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BitTorrent Traffic Falls In the U.S.

First time accepted submitter CAKAS writes "After legal actions taken by several industry outfits, BitTorrent traffic has fallen in the United States to the all time low of 12.7 percent of internet traffic. However, this trend seems to be unique to the U.S. — In other parts of the world, like Europe and Asia, BitTorrent traffic continues to rise. 'According to Sandvine, the absence of legal alternatives is one of the reasons for these high P2P traffic shares.' In the U.S. legal content delivery has flourished and provided customers easy access to content. This seems to suggest that due to these alternatives, people are less willing to pirate and pay the publishers for entertainment." (Calling it an "all-time low" seems a stretch, when talking about something released in 2001.)

11 of 129 comments (clear)

  1. Perhaps it's not that Bittorrent traffic fell by Feanorian · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Maybe Americans are getting smart and using VPN's and proxies :D

    1. Re:Perhaps it's not that Bittorrent traffic fell by matazar · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Not to mention seed boxes that can be purchased for cheap. Why waste your home upstream, when you can use a 100mbit connection to download and easily transfer it to your home computer with ssh/scp/sftp.

      Those companies must love seeing news like this. There's always another way..

    2. Re:Perhaps it's not that Bittorrent traffic fell by WrongSizeGlass · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Maybe Americans are getting smart and using VPN's and proxies :D

      Or US Internet traffic is growing - something the ISP's & cell carriers are crying about on a regular basis. If the overall usage goes up, stagnant BitTorrent traffic rates - or if the BT rates are growing at a slower rate as compared to overall US usage - will look like it declined.

    3. Re:Perhaps it's not that Bittorrent traffic fell by Opportunist · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Comments on /. are not really the problem. Making something public knowledge certainly is, though.

      As much as I was an advocate of "educating the masses" in my early geek days, I'm no longer a proponent of the idea of bringing our great new ideas and developments to them. Hate to say it, but we should simply keep it to ourselves.

      Think back of the early days of P2P and general content swapping. Did the MPAA care? Did they hunt you down like rabid dogs? Nah. It was a nuisance, but a petty one. Much like blackboxing was in the good ol' days. Sure, a few people did it and they got away with it, but nobody cared enough to prosecute it. The damage was small and the few that did it were not worth the effort.

      Think it would have been the same if it had been the widespread sport of Joe Randomboxer? Think AT&T would have been as lenient as they were? Think again.

      It's a matter of magnitude. It's simply damage vs. cost to avoid damage for them. Keep the damage low and they don't care about you. Ramp it up and suddenly you're in their sights.

      Yes, there are new ways of exchanging information and hiding it from the prying eye. But I'm no longer willing to share it with the masses. Call me an elitist bastard, so be it, but unless I can see some benefit in it, or rather, more benefit than harm, I see no reason to share that information with them.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  2. all time low? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    ha! the "all time low" for bittorrent should be 0.00%, you know, back before bittorrent was invented. saying "all time low" is an odd expression for something that started at zero.

  3. Netflix, not "legal actions" by TheEyes · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Filesharing lawsuits and six-strikes laws never did anything to stem the tide of piracy. What's been causing the fall of Bittorrent as a share of internet bandwidth in the US is the rise of legal streaming sites (Netflix, Hulu, etc), alternatives which don't exist in most of the rest of the world.

    1. Re:Netflix, not "legal actions" by neros1x · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Isn't it funny? Record companies swore that DRM-free mp3s would destroy their industry, and the MPAA fought for years to keep movies offline. The rest of the world argues, "People will pay for content that is easily available and user-friendly." Now we have the proof. I feel vindicated, somehow.

      --
      The penguin made me do it.
  4. Is actual usage falling? by hkmwbz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So, is actual BT usage going down, or is something else simply growing much faster?

    Actually, the article states:

    it's clear there's little to no growth in BitTorrent use

    But:

    These numbers don't take into account that absolute traffic has increased

    So what does that mean? How did they conclude that there's little to no growth if the numbers don't even take a very important fact like absolute traffic growth into account? Just wild guessing?

    And little to no growth doesn't mean decline. It means it's stable. So it's not really accurate to claim that "BitTorrent Traffic Falls In the U.S."

    Maybe one will have to read the full report, and it's all there. But I don't think the linked article supports the assertion that BitTorrent traffic is falling in the US. At worst, it's growing slower than other services.

    --
    Clever signature text goes here.
  5. Re:TL:DR by AngryDeuce · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The thing I don't understand with Netflix is why the fucking PS3/360/Wii clients are so godawful. Why the hell do they not just give you a goddamned alphabetical list of everything they stream? Because it would be too easy for people to find what they really want to watch?

    I refuse to watch Netflix on my Windows PC because fuck silverlight in it's stupid ass, but the arbitrary beshittedness of the console clients has me utterly perplexed because I can think of no reason why they would release a client like that in the first place. It's ridiculous that I have to use a 3rd party site to browse their offerings like someone that isn't only interested in shows related to the last goddamned thing they watched or some ridiculously specific categories ("Ooh, let's browse the 'heartwarming family films from the 80's' category, that's bound to have a wide selection to choose from for streaming!").

  6. Different conclusion: by nurb432 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    1 - Nothing released recently is worth getting..
    2 - Proxies/darknets

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    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  7. We've DOWNLOADED all the MOVIES by billstewart · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The reason BitTorrent traffic is falling is that everybody's downloaded all the old movies already. So now we're just getting the new ones, not catching up on backlog.

    --

    Bill Stewart
    New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks