      Have you ever wondered what the different is between business DSL and home DSL, besides the price? A business DSL connection will cost several times more than a home DSL for the same "speed" -- but is much less over-subscribed. The figures that I've heard for over-subscription are on the order of 10 for business connections (10M sold for every 1M of actual bandwidth available) and 70 for residential connections. That means that when you saturate your residential pipe, you could be using 70 times the bandwidth that you're paying for. High-bandwidth users generally cost ISPs more money than they make.

      If you really want to bitch and moan about using all the bandwidth that you paid for, then you'd better spring for a business line or a dedicated line. No one would touch your traffic on a dedicated line, because that's bandwidth that you have indeed paid for. If I was an ISP and an extremely high-volume user (abuser) complained about some simple shaping, I wouldn't give a rat's ass.

      Another poster claimed that they would vote with their wallet. It seems funny to me, because for afore-mentioned high volume users, you are actually choosing which ISP to screw out of money, not helping them out. ISP really nice about your bandwidth-abusing ways? Well, you could just be screwing them in return.

      I'm in full support of reasonable traffic shaping and limited of certain protocols on residential networks. It keeps my internet connection usable while assholes try to use every ounce of bandwidth they "paid" for.

    3. Re:Mine, Mine, Mine by jrock-jr · · Score: 1

      I wonder if they'd get the point when they day after that I cancel my contract.

      In my experience, if a customer can consistantly saturate a high speed link (~2Mb or greater) over the course of a month, then they'd likely be costing the ISP money. It doesnt make much sense to have you as a customer under these circumstances. I'd be more than happy to show you the door. Go rape my competitors network instead :)

      But the fact is -shit rolls downhill. ISPs will continue to sell you bandwidth this way because their upstream providers use the same technique.

    4. Re:Mine, Mine, Mine by Neoprofin · · Score: 1

      I wish I still had the free time to keep enough things running that it was saturated all the time. It might make me feel better about paying $30 for access to C-Span.

    5. Re:Mine, Mine, Mine by Neoprofin · · Score: 1

      What good is highspeed internet to my home if I can't use it

      If all I used the internet for was checking my email and reading /. I'd be more than willing to do it at school or at work, or to leech off one of the wireless users in my building. If I loose the one upside to the deal I have now, which is basically unrestrained traffic to my home, why should I continue to pay for that priviledge?

    6. Re:Mine, Mine, Mine by Neoprofin · · Score: 1

      Oh no, I fully understand that. The point is if they're losing money with their business model they should either charge me more, or offer me less. Unfortunately they haven't and now it's strictly their problem that I'm running in the red. Interestingly enough, they're not losing money, they're filthy rich, because of the exact reasons you describe. Rather than offer better service in the hopes of gaining a satisfied, loyal customer who would be willing to pay more or get less, they're using the fact that they're the only cable company within 50 miles to gouge absolutely anyone and everyone.

      Am I an abuser? Sure. But their practice of buying up all the competitors certainly narrowed my list of targets.

  12. cable internet here by FudRucker · · Score: 1

    if my ISP makes it impossible for me to download Linux ISOs when i need em i will complain to them, and if i get negative results i will cancel my subscription with them

    --
    Politics is Treachery, Religion is Brainwashing
    1. Re:cable internet here by rob1980 · · Score: 1

      If it's important enough to them that they hamper BT traffic, they'll just tell you to find an FTP mirror to download from. I doubt any amount of complaining you do will get them to change that, unless they have another service plan you can buy into or you know somebody at the company that can pull some strings (usually if bandwidth is throttled they can make exceptions on a case-by-case basis).

  13. NTL by celardore · · Score: 2, Informative

    I use NTL in the UK, I pay £25 a month for a (supposedly) 2MB connection.

    They don't bother me at all. I've uploaded an awful lot of gigabytes and downloaded several too, but they don't seem to care. My service is not degraded in any way.

    Some of my friends use different providers though, which pull stunts like "classifying" you - ie, if you download much at certain times, you will be bunched into a group that downloads at the same kind of frequency as yourself. Thus slowing you down.

    My opinion is that while it seems harsh to cut / slow people down, it's not unfair. Is excessive downloading and use of bandwidth fair to ISPs?

    Perhaps paying for bandwidth used is the way to go. As much as the idea sucks, compare it to road tax. A lightweight low-spec car will be taxed far less than a big 40t truck is. There's a reason for that.
    There's all this talk about internet traffic, perhaps they should start regulating and taxing it in the same way as road traffic.

    Don't get me wrong, I hate the idea of paying more money because I download more. But is my excessive downloading fair on 'regular' users of the internet who I'm slowing down? No.

    1. Re:NTL by oirtemed · · Score: 1

      Perhaps paying for bandwidth used is the way to go. As much as the idea sucks, compare it to road tax. A lightweight low-spec car will be taxed far less than a big 40t truck is. There's a reason for that. There's all this talk about internet traffic, perhaps they should start regulating and taxing it in the same way as road traffic.
      The basis being that a larger vehicle causes more wear on the road. Are high bandwith downloads wearing out routers? I think not. ISPs may be charged by their upstreams but thats an issue they need to work out. There is no reason why there should be bandwith limits, not with all the dark fiber lying around. This isn't a case of there being a bottleneck in the network - it is solely a case of ISPs trying to reduce their costs to turn a higher profit on the services they sell. They want to be able to sell a 5mbps connection and then tell you you can't use it. More money for them.

    2. Re:NTL by shawnce · · Score: 1

      Ok would you pay easily 2-5 time more for a dedicated 5 Mbps link then you currently pay?

      That would more closely reflect the bandwidth costs that the ISP sees if you maxed out that 5 Mbps link 24/7. You should be happy that ISP don't charge you the true costs since they realize that most folks don't max their links 24/7 ... what they sell is burst bandwidth rates ... unless you have paid for a dedicated link (not your typical residential link).

      Also traffic shaping isn't only about limiting bandwidth it is often about optimizing bandwidth for the ISP customers so that a majority of customers have timing critical traffic (gaming, VoIP, Video conferencing, etc.) operate at the rates they need while allowing time indifferent traffic like P2P to continue but not interfere with other traffic.

      The reality is the ISPs upstream bandwidth (and/or concentration point bandwidth) isn't unlimited nor is it free to the ISP and the prices they charge you are below what the true costs are if things are maxed 24/7 or if they had to install and maintain the exact upstream bandwidth to cover all their customers going 100% on their links.

  14. Here's what we do: by numbski · · Score: 4, Insightful

    We hard cap throughput based on what our clients have paid for. ie, if they've paid for 1.5 down, 768k up, those hard caps are put into place.

    Second, yes, we shape traffic. VOIP traffic gets top priority, ssh second, http third, and bittorrent, or any other p2p app get the lowest priority.

    These prioritizations are shared across our client base. That way, if anyone is doing ANYTHING that isn't p2p, it gets priority over p2p traffic. We think this is fair. If you want to run your p2p app overnight when no one else is on, then have fun. If you're doing it during the day, don't expect to get priority over everyone else. Note that we DO offer to sell dedicated services, and we do note up front to our customers that what we sell them is BURSTABLE throughput and that they are buying something like 256k symmetrical dedicated, and the 1.5MB/768k is burst. they aren't buying that in dedicated chunks. If they want dedicated, we can sell them that, but they have to pay for it.

    It just doesn't make sense to pay for 1.5Mbit symmetrical dedicated unless you're going to saturate that pipe ALL THE TIME.

    So far, no complaints.

    --

    Karma: Chameleon (mostly due to the fact that you come and go).

    1. Re:Here's what we do: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Great! who's developing the mod to make bittorrent go over SSH?

      everytime something blocks the p2p networks a solution comes in. the problem is, each solution takes a little more overhead than the previous one.

      the brain power could be used towards making the networks more efficient instead of making them more hidden.

    2. Re:Here's what we do: by udoschuermann · · Score: 1
      yes, we shape traffic. VOIP traffic gets top priority, ssh second, http third, and bittorrent, or any other p2p app get the lowest priority.

      These prioritizations are shared across our client base. That way, if anyone is doing ANYTHING that isn't p2p, it gets priority over p2p traffic. We think this is fair. If you want to run your p2p app overnight when no one else is on, then have fun. If you're doing it during the day, don't expect to get priority over everyone else.

      Provided that this policy is advertised and made clear to the customer (and not buried in a sea of light gray 6pt text) I would consider these overall priorities (voip > ssh > http > bt) to be reasonable real world compromises.

      What I would object to is being told that I have a certain pipe (implied to be free of any restrictions) when certain services are actually stomped into the carpet at a time when I may require them or are even blocked completely without me even being informed of it.
      --
      --Udo.
    3. Re:Here's what we do: by mnmn · · Score: 1

      Heres a great business idea with me as a potential customer:

      Connection for geeks, no client-computer support at all. No ports throttled or blocked (assume customer does it themselves). Dont need http proxy, pop accounts, antispam etc, just a UUNET server will be useful. Allow servers and sell IP blocks. Allow full burstable bandwidth (max 8mbit allowable on ADSL), but offer various levels of minimum guaranteed bandwidths. I assume a guaranteed 8mbit (download) bandwidth with no caps will be expensive... I'm willing to pay $100+ for it with an SLA. My routers will do the QoS so I will not complain if my P2P traffic is slowing my VoIP even at full bandwidth. Also provide me with reverse DNS and let me own my own modem. You are responsible for line alone, you'll pay for bandwidth (and IP blocks) on your side, offer less tech support, and I'll pay you maybe $120 per month for the maximum guaranteed bandwidth.

      You see, I've been paying for a dedicated server elsewhere, and I think I can run it at home with the much lower upload speeds if servers and the full theoretical (and practical) line bandwidth is guaranteed. We have 4+ desktops at home, a VoIP line, a VPN and P2P server and a potential medium-bandwidth http server. My pages are ~15kb in size so I can run it at home with good bandwidth. I know I'm not the only one here in Toronto with these requirements, but I dont know of one service (with good reviews) that offers what I'm looking for. Theres $$$ involved, I'm willing to pay (it becomes cheaper for me anyway), but I'm looking for no-frills full-bandwidth server-allowable and reliable line may it be ADSL or cable. Yes I know of (defunct) istop and techsavvy and others, but they have limits somewhere or where they believe is the maximum (reasonable) usage even though they advertise no caps. Their prices are low but the various limitations are unacceptable. All I want to buy is pure bandwidth no questions asked. No one is selling just that.

      --
      "Give orange me give eat orange me eat orange give me eat orange give me you." -Nim Chimpsky
    4. Re:Here's what we do: by numbski · · Score: 1

      That's because it is so difficult to provide.

      Here's what I mean: dsl has overhead added by reselling the Bells' service. It's not profitable AT ALL to be a dsl reseller these days.

      The cable companies have a lock on cable modem. Fiber? Well, yeah, but there's a serious overhead of getting it to your front door.

      Wireless mesh? There we go...but takes a long time to get out there. We have no problem selling unsupported throughput, and I can do it cheap, but getting it to your front door is the real problem. If you want throughput in my data center I can give it to you dirt cheap and unsupported, no problem. It's getting it to your home that's expensive.

      So yeah, if you're in St. Louis and want dirt cheap unsupported throughput, I can do that (in very limited areas, but working on it!), but if you want SLA and support of any kind, unfortunately you have to pay the same as everyone else. :\

      --

      Karma: Chameleon (mostly due to the fact that you come and go).

    5. Re:Here's what we do: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry to disappoint you mate, but that's never gonna happen, for one reason alone: Your sales people will, at some point, try to paint a much prettier picture of the services you give. I work for for a company providing satellite internet access to 3rd world countries. The contarct CLEARLY stipulates that our point of presence is the custome'rs serial port on his router, beyond that, he's on his own. And yet, the most commeon complaint we get in the support center is about slow browsing due to absolute over utilization of the downlink channel. Ever seen what 2 open sessions of emule do to a 128Kbps line? not pretty.

      Point is, you can sell this service, and state what you want in the contarct, but you'll still end up helping people configure their connection in winXP, because @it's good service@

    6. Re:Here's what we do: by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      That sounds quite reasonable. The problem comes not so much from traffic shaping but from artificial caps. If you capped bittorrent ports no matter what at 256k then I'd say that's dishonest. Or blocked them entirely, which many ISPs do.

    7. Re:Here's what we do: by typical · · Score: 1

      Gah. Horrible. This is *exactly* what a gentleman higher in the story was describing how to exploit

      Allocate bandwidth on a per-customer basis first, *then* break it down based on whatever application-specific stuff you want (application layer analysis, ToS flags, or even, God forbid, port number). Otherwise you just have eight zillion people tweaking their apps to look like VoIP or SSH traffic.

      --
      Any program relying on (nontrivial) preemptive multithreading will be buggy.
    8. Re:Here's what we do: by shmlco · · Score: 1

      "I'm willing to pay $100+ for it with an SLA."

      Fine. What happens if that service, if used to capacity, costs $400 a month to provide?

      --
      Any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so.
    9. Re:Here's what we do: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      simple logic problem:

      what happens when the overnight population becomes more like 35-50% of your customers? Suddenly your burst is more like squat, and you basically capped your customers speeds by 75%.

      Far more people than "5-10%" use the internet overnight.

    10. Re:Here's what we do: by StormReaver · · Score: 1

      "We hard cap throughput based on what our clients have paid for. ie, if they've paid for 1.5 down, 768k up, those hard caps are put into place."

      This is reasonable, as you're giving customers what they are paying for, but the rest of traffic shaping is not. If an ISP can't sustain my connection at the speeds that are advertised, then the ISP shouldn't be allowed to advertise that rate.

      The web sites and commercials that run here in the states always claim Xmbps. That claim is what drives people to the service. If the ISP can't deliver Xmbps as claimed, then it is just cause for breach of contract (their TV ads are valid contract offers), false advertising, and fraud actions.

    11. Re:Here's what we do: by Urzumph · · Score: 1

      Traffic Shaping != Traffic Prioritization.

      Let's say we have 3 packets to deliver - one HTTP, one VOIP and one BT packet.

      Under your prioritization scheme you send the VOIP first, HTTP second and BT third. This is perfectly reasonable - VOIP and HTTP are 'interactive' protocols, where people are (likely) waiting for a response, so you should make the response as fast as possible. For BT, they are simply waiting for it to download (and likely not even there) so a constant skew of a couple of ms is not a problem.

      Under BT Traffic Shaping, all 3 packets are sent (in some order, depending on their prioritization scheme, or on order of arrival if none) but before the BT packet is sent, the ISP checks to see how many BT packets that customer has recieved that ms and if it is too many, waits until the next ms to send it - in effect, artificially reducing the speed of transmission. This is known as the Token Bucket algorithm.

      They are very different things. Yours is perfectly reasonable, and I don't think anyone would object to it. Traffic Shaping is a somewhat different matter.

    12. Re:Here's what we do: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But who died and made VOIP boss? I had people at work asking me 8-10 years ago (IIRC) about that FREE TELEPHONE ON TEH INTERNET, and judging from the not-so-subtle messages sent in the (admittedly very well done) Vonage TV commercials, there's apparently still a pent-up demand for just such a model of voice service.

      So why are people who want to, oh, trade computer files the 2nd class citizens here? I mean, yeah, apart from the hogs and the morality and trading and all that stuff, I'm talking about the actual exchange of data which networks are supposed to be about. Why is VOIP not seen as some kind of cancer on the data network by data-intensive customers? I pay for phone service, but the sooper kool dood on the same wire getting a free lunch at my expense also gets priority for his data?

      I appreciate what you said about shaping things to most of your customers' demands, but at some point, the piggy VOIP contingent, if it grows and grows, will present their own network management problems, no? How do you think you will go forward, then? I'm just wondering if it is easy right now to dismiss the demands of filthy pirates (Arrgh!) because of things you already think about them? Would you be approaching this differently if you thought of VOIP users as the filthy leeches, finding a new use for a network for purposes it was never intended, and which hampers other activity?

    13. Re:Here's what we do: by ZorbaTHut · · Score: 1

      Out of curiosity, where does unrecognized traffic fall in this spectrum? For example, realtime games, and p2p on nonstandard ports, which are indistinguishable from each other.

      (Note that I acknowledge there's no perfect solution to this, but I have seen systems that put "unknown ports" at the bottom, making it unusable for any realtime system that the admins didn't know about.)

      --
      Breaking Into the Industry - A development log about starting a game studio.
    14. Re:Here's what we do: by powerlord · · Score: 1

      Glad to help point you in the right direction:

      http://www.speakeasy.net

      They have great plans for Home/Office and Business. I've recommended them for a few companies I work with as a consultant, and they have all been very satisfied with the results. I have also been very happy with them, the few times I have had to call up their customer support at some rediculous hour in the morning to chase down a problem (during initial setup and configuration, never once the connection has been up and running, and I've got one customer using them for going on 10 years now).

      The downside? They work through Covad which means three layers of companies to get your connection set up (or resolve a hardware issue outside your immediate gateway router): Your ILEC for the local loop, Covad as the CLEC for the backbone, and Speakeasy as the ISP. That said, I have had very few issues with this. The other downside? They can cost a bit more than a connection through your local cable provider or ILEC (for a given speed).

      The upside? They offer accounts that are very free of restrictions (including running servers, P2P, and I remember seeing them offering to work with you to provide/bill wireless access through your connection, or allow you offer it free if you wanted). Most plans include static IP addresses (they know who their selling to), and they've been quick to resolve the few issues I've had.

      --
      This space for rent. All reasonable inquiries will be entertained at proprietors discretion.
  15. Nope by the_macman · · Score: 4, Insightful
    What is your ISPs policy regarding P2P and is it fair for them to put restrictions and conditions on its use."
    Ummmm no. Absolutely not. If you're paying for your ISP, say for a 1.5Mbps download pipe then that's what you should get regardless. Since when was P2P technology considered "wrong use" of bandwidth? If they throttle your bandwidth to anything less then what's the point of paying them?

    Look at it like this. I pay ISP for BW. I use BW. Because I use paid for BW, ISP lowers it. I can't honestly give my money to anyone ISP that does that.

    I live in an apartment complex and we are allotted 500mb/24 hours otherwise traffic to our computer is put on a "lower priority" flag. I assume their logic is to prevent downloading of movies and what not. The problem is 500mb of legal data is totally feasable. Today I downloaded the EVE client, 564 MB. Now I have to suffer slower speeds because of it? Fuck that. Since my ISP is provided with my rent it's a one package deal and I don't have much of a choice, but once I purchase a home, hell will freeze over before I pay an ISP to throttle my bandwidth. My .02

    -T
    1. Re:Nope by Jose · · Score: 1

      If they throttle your bandwidth to anything less then what's the point of paying them?

      you will still get the 1.5Mbit/sec, it is just the bulk/non-realtime traffic gets a lower priority. which, to me..makes sense. I can't think of any P2P or BitTorrent downloads that can be considered real-time, or interactive. So whether that download takes 30 minutes, or 90 minutes to download..big deal. The priority should go to interactive applications/protocols like HTTP/SSH/IM(s).

      as patch deployment via BitTorrent becomes more popular, then yea, you might be waiting for that download, but those downloads represent a very minor amount of bytes on the wire.

      --
      The basic sleazeware produced in a drunken fury by a bunch of UCBerkeley grad students was still the core of BIND. --PV
    2. Re:Nope by caffeination · · Score: 1
      I'm in a similar situation. You live and learn - never again will I pay for the privelege of being locked into a single provider's greedy hands. I paid the equivalent of about £15/month for my connection, and I can barely use it browse Slashdot. It was advertsised as something like 500+ kbps, but it's nowhere near, and the ping times are perpetually in the several thousands.

      When I moved in, I was told there was a problem and they had set up some sort of replacement while they fixed it. A few months later (yes months) I returned to the office and asked how long until it was back to normal. Much to my surprise, all talk of a problem was forgotten. Obviously we had failed to complain enough, and it had been decided not to spend any more money on us.

      I never even got to use the expensive signup code I bought, instead I had to spend several further pounds on a tech support call to have my MAC address whitelisted. So no Xbox, no hooking up my other computer for testing, just bend over and take what we have deemed sufficient.

  16. Use NNTP Please by abscissa · · Score: 3, Informative

    I hope most Slashdot readers are using NNTP by now (not NTP) to use their music, movies, software, pr0n, etc. etc.

    You will help out your ISP by only using downstream bandwidth. You can also usually max-out your connection speed. A CD can take only 15-20 minutes to download.

    Further, your troubles with the RIAA/MPAA/Homeland Security are likely to be limited to when you, say, post on a heavily visited site about your activity but forget to post anonymously.

    For the best binary newsreader (to download files) from USENET, I reccomend Power Grab -- small, fast, free, and doesn't fiddle around with your registry.

    You will probably need to subscribe to a USENET service as well; I reccomend easynews or if you plan to download more than 20 GB per month than Giganews.

    1. Re:Use NNTP Please by jZnat · · Score: 1

      So how do us Comcast users with our puny 2 GB/month from their outsourced to GigaNews get decent alt.binaries connections? We'd still end up subscribing to something like EasyNews, but that seems like it defeats the benefits of using only the ISP's internal backbone to get stuff.

      --
      'Yes, firefox is indeed greater than women. Can women block pops up for you? No. Can Firefox show you naked women? Yes.'
    2. Re:Use NNTP Please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hope most Slashdot readers are using NNTP by now (not NTP) to use their music, movies, software, pr0n, etc. etc.

      Sure, tell my ISP to run a newsserver that carries binary group (and that can stay up for more than five minutes), and it's a deal.

    3. Re:Use NNTP Please by Synn · · Score: 1

      If I might make a further suggestion... use http://www.newzbin.com/ which will give you NZB files that work with programs like http://ninan.sourceforge.net/ that make it easy to search and automatically download from NNTP.

      I also use personally use http://www.giganews.com/ as my usenet provider since they have something like 70 days of binary retention.

    4. Re:Use NNTP Please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My ISP's good to bad route:

      a) provided Usenet services through their own servers. Full bandwidth (at the time, I think it was 1.5Mbps) ? concurrent connections. Good retenation of posts.
      b) outsourced Usenet services to some other place. 32-40kBps maximum, 2 concurrent connections. Good retenation of posts.
      c) removed Usenet services.

      I'm certainly not going to dish out money to pay for Usenet services when I can do free BT. So what's next?

    5. Re:Use NNTP Please by value_added · · Score: 1

      I hope most Slashdot readers are using NNTP by now (not NTP) to use their music, movies, software, pr0n, etc. etc.

      I've always maintained and happily paid for a USENET subscription (with Easynews), so using a PTP application for binary downloads was a less attractive option. As far speeds go, my ISP (SBC) seems to have recently discovered NNTP, and has started to throttle the connections (by around 60%), which I found really annoying because I'm not in the habit of downloading anything large on a regular basis, and because I pay SBC for a Super Duper Premium plan.

      Thinking I was clever, I decided to switch to using their HTTP servers (using wget). Mind you, Easynews does offer alternate NNTP server addresses, alternative ports, etc., but I didn't find any improvement. The switch worked like a charm.

      My point, if there is one, is that people will always try to find workarounds to whatever their problem is, but more importantly, the issue of paying for a service marketed and sold as Download Faster With Us and discovering a different reality that may or may not mentioned in the fine print can lead to very unhappy customers. In my case, I really don't think I'm getting what I pay for.

    6. Re:Use NNTP Please by abscissa · · Score: 1

      Wow, several posts seem to indicate that NNTP is being throttled now. What total fucking pricks... does your ISP offer "unlimited downloads"? My ISP, for example, offers 100 GB per month (up/down). Since NNTP uses minimal upstream, I would be really goddamn pissed if they started to throttle downstream of NNTP.

  17. Restrictions within reason by Psx29 · · Score: 1

    I don't think ISPs should be expected to _not_ do something about bandwith hogs that are using 100s of gigs of bandwith on what is supposed to be a residential service. There should probably be upload caps per month and above a certain amount say 100 gb, you have to pay for every 5 gb up. And downloads could also have a cap but be set much higher because downloading is always easier. I hate the greedy corporations too but I'd rather be able to pay a reasonable amount to use the services I want then have these artificial restrictions implemented especially as p2p is increasingly being used for more legitimate things.

  18. Pipex by FinchWorld · · Score: 1
    Pipex are known to do it, so hopefully I won't be with them for much longer, I got an interesting email about my bandwidth use and how I should move my high bandwidth downloads to the early hours. The second one I got told me they were going to start throttling ports to reduce my usage. At this point I phoned them up asking them to cancel my account, they wimped out and went back on the issue (I go 3 months last time I tried to cancel), I recently got an email again from them complaining about bandwidth.

    Thing is I pay a couple pounds more for the unlimited service, the cheaper service is limited at something pathetic (1-2 gig a month). Hardly fair play. Currently looking into Demon, see how long it'll take me to switch over.

    --
    "I may be full of crap about this game, and I may be wrong, and that's fine." -Jack Thompson
    1. Re:Pipex by rich_r · · Score: 1
      I've just switched from them, to multiplay.co.uk. A gamer's company, mainly, but they go out of their way to point out how they don't traffic shape or limit.

      Not sure if they've come out of beta yet, but they could be worth a look. Pretty much just adsl (no web space or email, last time I looked) but you do get a static ip and it's £8/mo cheaper than pipex.

      How much of a shill do I sound like? Honestly, I'm not on commision :p

    2. Re:Pipex by Loquis · · Score: 1

      I'm with pipex, and never had them complain about my usage, while i've left emule running for months on end (turning it off when i'm actually using the computer). It could be that i'm only on 512K as thats all i can get.

  19. virtual ports for sale! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well of course if ISPs block ports to restrict p2p, the same traffic will just be pushed through other ports. Of course the ISPs counter with packet analysis/filtering, to which p2p programs counter.. always the arms race. The problem here is that buried deep in the service contract will be terms unfavorable to the customer actually trying to make use of what he's promised.

    Nothing irritates me more than hearing from an ISP, "sorry, you have to pay us more to have these ports (ie. 21, 80) unlocked" in the first place.. but often times we can't all just drop the ISP because they are the only deal in town. What is a hacker to do other than outwit and subvert the ISP?

  20. No special policy by Crizp · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    My ISP has no special policy, neither does any other Norwegian ISP I know of. If one should ever try and implement some bandwidth restriction it would be Telenor, seeing as they're the most "evil" telco here (i.e. most American-like). But that's just a hunch, NextGenTel would probably be one of them as well.

    My ISP started out as a tiny "neighbourhood" company, and got bought out by Norway's most decent large ISP - reknowned by techies for their line quality. Customer service did go down the drain, but the lines are still good.

    If an ISP here should try restrictions, there'd be an uproar, I'm sure. Telenor tried the "metered by the gig" subscription for a while but had to toss it when no-one else did it. While a bunch of pussies politically, us Norwegians are good at getting what we're paying for. "Hey, we paid for 2Mb, you're saying we can't _use_ those 2Mb as we please? And not actually use the full bandwidth all the time? Screw you!" Our "consumer rights agency" would stomp down hard on anyone trying.

  21. Encrypted Bittorrent by jquestnavy · · Score: 1

    This backlash will encourage customers to resort to encrypted Bittorent connections to avoid being shaped by packetshappers. In all, I really dont care if they shape my packets because I am not going to sit at the screen and wait for a movie to finsih downloading when I could be watching episodes NipTuck on TV.

  22. Contract by JohnnyBigodes · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If I rent i.e. a 2MBit line, I want the 2Mbit that I paid for, period. No matter what I choose to do with the connection. If they want to cut down on people, then advertise the service correctly.

    1. Re:Contract by Todd+Knarr · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If you're buying 2mbit of dedicated bandwidth, then yes you're entitled to it no matter what you do with it. But most people buying broadband connections aren't buying dedicated bandwidth. They're buying shared bandwidth burstable to (for example) 2mbit. In that case, using 2mbit continuously is trying to use something you didn't buy.

      It's like my old dial-up ISP. They sold two kinds of accounts: standard dial-up, and dedicated modem lines. With a dedicated line, you bought modems for both ends and a dedicated phone line from your house to the ISP and you were entitled to exclusive use of that connection all the time. A standard dial-up account was not a dedicated line, and the assumption was that you weren't going to be dialed in continuously. So when people bought a standard dial-up account and tried to stay dialed in 24x7, after a bit the ISP sent them a nasty-gram: "Either buy a dedicated line, stop trying to stay dialed in 24 hours a day, or find your account terminated. If you haven't chosen in 10 days, we'll choose #3 for you.". I'd note that a standard dial-up account was $20/month, while a dedicated line started at $120/month and went up depending on distance ($20 for the account, $100 and up for phone company charges for the pair).

    2. Re:Contract by bbtom · · Score: 1

      Okay, so if my residential DSL connection is for "burstable" connections, why is it that if I google for the word 'burst' on my ISP website it comes up with zero results? Perhaps they could have told me before I signed up.

      --
      catch (HumourFailureException e) { e.user.send("You, sir, are a humourless idiot."); }
    3. Re:Contract by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, I don't know about your provider but let see what Verizon says on its website.

      - There is no mention of unlimited bandwidth (they might have done it when they first started but not any more)
      - It explictly says "Up to 3 Mbps/768 Kbps" (emphasis on "up")
      - On page on speed, it says "Verizon Online DSL packages are always represented as *maximum* downstream/upstream connection speeds" and "Speed and uninterrupted use of the service are not guaranteed"

      I think these complaints about "contracts" are based on old advertising schemes where ISP did (wrongfully) advertise unlimited bandwidth and I think most companies stopped doing that. Also, I'm pretty sure (if my DSL contract can be seen as representative contract) that most contracts do included these terms. Check your DSL provider's terms and conditions.

    4. Re:Contract by bbtom · · Score: 1

      I wish I could tell you what the deal with my ISP is, but they've changed their website and the I.A. stopped archiving it back in March of last year (before I signed up). It's freedom2surf.net (as I said, I'm on an uncapped deal, which they don't offer anymore - I'm movin' if it gets any worse).

      My previous ISP advertised an "unlimited service". When a well-seeded torrent is running at 20K on a 2Mb connection due to their shaping, I'd say that's 'limited'. My current ISP is "uncapped".

      The "up to 3mb" bit would be based on your distance. So, for instance, if you are in an area of the country where your phone networks don't support x Mb, you get less bandwidth.

      --
      catch (HumourFailureException e) { e.user.send("You, sir, are a humourless idiot."); }
    5. Re:Contract by JohnnyBigodes · · Score: 1

      In that case, using 2mbit continuously is trying to use something you didn't buy.

      Correct, but that's the issue here. 99% of times, bandwidth is advertised "as is", drawing the immediate (and lawful) conclusion that it's misleading advertising. If it states somewhere on the contract that it's "up to X Mbit", then OK.

      Even then, unless it's specified directly in the contract, there's no legal grounds for throttling BitTorrent at 1MBit against HTTP traffic at 2MBit, for example.

    6. Re:Contract by yndrd1984 · · Score: 1

      If it was in the contract, fine. If this was not clearly stated ahead of time, they should have been sued.

    7. Re:Contract by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then would it not be cheapest to buy 2 standard accounts and then switch between the two?

  23. Uhm, this line doesn't make any sense: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    This doesn't make any sense:

    Especially ISPs who are leasing their bandwidth by the megabyte are more inclined to resort to 'shaping your traffic'

    Seems to me, those charging by the megabyte would be happy for you to use Gigs and Gigs of traffic.

    1. Re:Uhm, this line doesn't make any sense: by elzurawka · · Score: 0

      I think that they were trying to make the point that some ISP and a small company, who is leasing bandwidth from a larger ISP...so taht when you start download gigs upon gigs, they have to pay for all that you download, but they still only get the flat rate from you, There for they would be inclied to slow peoples connections o P2P traffic so that they can save money

      --
      -EL
  24. More accurately by hackwrench · · Score: 1

    A spade and a wheelbarrow aren't tools common to being taken into an all-you-can-eat buffet, whereas attempting to max out your connection 24x7, doesn't. I am a fast eater and back in the day, I could really put it away.

    The problem here isn't contention, for this is ISP generated slowdown when there isn't contention to save the ISP upsteam fees. The problem here is the ISP's inaccurate advertising. They say x bps, but they fail to mention, "Oh but we'll do things(which themselves need elaborated on) to keep you from actually getting that amount), and also fail to mention a guaranteed minimum.

    1. Re:More accurately by shmlco · · Score: 1

      "...for this is ISP generated slowdown when there isn't contention to save the ISP upsteam fees."

      What goes up must come down. 30% of traffice is 30% of traffic, no matter how you slice it.

      --
      Any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so.
  25. Argument... by EvilMonkeySlayer · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I once got into an argument with a former ISP admin.

    It went along the lines of this:

    Him: You can't just download massive amounts of data from bittorrent etc.
    Me: Why not? All the ISP's talk about "unlimited" broadband, by that very definition they aren't limiting it.
    Him: But they have to pay for that bandwidth.
    Me: Yeah? And I pay for them to provide me a service that is unlimited as advertised, if they're complaining now about how people are using more bandwidth than they expected then that's too bad. They advertised it as unlimited (something a LOT of UK ISP's do), and now they're complaining? They've only got themselves to blame.

    Long story short, all these ISPs who are whinging only have themselves to blame. They hark on about "SUPER FAST BROADBAND1!!1!! WITH NO LIMITS!!!11!!" and then they discover that people actually use it?
    Idiots.

    1. Re:Argument... by bbtom · · Score: 1

      Tell me about it. My previous ISP (the reprehensibly evil PlusNet) cost me about £50 in transfer fees because their traffic shaping crapola made my connection unusable. I lasted four days from setup to requesting my MAC code. My current ISP (F2S) is going the same way (esp. since they got bought by Pipex). Are there any DSL providers in the UK that don't suck total arse?

      --
      catch (HumourFailureException e) { e.user.send("You, sir, are a humourless idiot."); }
    2. Re:Argument... by permaculture · · Score: 1

      Currently my Telewest Blueyonder cable connection has no bandwidth cap, and I pay them a good rate for that. The second they mention capping bandwidth or packet shaping, I'm requesting my MAC code.

      --
      Environmentalism is the new Victorianism. Everyone ties on a green corset and pretends we're virtuous.
    3. Re:Argument... by bbtom · · Score: 1

      Cool stuff. I'm out in the sticks and they don't do cable here.

      --
      catch (HumourFailureException e) { e.user.send("You, sir, are a humourless idiot."); }
    4. Re:Argument... by TubeSteak · · Score: 1

      Yes, they only have themselves to blame.

      BUT, it helps to understand why.

      When ISPs started offering these services, they had a formula of some sort that allowed them to guesstimate the avg usage they'd expect to see on their network.

      This allows them to essentially 'over'sell their available service, while still providing a good user experience.

      The Problem: The formula changed.

      Previously, their service was oversold... now it's overutilized. That's what costs them money, but to say it's their own damned fault is like blaming a school for sending out x applications, but having more than the normal number of students accept.

      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    5. Re:Argument... by Jorgensen · · Score: 1

      Go with http://www.zenadsl.co.uk./ They're slightly more expensive than the others, but their helpdesk know what they're doint and I've never had a problem with them. They're linux-friendly and will even set up a reverse dns for you too.

      Disclaimer: no: I don't work for zen. But I'm a customer of theirs.

      PS: If you do switch, please don't use the full bandwith! Less for me then!

    6. Re:Argument... by future+assassin · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      So I get moded a troll because you losers cant be bothered to read your ISP's TOS.?

      --
      by TheSpoom (715771) Uncaring Linux user here. I have nothing to add to this but please continue. *munches popcorn*
    7. Re:Argument... by yndrd1984 · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Uh, yes. To (very selectively) quote from your rant:

      whining ... idiots ... sit on their compter 18 hours per day ... Get off the fucking chair and get a life

      At least when I use slashdot to vent my frustrations I don't whine about being modded down for it.

    8. Re:Argument... by Borland · · Score: 1
      Long story short, all these ISPs who are whinging only have themselves to blame. They hark on about "SUPER FAST BROADBAND1!!1!! WITH NO LIMITS!!!11!!" and then they discover that people actually use it? Idiots.
      You obviously did not see the little "*" symbol by those claims. If you look around for the 2pt font paragraph on the reverse side at the bottom of the offer letter you will see that they have explicitly spelled out the rights, none, to which you are entitled. If you have any complaints, they may be referred to company arbitration. You may expect a dimissal of your suit within three days of receipt.
  26. I'm glad I live in a highly populated area. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since I live in a highly populated area (NYC), I believe that the lines are not payed for by the megabyte due to the sheer number of users, though Earthlink leases the cable lines from time warner. I am free to use any and all ports that I want (currently 20-21,80,2222,2323,6881-6900,2302 and 6112 (though not all at once)).

  27. Rogers by TheSpoom · · Score: 5, Informative

    I use Canadian cable ISP Rogers. They do packet filtering whenever they detect a download coming from multiple sources -- including BitTorrent, podcasts, and several other types of "shotgun" downloads. They also have a digital phone service, which always goes through port 1720, which they cannot filter lest they affect their VoIP customers. Combine the two and you find that any BitTorrent download going through port 1720 goes at full speed.

    It's just a matter of time before they find a way around this to filter all multiple-connection downloads though, and that scares me, considering that we really only have two high-speed ISPs here, Rogers and Sympatico DSL. Everyone else uses their lines, and thus their filtering. Hopefully we'll have more effective header encryption by then.

    --
    It's better to vote for what you want and not get it than to vote for what you don't want and get it.
    - E. Debs
    1. Re:Rogers by Narcissus · · Score: 1

      I know that it probably doesn't help you, but here in the Maritimes we have Eastlink, too. 10Mbps connection and seemingly no restrictions. The speed is unbelievable!

      The funny thing is, I'm actually downloading less now that I'm on this connection. I don't know why, but my guess goes something like this:
      a) I'm downloading something, taking a while
      b) Log in to torrent server, looking at stats and to see if there's any new, faster, torrents with the same stuff in it
      c) Find other stuff I think I might want, so grab it too

      Nowadays, though, my downloads finish so quickly I couldn't care less about finding new, faster, torrents. So I don't even go to the torrent servers anymore, so I don't download as much crap.

      I'm a bit annoyed with myself, though, now, as I have all this bandwidth and I hardly ever use it :)

    2. Re:Rogers by CokoBWare · · Score: 4, Informative

      I'm on Rogers, I use Azureus, and I am now, after a bit of research, getting good Torrent traffic rates after getting crummy experiences with BitComet.

      Here's what I do with my Azureus client:

      • Use RC4 header compression
      • limit my connections to other encrypted users
      • don't allow for fail-over to unencrypted connections
      • use nonstandard port # with port forwarding through my firewall
      • Use plugins:
        • SpeedScheduler - limiting my heavy torrent seeds to overnight use only
        • SafePeer - blocks questionable IPs from leeching off of me and collecting stats they have no right getting from me

      I find that by using these settings and plugins, Roger's datashaping devices (that they won't publicly admit to) haven't kill my fullspeed torrent traffic yet. I'll wait for the next countermeasure, but I might just maneuver my port onto the VoIP port since their Home Phone service is too expensive.

    3. Re:Rogers by manly_15 · · Score: 3, Informative
      Everyone else uses their lines, and thus their filtering. Hopefully we'll have more effective header encryption by then.
      Actually, that's not true. I work for an ISP (who shall remain nameless) who sells DSL (among other things) and everything relating to filtering is up to the ISP selling the service. This is why many different ISP's selling DSL can have different policies regarding quotas and packet filtering. Feel free to call one up in your area and free youself from the shackles of Bell and Rogers!
    4. Re:Rogers by mnmn · · Score: 1

      I'm interested. If Sentex really doesnt throttle ports and is UNLIMITED, I'm more than willing to give it a shot.
      Are servers (25,80) allowed?

      --
      "Give orange me give eat orange me eat orange give me eat orange give me you." -Nim Chimpsky
    5. Re:Rogers by manly_15 · · Score: 1

      I'm not actually working there now (in school now), so anything I mention isn't set in stone. Check with a service rep before you lay down your dollars :).

      There are no bandwidth limits other than 40 Gig's a month on binary newsgroups (this is b/c it's outsourced to GigaNews). No ports are throttled, but it is likely that interactive traffic (especially SSH) is queued higher than "bulk" bandwidth. Either way, it's nothing like how Rogers screws around with BitTorrent.

      All of the systems are run with FreeBSD. Sentex is a farily significant contributer to FreeBSD development.

      As for servers, of course! Most employees run their own servers off of their DSL connection (I do imaps, http, teamspeak, and others I've forgotten about). The view is that a byte is a byte, regardless of where it's going to or coming from. Just don't spew out spam or viruses and everyone's happy :)

    6. Re:Rogers by TheSpoom · · Score: 1

      Hmm, some good news, thanks. I might try one of them out. :^)

      --
      It's better to vote for what you want and not get it than to vote for what you don't want and get it.
      - E. Debs
    7. Re:Rogers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They've already limited port 1720 (and 1755, which, apparently, was also discussed as unthrottled) already.

  28. Bittorrent not the problem by danielk1982 · · Score: 1

    Bittorrent is not the problem. With the (slow) emergence of bandwidth intesive services (like legal movie downloads) this problem will not go away, even if you block all torrent traffic.

    Right now, most ISPs will charge you less for a slower connection and more for a faster connection, but they do not differentiate amongst the classes of users that use their faster connections. I am not a heavy user, but I do occasionally like to stream movies and when I download something I want it to be fast. Compare that to my friend who downloads several movies and games a month. Our bandwidth usage is like night and day. I don't think I broke a Gig/month in the last year, he probably hovers around 10Gigs/month.

    Bandwidth is not an unlimited resource, if you use more you'll pay more.

  29. As long as they are not breaking the contract... by Werrismys · · Score: 1
    Angry message follows:

    If the contract lets them do this, well, fsck em. Change ISP. I myself want unrestricted net.

    For most, in Finland at least, that is no longer possible. Outbound port 25 for example is mostly blocked except to the ISP's smtp servers (which, without exception, are SLOW today because they all have stupid filters and antivirus checkers), which sucks ass when you test mail server settings and such.

    We have WINBLOWS to thank for all this nonsense. Fsck it too.

    --
    'Once scientists, even the dim-witted social scientists, get muzzled, the Western Civilization is finished.' - oldhack
  30. Australia vs US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    preventing users from being able to download large amounts of data has been common practice here in australia for years. All broadband connections have limited download quotas. Perhaps this is the reason that Australia has been faster to take up emerging technologies (such as adsl2) than the US. With the prices fixed on most costs (data trasmission and phoneline rentals) the only thing that can really differnentiate an ISP here is its customer service and upload/download speed.

  31. There is a legitimate use by CiXeL · · Score: 1

    video conferencing. the thing is they wont remove the upload bandwidth cap to enable it.
    if people started really pimping out video conferencing with set top boxes for your tv using a wireless lan connection or something not only would you have a legitimate use but youd have isps scared sh%tless that people would beg for more bandwidth.

    1. Re:There is a legitimate use by aminorex · · Score: 1

      What is it with this nonsense assumption that P2P traffic is illegitimate? I push out several gigs of scientific data, free software, canned video demos, and live video every day on P2P. Moreover, there is such a thing, in the U.S. at least, as a right to privacy. What occurs under the cover of that right is presumptively legitimate.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
  32. I wonder by Azreal · · Score: 1

    I wonder, does p2p really have anything to do with bandiwdth usage? Let's assume there was no p2p software whatsoever. With the amount of bandwidth that ISP's are making available, and the rise of a more technologically savvy generation, would this prevent people from utilizing as much of the bandwidth as they are now? My thinking is, that right now, p2p is the most convenient for a vast majority of people to get what they want, but I don't believe that a less convenient delivery method would truly deter people from downloading audio, video, whatever files they are looking for. So, I'm not really sure this is a p2p issue whatsoever.

    As a side note, I'm not sure that ISP's could successfully implement bandwidth shaping, and/or bandwidth caps. If a single ISP were to open up shop and offer no bandwidth shaping or bandwidth caps, in the area that this isp serviced, I believe that people would vote with their money and choose this ISP over others. The only means to prevent this is to either compete with the ISP (getting rid of bandwidth shaping/tiered pricing/caps or lowering costs) or to use what would be considered illegal business practices by 1) leveraging existing pseudo-monopolies 2) interfering with traffic from competing ISP or 3) massive collusion amongst established ISPs. Unless of course they get the government to give them a reach around.

    So to summarize, it's not about p2p, it's about the people, and the success or failure of limiting consumers will be whether or not they'll be competing in a free market or practical monopoly (government sanctioned or otherwise).

    Just some thoughts w/o really thinking too hard.

    --
    $sys$droids
    1. Re:I wonder by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If a single ISP were to open up shop and offer no bandwidth shaping or bandwidth caps, in the area that this isp serviced, I believe that people would vote with their money and choose this ISP over others.

      You forget that most of the larger ISPs also own the data networks. That means they can just refuse to peer and/or sell bandwidth with Mr. New ISP. New ISP is dead. In order to keep competition healthy and strong, we need to ban vertical integration (i.e., ban companies from owning different levels in the supply chain). This will never happen because there are *way* too many people who automatically think regulation is bad for competition. Of course these people never say that the rules in a football game are bad for the competition between teams, but for some reason when the "teams" are businesses and the game is "the market" rules are bad.

  33. DIfferent services for different people by GoatPigSheep · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Here (quebec) we have broadband that spans a large scale of user demographics.

    the cheapest cable has a monthly limit of 1gig up and 1gig down and a speed around 256kbit down, which is very low but acceptable if you only do light browsing and email. The next level of broadband cable is 10gig up/ 20gig down at 6mbit down, 900kbit up, which is fine if you are a casual bittorent user who doesn't leave the application open overnight every night (fine for the occasional linux iso or tv show). The most expensive cable is 10mbit down/1.5mbit up (I believe), with no limit, which is good for hardcore users. The prices are about 25/month for the cheapo plan, 50 for the 20/10 plan, and 75 a month canadian for the unlimited plan. I have never had a problem with the unlimited plan and one of my friends who also has it even had a discussion with one of the cable guys who came by to fix some services who suggested the best bittorrent client to use! I feel 75/month is more than fair for a very fast reliable connection and the cable company doesn't seem to care much about how much users use the unlimited plan.

    DSL is a different story, you can get unlimited bandwidth for about 30$ cad a month but the speeds are quite low, about 3mbit down (so they claim, ussually less) and 500kbit up. Generally the cheap dsl is less reliable as well. There are more expensive dsl plans as well and they generally do not have any bandwidth limits.

    --
    GoatPigSheep, the 3 most important food groups
    1. Re:DIfferent services for different people by ggogeta · · Score: 1

      the extreme (fastest) plan only offers 900 k upload man... unfortunately...

    2. Re:DIfferent services for different people by GoatPigSheep · · Score: 1

      Yeah I wasn't sure how fast it was.. I have it but I share my connection with 3 other people and never get the full bandwidth

      --
      GoatPigSheep, the 3 most important food groups
  34. My ISP is rediculous by tonycarboni · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Since i started to use Bittorrent, it seems they put me on a "blacklist" of some sort- now whenever i seed anything for any period of time they throttle or turn off my internet for some time to "punish" me. At any time of the day, its hard to get download speeds past 300kbs and upload speeds past 100kbs. Optimum Online is the only broadband thats around here, so i just have to deal with it. When calling them to find out what exactly i was doing wrong, they told me not to seed for a long period of time. When asking at what rate i was allowed to seed before they bothered me, they were EXTREMELY reluctant to give me an exact upload ratio. Eventually one guy broke down and told me that they monitor anything over 20kbs thats been seeding for an hour! I can barely play an MMO without them shutting off my internet...

    1. Re:My ISP is rediculous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why don't you go tell your Mom that the nasty ISP isn't letting you infringe on other's copyrights anymore?

  35. Bandwidth vs. data volume by QuietLagoon · · Score: 1
    ISP's are selling you these huge bandwidth rates....5-30Mb/S in the case of Verizon, and then it turns out there's nothing *legitimate* to use that bandwidth on, and then they're shocked just SHOCKED that customers have found a way to use that bandwidth on?

    Bandwidth is how fast you can send or receive data. Data volume is how much data you send or receive. The ISPs are concerned about the data volume you use, not the bandwidth.

  36. I agree, P2P isn't just for illegal downloads by Kilz · · Score: 1

    I totally agree with you. I just downloaded open SuSE 10.1 RC1, a 3.3 gig torrent. I will probably get the release torrent when the final release is made. I think a lot of these ISP's think that all P2P is people sharing copyrighted material, so they think no one will complain if we slow it down. What they forget is that there are a lot of legitimate uses for P2P. Another legitimate use is for gamers, World of Warcraft sends out patches with bittorrent. More and more legitimate uses are found as time goes on.

    --
    I trust Microsoft as far as I could comfortably spit a dead rat
  37. That's nothing by caffeination · · Score: 4, Informative
    Spencer Kelly from BBC's Click program
    I think it's better form to refer to the BBC.
    Apparently it has been estimates
    Blatant typo.
    Especially ISPs who are leasing their bandwidth by the megabyte are more inclined to resort to 'shaping your traffic' by throttling ports, setting bandwidth limits or even classifying accounts according services used.
    "Especially" is redundant because of "more". The sentence sounds terrible.
    What is your ISPs policy regarding P2P and is it fair for them to put restrictions and conditions on its use.
    1. Possessive apostrophe missing from "ISPs". Should be "ISP's"
    2. Question mark missing from the end of the question

    However, I am not a grammar or spelling nazi. I love Slashdot just as it is, warts and all. I make spelling and grammar mistakes all the time. I just wanted to play at being an anal dickhead for a moment, just to see how it felt.

    1. Re:That's nothing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I just wanted to play at being an anal dickhead for a moment, just to see how it felt.

      Feels good, doesn't it?

  38. turning the tables by v1 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    What is your ISPs policy regarding P2P and is it fair for them to put restrictions and conditions on its use.

    When most of the big ISPs hit the scenes, they were all about promises. The provider that promised the most had the best shot at getting the new customers in what was a bit of a feeding frenzy as people rushed to get onto the "information superhighway". So naturally they promised no limits. If you will remember back ~10 years ago, there WERE limits. I very clearly remember my university had a large bank of dial-in modems at 2400bps, and a small bank of "fast" 9600's, and we were limited to 24 hrs per month on the fast ones. Anyone under such limits would gladly go with another ISP that had no limits on traffic.

    Five years ago this was not a big deal for the ISPs. Very few users were even achieving 1/4 of their cap. An ISP could easily place customers on their network that could, if they capped out, consume 4x the available bandwidth that the ISPs were leasing. Since the average user wouldn't go above 25% usage even at peak hours (8-10pm) this was fine. The typical ratio of dial-up customers to dial-in lines was between 7:1 and 11:1 depending on your ISP, so they were figuring that at peak times, only 1/7th of their customers would be online.

    Now, with things like BitTorrent and always-on internet like DSL and cable, it's entirely possible for a customer to max their line out, even for weeks at a time. As more and more customers go with things like BT, the average bandwidth usage of a customer skyrockets, and ISPs have to scramble to handle complaints of "the internet didn't used to be this slow!" from customers, and have to pay for more bandwidth from their upstreams to keep customers happy.

    It takes about a quarter second to realize this makes the ISPs unhappy. They have lowered their prices in response to competition, and now their costs are going up. Now, should we have pity for them? I tried to think of a single ISP in my area that went out of business, and I can't think of one. Not a single one. I don't care how much of a hit they're taking to their bottom line, they must still be plenty proffitable. So instead of having a 10mil quarter, now they're having to "suffer" a 7mil quarter. Waaaah.

    The ISPs are looking for ways to protect their pocketbook. The ISP industry is still proffitable, it's just not as lucritive as it used to be. Customers are willing to pay less, and are demanding more. That is how a free market economy works. Unlike some markets today, (gas stations come immediately to mind...) there are still going to always be a few providers willing to offer a little lower price for the same service, or the same service you used to get from your old ISP at the same price. Lower my cap or "shape" my bandwidth so my services go slower and I'll change providers tomorrow. Just watch me.

    --
    I work for the Department of Redundancy Department.
    1. Re:turning the tables by swillden · · Score: 1

      The ISPs are looking for ways to protect their pocketbook. The ISP industry is still proffitable, it's just not as lucritive as it used to be.

      Maybe. It's possible that it's getting to the point where it may not be sustainable.

      This whole issue makes a lot of people mad, but only because they haven't thought it through. It's all rather obvious:

      1. When broadband first came on the scene, there wasn't really a way for people to use all of the downstream bandwidth they had, so there was no reason to limit it. Sure, the providers knew that a few heavy downloaders would probably find a way, but as long as there were only a few, it was no problem, and they were better off just advertising unlimited. This was an appropriate decision at the time.
      2. Bittorrent and other P2P apps entered the picture, and made it possible for many people to use their whole connections. This was permissible under the terms of service, because it wasn't anticipated by the terms of service. However, it is clearly unsustainable given the pricing model.
      3. Since the market has changed, providers have to change, too, and they have three obvious options: (1) raise prices, (2) announce a change in the terms of service, explaining the sort of bandwidth limiting they're going to do or (3) quietly apply restrictions. Option (1) would certainly drive away business, and (2) might, so most ISPs take option (3). That's wrong, but predictable, since ISPs that choose the more up-front option of telling customers what the limits are will lose business to the less honest ones who choose option (3).
      4. What will happen next is that unless upstream bandwidth suddenly gets a lot cheaper, shaping will gradually become more obvious and annoying and we might even see a class action lawsuit.

      What we need is some ISP-specific truth-in-advertising legislation. ISPs should be required to disclose the details of their traffic shaping policies as well as their oversell rates and maybe even their average upstream utilization. The law should allow ISPs to change to change their policies at any time, but should require them to give notice and should specify what sort of notice is acceptable.

      Given that information, savvy buyers can choose the provider that works for them, and magazine, newspaper and web articles will help less-clued buyers to understand what they should pick. Odds are that ISPs will begin offering a range of options with different limitations at different prices.

      Note that this sort of truth-in-advertising law would also help prevent ISPs who also offer phone service from silently degrading competing VOIP service. They could degrade VOIP service if they wanted, but they'd have to disclose the fact that they were doing so. That wouldn't necessarily help people who have only one broadband option, but those areas are slowly going away.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
  39. You should get what you pay for by mAIsE · · Score: 0

    If you pay for a T1 line, or a now comcast is advertising 6 MB , you should be able to use it. If they want to complain that you are using what they sold you and then punishing you for using it. I would think at least in america you could file a class action law suit.

    No one should be able to sell you a large amount of bandwidth then punish you for using it, no matter what the protocol.

  40. It all depends by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 1
    I have no problems with honest ISP's who simply say "X for Y traffic and Xx2 for Yx2 traffic".

    I on the other hand absolutely loath those ISP's who claim "unlimited" bandwidth wich in reality is "fair use" wich in reality is a few gigabyte.

    Hell a few even in the year 2006 sell accounts with a 1 gig datalimit and charge a mint for going over it. Without offcourse CLEARLY spelling this out to the consumer.

    Who then buys WoW or some other MMO game and then is suprised that the initial patch alone exceeds his limit (based on real life experiences)

    I can understand the appeal of an ISP wanting to advertise with "unlimited" and then balking at the fact that some people take this literal but we got something called truth in advertising laws.

    I just wish the legal system would spend more time enforcing them. Next time a customer is billed extra for going over the limit of his unlimited service the ISP should be slammed down with a million dollar fine for deceitfull advertising practises and deception. Maybe even fraud.

    Then we can simply choose our ISP and contract based on our needs.

    It seems to work for Mobile phone contracts. Allthough a strange thing is that mobile phone companies typically try to oversell you, giving you a contract for more minutes then you use. Why on earth then are ISP's trying constantly to undersell you? Must be the old IT rule of normal rules not applying.

    I short I don't mind ISP setting restrictions just as long as they are honest and I can still buy my 300gb open ports account. In holland at least it seems there are at least a few ISP going after the no-nonsense users who don't like portals or other crap and just want a connection, fast and wide. You pay more but as I am now temporarily living in someone elses home and forced to use a crap ISP (tiscali) over my own (xs4all) I can see that although I payed twice as much it was worth every cent.

    Sadly ISP's like tiscali are not in the business of selling you bandwidth. They want to be content handlers/providers making a fat load of profit of you not from putting through bits but by selling you their content services. Kinda like a telecom running its own sexlines (wich for mobile telecoms is in fact the case)

    Tiscali doesn't even have binary usenet because "most of the content on usenet is pirated and we prefer our users to buy their content through us". Almost literal translation.

    Sadly many people don't have a choice of ISP. This is bad but then that is what happens when you vote for capatalists who believe in letting the stall owners run the market (that is what the free market really is, giving the key to the market to the stall owners.)

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

  41. Why don't they charge per megabyte? by moultano · · Score: 1

    I don't understand. If they have an issue with people using the full capacity of their purchased lines, why don't they charge based on how much capacity you use?

  42. I use Plusnet in the UK and... by ajpr · · Score: 2, Informative

    When I signed up around a year ago (to their "Premier" service) there were no limits.

    Since then they've introduced throttling, traffic shaping, removed their binaries, and the latency for games screws up more than it used to.

    It's annoying when a company changes the contract every few months to screw you, and you can't reject it to keep your old one. The only option is to leave, which is by no means hassle free.

    I've posted on their forums to get some kind of explanation but all I heard was that all the limits they imposed are good for me. They didn't see the point that I was making about them changing the contract every few months to a service that now is totally opposite what I signed up for.

    I guess I'll have to change ISP at some point.

  43. The Trouble wih Bandwidth Shaping by matthewcraig · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ISPs are increasingly using bandwidth shaping to provide more functionality for their in-house services and less functionality for other services. The trouble is users have no idea this is occurring. The user purchases "speeds up to 1.5 Mbps" with that assumption that the ISP will make every effort to obtain those speeds. The ISP never reveals their plan for low-bandwidth applications to get full speed and high-bandwidth applications to get low speed.

    Bandwidth shaping deceived the actual speeds when troubleshooting user complaints. While the ISP can have the user "test" the throughput with a FTP-protocol transfer to a local server, the ISP allows full bandwidth for that particular service to that particular server. The ISP is using technical smoke-and-mirrors to rip off their customers.

    Lowering user speeds based on usage is clearly unfair, if not illegal. I have seen first-hand how a tel-com DSL provider lowered the bandwidth, yet continued charging for the higher level of service. After my DSL provider performed a "speed check" without my knowledge, my maximum download speed was throttled to 650 Kbps down from 1.5 Mbps, but my monthly charge was never modified since my 512 Kbps upstream was not changed. It took a day of diagnostics and harassing their technical and customer support before I found out those details. (The only resolution they would provide is lowering it further to 512 Kbps up / 256 Kbps down and charging $9.99 less.) This happened after two years using the service at the 1.5 Mbps faster speed, and I believe it was because I was an active consumer of their bandwidth.

    Internet Service Providers have one customer mold in their mind: Their perfect user checks email (through the ISP's SMTP server) and browses web pages. They are trying to sell high-speed access for low-response time for these activities, however, as users become more aware of high-speed services (P2P, Streaming movies, Vontage, Online video game entertainment) that customer mold changes. ISPs are having trouble adjusting to these users, and they are throttling their access in hopes they get frustrated and go away or stop using these high-speed services.

    Someone who knows how the regulatory system works should pursue a complaint with the FCC when they encounter the bandwidth throttling on a specific application. This would bring light to the unscrupulous practice. The difficulty they would have is trying to determine how much actual throttling was done and how much of the latency was application specific or caused by problems outside the ISP.

    Less and less ISPs provide free use of the bandwidth you purchase. Users pay for the entire spectrum of bandwidth, but ISPs will slow down your traffic if you are not using that bandwidth in the way they want. This is slowing down adoption of new technologies (problems with Vontage?) and eliminating business ideas that would require dedicated bandwidth.

  44. "ISPs" themselves are a perversion of the Internet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Network to thy Neighbour. ISPs represent centralisation and control. Build a mesh, before it's too late.

  45. Amount of Net Traffic by RWarrior(fobw) · · Score: 4, Funny

    From TFA: 1/3 of the traffic on the net is P2P traffic.

    That means that only 2/3 of net traffic is spam?

    --
    Remove the caps and hold to a mirror.
    1. Re:Amount of Net Traffic by zettabyte · · Score: 1

      From TFA: 1/3 of the traffic on the net is P2P traffic.

      That means that only 2/3 of net traffic is spam?

      Nope, only a third is spam. The other third is pr0n. And a quarter of that is me.

  46. Cox's policies by Todd+Knarr · · Score: 2, Informative

    My ISP is Cox HSI. Where I live their policy is to apply transit caps, but enforcement is mainly limited to habitual high-volume offenders. If you go over the cap occasionally, you won't see anything happen. If you go over by a large amount for an extended period of time, though, you'll find your connection throttled back and possibly face termination of your account for ToS violation. They've had to wield this club quite rarely, as only about 2-3% of customers are problem cases. That small percentage is responsible for about 50% of traffic, so shutting down or throttling even a few of the worst offenders has a significant effect.

  47. Sorry... but that's not the way it should be. by flithm · · Score: 4, Insightful

    First of all, you're thinking like a mindless ISP employee, but secondly, you're right! This is the whole problem. The whole state of ISP business plans is set up wrong. People are accustomed to a low monthly fee, and ISPs like it because they get a guaranteed income from the majority low-bandwidth users.

    I myself am I high usage person. But I know this, and I'm okay with it. If an ISP doesn't like me using so much bandwidth they call me up and complain and I respond with "Sure no problem, I've got more money, take some of it, because I want to use more bandwidth." Traditionally in the past they've told me "UUUhhh we can't do that, you have to use less bandwidth!"

    WHAT?!

    Fortunately things are starting to change. I'm not paying my service provider extra fees for extra bandwidth and we're both happy.

    I personally see the future going with zero restrictions, but people paying for the usage. This is the only way it will go, with companies that have attitudes like yours going bankrupt.

    You're forgetting that people actually WANT to use these services. It's not your companies right to refuse them. It IS however your companies duty to its shareholders to come up with a way to satisfy market demands... and unthrottled P2P is one of them!

    Quit thinking like a mindless zombie and get with the times!

  48. Only in the UK by Tatsh · · Score: 1

    There hasn't been a company in the US doing this (unless you want to count the numerous colleges blocking the normal ports). If they want a solution, they can block all the ports except for 80, 443, 21, 59, 6667, and a few more. If no one is using 6667 for an IRC server they could then use that for torrents, which is probably a big deal to a ISP.

    The major thing about all this now is that encryption has come into play. Encryption of course sort of hides what kind of data is going through that port, but it also enables for some connections that won't work unencrypted to work better. Most smart torrent users are not using 6881-6889 anyway. (The first solution to traffic shaping was changing the port.) Azureus and uTorrent both support encryption now, specifically an implementation of RC4. So then what now? Should the cable companies make encryption a violation of terms of service? Or even go as far as to lobby the Congress (I'm talking US) to make it illegal without some sort of license (VeriSign would have it first of course)? It all sounds crazy to me.

    I feel like this article is only talking about UK, but I'm sure the US companies are thinking about it (I think there was one that did it, can't remember name). And there was definitely one in Canada who set traffic shaping to their service. Canadian users are also encrypting to get past it. It seems like there will always be a way.

  49. Try studying abroad with a 3 GB cap.. by NevarMore · · Score: 1

    I'm an American college student doing an internship (IM A WHORE http://yoosic.com/ and studying at the Technical Univeristy of Dresden.

    I have a fiance' and several close friends back home. We realized that our own parents, even our older siblings (Gen X), didn't have the communication tools that we are graced with. Calls overseas are kind of expensive, about $0.10 a minute if they call me using a calling card and $0.30 a minute if I use a ring-back service here. Its unaffordable if we call directly.

    I was happy when my boss clued me in to Skype. Free text/voice/video calls to another Skype user and a mere $.02, hot damn. $10 a month and I can call everyone, even the older family without computers. No dice according to the IT people here.

    I get 3 gigabytes a month. When I'm at home I like to listen to internet radio (http://rtds.org/ which is perfectly legal. I am a computer science student at a new university, I've had to pull down quite a few tools, papers, lecture slides, research for presentations via the ACM archives, etc.

    I am so used to having unlimited internet access. I know that it is still a luxury and many of my peers have less contact back home, but it is a great lift to someone who is so far from home to be able to stay in touch.

    In essence all I really need is around 500 kbps and set my large downloads to run when I'm not actively using my laptop. My usage is very legal and could be considered necessary for my coursework and in an extreme case the psychological health or my family and I.

    If I exceed my cap, it would be nice if someone would ask if I can legitimize my usage, but thats not the nature of the management.

    If you want to limit how much soda I get you can give me a smaller straw or give me a smaller glass, but understand that we have agreed on some minimum volumes and flow rates of my soda. Or more appropriately in my case, I can only buy soda from you and I have to take what I can get.

  50. How UK broadband actually works. by Ilex · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Unlike in the states where you subscribe to broadband directly through your Incumbent telco or Cable co. The majority of people in the UK buy their broadband connection through a retail ISP who in turn buy their bandwidth through the wholesale provider namely British Telecom. This has the advantage of much greater competition so people can switch from one provider to another.

    If you don't like the service that you are getting from your ISP or Cable Company you can always switch to another ISP who offers a better service though maybe at a higher price.

    Given that DSL subscribers in the UK have recently been given the choice to upgrade to an 8Mbit service at no extra cost, an all you can eat service model is not going to be sustainable as the few bandwidth hogs will saturate their connections and leech all the bandwidth. There has to be some sort of fair use policy and this differs between the ISP's

    PlusNet has taken to use traffic shaping to effectively block all p2p traffic once a user had gone over a rather small usage limit. This has resulted in a large migration of users away from PlusNet and onto my ISP Nildram. Nildram do not traffic shape and they give a generous 50gig per month download limit which only applied during peak times. After 12am to 8am it's all you can eat. They also role your previous months unused allowance over to the next month.

    It remains to be seen if my ISP can cope with the extra demand but the point is this is a good example of the free market and capitalism. If a provider gives bad service or poor value for money their customers will simply migrate to another provider.

    It's unfortunate the people in the U.S don't have such a free market for broadband.

    1. Re:How UK broadband actually works. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They all seem to be putting limits on ISPs in the UK now. But, at the same time other services/companies are encouraging use of bandwidth, like with the BBC's iMP and sky's movie downloads. Also, they are trying to cut prices, and outsource customer service etc. Now, carphonewarehouse has upped the ante again, with its £20.99 broadband, phone and shit. Oh, and a lot more people are getting up to 8mb now. How are the ISPs going to afford it all?

      Glad I'm on Blueyonder.

    2. Re:How UK broadband actually works. by Vorondil28 · · Score: 1

      As a citizen of the states I can tell you that (at least where I live), I'm not beholden to the local telco or cable company. (Although most [all?] telcos also sell Internet connections.) I get my Internet connection from a local company (whom I'll call "DK.net") that's separate from the telco and there are probably three or four other local companies like it. Given, DSL prices include a "line fee" that goes to the telco (it's their copper after all), but the connection to the Internet is taken care of by DK. Cable may be the same way, but I've not had any experience with that.

      --
      This sig rocks the casbah.
  51. traffic shaping by garyrich · · Score: 1

    From my limited understanding it seems like this type of traffic shaping should reduce the low priority service speed by 2%-5%. VOIP packets get 1st priority, but there really isn't all that much VOIP traffic. And it's the packets that get priority, not the "conversation".

    Are the ISPs really doing traffic shaping or are they doing something more primitive? Are they really just doing port throttling? Detecting P2P traffic and artifically limiting its bandwidth? If so, that's stupid. done right, shaping should make things better for everyone, including the P2P user.

    --
    -- your Web browser is Ronald Reagan
    1. Re:traffic shaping by yabos · · Score: 1

      Rogers Cable in Canada does just crude traffic shaping. They always limit Bittorrent to really low speeds even if it's the middle of the night. They don't just put QOS on the packets from what I've seen. I guess it could be that their network is just sooo overloaded that if the QOS the torrent packets to the lowest priority it goes to the low speed. They are also doing selective shaping. They don't do it on their whole network, but do it in places where they are overloaded an they get complaints.

  52. aa different way of limiting by app13b0y · · Score: 1

    I think cox has the best policy for this so far. Where I live they sell plans of 9mbps/1mbps, 5mbps/512kbps, and several smaller ones that I don't use.
    Those limits are hard limits, sometimes you can get a burst a little bit above them, but it comes down to normal really fast, but any time you're online you can get those speeds.

    To compensate for providing those speeds like that, they have a soft limit of how much bandwidth you can use throughout the day/month. I don't know what the 9/1 config limits are, but for 5/512 they allow 2GB down per day and 60GB/month, and 1.5/day and 7.5/month up. If you go over these limits, they don't kill you, but they will send you a notice saying upgrade, stop using so much bandwidth each month, or we can kill your service.

    Out of all the business plans I've seen, I find this idea better then the shaping other ISPs use as you're not pissing off the customers but you're still able to keep control of how much bandwidth you use each month. I believe 99% of all NSPs do it this way too, cox learns from the best ;)

  53. Humanities neverending war against limits. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't know of any ISP that says "take all you can". I do however know plenty of users who have that perception. Guess it's that "give 'em an inch, they'll take a mile" going on. Of course "a few bad apples spoil the barrel" also kicks in occasionally. Maybe we need a study on why people feel the need to be as antisocial as they are, while sucking on societies teat, instead of going out and creating there own society, free of all these rules they rally against?

    1. Re:Humanities neverending war against limits. by popeguilty · · Score: 1

      The fact that you don't know of any ISP that says take all you can is reflective not of reality but your limited knowledge. You're entitled to your own opinion, but attempting to have your own facts is disgusting.

    2. Re:Humanities neverending war against limits. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh huh. Well I tell you what Mr "My reality can beat up your reality any day". Why don't you set up this utopian ISP that has your version of reality and let's see how well it does. It should be a most informative lesson about the limits of human arrogance (much like that king who stood on the seashore and tried to command the ocean).

    3. Re:Humanities neverending war against limits. by popeguilty · · Score: 1

      Look, I'm not saying that unlimited bandwidth is a good idea. You're taking swipes at me, but I'm not even vaguely where you think I am. All I'm saying is that if you advertise unlimited bandwidth, and your contract doesn't provide for shaping/throttling, then you don't get to engage in shaping/throttling.

      I'm not calling for utopia. I'm calling for corporations to honor the contracts they enter into with private citizens, which is a less and less popular idea these days.

    4. Re:Humanities neverending war against limits. by laughingcoyote · · Score: 1

      My ISP had it on their ad, big red letters: "UNLIMITED broadband service starting at $19.99 depending on speed!" Luckily for them, they seem a decent one, and thus far, they have delivered on that promise of "UNLIMITED", at the speed I pay for. If they ever choose not to, they'll find themselves in court-far as I know, there are still laws against false advertising.

      On the other hand, if they want to advertise LIMITED service, in big red letters, no problem. But you better not lie to me about what it is I'm getting for my money.

      --
      To fight the war on terror, stop being afraid.
    5. Re:Humanities neverending war against limits. by shmlco · · Score: 1

      False advertising, maybe, but I'll bet anything their contracts (especially for a month-to-month service) are written like those of the credit card industry, whereby they can change the terms of the deal at any time they choose. If you continue to use the "service", you agree to the change.

      --
      Any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so.
    6. Re:Humanities neverending war against limits. by laughingcoyote · · Score: 1

      Oh I'd imagine they are. Still, it'd be interesting to see how a judge would rule on it. My feeling on it is that if there's a discrepancy between a company's advertising and their contract, whichever one is in larger print should prevail.

      --
      To fight the war on terror, stop being afraid.
    7. Re:Humanities neverending war against limits. by shmlco · · Score: 1

      You may have had "unlimited" service... right up until the agreement changed. And I suspect that if one checked the advertising, there'd be a weasel-word like "virtually" unlimited service, or a conspicuosly place asterisk leading to some fine print like "subject to conditions and terms of service."

      --
      Any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so.
    8. Re:Humanities neverending war against limits. by innocent_white_lamb · · Score: 1

      One ISP here used to advertise "Unlimited Internet Service." But they had (and still have) a cap.
       
      Someone apparently called them on this and now they advertise like this:
       
      UNLIMITED CONNECTION time.
       
      Notice the fine print at the end of the headline.

      --
      If you're a zombie and you know it, bite your friend!
    9. Re:Humanities neverending war against limits. by Pantero+Blanco · · Score: 1

      The contract that I signed with my ISP didn't have the catch phrases the parent posts are talking about. They've yet to try any of the "dirty tricks" as well. Whether or not you'll ever find a _major_ ISP like that is another question...Keeping individuals happy is much more important when your customer base is a few cities.

      Also, Canute didn't order the tide back out of arrogance...quite the opposite. He did it to prove that even the power of kings had limits (and because he'd gotten tired of flattery).

    10. Re:Humanities neverending war against limits. by ergo98 · · Score: 1

      My ISP had it on their ad, big red letters: "UNLIMITED broadband service starting at $19.99 depending on speed!"

      So you can use your connection to send spam, for instance? Can you use it to launch hacking attacks, or to endlessly spread viruses? Both of those should fall under the "unlimited" banner, so clearly the ISP should have no Terms Of Service.

      They do? Well that's strange. Maybe they were referring to one aspect of their service, such as connection time. Those ads were usually crafted back when they were competing against AOL and other dial-up services, which due to modem/line oversubscribing limited users to a set number of hours per month under the base account. The "unlimited" means that you can be online throughout the clock with most high speed, even if their intent is that most of the time you have marginal usage tools like email checking and IM clients running.

      Every service on the planet is limited, and you shouldn't be naive about it.

    11. Re:Humanities neverending war against limits. by laughingcoyote · · Score: 1

      I don't believe it's "naive" at all. If I go into an all-you-can-eat buffet, I expect to be able to take as many plates of food as I happen to want to eat. If they have a two-plate-per-person limit, that's fine, but they should be up front about it.

      If you want to send viruses, it's the FBI you'll get to have a word with. Same if you want to send child porn-even at low bandwidth. I don't expect ISP's to change the laws by any means, and certainly both of those activities should be illegal. I -do- expect them to be clear about what they're offering. If they want to say "Unlimited connection time, limited bandwidth usage and some activities prohibited" in their ad, then they're every bit within their rights to do so. But that doesn't make good ad copy. They want to have it both ways, and that's where I have a problem with it. I don't believe it's "naive" to expect honesty, whether or not it's currently in rather short supply from corporations.

      Same for spam. "Unlimited connection (except sending of spam prohibited)" is fine, and certainly I'm all for it. But they -still- should be up front about what it is you may and may not do. Page 218 of the dense legalese agreement that no one reads and anyone that does can't understand is not up front.

      --
      To fight the war on terror, stop being afraid.
  54. In over their heads by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let's face it, it is the ISP's own fault.

    If I pay for a 2Mb/512KB connection (unlimited) as advertised, that is exactly what I should get.

    It is not the consumers fault that the ISP negotiated their contract with higher level providers badly. They should re-negotiate their contract on the higher level, not pass the problem on to the lower level. In the meantime, they will have to deal with the fact that they're going to have to live up to their end of the bargain until said contract is re-negotiated. After all, they aren't exactly _losing_ money now, are they?

    Also, many of these ISP's don't even use all of their pipes. There are tons that have extra capacity that just sits there, but they figure it'll be better to just hold out in order to sell what they have to the highest bidder or just to keep it away from competitors.

    ISP's, you're reaping what you've sown. Live with it, you greedy assholes.

  55. It's the business model... by fullback · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Who decided "bandwidth isn't free?" It doesn't cost anything more to talk all day long on a local call in the US. How about all that bandwidth? This is such nonsense. I live in the most expensive country in the world and have 100Mbps (up and down) fiber with no limits for less than US$70/month. It feels like dinner for two once a month because of the cost of living. The only difference is that US and European companies don't want to invest and try to suck every last penny from outdated technology. First, the argument was, "We can't *possibly* run fiber to your home! What are you, nuts? The country is too big!" How in the hell do you think everyone got a phone line or a sewer line? Then, it switched to, "Well, okay, but you only get 1Mbps down and 256k up because it's too expensive and that's all you need!" Yeah, right.... broadband, schmodbrand. "Well, well... It's unlimited! Really!" Liars. Huge friggin' pack of lying snakes. I love this argument that bandwidth "costs so much." A fabricated industry and business model from the telecoms with meters on the brain.

  56. A simple way around this by Limburgher · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Why couldn't bittorrent be modified to use HTTP for the downstream, or operate on HTTP entirely? IANABTH, but that would certainly get around any port-throttling issues.

    --

    You are not the customer.

    1. Re:A simple way around this by m50d · · Score: 1

      No reason at all. IIRC gnunet can already do this.

      --
      I am trolling
    2. Re:A simple way around this by mnmn · · Score: 1

      Thats not the issue. People are using higher ports everywhere with good results. The problem is with the ISP being the morality police, and limiting what was advertised to be unlimited (invisible caps). Theres always a way around their blockades, but we shouldnt have to.

      --
      "Give orange me give eat orange me eat orange give me eat orange give me you." -Nim Chimpsky
    3. Re:A simple way around this by zakezuke · · Score: 1

      > Why couldn't bittorrent be modified to use HTTP for the downstream, or operate on HTTP
      > entirely? IANABTH, but that would certainly get around any port-throttling issues.

      Because some ISPs filter inbound port 80... damn it.

      --
      There is no sanctuary. There is no sanctuary. SHUT UP! There is no shut up. There is no shut up.
  57. For people who have never been behind the scenes.. by yhetti · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I've managed two ISPs, one a Dialup/DSL and the other a WISP in the last two years, and I can assure the /. crowd that bandwidth throttling is nothing new, and you're probably all already subjected to it anyway.

    Pretty much any ISP that's ever had to face a legal problem has somewhere in their contract/TOS/AUP that the service is a "best effort", regardless of anything else you may have heard. It's kind of like the "NO WARANTEE WHATSOEVER" clause in the GPL; it's designed to keep ISPs from getting sued in the event that downtime causes a business to lose a contract or something similar.

    Pretty much every ISP that's smaller than 10k people keeps an "Abusive User" list. ISPs sell bandwidth based on average usage multiplied by their bandwidth an oversubscription rate. When somebody is some amount over the average (say, 2 STDDEVs), they got throw in the "Abusive User" pile. The way we handled it was to set Abusers entire traffic pipe as one priority above "bulk".

    Anything not classified as "Good" data (HTTP, SMTP, POP3/IMAP, etc) got assigned to "Bulk". Therefore, an Abusive's entire pipe had a lower priority then a normal sub's "Good" traffic.

    In this case, our "best effort" was to provide a better service to the vast number of people who do *not* download 10 gigs of newsgroups a day. If the Abusive actually canceled there account, that's *great*, because we were losing money on them anyway and could now pack 20-30 Normals into the bandwidth they were previously using.

    Also, if you check in your contract, most are worded so that the bandwidth cap is advertised as the "up to" speed. Basically, it means: "Due to how the Internet operates, we cannot garanutee you any maximum speed. We can, however, garantee you that it will never be over _______ Kbps, as that is the service you have purchased."

    So the moral of the story is: If you download 20 gigs a day, your ISP would probably rather you leave anyway, because they're losing money on you.

  58. Plusnet traffic shape by steve_l · · Score: 1
    If you have a plusnet consumer DSL contract it gets traffic shaped at peak (evening) periods. I have a plusnet business one and it isnt, but I'm still unhappy about the ISP because if they start doing shaping, they will look at the business customers eventually.

    What really annoys me is they have three levels of service, and their own VoIp traffic gets higher priority than competitors. That is an abuse of power.

    -steve

    1. Re:Plusnet traffic shape by matt_wilts · · Score: 1

      Plusnet's customers main gripe is the moving goalposts. They started off advertising "unlimeted broadband". Then they started to limit the amount of traffic you could download in a month. The next step was to limit the amount of P2P traffic you downloaded during "peak time" (which were never really defined properly to the users).

      Finally they included Usenet AND FTP usage in the P2P allowance. So, if you happened to download 15Gb a month duing peak times (4pm-12pm) you got limited to 4K/s for those protocols - meaning that you couldn't do things like, say, *upload* to your own website.

      Needless to say, I'm looking around for a new provider. Plusnet used to be the best "techie" provider but they've now become as vanilla as you can get, with nothing to differentiate them from any other ISP in the UK. I'm embarassed that I recommended them to friends.

      Matt

    2. Re:Plusnet traffic shape by steve_l · · Score: 1

      I dont disagree. I'm thinking of switching to cable. I do like the static IP addr and the ability to SSH in in to home, but otherwise, I find the fact that BT are part of the loop causes problems and finger pointing that nobody can deal with.

      My wife works from home and she has a different issue with plus.net. They do their system maintenance during the early mornings weekdays. So when things go wrong (like they did two weeks ago, when the raidus auth server went down), she can't do any work. That doesn't make her happy at all.

  59. Two Solutions to the 'problem' by Simonetta · · Score: 0

    There are really only two real-world solutions to this so-called bandwidth problem. One is to increase the bandwidth. There is much unused 'dark fiber' that was installed during the dot-com boom. It was installed for this very reason; which is to deliver high-definition entertainment and informational content to homes and businesses. High-definition being something that you can watch for several hours, not the formal television standard.
        But this is unlikely to happen because the dark fiber isn't owned by the ISPs, and, two, because the content creators have unreasonable expectations of the amount of money that they believe that they should receive from people viewing the product that they have created. The telecommunications conglomerates want the ISPs to go broke so that they can absorb the business. Hollywood is locked in a death spiral of creating $100,000,000 products for people who are increasing reluctant to pay more than a dollar to view each product. So don't expect anything (much) to happen on the corporate entertainment front. Except for endless press releases about how this and that BozoCom company is 'rising to the challenge of the information age' and all the other horseshit that you've come to know and love. Expect nothing more than mediocre entertainments loaded with expensive DRM from clueless Walter Yetnikoff-like bonehead entertainment execs.

        The other alternative is to get away from the atomistic PC and its webs and find others in the section of the city that you live in who are also downloading their entertainment. Then pool your downloads together into a community library. Get your content from this library instead of taking such a huge chunk of the web's bandwidth downloading the same individual content title. This is all so illegal but I don't give a fuck and I know that you really don't either. So let's be reasonable about it instead of slithering around in our rooms. Building a community has many benefits that range far beyond unchoking the bandwidth spectrum.

        There are many ways to do this, but no one in the IT community has any experience with either flesh-and-blood community development or the protection of illegal community digital libraries. But it can be done. Start by doing two things: talking about what you want, and just doing it. I recommend using DVD-ROMs because they hold 4.7 gigabytes of content for 25 cents. Others recommend using older 10-50 gigabyte hard disks loaded with content as a community library exchange medium. Do both. Or whatever works.

      Just do... something...besides sitting in your chair downloading.

    1. Re:Two Solutions to the 'problem' by NutscrapeSucks · · Score: 1

      I also question if this is a "problem". Look -- if the ISPs came and offered a 10mbps service for $80/month, how many people would take them up on it?

      Joe Websufer doesn't need anything faster than standard broadband, and even most P2Pers leech by on a standard connection -- you'd have to be pretty hardcore to pay big $ for a "business" SDSL connection, just so you can pirate stuff. It's counter-intuitive.

      Furthermore, no sane company is going to make a multi-billion dollar investment in something that really only has piracy applications. Not to mention the whole "wire coming into your house" is going to be obsolete at some point as wirelesss broadband services get rolled out.

      Which is why you have AT&T talking about establishing their own VOD services and so on. There's simply very little justification for opening the bandwidth floodgates otherwise.

      --
      Whenever I hear the word 'Innovation', I reach for my pistol.
    2. Re:Two Solutions to the 'problem' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Multi-terabyte software RAID 5 array. Write performance isn't great (faster than 100 Mbit in my experience though), but it's a whole lot of storage for the money since you don't need a controller and you can have the disks hooked up to heterogeneous hardware (such as a mixture of PATA and SATA (and firewire/usb on some platforms)).

    3. Re:Two Solutions to the 'problem' by Jonathan · · Score: 1

      The other alternative is to get away from the atomistic PC and its webs and find others in the section of the city that you live in who are also downloading their entertainment. Then pool your downloads together into a community library

      When I was a kid in the 8-bit days that's pretty much how pirating happened. Sure some people had modems and downloaded stuff from BBSes (at an amazing 300 baud or at most 1200 baud -- of course, most games were only a few hundred kilobytes back then), but in general, you found kids at school that had the same type of computer you had and traded stuff in person.

    4. Re:Two Solutions to the 'problem' by alienw · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Let's just clear something up. Wireless broadband is never going to happen on a large scale, and it will never give you significant bandwidth. There just isn't enough wireless spectrum out there to give everyone more than a megabit or so. If you think wireless poses any threat to cable or telephone companies, you are very wrong. The future will be fiber to the node and something like gigabit ethernet running to each customer. Of course, you won't get more than maybe 20 MBps for the internet service; the backbones aren't fat enough to support that. The bandwidth will be used by the provider for things like TV and other commercial stuff. There are lots of limitations as to how fast the internet can operate.

    5. Re:Two Solutions to the 'problem' by NutscrapeSucks · · Score: 1

      I disagree quite strongly. There's very little argument that general Internet users want more than "a megabit or two", and wireless access will be massively appealing to the consumer (50% laptop sales), rather than waiting for Google to put a few thousand 802.11 hotspots in your town.

      Just from a capitalist perspective, wireless has phenomononly lower infrastructure costs than Wireline. Look at the massive debt taken on by the Cable companies, and that's for something that everyone wants (television) -- what investor would replicate that when they can just throw up some cheap towers?

      I suspect you'll be waiting a long time for gigabit ethernet to come into your house, and, if it does, the high bandwidth will be tied to a closed service (like AT&T VOD) and you won't have more than "a megabit or two" available for general internet access/P2P.

      > If you think wireless poses any threat to cable or telephone companies, you are very wrong.

      AT&T/Cingular and Verizon are the phone compaines.

      --
      Whenever I hear the word 'Innovation', I reach for my pistol.
    6. Re:Two Solutions to the 'problem' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry to burst your bubble, but many places in Canada got wireless broadband a month or two ago. It's taken care of by the two biggest telcoms, Bell and Rogers.

    7. Re:Two Solutions to the 'problem' by Brushfireb · · Score: 1

      Your business logic is suprisingly poor and short-sighted. The reason that wires work from a business model is simply BECAUSE of the (expensive) cost. The reason that wireless WONT work as a business is simply BECAUSE of the (cheap) cost.

      Wireless is too cheap to put in, but very expensive to maintain. So it becomes commoditized very quickly, and prevents profits. This is why large scale wifi has not occured. Wi-Max may fix that, but it remains to be seen.

      Wires allow stability once implemented, and they are valuable becuase you can charge others to use them. Wires will always be faster, more reliable, and more versatile than wireless.

      The only way wireless will become a nationwide deal is through the cell carriers improvements or maybe google's world domination. Everyone else will just go from DSL/Cable, to Fiber, and rightly so.

      B

    8. Re:Two Solutions to the 'problem' by NutscrapeSucks · · Score: 1

      Your business logic is suprisingly poor and short-sighted.

      Aren't you a polite individual. Anyone who thinks they're getting Fibre-to-the-Curb RSN is the real short-sighted person here.

      The problem with your argument is that there's already a wireline infrastructure out there, so there's not a guarunteed return-on-investment for this sort of infrastructure. If there was, I suspect we would have seen these wonderful high-bandwidth lines being installed already.

      The only way wireless will become a nationwide deal is through the cell carriers improvements

      Exactly. When it comes down to it, AT&T/Verizon will invest their money into wireless services over wireline bandwidth. And if they won't, there's four other providers that might.

      --
      Whenever I hear the word 'Innovation', I reach for my pistol.
    9. Re:Two Solutions to the 'problem' by Brushfireb · · Score: 1

      I wasnt trying to be impolite, simply accurate. My apologies.

      However, I still disagree with your premise.

      And, as far as I can tell, so do the companies you speak about. Verizon is,and has been, and will continue to be, deploying the FIOS Fiber Network. It has announced plans to do this throughout the US. SBC (now AT&T) has decided to compete against verizon, and has been doing beta runs of the same thing.

      Why wires and not wireless? Simple. The speed is worth the extra cost. That speed in fiber allows them to push other stuff beyond internet, like movies, tv, telephone, video telephone, etc etc.

      These are things that wireless currently isnt capable of doing. Even 100mb wireless isnt capable of doing these things reliably. And cell carriers arent even close to having 100mb wireless deployed anywhere significant.

      So again, why would someone want to try to provide all those additional (and profit-making) services over wireless, which is unstable and ill-suited. Certainly, Wireless has its advantages, but in the busienss world, it has very limited real profit potential. All INTERNET only type of services move towards commoditization -- like Dialup.

      But hey -- Just remember this post in 5 years, and we find out who is right. Unless there is some badass improvement to the speed and stability of wireless, my bet is still on wires.

      B

    10. Re:Two Solutions to the 'problem' by NutscrapeSucks · · Score: 1

      I should note that I'm AT&T/SBC territory, where they've been "beta-testing" fibre since long before the first cable modems went in. Maybe Verizon is really going to do a real rollout. I kind of doubt it, but we'll see. At this point the applications of fibre are all highly speculative, while wireless "broadband" is a no-brainer market-wise and is already a hellava lot more available than Fibre is.

      --
      Whenever I hear the word 'Innovation', I reach for my pistol.
  60. This is nothing new. by jtownatpunk.net · · Score: 1

    It's been happening since consumer broadband hit the scene a decade ago (or has it been around longer?). "We can give you twice the speed of DSL!" "Oh...wait. We weren't expecting you to actually use all that bandwidth. Um...We're just gonna make a few adjustments. No need to bother you with the details. Oh, and stop running your personal web site and mail servers."

    When I signed up for a cablemodem, I was one of the first people in town. I called the cable company to request a hookup and was transferred to the director of engineering to set up the appointment. It was that new. So, while I had the head cheese on the line, I asked if I'd be able to run my own servers. "Well, we don't have a business service set up yet but you can get a static IP for an extra $10/month. Go for it." A few months later, they shut off my service for running servers. Just personal stuff like email for a few friends and a few of their websites. Very low-bandwidth stuff. Of course, they did it while I was on vacation and didn't bother to contact me first. Had to call tech support at 2am to find out why I couldn't get online.

    And now they're going after bandwidth "abuse". Nevermind the fact that they're shoving 4, 8, even 16 meg service plans down our throats with no option for just a simple 128/128k connection. Last place I lived, I had a 384/128 connection for $20/month. That was all I needed. Now the slowest I can get at the new place is 4000/384 at $45/month. I don't need all that speed and I certainly don't need the >100% rate increase but nothing else is any cheaper (don't have a phone so no DSL). Now they might punish me if I try to make use of this extra bandwidth I'm required to purchase. Screw that.

  61. Re:For people who have never been behind the scene by yhetti · · Score: 1

    Ugh, my GRAMMAH on that was HORRIBLE. Never write a post when you're in a hurry :(

  62. Inevitable-One for one, and all for one. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Ever heard of false advertising?"

    Only from those who don't read what's before them (something "/."'s famous for).

    "All you can eat" does not mean "all you can take home". "Unlimited use high-speed connection" DOES mean "unlimited use"

    So would that be "unlimitied bandwith" (your interpretation) or "unlimited time" (their interpretation)? This whole situation seems more like "here's the interpretation that benefits ME the most". Rather than the interpretation that benefits society the most.

    1. Re:Inevitable-One for one, and all for one. by DarkVader · · Score: 1

      Well, for those ISPs that say it, they typically advertise "unlimited internet" - and then follow that up with limits in the fine print - which they know nobody reads.

      The "unlimited" claim is a lie, and some CEOs need to spend some jail time over it.

    2. Re:Inevitable-One for one, and all for one. by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      and then follow that up with limits in the fine print - which they know nobody reads.

      While that sort of thing is certainly disingenuous, it's also so common as to be something that almost all companies do; people really, really ought to be reading the small print before signing up to things. They don't really have much of an excuse not to.

    3. Re:Inevitable-One for one, and all for one. by DarkVader · · Score: 1

      Actually, there are good reasons not to read the small print:

      *I have a reasonable expectation that the small print is substantially similar to the big print, only restated in legalese and in more detail. If this is not the case, the small print is legally invalid in many jurisdictions.

      *The small print is generally written in legalese, a language designed to obfuscate the meaning from the public. For a non-attorney to read and understand it would require an inordinate amount of time in many cases.

      *If you do take the time to read and understand the small print, you've most likely just obligated yourself to it. If you can reasonably argue in court that you had no idea what that small print actually said, but were given an explanation by a salesperson (best to have a tape of this, or a witness) you have a reasonably good chance of having the actual contract you signed be defined to be the salesperson's explanation and the large print.

      Now, I'm not saying if I do or don't actually read the small print - just that there ARE very valid reasons not to.

  63. not having bad analogy guy chiming in... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...is a lot like if the car companies stopped giving away free fishing poles with every new pickup-because of gwb and homeland security-it just doesn't smell right or leverage out of the box.

  64. You Pay For This and They Give You That by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Why don't they just put restrictions preventing you from using any bandwidth they sell you? It's just as justified as their P2P restriction.

    --

    --
    make install -not war

  65. Its just Politics! by Klanglor · · Score: 1

    ISP complaining about bandwith usage?
    c'mon! Its just PR with the music and movie industry :)
    Sorry to say it. but its just PR.
    Just look at the ISP ads wording.
    UNLIMITED BANDWITH, XXX MBPS/Sec... GOLD PACKAGE FOR ONLY XXX EXTRA...
    If people don't use bandwith, they won't be able to sell internet service at premium price.

    Or they are up-to a big scam, because they signup so many people for multi-year contract, they just want to prevent them from using what they paid for.

  66. Its just business sense by ShowMeTheMoney · · Score: 1

    Most people use their Internet connections to see the odd website, do their web banking, chat online and even download the odd ISO. And when they do, they want it to be fast.

    ISP's build their pricing models around this type of usage, and are able to provide affordable broadband with (usually) good performance. They make money by buying X amount of bandwidth and selling that same bandwidth many times over and over.

    If you are an intensive P2P user (read content of questionable ownership) you are going to break this model.

    In this case a number of things can happen:
    1) Service degrades: customers complain and move somewhere else
    2) ISPs need to buy more bandwidth to cater for a small number of bandwidth intensive users: prices need to go up for the rest of us in which case customers will move somewhere else
    3) ISPs put acceptable usage policies in place

    Looks to me that shapping is just enforcing 3) above. Its a free market and if you don't like it: 1) Move to other provider, while they are still in business or 2) Buy a premium (read 100x more expensive) service without restrictions. :-)

  67. Bullshit by GuyFawkes · · Score: 1

    I don't care who you work for, I have a 10 m/bit connection with telewest, no traffic shaping, no filtering, no contention, nothing in any way less than exactly what is advertised.

    Telewest / blueyonder have enough bandwith for hundreds of television channels, and as HDTV comes in they will have bandwidth for hundreds of those too.

    I can suck DVD ISO's off usenet all day and all night and nobody gives a shit.

    The difference is YOUR customers will eventually be joining me, or a company like the one I'm with, while your company folds, or gets a clue.

    BT is the nigger in the woodpile here, they artificially screw the pitch for all their resellers, such as the ISP you work for.

    --
    http://slashdot.org/~GuyFawkes/journal
    1. Re:Bullshit by CrackedButter · · Score: 1

      When the likes of NTL, Telewest actually get down with laying more cable we might join them, trouble is their UK coverage is pathetic and BT is in no hurry to do anything of the sort with what you are suggesting.

    2. Re:Bullshit by Rekolitus · · Score: 1

      I've been looking at BlueYonder myself. I particularly like the fact that they provide a Debian mirror.

  68. Umm...backlash? by denoir · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The major broadband provider in Sweden, Bredbandsbolaget is so upset with people downloading large amounts of data that they upgraded the standard 10 Mbit connection to 100 Mbit.

    The reason why they did this is of course not altruistic, but they have a number of online services like video rental that they wish to promote. 10 Mbit is acceptable for a standard divx compressed movie, but when you upgrade to DVD quality (as they have done), it's simply too slow. So the 100 Mbit upgrade was basically a necessity.

    And no, they are not complaining against the P2P traffic and have made no attempts at reducing it or blocking it.

    When you have a real fiber optics connection you not only expect, but demand to have unrestricted bandwith. Otherwise, what's the point of it?

  69. Shaw Canada, Encryption and Volume Limits by Ziggy114 · · Score: 1

    I'm with Canadian ISP Shaw Cable, and this whole packet shaping thing is definitely part of their gameplan. I can't really blame them, but what an underhanded way of regulating internet traffic. They already have an advertised limit on volume (60 gigs a month for my connection) and now they're going to slow it down and not tell me? Screw that. I'm a student living in a house with 5 other people sharing one connection, so needless to say we use a lot of bandwidth. As of late we've been called my Shaw, but not because of the bandwidth we use - rather, how much volume we downloaded. We doubled the limit. Twice. So, we moved our bittorrent activities to early in the morning and started watching how much was downloaded. Problem solved, no more phonecalls. All this using a wicked app called uTorrent, and packet encryption. This is how we discovered Shaw's use of shaping, as prior to using encryption nothing would go over 100KB/sec. Now, we get speeds sometimes over 300KB/sec or better. If all they're going to complain about is volume, I'm going to continue to get the most out of the advertised bandwidth. I've got the common courtesy to keep my torrent downloads to off-peak hours, I'm not waiting any longer than I have to for something to download.

  70. Plusnet (UK ISP) block NNTP too by matt_wilts · · Score: 1

    My current ISP blocks NNTP too. Not only did they limit it to 4K from their own servers, they checked your traffic and if you were downloading using NNTP over HTTP (for example, from Easynews) then they limited that too.

  71. P2P proxying by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I once read something about p2p proxying. The ISP sets up a box with
    a huge diskarray and lets its customers download 'shared' files from
    this P2P proxy over its own local network...

    Is this being used by ISP's? After all, every body would be happy, both
    the customer and the ISP. Apart from some content providers, but well ...

  72. Legitimate use by crossmr · · Score: 3, Insightful

    1)Bittorrent has legitimate use. It is often used for linux distros, and many places are using it for demos of software and nasa even uses it to give access to large images. Try explaining the throttling to customers using it for "legitimate" reasons.
    Customer: Why is my download so slow?
    ISP: Well sir, we detected that you're using bittorrent, that must mean you're downloading pirated software or movies.
    C: I'm an academic and I'm downloading some images from nasa I need for a class tommorrow.
    I: uh..uhm.. have you tried turning it off and on?

    2) I'll repeat the false advertising. Nowhere in the advertisements does it say "Unlimited HTTP traffic at super high speeds!". In fact nowhere in the advertisements I've seen does it give any indication that a certain type of traffic is welcome.

    3) Pick one: Usage cap, throttling. Enforce it. Make it very clear in your terms what the usage cap is, what the penalty for going over it is. Offer tiered usage plans, don't just sodomize them with something stupid like $10/GB after 20 GB limit. I have a 90 GB limit I believe, I usually top out around 36 GB a month. I haven't experienced any throttling to my knowledge. I do notice that legit linux distros go WAY faster that less than reputable torrent sites. I don't think that has anything to do with my ISP though.

    4) Prepare for the backlash. If you choose to throttle, those users you so aggressively marketed to will be pissed off. If you don't spell out any limits on use very clearly, its going to bite you in the ass. If you want to advertise something you can't provide, don't sell the product.

  73. Re:For people who have never been behind the scene by cervo · · Score: 1

    Perhaps, but if you advertise a full 10 gig a month with no limits and then there is a limit put in, I'm sure an attorney general would love to go after you for fraud. If the model is not sustainable, stuff like that should be told up front. Just a "best effort" disclaimer is not good enough if you are advertising unlimited content. Also putting al traffic at BULK or just above bulk is ridiculous. However advertising a policy where all p2p traffic is made bulk for good or bad users is not ridiculous. As long as the policy is advertised I see no problems. But to do this without telling the consumer and advertising unlimited connections is fraud. And if any of these ISPs are in New York and the attorney general there is made to understand the issues, he will not hesitate to sue. He sued H&R block for selling misleading retirement accounts, where the terms were in the small print but the customer representatives and avertising misrepresented. I'm sure there would be a field day with the ISPs. Go Elliot Spitzer!!!!!

  74. Costa Rica / Hungary by dindi · · Score: 1

    When I lived in Hungary, my ISP had a policy, that over a certain amount of traffic, your account got limited till the end of the month ... I seem to remember 4 gigs, but that was a long time ago

    In Costa Rica there does not seem to be a limit like this, but then again it seems that that part of the town is pretty empty DSL-wise as it is a new service in the area.

  75. Whining by dereference · · Score: 1
    I really don't mean to pick on you in particular, but this is as good a place as any to respond. I've got nothing to do with any ISP, but I do pay a load of money to one to ensure I have the dedicated bandwidth I need. It shocks me to hear how much the collective crowd here seems to think it's downright wrong not to get something for nothing (perhaps it's the free-as-in-beer mentality part of FOSS).

    Lowering user speeds based on usage is clearly unfair, if not illegal.

    What in the world could possibly be illeagal? At best this is the free market economy at work. It's not false advertising; take a look at the fine print, the terms of service, and/or acceptable usage policies. I can assure you they've bothered to disclose this behavior.

    Someone who knows how the regulatory system works should pursue a complaint with the FCC when they encounter the bandwidth throttling on a specific application. This would bring light to the unscrupulous practice.

    Most likely it would be the FTC, not the FCC, since this seems to be an issue more with your naive belief in the glitzy advertising without bothering to read the remainder of the offer.

    Did you ever stop to consider how redidential broadband can possibly be so inexpensive? Have you ever tried to purchase bulk amounts of bandwidth directly from a Tier 1 provider, or even provisioning a T1 line to an arbitrary location? This stuff is not cheap, even in bulk, forgetting any other expenses that go into providing the service.

    Basically, the ISP is a consolidator; their entire business is based on buying bandwidth in bulk, and overselling. Wake up to this reality and things will become much more clear. Sure it would be great to pay $30/month and get 5Mbps dedicated symmetrical bandwidth, but that's just not going to happen.

    Of course there are ISPs who push the limits of advertising and treat customers with zero respect. But the whole residential broadband industry is based on usage statistics. Think of it much like insurance companies and their actuarial tables. It's always unfair, as some portion of customers who pay more, and get less (or nothing) than those who pay the same amount and get significantly more.

    You might not like that thought, but you need to get it out of your head that you're in the correct marketplace at all. If you need full-time dedicated bandwidth, you need to investigate "business-class" service, not residential (and you need to be prepared to put your money where your bit requirements are; it's nowhere near as inexpensive).

    1. Re:Whining by matthewcraig · · Score: 1

      Don't read this as me whining about losing bandwidth. I've moved since then, anyway. What I wanted to convey is this: The trouble with bandwidth shaping or bandwidth limiting is users having no idea it happens. Even if the ISP tells you in the fine-print contract about bandwidth shaping in general, you'll never know whether it is causing your application failure. Instead, high-speed applications will simply not be adopted because the ISP cannot provide the quality of service required. Users will be reluctant to adopt other high-speed applications, as well.

      Telecommunications is a regulated market. The telephone companies especially are expected to be up-front about their service and billing. This bandwidth shaping (or "denial of service", let's call it what it really is) would not be allowed if it was a more well known technology like telephone calls, television, or electricity. I say, get the FCC involved and let them decide whether this is illegal or just unfair.

    2. Re:Whining by dereference · · Score: 1
      The trouble with bandwidth shaping or bandwidth limiting is users having no idea it happens.

      That's exactly right, and I agree they should disclose what they're doing, so that we can allow market forces to correct this.

      Even if the ISP tells you in the fine-print contract about bandwidth shaping in general, you'll never know whether it is causing your application failure. Instead, high-speed applications will simply not be adopted because the ISP cannot provide the quality of service required. Users will be reluctant to adopt other high-speed applications, as well.

      Well, I agree with you there; this is a very likely long-term result. However, because it's in the fine print, you'll probably never succeed in getting the FCC or FTC to help. Currently, all telecommunications tariffs are required to be made publicly accessible; I'll dare you to find the plain-language rate structure of your local carrier, as filed with the FCC, and make any sense of it. If you think fine print in a DSL agreement is bad, you really should take a few minutes to see what you're up against.

      Telecommunications is a regulated market. The telephone companies especially are expected to be up-front about their service and billing. This bandwidth shaping (or "denial of service", let's call it what it really is) would not be allowed if it was a more well known technology like telephone calls, television, or electricity. I say, get the FCC involved and let them decide whether this is illegal or just unfair.

      Yes it is. But once we stop thinking of IP bandwidth at home being the same as a dialtone, I think we'll all be happier. I think the last thing we need right now is more government intervention and/or regulation. Contact any DSL provider and ask about getting a T1 to your home. They'll certainly do it, and it should come as no surprise that it costs roughly 10-20 times what their standard (but often faster) residential DSL lines cost. They are, however, unlimited in every sense. No bandwidth caps, no port/protocol blocking, no disallowed server hosting; you can use this full throttle 24/7 for any purposes you want, and you can get guaranteed (non-oversold) bandwidth.

      In fact, these T1 prices are extremely well regulated. So well, in fact, that their price hasn't come down substantially in at least decade. Now, you propose to get the government involved in the residential game as well, and I suggest that you're unknowingly asking for significantly higher prices and significantly lower customer service (as if it's not already as bad as it could be).

      Residential IP bandwidth service is not guaranteed the same as your dialtone. Consider for a moment that IP is fundamentally a "best effort" delivery service in the first place. Whether the ISPs happen to be selective about the kind of packets they drop is totally market driven, no matter how much we wish it was "fair" (or even better "unlimited" as they claim). But you can't have it both ways; you can't have cheap and unlimited bandwidth, and the reason is the very regulation of the telecommunication industry you mentioned. Eventually, upstream, you're going to need to pay for the bandwidth you use, and you're going to pay a lot.

  76. well by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    over here (Portugal), traffic shapping has been running for about 2 years
    and what's really fucked is the fact that all the isps are doing it, so there's really no choice if you wanna change
    oh, and all of them have bandwith limits too, so when you're over the limit, you start paying for the MB

    i would say you guys are lucky for feeling this only now :p

  77. Don't they already throttle speeds? by ShyGuy91284 · · Score: 1

    I don't know about eveyrone else, but my upload is 56 kbyte/sec max, and that seems pretty throttled compared to my download.

    --
    In undeveloped countries, the consumer controls the market. In capitalist America, the market controls you.
  78. God Bless Fiber Optic by KU_Fletch · · Score: 1

    I'm willing to put down the $50 a month for my new fiber optic line. I'm allowed 500GB of total down traffic a month. I guess Verizon assumes that if you're buying a fios setup, you're not doing it just to e-mail pictures to grandma.

    --
    It's not stupid. It's advanced.
  79. What happens if you only have one ISP? by antdude · · Score: 1

    For my city, I only can get cable modem service because DSL and FiOS are not available. I can get IDSL and satellite Internet services, but they are super slow and expensive (e.g., IDSL = $100+ per month).

    I would love to get more options, but I don't. I live in a city too!

    --
    Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
  80. optional certification for spelling out use limits by chocolatetrumpet · · Score: 1

    How about we develop an optional certification that ISPs can conform to?

    It would basically confirm that they spell out their traffic shaping/throttling policies.

    Who's in?

    --
    Spoon not. Fork, or fork not. There is no spoon.
  81. Bill on the 95th? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why don't they give us all the maximum connection possible, and bill us on our 95th percentile usage?

  82. Where do we see this going... by heinz1218 · · Score: 1

    Are the ISPs really all going to try and limit bandwidth? As was aforementioned, when we sign up for broadband it's "unlimited."

    True it's a common practice to oversell in certain markets, but banks, for example, have certain safeguards against this - i.e. they have to keep a certain amoutn of cash on hand at all times. Perhaps we need this for bandwidth and/or hosting?

    I think ISPs would be smart to establish no legal liablility for what users are downloading, then they might not care so much about torrents, etc. (or maybe they already have this, and bandwidth is the issue for them). Anyone know what Verizon's plan with their FioS service is?

    On a more unrelated note: I'm not too familiar with newsgroups, but is it possible for ISPs to block those as well? It's my understanding they use the same protocols as web pages, but i find it hard to believe that they're "unblockable."

    1. Re:Where do we see this going... by tres3 · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately banks are no longer required to keep any meaningful amount of reserves. :( An excellent essay explaining how this is going to become a problem very soon can be found here: http://www.kitco.com/ind/Daughty/apr122006.html

  83. They created the need for Bittorrent by YGingras · · Score: 1

    Ever heard of false advertising?

    Exactly. In the first place if their service didn't suck we wouldn't have to use Bittorrent. They offer me some web space so I can share and the offer me upload so I can share but those are so ridiculously crippled that I have to ask other to help me with their bandwidth if I want to share anything larger that a few kilobytes.

    I made some fractal animations and I use bittorrent to share them because thats the only way I can push something that big. I provide the movies for free, people who like them pay me by leaving their torrent client on. What is the net if people who have something interesting to share have to shut up because they cost too much?

  84. Unreasonable Attitude by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Now I don't have a problem with hard caps being in place as my ISP uses them but I certainly signed up for Unlimited usage as that's how it was marketed. Personally should my ISP begin limiting my total bandwidth, I will personally sue them for false advertising as my decision to purchase their service was based upon the maximum available bandwidth and the fact that it was unlimited and anything that changes it would be in violation of the advertised service level at time of sign up.

  85. small print by jheath314 · · Score: 1

    If they want to change the rules of the game, they should put them on paper.

    I'd be very surprised if they didn't. Here in Canada, they put all kinds of conditions and limits in your contract; they don't advertise those limits very loudly, but they're there, for any who care to read them.

    "The large print giveth, the small print taketh away."

    --
    Procrastination Man strikes again!
  86. Return of metered useage by nurb432 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Now that they have everyone used to using the net, it it time to clamp back down to where you only get so many bytes a month, or so many hours.

    Remember when this was the norm, and few people really cared about the 'internet' ? un-metered usage is what caused/allowed things to take off. going back to it will hurt a lot of business that exist only because of the network.

    This reminds me a a drug dealer. Cheap[ drugs until you get hooked.

    Cell phones are next, now that all your teenagers are used to those 'free in-plan calling' things

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  87. Not a good idea by typical · · Score: 2, Informative

    That's a really bad idea.

    BitTorrent actually uses ToS flags specifically to make it easier to prioritize bandwidth and differentiate it from interactive (ssh, Quake) or semi-interactive traffic (www). Same as mldonkey.

    The reason why? Your ISP is not stupid. They can limit available bandwidth specifically to you, and they will happily do so. They don't need to (nor would they want to, for the reason you mentioned, among other things) limit it based only on port and ignore the user. Otherwise, yes, everyone would tunnel their traffic through the port that got "highest priority".

    If you *do* manage to make your web traffic and BitTorrent traffic indistinguishable, then your ISP is just going to deprioritize both.

    What your ISP (or the NAT/router box that you run at the edge of your network) *can* do is to prioritize your own bandwidth based on the urgency with which any packet needs to get somewhere. You want to be able to run BitTorrent and Quake 4 simultaneously, but BitTorrent eats up all your available bandwidth, so you can't play Quake 4 with a P2P client running. If you provide enough information to be able to figure out which of the two should take precedence over the other, then you can run P2P without impacting your other network usage. Much more intelligent.

    Read this for a more detailed description of what I'm talking about.

    The point is, what you're trying to do is make your usage indistinguishable from that of other users. You can't do that, at least from the standpoint of your local ISP, because your local ISP *knows* where the traffic is going. What your approach here will do is make your different applications indistingushable from each other -- but then you are just throwing away information that can keep multiple applications running well together. Granted, maybe an ISP won't take advantage of it -- "He wants us to prioritize these packets of his above these other ones of his? Hell, we don't care!" -- but it isn't going to improve things relative to other users.

    --
    Any program relying on (nontrivial) preemptive multithreading will be buggy.
    1. Re:Not a good idea by evilviper · · Score: 1
      They can limit available bandwidth specifically to you, and they will happily do so.

      Not without a lawsuit they won't.

      You want to be able to run BitTorrent and Quake 4 simultaneously, but BitTorrent eats up all your available bandwidth, so you can't play Quake 4 with a P2P client running.

      It's fairly easy to configure traffic-shaping (to slow bittorrent) on your own firewall/router, and still mascarade as port 80 HTTP in public.

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    2. Re:Not a good idea by Whoozit · · Score: 1

      What your ISP (or the NAT/router box that you run at the edge of your network) *can* do is to prioritize your own bandwidth based on the urgency with which any packet needs to get somewhere.

      I agree this is what the ISP should do. I'm in Canada using Rogers -- and the problem is they deprioritized BitTorrent (and only BitTorrent) so that the uplod speed was about 0.1 k/sec. Which basically makes the entire protocol useless, and makes the traffic shaping a frustration, instead of a boon, to users.

      I want to play fair. I want my p2p traffic to have lower priority than my own (or my neighbour's) VOIP, web surfing, etc.

      But I paid for a high-bandwidth pipe so I could use BitTorrent; I will accept a lower speed at peak times, but not their model which kills the speed ALL the time, whether the network is congested or not. And only for that one specific application - eMule, UseNet, FTP, HTTP, all work at full speeds.

      Needless to say, I was fed up, switching ISPs is not an option, so I'm using uTorrent with packet encryption and everything runs well.

      But the goal of QoS is defeated - my roommates and I now have to individually throttle our bittorrent clients instead of letting my router handle the QoS. The ISP can't adequately tell encrypted traffic from p2p traffic and general quality suffers. All because of an over-agressive filter.

  88. Switch to whom? by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    See, that is the problem of letting monopolies exist in the data 'market'.

    Around here we have 2 choices. One is cable, and you cant choose your company. 2nd is our phone co, and we only have one that isn't cost prohibitive.

    And don't tel me to goto satellite, that is slower and more $ then what will come out of this latest 'screw the consumer' kick.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    1. Re:Switch to whom? by mattkinabrewmindspri · · Score: 1
      Agreed. If competition wasn't prohibited by the government(s), then the price for increased speeds would be likely to fall.

      By being the only game in town, the cable companies and the phone companies have been able to charge excessive amounts for a long time. While people say "those companies had to pay for the infrastructure," the fact that they were monopolies and were able to keep prices artificially high paid for a lot of that infrastructure.

      If there's any doubt that the monopolies are making money hand over fist, then every six months when I call Comcast to cancel and move to Qwest, why does Comcast offer me service at half-price?

      Is it because they're just barely scraping by with the $60/month they get from me for internet and television service I don't use?

      If competition were allowed, then prices would have fallen significantly, and paying for the bandwidth you actually use would be a much fairer proposition for the customer. But the monopoly service providers want to both have monopoly prices and charge per bandwidth used.

    2. Re:Switch to whom? by arminw · · Score: 1

      ....See, that is the problem of letting monopolies exist in the data 'market'......

      How is this any different from your electric or gas company? If you normal household electric line is insufficient to run that 500 kilowatt super pottery kiln, you can pay the company to set you up the proper line, complete with meter and pay for the amount of electricity you use. On the other hand, if you want to run your 10Kw kiln 24/7, you may do this, but you're still metered and billed at the end of the month. Why should you expect anything different for data? Maybe ISP's should just count packets and charge a certain amount per packet, plus a small fixed 'metering" fee, based on the average needs of all their users.

      --
      All theory is gray
  89. Ideal Compromise? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OK, Ideal Compromise is an oxymoron.

    I'll grant that ISPs only buy some % of the total b/w they sell to users. I'd also like that my bursty web browsing, e-mail reading, VoIP not get bogged down unecessarily by other people using b/w flat out, regardless of the cause. So I'd like to propose some ideas.

    First, ISPs put everything up front. Probably stop using the word "unlimited" at all, unless it truely is unlimited within your infrastructure. What ever shaping, capping, etc. should be spelled out. Perhaps a grandma friendly summary in the main ToS/AUP, but with details on a direct link from those.

    Forget about ports. You have to leave some ports open, and users will eventually exploit those anyway. Do it strictly on bandwidth being used for all purposes over some period. I'll make an exception for outbound port 25, for obvious reasons. I think it should blocked by default, but available under monitored conditions, perhaps with an addtional fee structure (but that's a whole other discussion).

    Degrade the service gracefully. I don't want to be cut off for the rest of the next billing cycle if I happen to torrent one ISO. Please allow me some occasional periods at full tilt. Degrade me some if I keep going, then more if I keep hogging, but keep it to where I can still do some "normal" traffic as soon as I stop hogging. Make sure the throttle eases as my usage becomes normal. Perhaps my "historic" (monthly, weekly?) usage pattern controlls how fast I get knocked back and how slowly I get eased.

    I'd prefer weighted queues on the ISP to NSP connection(s) as the method of "throttling". Let any b/w not actually being used by normals, be use by hogs. It doesn't cut anybody off. It uncourages doing hogging off peak.

    Don't gouge. I'm against b/w thresholds that increase monthly costs to the customer. Now I can see charging a premium to give faster "recovery" from throttling and/or a longer grace period before each reduction. I can also see a cap free service at a higher premium. While on the topic, if the ISP's model is "fines" for b/w excess, then they should not exceed the monthly costs of any available service levels that would permit that level of b/w.

    A roll over of a few months "bandwidth" or "good behavior" credit should also be considered. If you've been a normal user for say 3 months, you don't get degraded as quickly as those who download the entire Internet daily.

    Give the customers tools to monitor their current status and historical usage.

  90. Comcast NNTP stupidity by typical · · Score: 1

    I thoroughly agree. Granted, Comcast probably doesn't bother to set up an NNTP server near everyone they service. However, NNTP *does*, at least in theory, provide a feasible way to drastically reduce the bandwidth that an ISP uses. It's not cheap to run a full NNTP feed, but it has to be a lot better than pulling down the same amount of data many times over.

    Another alternative -- there doesn't seem to be any reason that you couldn't have just a "master" NNTP server with a bunch of "slave" NNTP servers that only synchronize headers (or even just overview information). Bodies would go from the master to the slave server only when a user requests an article from the slave server, then remain on the slave server until it expires.

    That way, the ISP has one master server, a number of slave servers, and it seems like they can only win on bandwidth usage, by caching articles near a user that uses them.

    HTTP caching proxies, which are comparable in approach seem to be popular. Maybe not enough people use NNTP to make this worthwhile, but it seems like the risk of doing something like this is pretty low.

    --
    Any program relying on (nontrivial) preemptive multithreading will be buggy.
  91. packets per second limit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I use the greek ISP Otenet, but users of all ISPs using OTE (the telecom company which is basically a monopoly) DSLAMs face the same problem. Most of the time my connection is limited to 30-45 packets per second. That basically means no VoIP and really slow P2P downloading... Not to mention i cannot surf the web while a P2P client is running. A clever way to protect a monopoly (making VoIP impossible there is only one telephony network) and at the same time stop P2P services, don't you think? No ports blocked, we have invented a better way.

  92. Re:FUCK THE ISPS by SECProto · · Score: 0

    notice: parent is not off topic. Flame? maybe. troll? maybe. offtopic? not at all. And on to my on topic comments. Who are they ISPs to decide what we use their services for you might ask? Well, I say, they are the ones with the lines and the access, they can do what they want. They may not be offering their services as provided however - so you may have a lawsuit against them (or maybe it would be called something other than a lawsuit, dont bug me about proper terminology). Most ISPs however, probably have a clause in their contract saying "our services are subject to change at any time without warning." However, if you stop using their services and move to an ISP with better terms, they might notice the loss of business (if a lot do it) and decide to change back. In any case, staying with them is not the way to accomplish anything. Without P2P what use is the internet? so you can talk to people, send email,s read wikipedia. Download wikipedia and start using a phone, and the ISPs can bugger off. So maybe we should get some open source wires?

  93. ISPs should be smart about bandwidth shaping by typical · · Score: 1

    Engineers at ISPs really, really need to do per-user traffic shaping *before* trying to do application-specific shaping.

    You do sort of do this, but this is a very brute-force way to do it, since there are only two classes -- "Abusive" and "Not Abusive", and it sounds like Abusives lose application-specific prioritization on your network.

    The ideal would be to use something like this.

    Granted, your approach is worthwhile if the sole goal is to encourage Abusives to leave...

    --
    Any program relying on (nontrivial) preemptive multithreading will be buggy.
    1. Re:ISPs should be smart about bandwidth shaping by yhetti · · Score: 1

      Mine was a very generalized guideline as not to water down a political discussion with tech. In reality, we did a lot of per-user shaping, but it's of limited use. Assume you have a 10Mbit link @ 1,500 a month. If you're selling DSL @ 29.95 a month, you break even on the 50th subscriber. But if each DSL sold at 768k download, the industry standard when we were doing DSL, 14 users at max download speed saturate the entire link. You can't hard-throttle somebody at lower than what they paid for, that really *is* straight-out fraud. But you can use priority tables in such a way that P2P has many times less chance of getting through a network than a ping.

  94. speaking as an ISP... by scronline · · Score: 1

    We don't throttle our bandwidth, however I can understand why some are doing it. Broadband is NOT a dedicated product. Using rough figures as an example...When someone buys 6meg DSL for $99/mth it will cost the ISP $450/mth to supply the 6meg to that DSL when needed. So for prices to be lowered overbooking is done. You know, like with dialup? Are we all forgetting that? To bring prices down for the residential customer a certain amount of overbooking HAS to be done. When you have someone that's using that 6meg 24/7/365 they are costing the ISP $360/mth in a manner of speaking. They have to make it up somewhere. And that's not including the cost of the circuit to the customer...only the bandwidth. You can't exactly expect a company who's responsible to stock holders to allow customers to literally cost the company money to run completely uncontrolled.

    And of course, the cheaper you get, the more overbooking there is. This is what I don't understand. Why are people complaining about their level of service they get from their "cheap" ISP when they know full well the kinds of things those ISPs will do? It's the same ol' same old. You get what you pay for. You can't expect to get Ferrari speed and performance out of a Geo Metro.

    It goes for the level of support too. Look at what the telcos have all done. You need support, you're going to talk to someone in India. I constantly hear people talking about "My DSL is always going down and I have to talk to people in India I can barely understand" but then they turn around and "oh, you're DSL is $16.95/mth that's just too expensive". $4 more a month and your DSL will always work and you get support from someone who actually speaks english as a first language....wow. I don't understand people. There's a difference between value and savings.

    1. Re:speaking as an ISP... by Sigma+7 · · Score: 1
      When someone buys 6meg DSL for $99/mth it will cost the ISP $450/mth to supply the 6meg to that DSL when needed. So for prices to be lowered overbooking is done. You know, like with dialup? Are we all forgetting that? To bring prices down for the residential customer a certain amount of overbooking HAS to be done.


      Overbooking not the issue. The issue is with ISPs that advertise unlimited but then charge for excessive bandwidth usage. Either it is unlimited or it is not - if it isn't unlimited, then do not advertise it as such.

      If an "All-you-can-eat" restaurant can't handle Homer Simpson, then they should increase their prices to compensate or not provide an "All-you-can-eat" option. This is plain and simple, and applies to ISPs as well.

      As for overbooking, my dial-up ISP fixed the problem by having two peak hours per day, with extensions during non-busy periods, followed by annual renewal requests. This worked perfectly - as the heavy users that did not like the policy were free to choose any other ISP in the area (which actually bill for services rather than ask for donations.)
    2. Re:speaking as an ISP... by scronline · · Score: 1

      I don't disagree with you on the advertising it as unlimited, but falling back on the corperate america B.S. you have to remember it's marketing speak. Look at Netflix. Unlimited rentals...yadda yadda. But when you look at their AUP it says (now after they got caught anyway) that they may "throttle heavier users". It's everywhere. Unlimited doesn't necessarily mean unlimited in marketing world to think otherwise is not taking into consideration corperate (and sometimes human) nature to mislead others for personal gain. I agree with you whole heartedly that they shouldn't be able to SAY unlimited if there's even 1 limit on the service (including blocking ports), but that's just not the country we live in. That's an issue to take up with you elected representitives.

      As far as dialup, I think you've completely missed the point. First, instead of adding new lines (which would have cost more) they outsourced. That's still a form of overbooking. In other words, they are selling services they can't support so they turn elsewhere to make sure that service can still be provided. Dialup is also not a dedicated service yet back in the day MANY people tried to use it as such.

      Point still remains that DSL and Cable (for the most part) is not a dedicated service and is intended for considerably lighter use than a dedicated product such as T1s, T3s, DS and OC circuits.

      Let's also not forget one painfully simple fact. We live in a free market society and there are plenty of other alternatives. Unhappy? Go somewhere else. Don't reward a company for behavior you don't like with your continued business. If doing something doesn't hurt them financially, they'll continue to do it. It's that simple. Complaining about something rarely works in the best of circumstances and that's not talking about companies that have already proven that they don't give a rat's bum about anything other than their own profits and has a monopoly.

    3. Re:speaking as an ISP... by Todd+Knarr · · Score: 1

      Actually the all-you-can-eat places do limit the Homer Simpsons and still call it all-you-can-eat. They simply say "all you can eat" means all you personally can eat while you're there. You don't get to take it home with you and eat it later. You don't get to split your meal with your friends. And you don't get to leave and come back the next day and pick up where you left off without paying again.

    4. Re:speaking as an ISP... by Sigma+7 · · Score: 1
      Actually the all-you-can-eat places do limit the Homer Simpsons and still call it all-you-can-eat. They simply say "all you can eat" means all you personally can eat while you're there.


      Yes, and the Homer Simpsons eat the entire stock in one sitting without problem and still be hungry enough to look for other restaurants, and go fishing afterwards - in the same way that Homer Simpsons aren't even close to being tormented when force-fed every single donught in the whole world.

  95. unlimted != dedicated by SQLz · · Score: 1

    Educate people on what "dedicated" is and charge them more.

  96. Oh yes the power companies will! by gripen40k · · Score: 1

    Just try hooking up a high voltage/high power experimental tesla coil in your basement, within a month I guarentee you they will figure out that your house is the one using 3x the amount of power it's supposed to. Not only that, but depending on what provider you have, they will even phone you asking what you are doing! Trust me, it's not that different...

    --
    Har?
  97. How will BT affect free city WiFi? by justthinkit · · Score: 1

    The free wifi for all movement could be for not if BT crushes it. Are there plans to deal with BT on free wifi networks? My mother-in-law could be affected and that would be, well, ok either way I guess.

    --
    I come here for the love
  98. Complaining about ISP advertising by typical · · Score: 1

    Bittorrent has legitimate use. It is often used for linux distros, and many places are using it for demos of software and nasa even uses it to give access to large images. Try explaining the throttling to customers using it for "legitimate" reasons.
    Customer: Why is my download so slow?
    ISP: Well sir, we detected that you're using bittorrent, that must mean you're downloading pirated software or movies.
    C: I'm an academic and I'm downloading some images from nasa I need for a class tommorrow.
    I: uh..uhm.. have you tried turning it off and on?


    Your ISP doesn't give a damn whether you're downloading a free copy of emacs over and over, pirated cell phone games, kiddie porn, simultaneous Internet radio feeds, or whatever. (Unless your ISP happens to be your university, in which case "but it's for research" does buy you some slack.) They just care about the fact that you're sucking down enough bandwidth that they are going to be paying more for your bandwidth than you are to them.

    Frankly, the whole argument has been done to death:

    There is absolutely zero, none, zilch, nada way that ISPs are going to be happy giving people bandwidth below cost. People that expect this are kind of jerks. They know that the ISP is going to lose money. It's like walking into a store with an obviously incorrect coupon and demanding that the store honor it.

    I agree that ISPs should correct their advertisements -- they are indeed misleading. But people need to realize that, while they may get ISPs to do this, they aren't going to get below-cost bandwidth out of ISPs by griping about the advertisements. You will not get true unlimited usage without ISPs working on a way to take it away unless you are actually paying for your bandwidth.

    Also, at one point, the ISP had quite a bit of lock-in ability due to the fact that you become attached to your email address. However, these days, I don't think I know anyone that uses their ISP's email services. I use an inexpensive commercial provider (mailsnare.net, which I wholeheartedly recommend, for $20/year -- they provide a spam filtering system that is almost identical to what I set up on my own computer), and most of the people I know use free third-party webmail. Even given that your ISP "tricked" you into signing up, they don't gain much. If there's a legitimate alternative, you can switch. If there isn't, you didn't lose anything. So I don't have a lot of sympathy for people that complain about false advertising, because my take is that they're looking for some reason why they can claim that they should actually get subsidized bandwidth.

    The fix is to figure out more efficient ways to use the network. For example, I really wish (and have *no* idea why they don't do this) that ISPs would provide higher speed access within their network. I should be able to send a file to my buddy Bob, a block over, who also uses Comcast, with greatly relaxed upload/download restrictions. This encourages people to keep their network traffic off the Internet (and thus reduces the ISP's costs) and encourages people to join networks that their friends are on. Think of something like how cell providers do free in-network calling to get more and more people to join the network.

    --
    Any program relying on (nontrivial) preemptive multithreading will be buggy.
    1. Re:Complaining about ISP advertising by crossmr · · Score: 1

      The whole thing rests on the advertising. Until ISPs change it, we can expect whatever they promised us, regardless of whether or not its realistic. Thats what they sold us and if they don't provide it, we have every right to complain.

    2. Re:Complaining about ISP advertising by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

      I'd like to point out that my local ISP (Cogeco, Ontario, Canada) actually runs a local Linux FTP mirror for use only by customers. Its quite nice getting my yum updates at 800KB/s or more.

      I still use BitTorrent for other things, but they've made better use of their incoming and outgoing bandwidth by providing this mirror themselves directly to customers.

      Now if only they advertised such things :-)

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
  99. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2, Funny

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  100. OR... by deesine · · Score: 0, Offtopic
    Discussing a topic on Slashdot without someone making a sideways political attack is like a global warming alarmist watching an SUV drive by and them not getting upset.

    Hmm. That was kinda political, wasn't it?

    --
    damaged by dogma
    1. Re:OR... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Discussing a topic on Slashdot without someone making a sideways political attack is like a global warming alarmist watching an SUV drive by and them not getting upset.
      Hmm. That was kinda political, wasn't it?

      Yes, being concerned about whether or not the earth will be able to sustain life in the future is highly political.

      Oh, and you are an utter republican (sorry to insult you so deeply by using that synonym for moron).

    2. Re:OR... by deesine · · Score: 1

      A democrat AND a coward. Why am I not suprised.

      --
      damaged by dogma
    3. Re:OR... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, being concerned about whether or not the earth will be able to sustain life in the future is highly political.

      Yes, and instead of finding alternate fuels, let's run the farmer out, deny him water, bring in illegal immigrants to keep wages low and build a tram that cost Billions of dollars, if for no other purpose than "it'll look good and attract people" (get that Easement Department on the phone, now!)

      Oh, and you are an utter democrat (sorry to insult you so deeply by using that synonym for dependent).

  101. Some French ISP are shaping traffic covertly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Posting as an AC for professional reasons... Many large ISP in France are shaping traffic, but they keep it covert. By covert I mean that there is no paper trail for this activity, and few people inside the ISP even know about it. Users have long been suspecting that the unexplainable slowdowns are caused by traffic shaping, and they are mostly right. But no one has yet produced a sufficiently incriminatory smoking gun. ISPs have been advertising unlimited connectivity and they fear the backlash, both from consumers, consumer protection societies and regulatory authorities. For now it is "see no evil, hear no evil, talk no evil"...

  102. Yeah by StarKruzr · · Score: 1

    It smacks of "ENGLISH NO FIRST LANGAGE LOL ^_______^" illiteracy, specifically.

    This text has been added to defeat the lameness filter, which at the moment is behaving rather lamely itself.

    --

    +++ATH0
  103. Optonline Sucks by nukem996 · · Score: 1

    I currently have optonline for the longest time I would use p2p software to download legal things like knoppix and game patches. About 6 months ago our internet was really slow for about a week so we called them and an admin was put on the phone. He told us that running any p2p software is considered running a server which violates there terms of use. He told us the next time we run any p2p software we will be kicked off there service with no warning. We pay for a service and the ISPs seem to only let you do what they want you to. I know many people who actually are using more bandwith since they discovered newgroups so really the ISPs are going to lose either way.

    1. Re:Optonline Sucks by TwoManAdv · · Score: 1

      I have optimum online too and the great thing about newsgroups is that your not sharing the files out to other people. You see optimum doesn't cap you for downloading they cap you when your uploading to much. I don't know how speeds are in your area but downloading from newsgroups I can pull about 13-14Mbs and I can do this all day and night and optimum could care less. What optimum does care about is the uploading and thats when they notice you.

      I'm not sure if you follow broadbandreports at all but the capping discussion has been going on for years
      http://www.dslreports.com/forum/remark,15784791/

    2. Re:Optonline Sucks by nukem996 · · Score: 1

      I download from newsgroups as well and download from HTTP and FTP servers but what annoys me is that if I download from bittorrent one or two things I perminatly capped on all ports. It seems though that they only are about p2p uploading speed because we upload all the time on FTP, games, and HTTP and are never capped.

    3. Re:Optonline Sucks by TwoManAdv · · Score: 1

      Obviously optimum is going to be watching p2p more than some other protocols but when it comes to the capping its all automated so the protocol shouldn't matter. I have spoken to web developers that have been capped when uploading to there servers and I have spoken to gamers who tried setting up their own game servers for them and a couple friends which have been capped.

      The thing that is really annoying about the cap though is that it doesn't seem like anybody knows exactly what triggers it which makes it harder to avoid. I've managed to avoid it by limiting my uploads which I really shouldn't have to do.

    4. Re:Optonline Sucks by nukem996 · · Score: 1

      I realise that but I think that the capps should be lifted after you stop using p2p or what ever you do to get capped, automatically. I was just reading about the Optimum Boost that is comming to my area. This service says it allows you to run "web and e-mail servers." After reading a little on the web about it it seems they cap web and e-mail server. These companies now seem to cap things they tell you you can do.

  104. Fault of torrent users by Soban · · Score: 0

    It is not Isp people's fault. torrent users gotta realize that if they download something they have to upload that thing to. but only to the ratio of 1:1. no need to make one host a server. if you wanna make a change then start firts by doing only 1:1. (well ofcourse the first uploader gonna have to make a little more lets say 1:3)

  105. Well... Its both good and bad... by A10n · · Score: 0

    I mean some Internet connections are shared with your neighbors. For example if you have hard wired cable Internet and someone is always downloading 24/7 you will notice your network to be always busy, dropped packets, etc...

    So doing this will help out people in this type of situation.

    On the other hand I do believe that its unfair to restrict someones Internet use or bandwidth for certain ports. Back in the day AOL use to charge per hour... I hope it doesn't come to the point where you have to pay a monthly fee + extra Gigs used or something similar to that.

  106. eMule too. Avoid those isp! by leuk_he · · Score: 1

    In the ed2k world also more and more users begin to notice isp are throttling or blundly blocking users. As a developer one can only tell to the users to switch isp(vote with your wallet). One problem is that isp simply deny everything. An other problem is that in some countries there barely is an alternative. (Portugal, Chile)

    Anyway to start I created a wiki page to document those isp's so users know what isp they should List_of_Bandwidth_throttling_ISPs wiki page

    There are already 2 emule mods that support protocol obfuscations like utorrent/azareus but since encryption only works if both peers uses it this still is of limited use.

    Anyway those mods are neomule and Sion emule

    Try to avoid such isp if possible, or contact your local consumer body to take legal action.

    This link has already been posted here, but it does not hurt to post it again:
    Bad sip at azareus wiki

  107. What comes up must come down? by hackwrench · · Score: 1

    Call me when the price of gasoline comes back down to $1

  108. One for one, and all for one-Laziness as a defense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Well, for those ISPs that say it, they typically advertise "unlimited internet" - and then follow that up with limits in the fine print - which they know nobody reads."

    And who's fault is it for not reading the fine print? I know I read the fine print to anything I have to agree to.* What's everyone elses excuse?

    *I even get up off my ass and ask questions about anything in doubt.

  109. Re:"ISPs" themselves are a perversion of the Inter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    > Network to thy Neighbour. ISPs represent centralisation and control. Build a mesh, before it's too late.

    I think already you know why people don't network to their neighbors:

    • latency issues: you think 60ms is a bad ping for a FPS game server? wait til you experience the 2000ms ping to the same server via your darknet.
    • bandwidth issues: you only get as much bandwidth as the weakest link you traverse. Ooops. That guy on the 15th hop only has a 14.4K connection to the next guy.
    • connectivity issues: Remember that guy on the 14.4K connection? well his son just drove a tractor over the support wire for his 200' antenna. You won't be getting connectivity outside of Montana for 3 weeks unless you go help him fix it.
    • privacy issues: Remember that guy with the 200' antenna? He's also the local preacher, and he noticed some strange URLS in his access logs that he wants to talk to you about -- such as "What is this goatse thing, and why do you keep visiting it?"
  110. ISP Customer Business Model by Sterling2p · · Score: 1
    I think this subject really pisses a lot of us off. Some posts seem to say that at least some international providers are getting it right. I feel that we need better customer rules. We should even use these rules to balance ISPs against each other and find out what plans are best for one another.

    I used to max out my connection with bit-torrent, but now I hold uploads to 10k/s during the day because I know my ISP is too stupid to create real rules for everyone so we can all get the data we want.

    If it was my business, the rules would be created to balance peoples needs with those of the business. It is foolish to 'oversell' your services and then be found not able to comply with your very open ended advertisments. As you gain customers, the back-end of the services need to be upgraded. To me, it looks like they expect all the new customers for broadband to be grandparents who would under-use the internet services so much that they would be throwing money into the ISPs pockets.

    Seems like the ISP business is coming close to gambling. I don't think you can gamble when you are comming to utility status.

  111. No problem-Fine Print. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I see you've been modded +5. Good! Now read below 0 and you'll see the whiners complaining about what you just spoke about. I'm more than willing to bet that none of them have ever taken a "false advertising" claim to court, for the same reason they never bother to write a complaint letter to a business, or a letter to their political representative. Talk is cheap and most really know in their hearts that they're not as important as they think they are. Taking ones ball and going home only works if people really need your ball. I'd really like to see these "threats" backed up with something more than just one's mouth. At best those who don't try to abuse society would benefit, and plus we'd get some amusement from the "but I didn't read the fine print" defense.

  112. Congrats....you all missed my point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I get what you're saying, but you all didn't answer my question...

    If all they expect you to do is chat, do some vonage etc etc, then why are they selling me 5Mb/S *BASE* bandwidth and for a few more bucks I can get 30Mb/S. If not for downloading lots of stuff, then what?

    I'm not arguing that they're overselling, I'm asking if all they wanted me to do was chat, then why have such huge download rates available. WHere is the logic?

  113. Yes it can, and here's a paper on it by sdpinpdx · · Score: 5, Informative

    For a detailed analysis of exactly how, see Should Internet Service Providers Fear Peer-Assisted Content Distribution? (PDF Related papers can be found at http://del.icio.us/tag/locality+p2p

  114. Two sensible proposals ragrding P2P vs ISPs by RedLaggedTeut · · Score: 2, Insightful

    1) ISPs should set up their own P2P "clients" to act as servers to deliver the most popular legal content (let's just assume that there is actually a demand for legitmate content on P2P networks)

    2) ISPs should not simply block P2P traffic, but should instead encourage P2P-traffic between users in their own and "friendly" network, so that more of the flow of data in P2P stays within their own networks, reducing fees to other nets. Since many P2P-networks consider latency in their queue ratings, one way would be to raise latency a little.

    I am not even mentioning that ISPs should structure their contracts in such a way that power-users with high network load pay more. Using the networks resources fully is not rogue behavior, it is simply different behavior.

    --
    I'm still trying to figure out what people mean by 'social skills' here.
    1. Re:Two sensible proposals ragrding P2P vs ISPs by evilviper · · Score: 1
      You're saying the exact same things I've said for years, except I was talking HTTP/FTP, before P2P came on the scene.

      ISPs could save a LOT of money on bandwidth if they had caching proxy servers.

      Customers aren't going to use the proxy out of the kindness of their heart, so they need some incentive. To do that, ISPs need to uncap the speed when downloading from the ISPs network (the fastest the modem can provide), and only cap it at the 768Kbps speed when the data has to travel out to the internet.

      So, the company saves money on bandwidth, and the customers get extremely high speed downloads from other subscribers on the same ISP, or when using the caching proxy server instead of a direct connection.

      I am not even mentioning that ISPs should structure their contracts in such a way that power-users with high network load pay more.

      Absolutely not. ISPs are advertising 768K, and they have to do their very best to provide that. No matter what kind of a user you are, you're just utilizing the service, exactly as described (did the flashy commercials say 5 hours per day, max? No.)

      The only fair thing ISPs can do, is exactly what they don't want to do... Have a much lower-speed 128k/16k plan, and charge maybe $10 for it. That way the power users really will want the higher-speed plan, and average users will get to pay less. Obviously, they want to keep the minimum plan as expensive as possible, which has been the root of this "power users" problem for the past decade.
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    2. Re:Two sensible proposals ragrding P2P vs ISPs by petrus4 · · Score: 1

      ISPs could save a LOT of money on bandwidth if they had caching proxy servers.

      I've been online long enough to be able to remember a time when (in Australia at least, and presumably in the US) ISPs actually did do this. Of course, that was back when ISPs were run by people who actually knew what they were doing; we're going back a long way, here. ;) These days I know better than to contact the tech support of any ISP I use, since I've found in virtually every case that I generally know around a hundred times more about a given problem than the person on the other end of the line.

      ISPs used to be localised small businesses made up of people who were simply a bit more technically inclined than most. These days on the other hand, you'll have local dialin nodes run by the usual large, faceless corporations. They employ legions of dumb kids straight out of high school, and seem to expect XP's wizards to serve as a substitute for training, for the most part. Heaven forbid that anyone they employ would be educated in anything so arcane as hardware installation or networking theory, let alone having experience with a UNIX-based operating system...which of course they *should.* I haven't heard of Squid running on XP...and thus it doesn't get used.

    3. Re:Two sensible proposals ragrding P2P vs ISPs by jonwil · · Score: 1

      Even today many ISPs (and other hosts along the way) run transparent caching proxy servers (there are various RFCs covering such servers and protocols governing them IIRC)

  115. And in the news today.. by DigitAl56K · · Score: 1

    Shocking new statistics reveal that approximately a third of Internet traffic is generated by technologies that are popular amongst Internet users worldwide. ... WTF?

  116. Servers that refuse to 206 by tepples · · Score: 1

    Getright can download the same file from multiple hosts at once over plain old HTTP.

    Not if you are connecting to a server that refuses to return 206 Partial Content responses. This measure was common when download managers started to hog (open multiple simultaneous connections to) individual servers. BitTorrent, on the other hand, requires clients to support multiple sources or the tit-for-tat algorithm will choke them off.

  117. To Software Developers!! by matthewcraig · · Score: 1

    After thinking about this a bit more, I have a suggestion to developers writing network applications.

    Stop making it so darned easy to shape your application's traffic! Network companies aren't using sophisticated hashing algorithms to do this bandwidth shaping, instead they are using simple TCP/UDP port numbers. (To be true, I have seen some application-specific network devices that use hashing algorithms that require regular fireware updates.)

    If bandwidth shaping is here to stay, as many posts here indicate, then use your software to work around it. For example, use multiple ports, test the bandwidth of each one, then send a burst of network information down the fastest. Or, change the data traffic port for each version. Or, have a "fire wall mode" that will funnel all network traffic through port 80, or another ISP favored port number.

    If ISPs and network security administrators are going to use network ports to screw up your application's traffic, then your applications must not rely on those ports causing the problem.

    1. Re:To Software Developers!! by magetoo · · Score: 1
      If bandwidth shaping is here to stay, as many posts here indicate, then use your software to work around it.
      No, don't. If you deny ISPs the opportunity to limit traffic by protocol they'll simply limit traffic by user instead. So you'll end up not with slow torrents, but with slow everything -- web browsing, checking your email, SSHing home from work/school, whatever.

      It's better to try to get some competition into the market, and by favouring the ISPs that are open with what they do. A previous poster working at an ISP mentioned giving P2P traffic a lower priority (but still letting it use all bandwidth), and that's not unreasonable. You want VoIP, SSH, email, and even HTTP to take precedence anyway.

      On the other hand, if ISPs are being unreasonable and try to squeeze "bad" traffic out entirely, then by all means work around it. But they'll find a way to limit your bandwidth sooner or later. And there's no shortage of companies willing to provide technical solutions to their problems...

  118. I am SHOCKED, SHOCKED to learn by Ogemaniac · · Score: 3, Funny

    that P2P abusers do not want to pay for their goodies: Neither the bandwidth NOR the content.

  119. Totally Ridiculous. by guitardood · · Score: 1

    First, I am president of an internet hosting company in the Chicago area. If my downstream provider even remotely thought about giving VOIP traffic priority over my IP traffic I'd have them in court faster than you can say 'I'. As for putting limits on 'unlimited service'. I've got DirectTV. I pay for it to be available 24-7 for all the channels in my package. According to some of you, it would be okay for DirecTV to shut off my dish if I were to be such a TV junkie that I sat and watched GSN all day and night. Unlimited is exactly that, unlimited and anything else is "NOT" unlimited and shouldn't have been falsely sold that way. The real problem is that a company purchases an OC3 and then proceeds to sell to it's customers 10-20 times that bandwidth in the hopes that most people will be using burstable protocols. If everyone of their customers decided to watch live internet TV and saturate their bandwidth, the only legal recourse would be for the provider to start buying more bandwidth or go out of business. The only reason they're getting away with this is that the executive and judiciary are technologically ignorant. And what does it matter, everything will be AT&T in short order anyway;-) --- guitardood

    --
    -- L8R, guitardood
    1. Re:Totally Ridiculous. by BlindByMyLazerMouse · · Score: 1

      Seems like research is out of the question to develop better networking technologies but rather using the flip switch to turn off/on things. Remind you of transistors?

  120. A better titie: by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    "Using the same mentality as the RIAA, ISPs attack their customers"

    "Hey, there are plenty more in line, and since we have a virtual monopoly, where else will they go anyway? "

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  121. so now....... by wookie+geek · · Score: 1

    ...all the corporate whores come out with "it's not dedicated its burstable". BUT....nothing says "burstable" in the TOS. Looks like the ISPs having lost the war on the idea that unlimited service meant limited bandwidth now are going with unlimited means burstable. Same tune different lyrics. Lets get real, using a car analogy which seems so prevelant here, if you rent a car for a week with unlimited milegae and want to drive 500 miles per day, they don't use Lojack to set a limit on the throttle or turn off the car for 24 hours after the first 100 miles because unlimited means burstable mileage. If you advertise and charge to provide a service, then provide the service advertised and charged for...anything else strongly resembles the nightsoil of a large, well fed, male bovine. The ISPs don't mind taking your money for fees, as long as you don't actually use what you paid for, but when you want them to hold up their side of the bargain they immediately start to weasel. (my apologies to weasels for the comparison). So for all the corporate whores posting about how the ISPs provide such a great deal and we shouldn't complain..go over to that other place where they have ISP forums for all you fanboys to hangout in and BS the customers.

  122. Re:Proxies / ISPs are advertising 768 by RedLaggedTeut · · Score: 1

    Well, the problem with HTTP proxies is that today most of content of the www is dynamic in some way - so caching is not that useful. The next buzzword standard, Ajax, is even built around being dynamic. I think this needs to be sorted out completely, this is not how the web2.0 should look.

    Regarding that "ISPs are advertising 768k, so they have to offer 768k".
    It is not as simple as that, ISPs face the "empty seat problem". If they charge the casual user for a fully used 768k line, they will lose these customers to other ISPs. This means that those who run P2P 24/7 are perceived as problems in the business plan, which they are. I don't think P2P apps should be fettered when run casually, but that they should be controlled by charges for network traffic.

    So a "flat rate" would practially mean a rate where 95% of users are covered, and only 5% have to pay extra bandwidth fees, which might again be reasonably capped. It is not constructive for P2P-users to somehow insist on their rights to use the bandwidth since the ISP then will have to find other ways to harm P2P, simply because otherwise the ISP will be out of business.

    --
    I'm still trying to figure out what people mean by 'social skills' here.
  123. Lets make it simple by Julian+Morrison · · Score: 1

    Ever heard of the phrase "the customer is king"?

    If an ISP won't provide the very service for which I'm paying them, namely bandwith enough to run torrents should I so choose, connectivity on all ports, and the right to run servers, then I can and will dump them for someone else who has the entrepreneurial good sense to give me what I want.

    BTW, my current ISP gives me pure un-tampered connectivity, a static IP address, and bandwidth bounded only by the size of the pipe. ("Demon Net", £24.99 monthly.) That's why I remain brand-loyal.

  124. "I'll sell you a DVD ... for ten billion dollars" by tepples · · Score: 1

    people too cheap to buy their own CDs and DVDs

    There exist dozens if not hundreds of movies at least 56 years old (and thus which have been Bono'd twice) that are not available for sale to the public on VHS or DVD and whose copyright owner has no intention of publishing on VHS or DVD. Song of the South is one of them. In order to buy a legitimate copy of one of those, you would have to hostile-takeover the copyright owner, which means you'd have to spend at least billions of dollars to buy a large fraction of the movie's copyright owner's stock.

  125. Cable co's hate uploads! by WoTG · · Score: 1

    I think my ISP was one of the first major ISPs in North America to traffic shape upstream traffic. In general, they don't worry too much about total bandwidth consumed. My current traffic limit, 60GB/mo, is much higher than I have ever used in a month, and I'm probably in the top 5-10% of bandwidth users - there's a limit to how much video someone can watch in a day!

    However, my ISP hates Bittorrent and other P2P uploads with a vengeance - I'm throttled to about 15KB/s upstream for BT compared to 2-3x that for regular HTTP and FTP transfers. Since cable is shared, and total upstream is significantly lower than total downstream, P2P has to be throttled or the entire network segment will move at a crawl. The ADSL guys don't have that problem. If you clog up your ADSL upstream, you only affect your own connection. Once the traffic is at the network centers, ADSL and cable are relatively similar -- big pipes to centralized locations are relatively cheap.

    No, I don't like it; however, for ~$40/mo, it's a fair deal and I can't be bothered to switch.

  126. Comcast has the perfect technical solution by cgenman · · Score: 1

    Our comcast router is so bad that it jams up and requires a reboot after a certain number of total connections are reached. With regular surfing, this can take about 6 months. But with any P2P apps or Torrents open, the router dies in about 12 hours.

    Personally I'd rather they just throttled P2P traffic back to 10 kbps, but their solution is elegant too.

  127. Yes please! by pammon · · Score: 1
    Now that they have everyone used to using the net, it it time to clamp back down to where you only get so many bytes a month, or so many hours.

    Yes please!

    Speaking as someone who almost never uses P2P, I'm sick of subsidizing those who do. They drive up the price for everyone.

    The most common argument in this thread seems tox be "I paid for unlimited usage, so that's what I should get." Ok, then tell Comcast/Earthlink/etc. to stop treating everyone like a P2P hog. I use a fiftieth of the resources of an eMule junkie, so why the heck am I being charged the same $60/month?

    1. Re:Yes please! by Immercenary_2000 · · Score: 0

      They'll still charge you the $60 a month... after all you're already paying it and in most places I've lived you've only got 2 choices for broadband, both of which cost an arm and a leg. What will happen is that they will charge the p2p users more than $60.

  128. Return of Ma Bell. by twitter · · Score: 1
    Now that they have everyone used to using the net, it it time to clamp back down to where you only get so many bytes a month, or so many hours.

    This is only possible when you have no place else to go. In the US, telco mergers are bringing back Ma Bell and pay per minute/distance nonsense.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  129. no need to get righteous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i am fairly shocked by the harsh, almost vindictive language that some of these posters who work for ISPs are using. They imply: p2p user=criminal/thief and therefore they and their companies are justified in deliberately misleading their clients and generally holding them in contempt. I'm not so naive as to imagine that the majority of bittorrent traffic isn't illegal, pirated media, but regardless: the bittorrent protocol is extremely efficient at distributing large files throughout a network.
    when the music/film industry finally wakes up and shifts its distribution online, the fact that the traffic might be legal won't be any less burdensome on your poor, inqadequate routers and fibers. In fact, paying customers are going to demand high quality uncompressed DVDs and music files. rather than whining about the 'abusers' who slow down your obviously badly designed services, why don't you get a clue? who doesn't think internet connectivity in North America isn't marching steadily towards everyone being connected at the fastest/most reliable/cheapest possible...etc etc

    its amusing to watch companies who have no clue what's right around the corner: so petrified by their inability to forecast the market/user behavior that they take out their insecurities on paying customers.
    this is the real 'abuse'

    ISPs who care so little about their client's satisfaction that they can afford to keep employees who spend their time insulting them on slahsdot, will eventually be replaced by ones who give a shit. seriously.

  130. Oh, come on by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you're intentionally misunderstanding the grandparent's use of terminology. If somebody advertises an 8 Mbit/s download bandwidth from the web, that's what they should deliver - nonstop. If 8 Mbit/s with a cap of say 100 GB/month is what is actually sold, then the cap would be a significant limitation from the 2.4 TB you'd theoretically achieve without the cap during a normal February. Therefore, it should be in the ad for the simple reason the cap is a substantial limitation on the service (in fact, a different service altogether).

    And they can claim abuse as much as they want. If they're selling me something by false advertisement, the disagreement can always be settled in court.

  131. Relative Costs by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    There is a problem with your analogy.

    It really doenst cost more to push more bits over the month, while it does cost more to produce the extra power to feed your house if you use more energy.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    1. Re:Relative Costs by arminw · · Score: 1

      ......It really doenst cost more to push more bits over the month,.....

      However it really DOES cost more to the ISP if everybody starts pushing more bits all at the same time. Except for rush hour times, the road system is adequate. ALL infrastructure providers lay out their systems for average expected use. If that use goes up, the utility systems get stressed and have to increase their capacity. Data is just another utility. The more people shower and flush, the bigger the facilities have to be and that costs more. We accept usage based rates on other utilities, so what is so unusual that this should also be true for a data utility like the Internet? If you pay $39.95 a month for a DSL line and so do your neighbors, why should you not pay more if you wish to push ten times as many bits as your average neighbor? Metered bits are the wave of the future, just as are metered water and electricity, whether we like it or not. The only service I can think of that does NOT increase in proportion to the amount and type of use is broadcasting. A transmitter-studio setup costs about the same, whether there are 1000 or a million listeners.

      --
      All theory is gray
    2. Re:Relative Costs by nurb432 · · Score: 1

      Then my lame neighbor should be able to get on a pay per use plan. I signed up for unlimited. That is what my contract says, so i use it as such.

      Why should i pay more because my neighbor doesnt use as much? Thats like saying i should pay more *road* taxes because i drive a supercharged v8, but the guy next door has a 1 cyl hybrid.. We use the same amount of road regardless of how much faster i suck gas..

      --
      ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    3. Re:Relative Costs by arminw · · Score: 1

      .....Thats like saying i should pay more *road* taxes because i drive a supercharged v8, but the guy next door has a 1 cyl hybrid......

      But that's exactly what I meant. You DO pay more gas tax which goes for the roads. If your "unlimited" use and that of everybody else's unlimited use becomes high enough, the additional bandwidth cost will be passed on to users. When your neighbors, who mostly use only e-mail and surf the web, learn that they are subsidizing your extraordinarily high P2P usage they may opt for a low measured rate and then your so called unlimited rate will go up dramatically. I hope that that when the measured services start, they will apply to all bits, regardless what information these represent.

      --
      All theory is gray
    4. Re:Relative Costs by nurb432 · · Score: 1

      You didn't get my point about the roads, i was saying that its *not* ok to do it the way its done, it should be *flat* road access tax, regardless of how much gas you use. Its about the actual access to the road, not what is in your car. Ok, i admit my analogy was confusing as its not a true comparison to the network, where usage does not relate to cost, ( unlike a road ) so ill give you that much. It was late

      Now, "So called unlimited rate" F-ing moron. that is what my damned contract says so no, its not some 'so called' garbage its reality. If my usage effects TOS for other customers, then the ISP didnt plan ahead and over sold. Too bad..

      Im done arguing anyway. Its wrong for me to be penalized due to stupid neighbors ( or drivers ). period, end of discussion.

      And anyone that disagrees with me is wrong, stupid, in my way, and should be banned from usage, or even removed from the gene pool totally.

      --
      ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  132. $20 per meg. Not in my universe by pcjunky · · Score: 1

    I have a small WISP in Ft. Myers FL. (SW FL) I'll pay a bounty for $20 per month transit. Our main Wireless distribution point is 1 mile from our main office. The cheapest I can find transport is $695.00 per month for a 10 Meg Fiber connection. I'd pay $500 to someone who could find a transit provider that would sell a point to point 10meg connection for $200 per month.

    Of coarse that's not the total cost of bandwidth. I first have to purchase bandwidth to the Internet. The cheapest I have found in this area, (local population around 500,000, not exactly the middle of nowhere), is around $4500 for a full DS-3.

    If I could buy bandwidth for $20 per meg and get transit for $20 per meg I would let all the Bit Torrent users use all they want. Just not the case. $200 per meg for unrestricted use seems about right.

  133. Throttleing - Encryption - bandwidth caps by maillemaker · · Score: 1

    These games will continue until eventually, all traffic will be encrypted. Then you are going to see caps placed on bandwidth usage.

    Steve

    --
    A work that expires before its copyright never enters the public domain and thus enjoys eternal copyright protection.
  134. This is redundant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But the reason a lot of people use P2P (and I don't use P2P because it's too easy to trace) is to get stuff that simply isn't sold or available.

    Cable content is routinely made availabe in the U.S. , Canada, or U.K. which is terrific and only available in that market. If you want it, you either move, or hit P2P to get a copy. It's easier to hit the P2P.

  135. Solution? by JKConsult · · Score: 1

    I steal my internet connection from my clueless (or generous, I haven't decided) neighbors who leave their routers wide open. I don't P2P out of respect for their download speeds; I basically just have HTTP traffic. Living in an apartment building in Austin, I have 13 available networks, 5 of which are left open. I bounce back and forth. Am I stealing? Sure. But at least I'm a somewhat honorable thief. And for the year that I'm back in school, that $50 a month is better spent on beer (because we all know that free as in beer doesn't exist).

  136. It was never the "norm" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Remember when this was the norm"

    No. Never. And I had a dial-up account since '92.

    The limiting factor in those days was the fact that you didn't want to tie up your phone line for more than an hour or so at a time.

    For a while, we had ISDN, which had time limits (and cost dearly), but never a bandwidth limit. Then came Cable modems, which had some vague limit, but was clearly over 100-150MB/month. Never stated, but it seemed they were concerned with P2P. Finally onto fiber which is faster and better than ever and we're taking advantage of it and there are no limits.

    So, I've been using the internet for 14 years and I've never had a limit.

    Thanks for asking.

  137. Sorry... but that IS the way it should be. by NoMaster · · Score: 1
    You're forgetting that people actually WANT to use these services. It's not your companies right to refuse them.
    How very American...

    Of course it is my company's right to refuse them! If I feel and can justify that the cost of setting up and running separate accounting, billing, and traffic systems for the (very small) x% who are both (a) heavy users and (b) prepared to pay for it is too high to be bothered with, then why would I do it?

    I wouldn't - I'd leave it to those who want or are best structured to handle that particular set of problems. Since everyone else is using crap analogies, I'll say this: there's a reason the corner hardware store doesn't sell industrial plumbing supplies, and it's the same reason MegaHardwareStore doesn't sell individual screws...

    --
    What part of "a well regulated militia" do you not understand?
    1. Re:Sorry... but that IS the way it should be. by flithm · · Score: 1

      If your company is publicly traded on the open market then no it's not your companies right. Your companies first and foremost duty is to the shareholders.

      You're just defending a stupid business plan with ridiculous analogies. Like I said I'm already using an ISP that implements a service class for high bandwidth users. It doesn't seem like it costs them very much to maintain, and it sure as hell brings them in extra cash.

      We cried. They responded.

      To use an analogy that more closely matches the situation: your company is like a hardware store that sells a monthly service where people can come and use all the tools they need. And keep in mind that the service plan your hardware store has advertised goes something to the effect of "Come and use any tool you want for the low monthly price of..."

      I don't have any statistics on the real numbers but I'm guessing if you surveyed all of your internet users and asked them "do you want unthrottled P2P access?" at least ten percent to a quarter of them (probably more) would say yes.

      So in continuing with the ridiculous analogy... now imagine ten percent of the users that signed up for your monthly hardware renting program require tools that you don't offer even though they were never told up front that those tools would never be available.

      And moreover... then imagine that 3-10% of the users are being chastised by your company for using too many tools too much of the time, when those are just their needs.

      It's not that the people are wrong. And the company's position has some merits too... after all gotta be fair to everyone. But the thing is that there's a better way, and right now it's attitudes like yours that are keeping things from changing for the better.

      And people (like me) are speaking with their pocket books. I'm willing to pay extra for the bandwidth I use, and I DO pay extra. The companies that don't want to offer a service that meets my needs are simply going to fade away.

      and p.s. I think YOUR attitude is the one that exemplifies the americano way... buttheaded stubborness and an inability to change and be flexible.

  138. Re:Proxies / ISPs are advertising 768 by jonwil · · Score: 1

    Simple, offer fast speeds but limit downloads. Most "normal" users will not exceed the 10gb/month (or whatever is offered) but high bandwidth users will have to pay $X per gb over the limit.
    P2P bandwidth hogs will pay up (or move to other ISPs that havent adopted the new model).
    Because the high bandwidth users are paying extra, the average amount of bandwidth being used by everyone paying $x per month for the ISP service goes down. This means that the $x could go down (as the light users dont subsidise the heavy users as much anymore) which will keep the "normal" users from jumping ship to other ISPs still offering "unlimited".

  139. Option for P2P users? by GhodMode · · Score: 1

    Okay... So, it seems that the ISPs who sell us an "Unlimited" broadband Internet connection at speeds from 1-5Mbps don't actually want us to use it to it's full potential...

    That's bullshit: They sold us a service which they told us was unlimited and then complained when we used it as advertised. However, that's the nature of business and marketing a service. Their reasons are understandable.

    Now that ISPs are getting smart enough to limit our use to save themselves some money, is a market going to open for those of us who want to use our broadband service?

    My situation is this: Most of my WWW usage is pretty basic. I read documentation, forums, emails, and articles. I'm not usually interested in watching videos online or downloading large files. None of that consumes much bandwidth. On the other hand, my Internet usage includes P2P file sharing... a lot of it. My bandwidth is usually maxxed out. So, if my plain and ordinary 1Mbps ISP limits my usage on ports other than 80, 25, etc, I might as well switch to dial-up for all that I can use the Internet for.

    I don't think I'm unique. If it came down to it, I don't want to, but I probably would pay extra to continue using my full bandwidth. Is this a potential market? Do the ISPs realize it? How much would it cost to the user for it to be a sustainable business model for the ISP?

    -- Ghodmode

    1. Re:Option for P2P users? by hi2005 · · Score: 1

      Yes, i agree to you. the point here is not ISPs don't have rights to choose to throttle P2P ports, but is that they shall clarify their services before the flack of their network services. they have rights to choose and define their products, while our internet users have rights to know what we are using and consuming. right?

  140. Inevitable-Alturistic on the cheap. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "The ISPs oversell bandwidth because otherwise it'd be too expensive for anyone to be willing to use the Internet."

    The correct answer is right there. Let them pay what their usage REALLY costs. Of course the unlimited crowd will never go for it because they want cheap AND unlimited.* Just like the Wal-mart crowd wants cheap without the guilt of the whole structure behind those cheap prices.

    *Plus if you think about it a bit deeper. Most of the P2P traffic is of an illegal nature. It's easy to be "unlimited" with stuff that's not yours to begin with. "Here's the movie/music/software that didn't cost me anything over bandwith that I didn't pay the real cost for".

  141. Having a William Safire moment... by ScaryMonkey · · Score: 1

    That's "attorneys general" ;)

  142. Oil for Gold ... by Ex-MislTech · · Score: 1

    Opec: Oil for Euros...

    The plan on the table is not to change to another fake paper system,
    but to sell oil for gold directly, a physical tangible asset vs. monopoly
    money that is printed at a whim and carries no ties to a physical valued object .

    Most if not all of the world's banks went off the gold standard long ago .

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gold_standard

    They fiat currency of the Euro and the Dollar are all monopoly money, ie. fake .

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fiat_currency

    A more detailed and possibly over zealous dissertation on it :

    http://www.strike-the-root.com/61/davis/davis1.htm l

    This I feel is what the Iranians and Indonesia have decided in which they no
    longer want to participate, and it may spread to Opec as well .

    In fact Iraq did it shortly before we went to war with Iraq .

    http://www.safehaven.com/article-1251.htm

    Ex-MislTech

    --
    google "32 trillion offshore needs IRS attention"
  143. Shaping driven by traffic analysis by tepples · · Score: 1

    who's developing the mod to make bittorrent go over SSH?

    Once sustained throughput over an SSH tunnel reaches a given level, the tunnel is likely to be counted as an unknown P2P file-sharing instance. This sort of traffic analysis and shaping doesn't even need stateful inspection of packets.

  144. Weak Arguments by costac · · Score: 1

    I find the whole idea of P2P bandwidth filtering as well as the ensuing
    arguments (i.e. someone has to pay for the bandwidth) incredibly week.
    I will spare you the really overused and innappropriate car analogy but hear
    this: Airline companies routinely oversell seats on most flights. It is a practice
    that is called overbooking and it ensures that if a passenger
    cancels or misses the flight, the otherwise empty seat will still be sold.
    Now, the law in most countries is that every passenger has certain rights if
    they are denied boarding, i.e. they are entitled to accomodation, tarsnport
    to and from airport, etc. I fail to see how the process of "overselling" bandwidth by advertising for
    unlimited broadband and providing anything but should be judged differently
    than the above example.

  145. Re:Proxies / ISPs are advertising 768 by evilviper · · Score: 1
    Well, the problem with HTTP proxies is that today most of content of the www is dynamic in some way - so caching is not that useful.

    Congratulations. You managed to completely miss the point.

    People aren't going to notice the difference between 768Kbit and 3Mbit when they're just loading a web-page. There, latency is dominant. When there is a multi-MB file embedded in that web-page, however, they will, and large files are rarely served dynamically. AJAX has nothing to do with this at all.

    It is not as simple as that, ISPs face the "empty seat problem". If they charge the casual user for a fully used 768k line, they will lose these customers to other ISPs.

    Oh yes it is. Saying, "Other ISPs are falsely advertising, so we have to too," is not a workable legal defense.

    This means that those who run P2P 24/7 are perceived as problems in the business plan, which they are.

    It's not my job to make sure an ISPs is making a profit, nor is it grounds to violate a contract, or falsely advertise services.
    --
    Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  146. Re:Congratulations. You managed to completely miss by RedLaggedTeut · · Score: 1

    Well, congratulate yourself, I guess you know on what.

    You mentioned HTTP proxies yourself, and HTTP is supposed to serve web pages, not documents or images. Static images that are part of the page are cached by the browser anyway, and advertisements are often not cached but delivered dynamically. Regarding "When there is a multi-MB file embedded in that web-page", maybe you just shouldn't embed such big images, and even when you have a reason to do so, either the target audience is to small to make the ISP set up a proxy for them, or you should deliver the content by other protocols.

    I did not say the ISP should falsely advertise. I said he should make a contract that he can keep without loopholes, like kicking out customers.

    I did not say he should throttle P2P bandwidth, which is what you are talking about, but that the ISP should use latency to shape traffic.

    And, no, it isn't your job to help the ISP make profit, but it is not the job of the ISP either to maintain a contract that is not profitable to the ISP.

    Maybe you are not one yourself, but the people who use your argument are freeloaders on fees paid by others. I guess your enthusiasm for HTTP proxies is honorable, but HTTP is not P2P, and as long as P2P does not implement a proxy-like behavior, it isn't good, and usually it is hard to make P2P work like proxies because the number of clients willing to upload a specific file at a specific time is small. However, as I suggested, fatcoring in latency between P2P clients for queue ratings should result in improved P2P behavior and lower global network load.

    --
    I'm still trying to figure out what people mean by 'social skills' here.
  147. Bandwidth by 00110100+00110010 · · Score: 1

    It sounds like you understand T1 just fine.

    The DSLAM compresses the data so that it can be encoded into the available bandwidth. I don't know any details about the compression, but I know a little about the bandwidth.

    DSLAMs where I am are fed with multiple T1s. The DSLAM in my neighborhood serves up to 144 customers with 4 T1s or 6.176Mbps. They can take up to a DS3, or 28 T1s. A single DS3 fed DSLAM can handle up to 5000 lines.

    Google leads me to believe each 27 to 36Mbps cable internet channel can serve up to 1000 cable modems.
  148. Re:Congratulations. You managed to completely miss by evilviper · · Score: 1
    You mentioned HTTP proxies yourself, and HTTP is supposed to serve web pages, not documents or images.

    Well, you've completely lost me there. First of all, "web pages" contain "documents" and "images", so I don't see your point. Second, HTTP is a transfer protocol for ANYTHING. Linux ISOs are transfered over HTTP constantly. Large videos are being downloaded over HTTP constantly.

    Static images that are part of the page are cached by the browser anyway,

    Yeah, cached by your neighbors browser, while yours has to go download them from the source. That's the whole point of a caching proxy. Browser caches are also very small, making them of limited usefulness.

    Regarding "When there is a multi-MB file embedded in that web-page", maybe you just shouldn't embed such big images,

    That's the most ridiculous argument I've heard so far. I guess people should only use the internet how you see fit. Besides, you clearly don't understand that this isn't limited to things embedded in web pages. Any HTTP traffic will greately benefit.

    either the target audience is to small to make the ISP set up a proxy for them, or you should deliver the content by other protocols.

    You can talk about how people "should" change the internet to suit you all you want, but it's not going to happen. The fact is, massive ammounts of HTTP traffic ARE accounted for by sites like video.google.com, and a caching proxy can reduce that massive ammount of traffic down to practically nothing.

    Sadly, it still doesn't sound like you understand.

    I did not say he should throttle P2P bandwidth, which is what you are talking about, but that the ISP should use latency to shape traffic.

    Those two are almost exactly the same thing.

    and usually it is hard to make P2P work like proxies because the number of clients willing to upload a specific file at a specific time is small.

    No, actually it's fairly easy. For Gnutella and kin, setup a node on an ISP server with massive disk-space, have it act as a supernode for all users, and have it save a copy of your downloads to it's local storage. Then, future downloaders will automatically see that file as an alternate location, and it will be downloaded from there automatically.

    Now, it's really the dual-level bandwidth that makes this work... Since your ISP's node will allow you to download the file at 3Mbps, and you'll be getting at most 768k from all the rest, it will download the vast majority from the ISP's node, dramatically cutting down on internet traffic.

    Although I don't know of any real proxing method, it would have similar benefits for bittorrent too. When one of the seeds/peers is on the same ISP as you, you will download the vast majority of the file(s) from them (at high-speed) instead of over the (slow) internet.

    Why do ISPs always insist on working AGAINST anyone that uses the internet, rather than trying to work with them to save money on their infrastructure, while providing a much, much better service to their customers? They just keep raising speeds, all the while trying to make it harder to do anything with.
    --
    Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  149. The on-peak/off peak approach by notanic · · Score: 1
    Hi, Here in New Zealand we have one ISP that has started plans that have an 'on peak' and 'off peak' traffic allowance.

    You basically get twice as much off peak traffic, as on peak.

    This would basically encourage the users themselves to schedule their p2p to be kind to others (as well as themselves).

    Anyone else tried this approach.

    P.S I won't mention the ISP or the plans, people outside NZ wouldn't understand how you can get so little for so much $$.

  150. Depends on how they advertise it. by Killshot · · Score: 1

    If an ISP advertises "unlimited internet" they better not mess with my ability to use p2p.
    If they clearly state what their policy and limitations are, and/or give me a way to at least pay more to bypass those limitations. I will not have much of a problem with it.

  151. As long as you understand what you buy by ChronoFish · · Score: 1

    COX Communications here on the East Coast states very clearly that you can not run a server on your home internet connection. I actually don't have a problem with this for several reason. First they were up front about it. Second, it only costs me about $10/month to run a website with virtually unlimited bandwidth/storage on a thrid-party webfarm. I don't like that they block port 25 (SMTP), but I undstand why they do - and since they offer their own SMTP server it's not that big of a hassel. Yes the service is throttled (sending is much slower than receiving) - but that is standard internet business. Given my ration of download-vs-upload, I'd gladdly sacrifice my upload bandwidth for more download bandwidth. I'm perplexed to as to why Teloco's feel that need to muck around with a "tiered" Internet. It's already "tiered" based on how much data one wishes to push/pull. -CF

  152. False Advertising in Australian Broadband by Yonan · · Score: 1

    "Unlimited" plans that aren't unlimited were somewhat recently shot down in Australia by the ACCC (Australian Competition and Consumer Cmmission). No more calling plans unlimited if they're shaped to 64k after 500 meg of DLs... that plan caused a big fuss on www.whirlpool.net.au. This was one decent move in the industry at least. So long as ISPs are upfront about what they do there should be no problem. Anyone with half a brain and cares about the type of service they get reads up on ISPs and knows what they're getting into. Is the ISP good for leeching or gaming, high quota or low price, good support or no support.

  153. watch out: SPEAKEASY.NET and their pre-sales lies by ClioCJS · · Score: 1
    SpeakEasy.net sold me 1.5M/768K DSL for $90/month. They told me people usually pay them twice the going rate for a given speed because of their excellent service. Their network was indeed excellent, and the reason I went to that company was because of their promises of "unlimited bandwidth" and "a provider designed for power users to use".

    I even had a conversation with the online sales staff to ensure that yes, I could download at 100% of my rate 100% of the time if I so chose (something I have done on and off for several years now). Screenshots of the conversation is here:
    http://www.flickr.com/photos/clintjcl/76331315/

    And what happened? Later they told me that I need to curb my usage, or be terminated. After months of bickering, they finally told me to "keep it to 100 megs a month". That wasn't really possible for me, however, as they didn't even give me a month of time before terminating my service.

    I was very lucky that Verizon & Covad actually didn't screw it up, and my new DSL came only 6 days later. And because the termination date was a friday, I got usage until monday (25 gigs baby!).

    So: Don't believe your ISPs lies. I'd advise going with a smaller mom-and-pop shop than a big corporate ISP like SpeakEasy or EarthLink.

    Buyer beware.

    (They tried to use a $300 cancellation fee to bribe me out of writing about this, but I'd rather pay $300 if it saves someone else from my experiences. I can't be bought off so easily...)

    --
    -Clio
    Karma: Bad (mostly from not giving a fuck)
    Blog: http://clintjcl.wordpress.com
  154. My car might have 255HP by DRAGONWEEZEL · · Score: 1

    Mine has 305 (thats why my WOW Char is LSONE on Rexxar)

    Your So right.
    That gave me an idea?

    What if the badwidth business model worked like cars?
    You have a full "tank" of bits when you start out each month, and you have to add "GAS" if you go over.

    Then charge people who aren't bursting, but all out sprinting eternally

    If you drive throttle to the floor, you get bad gas mileage right?
    (I know I would..)

    But if you baby it, keep it mild & constant, a tank will get you much farther. (over 33%)

    Enact this rule, and people will throttle on their own. Make them responsible, yet make the bandwidth available for when they need it.

    I put my foot to the floor daily, but if I just held it there all day, I wouldn't be able to park it!

    dw

    --
    How much is your data worth? Back it up now.
  155. Buy A Porsche to go 35 on the Info Superhighway by Guardian452com · · Score: 1

    Buy A Porsche to go 35 on the Info Superhighway,I don't think so, want to go slower use dial-up.

  156. ISP: Speakeasy, Status: Very Supportive by John+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

    I've been on Speakeasy since I moved about three years ago and I run a Debian torrent client 24/7, and I've never seen my traffic slow or had any extra charges. However, I pay double or triple what the US Cheapo ISPs offer and I expect the complete, constant service in return.

    I get it - and more. Speakeasy even encourages you to share your bandwidth with your neighbors and collect a cut of the income. Indeed, they offer special services for gamers and other folks who want faster performance. If they're traffic-shaping, AFAIK it would be just to get to my advertised limit and I've never seen it. They even upped my speed without me asking when it seemed their price was higher than most competitors.

    They also have rocking technical support and great attitudes. Have I mentioned I'm a Raving Fan? You want to try good service? Sign up here... (Full disclosure: referral program in use)

  157. Re: HTTP proxies are great by RedLaggedTeut · · Score: 1
    Well, I suggested that ISPs set up P2P nodes, and since I am the thread starter it is my idea as far as slashdot is concerned.

    That's the most ridiculous argument I've heard so far. I guess people should only use the internet how you see fit. Besides, you clearly don't understand that this isn't limited to things embedded in web pages. Any HTTP traffic will greately benefit.

    I don't think so. Of course I can't prove it without presenting a scientific study, but for one, the big images served will be mostly from sites with less visitors, so there won't be many cache hits, sites with big media and many visitors will already be using akamai, and finally caching all HTTP replies in a proxy requires a big proxy or proxy farm - this means that downstream-ISPs would actually carry the costs of the big content providers or have to pay for the slashdot effect. I guess you see the problem in there. Or not, so let me spell it out: P2P users volunteer their bandwidth out of altruism, in a way, but why should the ISP volunteer to provide the bandwidth for another business?

    As far as I am concerned lowering network bandwidth requirements would require rethinking of protocols, for example if you look at this very slashdot page you will notice that most of the waste of bandwidth actually is in the navigation which however is not served separately.

    I guess in two years we will talk again on slashdot and you will say you always have been saying that protocols need to be improved or changed. You also neglect to mention that HTTP 1.0 did not support continuing a download in the middle, which was crippling in the times of 56k, so the HTTP protocol has been improved after those times of the proxies(which often refused to cache especially the big downloads anyway)

    Regarding the ISP question, you can benefit from a fast line when downloading software from a central site, without using it 24/7. However, P2P users tend to download stuff they don't really need, just to get over the boredom in waiting for the download to start (and complete) which they actually are interested in. Not to forget that you might simply leave both your PC and your P2P running just to improve your queue rating, which is wasting resources both at the ISP and in your energy bill. I know what you will say now, it is not my business what you do with your bandwidth as you pay for it, but as you seem to be opposed to increased fees for power users, it seems you don't like paying that much either.

    I guess you want to convince me that proxies in theory are a good idea, which I don't disagree with completely, but then you get lost in arguing that latency and bandwidth is the same, which it clearly isn't. I guess to top it off you probably have a job where you in theory know this stuff better than me.

    --
    I'm still trying to figure out what people mean by 'social skills' here.
  158. Re:watch out: SPEAKEASY.NET and their pre-sales li by stinerman · · Score: 1

    I use their 1.5/384 offering.

    The only problem I have is that (and its not even them) the ILEC often works on lines and doesn't give a shit if they break anything serviced by a CLEC. I've had to call a few times when my DSL was out. Of course, you know Speakeasy isn't too quick on the draw since they have to call the CLEC (in my case COVAD) who has to call the ILEC (AT&T) to get a linesman out to check the lines.

    I don't know where you live or who your CLEC is, but I have a computer hooked up to my TV that does nothing but run BitTorrent 24/7/365 and I haven't gotten a call. My connection is probably completely saturated in the up direction a good 95% of the time. Perhaps it is your CLEC who is complaining.

  159. Nah, it wasn't my CLEC complaining. by ClioCJS · · Score: 1

    It was a corporate minion from SpeakEasy who contacted me.
    Repeatedly.
    For 2 hours at a time, sometimes, trying to "talk me out of" being who I am (a habitual downloader since the 1980s.)
    I did not have this problem with my previous 4 or 5 DSL ISPs (one went out of business, one I did not choose and was thrust into, two flat out didn't work, and one I left but shouldn't have - patriot.net).
    And their reasoning was quite simple: I was downloading too much. They said my 250G in a month was more than thrice anyone else in the D.C. area POP . . .

    --
    -Clio
    Karma: Bad (mostly from not giving a fuck)
    Blog: http://clintjcl.wordpress.com
    1. Re:Nah, it wasn't my CLEC complaining. by stinerman · · Score: 1

      What I meant was that your CLEC partner with Speakeasy might have been complaining. Since your circuit is serviced by Speakeasy, your CLEC (COVAD, possibly Version based on where you live, even though I didn't think Speakeasy had a partnering agreement with Version) might have put pressure on Speakeasy to get you to stop using your connection as per your TOS.

  160. Interesting idea. I still tend to think it's Spea by ClioCJS · · Score: 1

    That's an interesting idea. However, Covad has been my CLEC for all 6 DSL ISPs I've had, and I've only had this problem with SpeakEasy. I've also heard from others who are having SpeakEasy do the same thing to them. We'll see how the next ISP fares...

    --
    -Clio
    Karma: Bad (mostly from not giving a fuck)
    Blog: http://clintjcl.wordpress.com
  161. Re: HTTP proxies are great by evilviper · · Score: 1
    Well, I suggested that ISPs set up P2P nodes, and since I am the thread starter it is my idea as far as slashdot is concerned.

    Yes, but that alone will help very little, without the dual-level bandwidth I discussed.

    and finally caching all HTTP replies in a proxy requires a big proxy or proxy farm - this means that downstream-ISPs would actually carry the costs of the big content providers or have to pay for the slashdot effect. I guess you see the problem in there.

    No. The whole idea is that running a few servers with a lot of storage on their network is much cheaper than purchasing that much more internet bandwidth, for the ISP.

    but why should the ISP volunteer to provide the bandwidth for another business?

    For them to save money on their upstream ISP bill, to provider their customers with a much better service, etc.

    I get the feeling like I'm arguing with a brick wall. How many times do I need to say these exact same things over and over, before they register with you?

    I guess in two years we will talk again on slashdot and you will say you always have been saying that protocols need to be improved or changed.

    Not at all. I've posted this idea to slashdot several times in the past, and I'm sure anyone who searches through my comment history can find numerous mentions of it. Nothing on the web is ever lost. Besides, as I've said, yours does not include dual-level bandwidth, or anything similar, which would be rather necessary for this to work well.

    I know what you will say now, it is not my business what you do with your bandwidth as you pay for it, but as you seem to be opposed to increased fees for power users, it seems you don't like paying that much either.

    I'm very tired of repeating myself over and over, so I'm just going to copy/paste the exact same thing I said last time:

    The only fair thing ISPs can do, is exactly what they don't want to do... Have a much lower-speed 128k/16k plan, and charge maybe $10 for it. That way the power users really will want the higher-speed plan, and average users will get to pay less. Obviously, they want to keep the minimum plan as expensive as possible, which has been the root of this "power users" problem for the past decade.

    but then you get lost in arguing that latency and bandwidth is the same, which it clearly isn't.

    This is COMPLETELY idiotic...

    I didn't say latency and bandwidth are the same, and I can't imagine how you could actually believe I did. In fact, I think you're just trying a little straw man here.

    You said: "I did not say he should throttle P2P bandwidth, which is what you are talking about, but that the ISP should use latency to shape traffic."

    Clearly you've never done any bandwidth shaping/throttling. What you don't realize is that the way bandwidth is throttled, is by increasing the latency between packets, once you've reach a certain bandwith. If it takes 10ms for a packet to get from the server to you, and the router holds that packet for 10ms longer, that throttles your bandwidth to half what it otherwise would be.

    So, in this instance, the two will have effectively the same result. If you increase latency, you will be throttling the bandwidth.

    I guess to top it off you probably have a job where you in theory know this stuff better than me.

    That's funny. I can see from your webpage that you are a software architect, not a network admin. Since I do this stuff from day to day, I'd say quite the reverse is probably true. You think you know the theory, but don't actually have any experience with it.

    --
    Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  162. I get how much stuff? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I love broadband. It's much faster then those dialup days on my 14.4 and finally the 56k. No doubt though the ISP ripped me off.

    Comcast is the only broadband in this area. You don't have any other choice. Not only that, I've never once reached the speeds they promised on any application. If someone sends me an app they complain how slow it's going. When I send them an app, they cancel. It's just pathetic.

    I'm not not even sure what the speed promised was anymore. All I know is that it's alot faster then those dialup days so I have to deal with it. I remember those calls from Prodigy and what not threatening to cancel me if I kept staying online too.

    It's been the same way for along time. ISPs are full of crap. They lie to you repeatedly. Dozens have people in this article are all saying the same thing... sell us what we payed for. We know wtf you sold us... why don't you? There should be a huge class action lawsuit and we just rake them over the coals. They misled everyone. We aren't the bad guys just because we used the services they offered... if I hear another unlimited bandwidth commercial from those sob's...

  163. Very simple solution to this! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ISPs need to change the way they charge for DSL.

    Rather than charging every home user a flat fee, why not just charge people for what they use.

    eg

    Basic service £15 pm including 5GB of download

    then charge say an extra £1 for each additional 5GB

    That way if im having a month where im doing lots of additional downloading, then that gets reflected in my bill, I do an extra 50GB, I pay and extra £10.

    No caps, and everyone at the same speed, that way everyone knows where they stand, and the heavy users pay their way. Would that not be simpler for everyone.

    I have only seen one ISP in the uk that used this model, but it makes perfect sense to me.

    http://as400blog.blogspot.com/

  164. Re: Clearly you've never done any bandwidth shapin by RedLaggedTeut · · Score: 1

    If it takes 10ms for a packet to get from the server to you, and the router holds that packet for 10ms longer, that throttles your bandwidth to half what it otherwise would be.

    No it doesn't, not if you have many connections, and connections which send big packets of data without waiting for every ACK; To quote dunigan: "TCP uses a sliding-window protocol to implement flow control." so that window size is packet size times number of packets to transmit before an ACK can be expected.

    I guess if you bump up the latency just hard enough it will eventually throttle bandwidth effectively, or if you use applications for testing that need to wait for a reply to small packets.

    So I don't doubt that you can set up a test which proves your views, since doubling the latency as you proposed means hitting the sender so hard that it might exceed its max window size. I think I could set up a test which proves my views as well.

    It also will get worse if you as the ISP intentionally drop packets to lower window size, but this is not increasing latency, it is sabotage.

    Thanks, looking up documents on these keywords was very instructive to me.

    --
    I'm still trying to figure out what people mean by 'social skills' here.
  165. Re: Clearly you've never done any bandwidth shapin by evilviper · · Score: 1
    No it doesn't, not if you have many connections, and connections which send big packets of data without waiting for every ACK;

    You're correct that it won't really be 1/2 the bandwidth, but I simply thought I should make the theoretical example as simple as possible.

    since doubling the latency as you proposed means hitting the sender so hard that it might exceed its max window size.

    You don't quite understand. ACKs are NOT and cannot be sent async. A large window may mean it only needs an ACK after every 20 packets, but the ACK can't be sent until #20 has been recieved, or the timeout (waiting for #20) has been exceeded.

    So, if you delay the outgoing ACK by 10ms, there will be no incomming traffic for the next 10ms. For bandwidth shaping, the router dynamically adjusts this delay to get the approximate throughput you want. And yes, if the machines use a ridiculously large sliding window, the router won't be able to hold all the packets, some will be dropped, and the machines will negotiate a smaller window because of that increase in packet loss.

    I think I could set up a test which proves my views as well.

    I don't see how. The point still remains that increasing the latency is HOW bandwidth shaping is done. I really can't see any way of doing one, without doing/causing the other.
    --
    Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  166. FUD in TFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The author either fell for, or was deliberately spreading, **AA FUD. The only purpose for P2P that is mentioned is copying music and videos. There is also the standard oversimplified claim about copyright:

    Of course, it is illegal to share copyrighted material like that.

    Sharing copyrighted material like that without the copyright holder's consent is illegal. Sharing copyrighted material like that with the copyright holder's consent is perfectly legal, and people do it (e.g. distributing FOSS), but the article has nothing to say on the subject.