Elude Your ISP's BitTorrent Blockade
StonyandCher writes "More and more ISPs are blocking or throttling traffic to the peer-to-peer file-sharing service, even if you are downloading copyright free content. Have you been targeted? How can you get around the restrictions? This PC World report shows you a number of tips and tools can help you determine whether you're facing a BitTorrent blockade and, if so, help you get around it."
Slashdotted already...
wha'? where am i?
.. kind of lucky, anyway.
We have a website which provides pretty detailed information on what the ISP's are up to. Because there are so many members, I think the ISP's are sitting up and paying attention to a degree, because it's really not that expensive to change providers now.
So here it's just a matter of choose your carrier and tell the other telco's to piss off.
Do it yourself, because no one else will do it yourself. [beta blockade 10-17 Feb]
that the cable companies don't consider (or don't want to have to consider) the consumer of their broadband offerings as their customer. They'd much rather have us be parasites on their network, parasites who happen to be targets of profitable marketing campaigns. The ad injection nonsense that a number of ISPs have launched is indicative of this attitude: we're just eyeballs attached to brains that view commercials.
The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
Protest by paying the bill in pennies or any other kind of creative check-writing various tax departments have been the victim of...
My PC can run for months/weeks/hours of being on and have no problems with the connection. The moment I run LimeWire, the problems begin. 9 times out of 10 I end up having to reboot my cable modem to get back on-line....despite the fact my cable modem shows normal activity.
Forgot to check the "Post Anonymously" button?
If sharing a song makes you a pirate, what do I have to share to be a ninja?
So if your car manufacturer kept track of how many miles you'd driven, then limited either the speed or distance you can travel, would THAT be OK?
I'm sick of the "now you can download movies and music" commercials that say you can do these things, but don't mention limits other than POSSIBLY in fine print... at the bottom of the screen... in a 2-second flash... in the middle of a paragraph.
Either sell the service and back it, or don't bother. Sticking it to the customers 'cause you oversold your bandwidth is about as obnoxious as it gets without bein' illegal.
Don't tell me to get a life. I'm a gamer; I have LOTS of lives!
So, what are you implying? That those who pay for a high-speed connection to the Internet shouldn't have rights to the high-speed part of it? So you are saying because I pay $XX per month to get unlimited access to the Internet at a speed of say ~1.5 MB/Second I have no right to demand use of that unlimited connection? I don't get what you are implying here, it seems like you are saying that what you pay for you have no right to use.
Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
It will be interesting to see if a major ISP steps forward with an offer to provide completely unthrottled service, perhaps at a premium price.
Would an across-the-board failure to offer such an obvious consumer winner provide grounds for charges of collusion or racketeering?
I've calculated my velocity with such exquisite precision that I have no idea where I am.
Maybe you'll shutup when they come for your 3rd party VOIP.
He's implying that anyone clueless enough to think they can get "unlimited access to the internet" for a measly ~$40/month deserves to get burned. People that dumb are the ones responsible for the subprime mess.
I've had pretty good luck with Verizon DSL. For a moment I was considering switching to cable but with all of the horror stories I've seen around here regarding bitTorrent clients I've stayed away from cable. The only time I ever had a problem is when I was seeding some popular, copyrighted music that I pulled down off of a site that I found via a Google Search. It was kind of creepy. As long as I was seeding the file, my transfer rate went down to near zero. Once I stopped, it went back up to my full speed. I tried it out a few times over a couple of days just to make sure that I wasn't imagining things and sure enough, every time I seeded that one file my connection slowed to a crawl.
But that is what the contract states (usually) or at least the advertising either directly says it or implies it. It would be equivalent as some company offering a price for an item and then that item never being available for purchase at the stated price. Someone should really sue these ISPs. The bad part though is, if you are like most people there are only 2-3 ISPs in your town to chose from, in worst cases there is only one ISP that offers high-speed Internet.
Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
It's not car manufacturers, it's more like taxing someone who spends more time on roads then someone else, which is something we do already with Fuel Taxes and Road taxes against Semis.
I agree with throttling, I just wish they would be upfront about it. If they have bandwidth limit, then state it. If they block certain protocols, say so.
Surely the
I don't have this problem because I am willing to pay more for service from an ISP like Speakeasy that does not do this. If you want these companies to change, you need to be willing to hurt their bottom line even if it costs you more.
The cake is a pie
He's implying that everybody else is "pirating" commercial software and entertainment. You know, trolling.
What?
Uh, it's more like you purchase said item at the stated price and they bill your card and give you something crappy with a picture stapled to it.
Support my political activism on Patreon.
You must be new here.
Good idea, but 5GB Ubuntu/Fedora/Slackcrap is free in the first place.
Support my political activism on Patreon.
A friend of mine runs a ISP, he has a very simple policy that works out
rather well. He does not go out of his way to regulate what people do
on the network until it causes a issue. Bit Torrent is a bandwidth hog
and attempts to evade filtering rather well. If he encounters issues
caused by a Bit Torrent user he just hands them their money back
for the month and drops them as a customer. This keeps the rest of the
network clean and the other customers happy. The profit margin on each
connection is so very thin that it just does not pay to mess with this
extremely small portion of the customer base.
Got Code?
- Download something popular
- Call your ISP
- Read their terms of service
- Glasnost
- pcapdiff
- Vuze plugin.
Avoiding throttling;- Enable protocol encryption.
- Change the port number to something other than 6881.
- Tunnel through TOR or some other commercial VPN.
To which I would add, if you know your ISP is injecting fake RST's filter them out with a firewall rule. A little more complex a task than the expected audience of TFA though.09F91102 no, 455FE104 nope, F190A1E8 uh-uh, 7A5F8A09 that's not it, C87294CE no. Ah! 452F6E403CDF10714E41DFAA257D313F.
Except for archive.org and a few other sites I've not seen much of it on the internet, and since just about everything is copyrighted by default I really doubt there is much copyright free content out there. There was a time when the US had much saner copyright laws, but that was before it went the way of Europe and signed on to the Berne Convention.
Time is what keeps everything from happening all at once.
Here is a link to the printable version
Holy cow, have we just witnessed a guy p0wning hisself? Like the soccer player who unwittingly kicks the ball the wrong way and ends up scoring a goal for the opposing team? How about the guy who KO'd himself in the boxing ring? Or the fielder who tries to catch the deep long fly ball, and it ends up bouncing off his glove for a home run?
Lil' Thindime, lilting a lacrimose lament, krashes the kwaint konfines of Kokonino Kounty
yup, i agree with the road tax analogy, and agree with the ISPs need to be up front and honest about it so customers know what they are getting, lots better than dishonest marketing hype to get customers to buy then later they feel as if they were lied to and taken for a ride by deceptive marketing...
Politics is Treachery, Religion is Brainwashing
While it does defeat the purpose of file sharing to a degree, but I have found that ISP's can only really detect file sharing through your upload to download ratio. I work for an $ISP, and we red flag accounts with an upload equal to or greater than their download, which sucks for some customers who upload large amounts of information to other servers or sites. I don't agree with it, but I have to pay the bills :P
OH SHIT
After all, I am strangely colored.
They basically do that with their x-ty thousand miles warranties.
Any sufficiently unpopular but cohesive argument is indistinguishable from trolling.
My ISP started messing around with this, I called them to ask about it and they flat-out denied it.
When I looked on the message boards and everybody else was in the same boat, I called again. This time they said they were throttling, but only at peak hours (not true - but that was the official line).
Next day I called their competitor. As soon as the line was installed (2 days) I called and told them I was switching, and to who.
No sig today...
I think it's more like admitting you made a mistake. In public. And not being afraid to own up to it. And taking the consequences. I think we need more of that.
Oops... getting too serious...
Moderation in everything, including moderation.
I'm sure the next wave of cable modems will have red numeral LEDs on them. The more you download/upload, the higher the number counts (in bytes). Sort of like an odometer. The first of each month it gets reset back to zero. But, if you go over your monthly limit four things will happen. Should there be any question, the customer will have a visual representation of their usage habits.
1. Your connection slows down.
2. Your connection is turned off.
3. You pay extra past that X amount of bytes.
or...
4. You throw the damn modem out the windows and tell the ISP to go f*ck themselves.
Life is not for the lazy.
I use first party, so I'm not too worried, but I wouldn't be too worried if it were third party either. BitTorrent is designed to saturate your connection, in both directions. VoIP is not. BitTorrent, for the typical problematic use case (Jolly Roger), is on 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. (And it would need to be, to bust those Comcast limits discussed earlier.) VoIP, for an *intense* user, is on for perhaps an hour or two a day. A more typical user is on for a few minutes and uses less bandwidth than watching one of those Will It Blend videos. (Chuck Norris just roundhouse kicked your usage statistics to the face!)
The number of legal users who end up in the top X% of their ISPs' resource expenditure graphs is so small as to be insignificant.
Help poke pirates in the eyepatch, arr.
Every major ISP sells completely unthrottled, you bought-it-enjoy-it bandwidth to businesses. Get yourself a T1 line, never worry about being throttled again! Prices are quite reasonable starting at about $600 to $1200 per month.
Its an obvious consumer winner!
Help poke pirates in the eyepatch, arr.
The bad part though is, if you are like most people there are only 2-3 ISPs in your town to chose from, in worst cases there is only one ISP that offers high-speed Internet. Sucks when Comcast and dial-up are the only options (guess it doesn't matter anyay, as Road Runner throttles now too).
The path to enlightenment is truly through homemade drugs!
For those ISP's with periodic bandwidth caps, there's already a firefox extension called Net Usage.
09F91102 no, 455FE104 nope, F190A1E8 uh-uh, 7A5F8A09 that's not it, C87294CE no. Ah! 452F6E403CDF10714E41DFAA257D313F.
You just don't get it. It isn't the downloading any ISP is objecting to; it is the uploading. ISP's are paid for content distributed from their networks, like websites. It normally pays half the cost of the ISP's connection to the Internet. But now you have cheapo companies (the so called "legal" stuff) and IP theives using P2P programs to distribute their whatever on the ISP's nickel. Yah, ISP's are livid about it. When is anyone on this forum ever going to get it through their thick skulls that it is the "UPLOADING", the "SEEDING", the ISP's are objecting to?
If you want broadband you've got basically 2 companies to choose from depending on where you live. Both suck. It won't be long before they really put the screws to people. Prices are going up and so are restrictions.
ISPs are often seen as big bad guys when they do this but the reality is it does cost more to support a user who actually uses their connection pretty significantly than someone's grandma who checks email 2x a month. It's not the fact that they filter/etc... that's the problem. They shouldn't even need to filter. It's the marketing dept. If they didn't sell the internet connection as "unlimited" they wouldn't have problems at all. Say $20/month for 2 gigs of transfer with an extra $5 per gig or a similar pricing structure. Suddenly the bittorrent/P2P problems vanish. Of course they could no longer advertise as "unlimited" but they aren't delivering that as it is.
The connection I bought is 3 meg down, half a meg up. So I am paying for that "up' part. It is in all the adds...
Maybe he's trying to start a new AC meme. Imagine a world where all the posts about chowing down on a jock's stool are followed up by a post apologising for contributing nothing. What an improvement that would be!
For example, look at the recent shenannigans with Bell and those subletting their monopolized line-system. The regulating bodies basically just said that Bell is doing nothing wrong by throttling or otherwise screwing with the traffic of the 3rd-party ISP's customers, because there's no proof it will cause lost business.
Hello! The ISP's cannot provide the indicated level of services due to the interference of a third party. Screw loss of business, that's a pretty major way of screwing the customers, who now have absolutely zero choice for ISP's who aren't handing it to them up the tailpipe (Rogers, the non-DSL ISP, also throttles). So is it fair that customers aren't "leaving" because they're getting equally screwed elsewhere?
When I last spent time in Aus, I was amazed by how closely they kept tabs on their politicians and policies. North America in general could learn a lot from them in that regard.
The number of legal users who end up in the top X% of their ISPs' resource expenditure graphs is so small as to be insignificant.
Unless you are one of them. Then it gets very significant, very fast.
If their business model relies on them explicitly charging people $X/MB for hosting packages and yet they give their internet customers unlimited uploads, then that's their own dumb fault. They need to either explicitly put limits on what customers can upload from their non-business connection, or better promote their hosting solution (faster speeds, higher availability, etc.) to make it worth the price.
On the other hand, if they're getting paid by their downstream customers for distributing content to them (i.e. other ISPs buying bandwidth off of them), then it doesn't matter whether it's their web servers doing the uploading or the cable/ADSL customers.
I think the only reason ISPs are livid is because a) they want to keep advertising high speeds and unlimited usage and b) they don't want to provide the infrastructure necessary to support people actually using their high speed connections as much as they please. Or, they may simply be getting paid by the cartels to be "tough on P2P" in order to help keep it marginalized.
Sorry, that is not the case. People are morons for getting into subprime troubles, but they are not lied to when they sign the papers. Truth-in-lending laws require the total cost of the mortgage to be put right on the front page (the page with those four boxes) very clearly.
Comcast spamming the airwaves with "Unlimited! Always-on internets!!!" is not the same thing. It is very clear they are misleading their customers. I should be limited by either my speed or a total cap, but not both...and NOT measured via some imaginary total to which I can not be made privy.
For those ISP's with periodic bandwidth caps, there's already a firefox extension called Net Usage.
.au, whose ISPs Net Usage customizes for), there's NetMeter, which tracks all traffic through your network interface.
For those who want to keep track of bandwidth from other programs as well (or maybe just aren't in
Would our headline be construed to encourage the violation of Terms of Service/Use contract between ISP and Customer? Is there a good site for condensed information on bypassing filters/firewalls/proxies etc. (that may not necessarily prohibit illegal actions)?
...is that computer magazines run articles like this anyway. I doubt they'd post an article that's more or less "How-to warez more effectively!!!1", torrenting is something a lot of people do. The pirate bay is around top 100 on the alexia webranking, and if you start reading the next 100 maybe you'll realize just how big that is. It's higher than IGN, NBA, Digg, 2ch, SourceForge, CNET, mozilla, amazon.de (not com!) and so on. Other prominent sites like IsoHunt (124), torrentz.com (157) also rate very highly. That's way beyond a few hogs they want to get rid of, saying "WTF I can't use torrents" is almost up there with "WTF I can't watch YouTube" or "WTF I can't run MSN". They'll be killing themselves if they keep this up...
Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
Well, the darkside is everywhere. Home office is in Europe.
You are being MICROattacked, from various angles, in a SOFT manner.
They can crack down on illegal P2P all they want. Won't affect me at all. If I want to help out my fave Linux flavor by seeding the latest version, h'wever, they shouldn't be able to tell me I can't.
They're making no distinction between "good" and "bad" P2P, they're just lumping it all together... and screwing us for their inability to provide a service in good faith.
Don't tell me to get a life. I'm a gamer; I have LOTS of lives!
"The biggest problem with communication is the illusion that it has taken place."
I dual boot Ubuntu Feisty and Win XP SP2. About a year or so ago, while on XP, I noticed that my ISP had began to throttle bittorrent . . . I tried a few techniques, and nothing worked, so, I immediately rebooted into Feisty and . . . ta-ra! I was pleasantly surprised to find that their throttling is completely nullified when on Ubuntu Feisty. Has been that way since, also noticed that switching to a better router (from a Dlink to a Huawei) made no difference. I use the default client on GNOME . . . yet another reason why I only boot into Windows about once every two weeks.
SARAVA!
I know that I've had problems torrenting linux iso's. My access slows down to a crawl for up to an hour after I stop downloading the torrent. Someone hates my isp so badly that they registered a domain about it. It's not a very good site, but the fact that they put even that much effort in to it... It's http://www.ntc-sucks.com/.
BitTorrent doesn't use a lot of downstream bandwidth compared to other applications, anyway. You can get faster downloads from a well-hosted web site or a good Usenet service.
Visual IRC: Fast. Powerful. Free.
There's only customers who use what they paid for and companies that oversell their connections.
Every time I've had a series of slow connections, I start to worry.
Not that I've ever downloaded anything over Bit Torrent that was copyrighted, of course!
Glenn Rubenstein
We are looking for someone that has more time than us to take over this service. There is definantly a need and demand for this type of service, but we have other buisnesses to run and this needs a full time owner/manager. What is included: the secureix.com domain, all the custom written software that makes this service possible, and help getting your initial servers running.
Seems to me ya don't exit a business where the "income potential is limitless" lo+lUntil the sale is complete we will not accept new sign ups.
Email six@secureix.com with any offers/questions.
Here are some FAQ about this auction:
You will need one very basic Dual P4 server per 128-256 premium customers.
You will need about 75 mbits avg. per 256 premium customers.
Income potential is limitless.
Nearly 200,000 people have visted our site and signed up for some level of service.
2. Relakks charges EU$5 so thats USD$7.50-8/month, not $5
The latest releases of DD-WRT, and a few other custom router firmwares, have a built-in bandwith log for your entire network.
"I think an etch-a-sketch with an ethernet port would beat IE7 in web standards compliance."
You forgot that the porn filter is already in trial phase? Where am I going to get my stamina booster now?
Oh, and why is the cost of broadband here is still hideously expensive?
# it's no revolt, we're just seceding .../#
to split ourselves off from the union
you intend to take away our slaves,
you proclaim but we don't emancipate
That is, of course, because my cable modem is NOT in a closet somewhere and I look at it all the time and not just when the connection drops.... Yep.
Flappinbooger isn't my real name
Not only that but in quite a few commercials that fine print isn't legible. I have a 50" sdtv, and many commercials fine print is just a fuzzy line across the bottom. If there are cover your ass requirement in there, im sorry but thats just fraud.
Is that webpage really grey-on-dark-grey or is it using an IE-only style sheet?
If so, is that one way to avoid the blockade, make your webpage on eluding the blockade so hard to read that anyone over 30 gets a migraine before they get to the end?
Heh. So... 'slashdtards' make a minor typo. What do you call somebody that mangles grammar as bad as you have?
P.S. Thanks for proving my point!
"I like to lick butts!" by MobileTatsu-NJG (#32700246) (Score:5, Informative)
I've seen some homes outfitted with a professional network installation. What I mean by professional is that having RJ45 wall jacks and all the cable splitters, modem, and routing equipment in the attic or closet. However, most users at home have their cable modem and/or router right next to at least one PC. I'm sorry, but your local cable/telco will just see you as a "special" case.
Life is not for the lazy.
Many users have wireless routers and operate laptops from other parts of their home. Welcome to 2008.
Rich
I haven't used Limewire, but I've noticed a problem with two completely unrelated bittorent clients, which caused me to conclude that the problem might be in the BT protocol itself:
When a BT client is running, occasionally the network stack gets screwed up, with the usual effect that I am unable to do anything online at all. Nothing connects.
Unload the BT client, and everything instantly goes back to normal.
Also, BT clients occasionally cause a BSOD by munging up the network driver... on a machine that otherwise NEVER crashes.
~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
Economics was obviously a major driver (and slavery's as much a part of that as free trade), but a lot of it was emotional/political issues - slavery has a large impact on social organization, and people had strong emotional reactions both for and against it, and all that emphasis on the Union as personal identity and the "manifest destiny" crap; you don't get brother-killing-brother kinds of wars over trade policy. And you may remember that states were being admitted to the union in ways that balanced the numbers of new slave and free states - even though the new slave states weren't all in the Deep South which had the economics issues.
So much of the Union's desire to reconquer the Confederate States reminds me of China's insistence on reconquering and controlling their old empire, including Taiwan and Tibet (the, uh, Han shot first...)
And Lincoln wanted to increase central government power. While he wasn't a Prohibitionist, they were one of the groups that had joined to form the Republican party, and fighting slavery and Demon Rum required more central power.
Bill Stewart
New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
The ISPs advertise unlimited access! If this isn't available, they need to stop advertising it! Last I checked, they weren't losing money giving away internet access too cheaply, and they're still overselling what they've got. Subprime *buyers* weren't responsible for the mess, silly, it was the *lenders* - the ones giving away more than they have, way too cheap. People are going to consume as much as you let them - it's a well known economic trend that hasn't failed yet. If $40/mo doesn't grant unlimited access, as advertised, then the least they could do is provide a disclosure of the restrictions to access, *before* the customer initiates service.
-=[You cannot consistently judge this statement to be true.]=-
So what? It's true. Don't come saying you paid for all software and entertainment you use, liar.
Making laws based on opinions that stem up from false informations leads to witch hunts.
You never used bittorrent or what? You know you can limit the upload speed to whatever suits you, right? As for saturating the download speed, the day I see a solid hour of download at 1 megabyte/sec, I swear I'll have a spontaneous orgasm.
Making laws based on opinions that stem up from false informations leads to witch hunts.
So what? It's true.
...liar.
"Citation needed"
Don't come saying you paid for all software and entertainment you use...
Hmmm, did you actually see that written somewhere? Besides, I am within my rights to do whatever I wish with software, entertainment, or any other information in my possession, the law not withstanding.
Guess you're trolling, too. Peace, babe.
What?