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The Internet Technology

BitTorrent Beats Kazaa In Traffic Numbers 348

prostoalex writes "CacheLogic attempted to measure the peer-to-peer network traffic by installing their network monitoring tools in data centers of large ISPs. The results are in, and Bram Cohen's BitTorrent overtook Kazaa's FastTrack network. BitTorrent traffic amounted to 53% of all peer-to-peer traffic, according to CacheLogic. It's worth noting, though, that Kazaa traffic is highly seasonal, as a lot of high-schoolers and college students are simply on vacation this time of year."
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BitTorrent Beats Kazaa In Traffic Numbers

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @06:05PM (#9701648)
    Funny, I used to work for a porn site back in the bubble. Same thing, our numbers plummeted in the summer due to college students being off.
    • by Anonymous Coward
      Funny, I used to work for a porn site back in the bubble. Same thing, our numbers plummeted in the summer due to college students being off.

      Oops, small typo. Should read getting off.
      • by Ayaress ( 662020 )
        Oops, small typo. Should read getting off.

        No, that's why their traffic jumps during the winter. He was referring to why it drops in the summer.
    • by Saeed al-Sahaf ( 665390 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @06:23PM (#9701838) Homepage
      Yeh, as a former IEG guy, I remember that. Ah, those where the days! State-of-the-art equipment, an office in a glass tower just off Pike Place Market, gettin paid $$ to look at porn...
  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @06:05PM (#9701654)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by hey ( 83763 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @06:05PM (#9701656) Journal
    I file trading is peer-to-peer (decentralized) how can some central "authority" know what's going on?
    • by Mondongo ( 43895 ) <joaquin&mondongo,com,ar> on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @06:07PM (#9701684)
      I remember on a NYT interview that Bram Cohen said that all BitTorrent packets were not encrypted nor decentralized. All machines must connect to the tracker in order to download, so there ARE ways to measure it.
    • by athakur999 ( 44340 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @06:08PM (#9701706) Journal
      They installed their monitoring system at the ISPs, so they can just analyze packets going into and out of the ISP's network. Kazaa packets and BitTorrent packets will look different and be destined for different ports, so it wouldn't be too difficult for the software to tell the difference.

    • If you can't RTFA, at least RTF(Summary).

      "CacheLogic attempted to measure the peer-to-peer network traffic by installing their network monitoring tools in data centers of large ISPs.".

      No matter how decentralized a peer to peer network is, everyone still has to go through their ISP, and the bigger ISPs would cover a good percentage of all P2P users.

    • by vDave420 ( 649776 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @06:31PM (#9701910)
      I file trading is peer-to-peer (decentralized) how can some central "authority" know what's going on?

      Glad you asked.

      The company I work for, FreePeers Inc, faced this same problem about 2 years ago.

      At that time, I invented a statistics gathering scheme that took full advantage of the decentralized nature of p2p networks.

      Previously, the client/server scheme was superimposed upon networks (see Limewire's network crawler, for instance, which contacts every node it can to count them).

      My invention takes advantage of the nature of the network itself as a routing/aggregation tool to gather statistics for me,and let the results "ebb" thier way to our collector.

      See the public results here [bearshare.com].

      Interesting to note is that we are running our aggregator node on a cable modem, and yet still get "round trip times" for measuring stats on the whole network of 5 minutes. This could even be reduced to about 2 minutes for our current network size.

      In any case, the problem you describe (central counting of decentralized p2p info, such as network count or bytes transferred in a given time) is solved, and our company is awaiting a patent on it.

      It does work well. We are running the aggregator on a 256Kbps cable modem (as I said above) but the BW usage is so rediculously low that it could be run on a dialup 56k modem, if only we had any in our office! With it we can accurately collect lots of good statistics about our network, and update it every 5 mins.

      Each of those graphs in the linked to page [bearshare.com] is clickable, and will show more details.

      -dave-

      Use BearShare [bearshare.com] for all your p2p needs.

      • by jarich ( 733129 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @06:46PM (#9702008) Homepage Journal
        Use BearShare for all your p2p needs.

        Doesn't bearshare still have spyware embedded?

        From a quick google search

        http://www.oit.duke.edu/ats/support/spyware/bearsh are.html

        • Hardly qualifies as spyware, IMO. Save and Weathercast IIRC. Both easily disabled with firewall and a quick trip to the add/remove CP in Windows (although repeat when upgrading).

          Not to mention they're pretty upfront about it. Guy's gotta make a few bucks somehow, and Bearshare has been rock solid (thanks Dave). Wouldn't use anything else for general P2P.

          • I'm not an expert on BearShare but the link I listed (http://www.oit.duke.edu/ats/support/spyware/bears hare.html ) specifically talks about ad toolbars that track every web site you visit, New.net (filtering all of your DNS requests thru their servers) and a couple of pop up add trackers.

            Has he removed this obvious spyware in favor of a less intrusive money making model?

      • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @08:27PM (#9702737)
        All of that is great Dave, but Bearshare has spyware in it and it doesn't seem to stay up for me for more than a few days at a time. Why do you expend so much effort only to wrap it in such a crap program?
  • ...if someone could plot legit traffic against "illegal" traffic. My guess is that BitTorrent would account for a much higher percentage of legitimate file traffic as pretty much anyone who has a large file (e.g. Linux Distros) uses BitTorrent to distribute it.

    • by athakur999 ( 44340 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @06:10PM (#9701732) Journal
      It's also worth noting that most people use BitTorrent for larger files like ISOs. So even though the traffic in bytes in higher, I'm willing to byte when it comes to "number of files transferred", Kazaa still has the lead.

      • It's also worth noting that most people use BitTorrent for larger files like ISOs. So even though the traffic in bytes in higher, I'm willing to byte when it comes to "number of files transferred", Kazaa still has the lead.

        Sure. Although it's worth pointing out that P2P clients like Kazaa are some of the top places for distributing "funny" and "cute" videos like "grandma gets carried away by dog" or "monkey smells his butt". As far as I'm aware, most of these files lack any formal copyright protection an
        • Just thought I'd point out that there's no longer a concept of "lack of formal copyright protection."
          As of 1989 (year of the Berne Convention), once you create something, you have its copyright until its term expires or you formally relinquish it (even then, in Europe you retain certain "natural rights" to your work).

          But practically speaking you're right; it's highly doubtful that the copyright owners of the "cute" videos care or have the resources to pursue violators. Most normal people appreciate the ex

    • You're forgetting to mention a point you practically just pointed out. How large do you think illegal game and movie rips are? About the size of Linux distros. Therefore, I don't think the traffic margin would be more sizeable with legit traffic ratings because a heck of a lot of people still use mirrors to get Linux distros, videos, etc.
    • I can personally vouch for (and take credit for) a couple hundred gigabytes of legitimate traffic via BitTorrent over the last couple of months.
    • The best way to approximate that figure would be to take a good look at the most popular BitTorrent site -- SuprNova.org [suprnova.org] -- and count it up over a few days.

      From what I've seen, I'd say it's about 99.9% infringing content, and 0.1% non-infringing, whether you go by instance or byte-count. Even when you factor in the other "legit" BitTorrent sites, like scarywater's anime [scarywater.net], the overall ratio probably won't change much.

      The amount of GPL'd and other open content [slashdot.org] is increasing, though. Slowly.

      --

      • by moonbender ( 547943 ) <moonbender AT gmail DOT com> on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @06:49PM (#9702033)
        Well, I agree with your result - that the vast majority of bytes transferred using BT have the illegal bit set - but not with your means of getting there: looking at SuprNova is bound to result in a vast majority of the illegal stuff because, well, that's kind of what SuprNova is for. I mean, it's a (semi-) open tracker, sure, but I don't think a lot of people go to SuprNova for their legit torrents.

        Sites who do legit torrents usually have their own trackers, since setting up a tracker isn't a very large effort if you already have a site of your own and easily worth the control and overview it gets you. And on the other hand, individuals who do not have a site to spread torrents with rarely do legit torrents.

        Of course this is all backed up by no evidence at all. :)

        While I'm at it, there are several numbers that would be interesting to look at: The relative usage of the various P2P protocols - this is what TFA talks about. This is something you can probably determine fairly well by only looking at the port ranges involved. The percentage of legal traffic compared to the illegal traffic - ie what we've just been talking about. This is extremely difficult and most likely impossible to find out at the backbone level.
        What I'm interested in is the percentage of the total bandwidth P2P makes up these days. Imagine if something like a third of the total ISP bandwidth is consumed by P2P file sharing - then consider that nearly all of it is illegal. At that point the currently practiced stance on copyright violation is just shown to be absurd: either DO something against it, enforce the laws you already have instead of inventing moronic new ones, or come to terms with a reality that probably won't go away any time soon.
    • by vidnet ( 580068 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @06:29PM (#9701898) Homepage
      My guess is that BitTorrent would account for a much higher percentage of legitimate file traffic

      Yes, BitTorrent is probably used for a hundred times more legitimate traffic. 0.1% as opposed to 0.001%.

      But seriously... I can't remember when I last downloaded a distro on cds. Will we see netinstalls using bittorrent soon?

      • by Sycraft-fu ( 314770 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @11:09PM (#9703763)
        Not only are OSS people all gun-ho about it, but file hosting places (3dgamers.com comes to mind) are liking it too. I mean they post the New Hot Demo(tm) and get slammed with requests. Well you got three options:

        1) Make people wait in line (which they hate).

        2) Have ass-slow transfers (which people also hate).

        3) Use BT so people help each other and a 2x increase in people equals a very small slowdown in overall transfer rate.

        It really just makes sense as a protocol. You go to download something, the server contributes as much as it can, and clients pick up as much extra slack as they can. Only for the file you download, while you leave it on, so no "eating up the connection all the time" problems. If onyl one person downloads, well no net gain or loss for client or server. However with each additonal person downloading, rather than the server having to share it's bandwidth more and more, the clients help each other and the thransfer rate stays much more constant.

        Hence why it has so much legit appeal. I really hope that the major browser makers start including BT in their browsers. They do that, and if it gets modified to run on the webserver directly, I imagine it could become the predominant file transfer protocol for mass distribution.
    • That's like saying the majority of Kazaa's traffic just might be legit.

      Just because some Linux distros use it doesn't mean anything. I guarantee there is a lot more illegimate traffic going on than legit Linux distro traffic. Linux distros are not THAT widespread. There are a hell of a lot more people pirating music and movies than sharing the latest Slackware. Just saying.
    • They've done surveys on that before, but questionaires aren't going to cut it. I was skeptical of them before (very easy to lie, and good incentive to), but even moreso now.

      The RIAA has played dirty tricks enough that I know I'll never put a check mark next to, "Do you use peer-to-peer file sharing software?" let alone next to "Do you use peer-to-peer file sharing software for illegal purposes?"
    • What would also be interesting to look at is porn trading. I'd speculate a large chunk (at least 15%) of P2P traffic is NOT warez, NOT music, NOT movies, but porn.

      It's still copyright infringement, since porn is owned by the producers, but for some reason there is no outcry from the porn industry when people steal their stuff. I wonder why that is.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @06:06PM (#9701662)
    We all know copyright infringement is a full time job. When I was a kid, we didn't have high speed internet... heck, we didn't even have any peer to peer programs. We had a BBS and Zmodem (or worse!) and we traded what we could! And we we liked it! 0 day all the way.
  • Well shit. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by MikeXpop ( 614167 ) <mike@noSPAM.redcrowbar.com> on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @06:06PM (#9701666) Journal
    I sure hope the RIAA doesn't look in Bittorrent's direction. There are a LOT of good legal uses for it. Moreso (in my mind) than KaZaA.
    • Re:Well shit. (Score:5, Insightful)

      by ackthpt ( 218170 ) * on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @06:10PM (#9701727) Homepage Journal
      I sure hope the RIAA doesn't look in Bittorrent's direction.

      You should know by now that they certainly will, if they could show that ftp was ever used for music piracy they'd go after ftp servers, too. You're concerned that cow actually cares where it takes a dump?

      • They do (Score:2, Informative)

        They do go after FTP servers. So does the MPAA. I know, I got a letter from them. They log in, grab a directory listing of things they believe are copyrighted and send the ISP a letter. Whole process probably takes 5 minutes. And for the record, their logging into sites listed on Oth.net. I'm sure their are others but I know Oth is being spyed on for sure.
      • It's not only easy but trivial to show that ftp is used for music piracy. Just go to one of the many ftp list channels and grab the list, you'll find hundreds of FTPs (literally) with mp3s on them. They're going after the low-hanging fruit instead, because it's the easiest way to scare a lot of people.
    • Re:Well shit. (Score:3, Informative)

      Put up a freenet node and keep it running if you want to share things without having to worry about idiots on the network ruining it for you.

      That said, I've never gotten freenet to work quite right and just recently removed it again in frustration.

    • I hear you on this. This is how I get all of my big legit files now. ISO's, Game Demo's and all of the other bandwidth wasters.
    • Re:Well shit. (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Tremyl ( 789061 )
      They're not the RIAA, but the MPAA does definately look at Bit Torerent. To be blunt, using BT for anything the MPAA has a copyright on while a college network is fairly dangerous. The MPAA seems to run robots which, as best I can tell, find BT servers and check the owner of the network. If it happens to be a school, they generate a nastygram and send it to the computer department, with not so pleasant consequences. This happened to me a few weeks ago, where I was getting a few episodes of Firefly (and uplo
    • Re:Well shit. (Score:3, Insightful)

      I'd kind of like to see them try. Bittorrent has plenty of "established" Legal uses and is being used by companies (Mandrakesoft, redhat, etc) to distribute their product.

      Kazaa was designed and marketed from the get go as a way to share music and software among users. I don't recall anybody ever using it for their product distribution.

      It's much easier to argue that a system has legal uses if you can provide concrete examples.

      It seems to me that napster's, kazaa's, etc biggest hurdle was not argui

    • by mcrbids ( 148650 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @06:28PM (#9701890) Journal
      I sure hope the RIAA doesn't look in Bittorrent's direction. There are a LOT of good legal uses for it. Moreso (in my mind) than KaZaA.

      Which is precisely why BT stands to legitimize open-structure p2p networks forever.

      Napster really had no legitimate use. I mean, did you *ever* download a song from Napster that wasn't a bootleg? Neither did anybody else.

      Kazaa also has very limited legitimate use. Other than renaming an encrypted tar file "Wild Donkeys do hot chicks.mpg" and using it as a backup vehicle, its use as a bona-fide legal distribution channel is pretty limited.

      However, BT is different. There are plenty of BT users distributing bootleg movies, songs, and pr0n, but there are also plenty of sites using it to distribute legitimate demos, patches, ISO images, and other large files.

      To think that BT allows somebody on a T1 to serve near an OC3 worth of bandwidth by distributing the load is just incredible. I don't think the industry would be willing to give up that advantage without a fight.
    • I got a cease and desist letter from my ISP about two months ago seeding a CD. I've been running PeerGuardian since then. I'm amazed to see how many peers try to connect from banned IP addresses.
    • There are a LOT of good legal uses for it. Moreso (in my mind) than KaZaA.

      Yes [blizzard.com] indeed [telascience.org], not only to distribute Linux ISO's which is a common example, but BT usage is popping up all over the place, so I really hope they won't block the protocol at ISP level or try to make the software itself illegal. But then there's those loons [wired.com] that try to illegalize the whole thing, so you never know. :-P
    • The MPAA already does, we got a letter as a result of a bittorrent download about two months ago.

  • by SeinJunkie ( 751833 ) <seinjunkie@gmail.com> on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @06:07PM (#9701680) Homepage
    Doesn't the very fact that it's seasonal make BitTorrent a better option, since more files will be available more often? And BitTorrent is an open solution, so there's more development of the clients going on, rather than the closed KaZaa, who's development stopped at Lite, as far as I'm concerened.
  • by PIPBoy3000 ( 619296 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @06:07PM (#9701681)
    Call me crazy, but BitTorrent seems to have been more widely accepted than other P2P technologies. The programmer of BitTorrent was hired by Valve recently and sites like FileRush [filerush.com] are pretty commonly visited by the masses.
  • by eril ( 759876 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @06:07PM (#9701687)
    ....keep on screwing us by pointing the man in the direction of the next big thing. If you guys would keep your mouths shut, we could have the man chasing after Kazaa for years to come....just like he's still bitching about Doom as the game those kids play that cause 'em to go postal (no pun intended).
  • by yotaku ( 26455 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @06:07PM (#9701689) Homepage
    "It's worth noting, though, that Kazaa traffic is highly seasonal, as a lot of high-schoolers and college students are simply on vacation this time of year."

    And BitTorrent traffic isn't seasonal?
    • a lot of high-schoolers and college students are simply on vacation this time of year.

      Also, I could see the two sort of cancelling each other out (although I'd be willing to bet the college student's University has a bigger pipe than the high schooler's parent's cable modem). In the summer, I would imagine high schooler P2P use goes up and then decrease during the school year. In the non-summer months, I would think the college student use would go up during the school year and decrease during the sum

  • Bit Torent (Score:5, Interesting)

    by trotski ( 592530 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @06:08PM (#9701701)
    No surprises here, bit torrent is far supperior to Kazaa in almost every way.

    The only thing that needs to be improved with bit torrent is a merger of all the small tracker sites into one big site where you can hook on to any torrent out there. Suprnova.org is getting there but still, more momentum needs to be developed.

    That being said, the best thing about the bit torrent technology is that it's almost impossible for the RIAA to control it. The cat is out of the bag and theres no way it will be pushed back in.
    • The actual file transfer mechanism is definately more intelligent, but Kazaaa and the like still have their place. If I wanted to share a big directory of MP3s using BitTorrent, I would either need to create individual torrents for each MP3, or make one mondo torrent with the whole directory. Neither is a very efficient solution.

      WinMX is a decent compromise between Kazaa and BitTorrent. People with partial downloads can still upload the part they have so it has that benefit of BitTorrent, but also has t
      • If I wanted to share a big directory of MP3s using BitTorrent, I would either need to create individual torrents for each MP3, or make one mondo torrent with the whole directory. Neither is a very efficient solution.

        The natural upside to this is that fewer people will share big directories of mp3's using BitTorrent.
    • Re:Bit Torent (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Peeet ( 730301 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @06:29PM (#9701896)
      The only thing that needs to be improved with bit torrent is a merger of all the small tracker sites into one big site where you can hook on to any torrent out there. Suprnova.org is getting there but still, more momentum needs to be developed.

      That being said, the best thing about the bit torrent technology is that it's almost impossible for the RIAA to control it. The cat is out of the bag and theres no way it will be pushed back in.
      That being said, wouldn't centralization (sp?) or merger of trackers create the one problem that other P2Ps have had? One target to attack? I think it's fine that BT is harder to find and nail down. That will help keep it as content-rich and un-**AA-able as possible.
    • Re:Bit Torent (Score:3, Interesting)

      by LordLucless ( 582312 )
      The only thing that needs to be improved with bit torrent is a merger of all the small tracker sites into one big site where you can hook on to any torrent out there. Suprnova.org is getting there but still, more momentum needs to be developed.

      No, that doesn't fit with BitTorrents' (or rather, its creator's) stated aims. BitTorrent was not designed to replace P2P networks, but rather to allow the efficient downloading of a single file. BitTorrent is not designed to be hooked together into a massive netwo
  • Does this also mean that there has been some kind of demographic shift too, along with the 'generational shift' from movies to music?

    Also is this some kind of silent protest against gator style spyware embedded in Kazaa?

    Or as RIAA tactics target one section of users using a particular P2P network (sic), they shift alleigances to another?

    CNET article is nice but typically lacking on details...

  • While the MPAA and RIAA will want to trumpet this as evidence of illegla trading, let's not forget that more and more users are relying upon it for legitimate purposes. I downloaded all of the Slackware discs using bittorrent this time.
  • by unisol5 ( 637706 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @06:11PM (#9701739)
    MPAA monitors bittorent traffic from sites such as suprnova.org. They constantly send out letters to ISPs that explains which movie was donwloaded, and how the ISP should proceed with the client. So, downloading several movies from suprnova.org is not a good idea, because MPAA sees what everyone downloads. BitTorrent is in no way an anonymous download.
    • by Anonymous Coward
      Is it actually illegal to have a torrent on your system and not the infringing material? I downloaded several torrents from supranova.org and most of the time I never bother to download the content itself.
    • by joshv ( 13017 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @08:07PM (#9702616)
      There is no "bittorrent" traffic from suprnova.org. If you haven't noticed, people don't even download the torrents from suprnova.org. Every request for suprnova.org is round robin'd to volunteer servers. Each time you hit the site you get a different server.

      When you click on a link to download a torrent you download the .torrent from yet another server.

      Even if the MPAA monitored the .torrent download, this is not legal proof that the downloader of the torrent actually downloaded the file the .torrent points to.

      -josh
    • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @09:33PM (#9703153)
      I can confirm this...
      Anti-Piracy Operations
      PHONE: (818) 728 - 8127
      Email: MPAA@copyright.org <mailto:MPAA@copyright.org>

      Via Fax/Email

      RE: Unauthorized Use of Copyrighted Motion Pictures
      Reference#: [Withheld] (M)
      IP Address: [Withheld]
      Date of Infringement: [Withheld]

      The title(s) offered included:
      WHO FRAMED ROGER RABBIT

      Specifically, we have identified the following material as infringing:

      Infringement Detail:
      Infringing Work: WHO FRAMED ROGER RABBIT
      Filepath: Who Framed Roger Rabbit-avi(1).torrent/
      Filename: Who Framed Roger Rabbit.avi
      First Found: [Withheld]
      Last Found: [Withheld]
      Filesize: 748,644k
      IP Address: [Withheld]
      IP Port: 6885
      Network: BTPeers
      Protocol: BitTorrent

      Please contact us at the above listed address or by replying to this email should you have any questions. Kindly include the above noted Reference # in the subject line of all email correspondence.

      We thank you for your cooperation in this matter. Your prompt response is requested.

      Respectfully,
      Motion Picture Association of America
      There was more to the email, specifically steps we need to take and such, but it just made it way to long and boring.
  • by SubtleNuance ( 184325 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @06:14PM (#9701764) Journal
    One of the problems with .torrents is diversity. I use suprnova.org [suprnova.org] to get my .torrents.

    Does anyone else know of a good database of torrents? RSS Feeds? Websites?

  • Disturbing (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Nom du Keyboard ( 633989 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @06:15PM (#9701780)
    Am I the only one who find this disturbing that a private company is allowed inside a number of major ISP's and allowed to monitor traffic to the level of determining which programs the users are running? Doesn't this mean that they've looked inside the packets, since most programs now allow the user's choice of ports to use, and P2P means you can't analyze traffic based on its destination IP address?

    If CacheLogic, then why not the RIAA?

    If monitoring, then why not outright blocking?

    Is that a slope, or a Slip-and-Slide[tm], ahead of me?

    • Very good point. Also a heads up to anyone who possibly thinks that the NSA isn't looking at their traffic. The government and marketing agencies are probably looking at everything they can :) Knowledge is power... whether it's for (defense) or (marketing)
    • I would presume (or at least hope) that all the ISP's made CacheLogic sign contracts stating that they would not record, store or disclose to 3rd parties any information pertaining to packet contents, origin or destination other than that which might reasonably be expected to come out as part of "traffic" analysis anyway.
    • Re:Disturbing (Score:3, Interesting)

      by El Volio ( 40489 )
      I would love for someone to explain to me how this isn't a violation of the Wiretap Act [cybercrime.gov]. Unless all the customers have given consent in the T&Cs, there would be a good case (for investigating this further. The exemptions for protecting the "rights or property" of the network provider don't really apply here, as courts have typically required a substantial nexus between the monitoring and the rights or property (think IDS on the DMZ). This sort of research project doesn't seem to fill that requirement, e
  • by PhatKat ( 78180 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @06:19PM (#9701811) Homepage
    Shhh!!

    keep it on the dl
    • Too late, my friend. Too late. I knew BT's cover was blown when a couple of young kids from my wife's CHURCH asked me (the guy off in the corner in the OpenBSD Blowfish T-shirt with the actual algorithm on the back standing by himself and chain-drinking coffee) if *I* had heard of BitTorrent.

      "It's kinda like Kazaa, but way cooler" the young pre-pimply punk in the orange hawaiian shirt said.

      "Yeah, cooler", said his little brother, wearing an equally tacky spider-man shirt.

      "Oh, F***!" I said.

      There goes t
  • SMTP is inherently a peer-to-peer protocol (MTAs act as either clients or servers in mail transactions) -- being as common as it is, shouldn't SMTP account for the majority of peer to peer traffic on the Internet?

    If you don't think that SMTP is P2P, why is that? Because there's no content theft (FUD) going on?
    • Firstly, while there may be many messages on SMTP, I don't belive that the total size of transfers gets anywhere near that of BitTorrent. For example:
      http://www.telecomm.uh.edu/toptalkers_smtp.html [uh.edu] gives a (currently) 23 MB transfered per 5 minutes, for a university (at 6pm local). That's, what, one BitTorrent connection?

      On the peer to peer or otherwise of SMTP: Peer to peer implies that the cost of transfer/storage is mitigated by the number of people on the network. That's a modern viewpoint, but i
  • by radiumhahn ( 631215 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @06:26PM (#9701876)
    People, people, people... The RIAA and MPAA look to slashdot to find out which file sharing systems to target next.
    • Where else do you think they'd find their answers? Usenet??

    • People, people, people... The RIAA and MPAA look to slashdot to find out which file sharing systems to target next.

      I'd also like to add that nobody here should mention the fact that you can Google for nearly every single torrent listing site in existance. Nor that .torrent files can be traded on websites, email, and chat rooms. Nor that there are dozens of bittorrent clients available for free download.

      Let's keep this one to ourselves, shall we?
  • by scifience ( 674659 ) * <webmaster@scifience.net> on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @06:28PM (#9701892) Homepage
    New installations of spyware have dropped by 53%.

    "We just don't know what is going on" said the CEO of Claria.
  • Who needs it (Score:5, Informative)

    by smclean ( 521851 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @06:31PM (#9701907) Homepage
    Who needs P2P software when people leave movies unprotected [google.com] on their websites all the time? Click on any website on this google search, see what movies they have, and leech em.
  • Direct Connect? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Epistax ( 544591 ) <<moc.liamg> <ta> <xatsipe>> on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @06:33PM (#9701925) Journal
    I've never seen direct connect mentioned on any of these studies or warnings. Even when my school, RIT, got warned and passed the warnings on to the students, they only complained about Kazaa and not direct connect, despite the fact that it is much larger on campus. Is there some big thing about Kazaa that I'm missing? No matter how rare the item is that I'm looking for, I'm sure to find several people that have it. I've never seen a reason to use anything else (yet).
    • Re:Direct Connect? (Score:5, Informative)

      by phaxkolumbo ( 572192 ) <phaxkolumbo@@@gmail...com> on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @07:07PM (#9702201)

      Now, this is just my view (which, surprisingly, might not have any basis on reality...), but i've observed that DC tends to be more "regional" and "communal" for a couple of reasons...

      DC hubs don't scale well (at least the software that i know of), 1000-1500 users per hub seems to be the maximum, therefore hubs tend to be more private, usually, and anyone can start a hub. Plus most of the hubs i frequent have some restrictions on user population (for example, amount and types of files shared)

      There's a couple of DC hubs in my local area that allow only local people to connect and people look for stuff there first, and then resort to other methods (bittorrent, ftp, kazaa etc.). The ISP knows of the existence of these hubs, but seems to look away, since it keeps the traffic to the outside world down. The pattern seems to pop up on many campus LANs as well. And yes, there's legal stuff in there as well (*gasp!*), a quick search shows the ISOs for all the major linux distros.

      Maybe that's why... anyone can get to kazaa or use bittorrent, but dc hubs seem to be more restricted

  • by Dark-Helmet ( 64583 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @06:48PM (#9702023)
    think p2p is here to stay, and there are still features that need to be put in place univerally before it's mature, and all the various p2p flavors are comparable.

    The various bits are there scattered across different p2p networks. IMNSHO, all p2p networks/clients ought to have:

    -Swarming (as defined/used in BitTorrent)
    -Privacy/anonymity (perhaps as much as in Freenet)
    -Good searching (Kazaa, Napster, those types. With room for improvement all around)
    -Open-source clients with no ads/spyware
    -Decentralized/self-organizing networks (no central point of failure, or at least minimal)
    -Browser/web server hooks to autoswarm web content (there ought to be bittorrent:// links)

    Pardon my BitTorrent bias. I moderate the bittorrent_help mailing list, so I have more exposure to that.

    All these features should someday be pushed into numerous language libraries, so that they become ubiquitous.
  • by Tojosan ( 641739 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @07:19PM (#9702283)
    Am I the only individual here on Slashdot that isn't using a P2P client on a regular basis????????

    I've never been unable to get a demo I wanted from a legitimate source.

    I don't download pirate videos or music.

    I've d/l linux distros direct or at distro sites with no problem.

    So, in a short answer, why is using a P2P client sooo much better? From the consumer side that is?

    I've read the info at the Bittorrent site.

    And just to ask my fellow Sd folks...how safe is it?

    Thanks and be well!
    • BitTorrent is rather unlike any of the other P2P systems out there.

      From a user standpoint, it's "http, but vastly more scalable". It doesn't do file searching or anything like that. It just distributes load among all people downloading a file.
    • So, in a short answer, why is using a P2P client sooo much better? From the consumer side that is?

      For one, there's less load on the server(s). As long as the Tracker doesn't go under then mass popularity won't swamp the server, as quickly more and more of the downloaders can pick up the slack by offering up the chunks they already have.

      If you can't get it down in one go, or something necessitates a reboot halfway through your Linux ISO set, it will always resume.
      Heck, if the computer crashes then res

  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @07:51PM (#9702508)
    because I'd bet over half the bandwidth on kazaa is people trying to re-download something. As opposed to bittorrent, where the quality of files is almost guaranteed.

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