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BitTorrent Use Up 24% Since November

dingalig writes "It looks as though the MPAA's fight against The Pirate Bay and other BitTorrent sites isn't going very well. Ars Technica reports that BitTorrent traffic is up by 24% since before the holidays. 'BitTorrent traffic spiked over the December holidays. After a peaking at almost 12.5 million downloaders on the 200 most popular files, traffic dropped at the beginning of January — about the time that school started up again. But one figure that will prove alarming to the content creation industry is that the numbers are higher now than they used to be. "The baseline has been elevated," notes [BigChampagne CEO Eric] Garland. "Not only did the spike happen, but the bar was raised."'"

7 of 239 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Gotta love statistics. by FoolsGold · · Score: 4, Informative

    If they're counting all torrents, then yes the content/patches of WoW would certainly count for a fair bit.

    But you'd have to be rather naive to think Linux distros and other legal content (not including WoW) are in any way a measurable part of the total torrent traffic. I have no stats of course (this is Slashdot), except to say that whenever you look at the top listings of torrents being hosted on say TPB, I can see TV shows, Movies, Games and Music. No Linux.

  2. How does the MPAA know its movie-stealing? by freedom_india · · Score: 1, Informative

    I used BitTorrent more during holidays to...download various linux distros, exchange vacation photos and videos with my friends, 'tested' my router, 'tested' comcast whether it complied with its own policy, downloaded movies i BOUGHT from BitTorrent.com and downloaded Farenheit 9/11 about 3 times just to be sure (after all Michael Moore allowed me to do).

    So saying bittorrent usage is higher == movie/music stealing is higher is like saying iam getting poorer because the bush government's tax cuts benefit the rich only. Wait! Isn't that true? Sorry, its linking my home foreclosure with Bear Stearns bailout. Wait! Dammit Fox news, you have made me think like an idiot!

    --
    "Doing what i can, with what i have." ~ Burt Gummer
  3. Re:Gotta love statistics. by richie2000 · · Score: 4, Informative

    That could simply be because Linux distros don't need to use TPB since they have their own trackers.

    --
    Money for nothing, pix for free
  4. Re:Gotta love statistics. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    When Ubuntu Hardy Heron is released, please check the torrent tracker statistics and record the overall transferred data (in GB) vs time (say every 5 minutes).

    I did this for Ubuntu Gutsy Gibbon and was seeing somewhere in the vicinity of 8gbps of bandwidth being used by the Ubuntu torrents for a while after the release. Talking to a member of the official release engineering team at Ubuntu, I was informed that HTTP/FTP mirrors were taking loads in excess of 5gbps as well.

    Remember that these are only ISO images (good for new installations) and don't count the amount of bandwidth used for upgrading existing systems. And remember all the other Linux distributions as well.

  5. Re:Ironic in a way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    hmm, you can order downloading of individual files within a torrent, you didnt have to download whole season

  6. Most torrents ARE 'piracy' by HetMes · · Score: 3, Informative

    Don't try and make a point about torrents not being 'piracy' by mentioning a few users who downloaded a Linux distro last winter. Anyone knows it's a flawed argument; they're statistically irrelevant anecdotes. Remember those words, as they apply in almost any debate where a general statement is made, and some not too bright person tries to refute it.

  7. Bittorrent via Miro by Burz · · Score: 4, Informative

    Miro is a video feed aggregator, player, search tool, downloader with torrent support; recently out of beta and has improved a lot.

    The Miro folks are even trying to help people distribute their videos via bittorrent, esp. as a way to get full SD and HD shows published at low cost.

    It kind of competes with Youtube, but with better video quality. It even handles feeds from Youtube.