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BitTorrent Throttling Internet Providers Exposed

Data published by the Google-backed Measurement Lab gives a unique insight into the BitTorrent throttling practices of ISPs all over the world. It reveals that Comcast was slowing down nearly half of all BitTorrent traffic in the U.S. early 2008, but only 3% last year. In Canada, Rogers has the worst track record as it systematically throttles more than three-quarters of all BitTorrent traffic.

throttlingHundreds of ISPs all over the world limit and restrict BitTorrent traffic on their networks. Unfortunately, most companies are not very open about their network management solutions.

Thanks to data collected by Measurement Lab (M-Lab) the public is now able to take a look at the frequency of these BitTorrent throttling practices. Among other tools, M-Lab runs the Glasnost application developed by the Max Planck Institute.

The interactive data set published yesterday spans a two-year period and this initial release covers the period between April 2008 and May 2010. It includes BitTorrent throttling percentages of ISPs in dozens of countries, divided into three-month periods. Below we discuss a few trends and notable findings.

United States

The BitTorrent throttling practices of Comcast, exposed by Robb Topolski and TorrentFreak in 2007, were in part what led to the Measurement Lab research. After an FCC investigation Comcast was ordered to stop slowing down BitTorrent on a large-scale, and the data shows that the company has kept its word.

Early 2008 Comcast limited nearly half (49%) of all BitTorrent traffic but this was reduced to 3 percent by the first quarter of last year. Cox, another heavy throttler, went from 51 percent to 3 percent in the same time period. The data further shows that in 2010, Clearwire was the only U.S. Internet provider that limited more than 10 percent of all BitTorrent traffic, 17 percent to be precise.

Worst: Clearwire (17%)

Best: Comcast and others (3%)

Canada

In Canada, all large ISPs have admitted to slowing down BitTorrent traffic, and some do so to a great extent. Since the start of the measurements Rogers has continuously throttled more than three-quarter of all BitTorrent traffic, and there are no signs that this will stop.

During the first quarter of 2010 the two other large Canadian ISPs, Bell and Shaw, were throttling 16 and 14 percent respectively. Videotron on the other hand has never slowed down more than 7 percent, and only 3 percent during the last measurement year.

Worst: Rogers (78%)

Best: Videotron (3%)

Great Britain

In Great Britain, TalkTalk used to limit a third of all BitTorrent traffic, but this was reduced significantly by the end of 2009. They now only slow down BitTorrent during peak hours which resulted in a 12 percent throttling rate early 2010. Tiscali and BT Group are exposed as the most heavy throttlers while Virgin Media, O2 and BSkyB have had relatively low percentages throughout the measurement period.

Worst: Tiscali and BT Group (27%)

Best: BSkyB (5%)

Other

A quick look at some other countries shows that in Australia none of the large ISPs were throttling BitTorrent traffic heavily in 2010, and the same can be said for Sweden and France. In The Netherlands UPC used to throttle heavily, but this was no longer the case early 2010.

In Germany, Kabel Deutschland seems to be the poorest choice for BitTorrent users (36%), and in Poland UPC has to be avoided as they limit 87 percent of all BitTorrent traffic.

Those who are interested in seeing how their own ISP performs can take a look at the full dataset at deeppacket.info. The researchers promise to release more recent data in the future, and it will be interesting to see how the various throttling habits of ISPs develop.

For those who have a choice, which us unfortunately not always the case, the data can definitely help to make an informed decision when signing up at a new Internet Provider.

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  • KDSucks

    i’m using “Kabel Deutschland” since 2007 and they throttle not only bittorrent, but also NNTP (usenet) and on weekends, they throttle your whole internet connection, not matter what protocol you use.
    it’s NOT based on network load, it’s clearly scheduled.

    18:00 – everything goes down to about 250kbps
    00:00 – everything goe up again to 4100kpbs (fullspeed @ 32mbit account)

    on weekends its even worst, because it starts at 10:00 in the morning and is active until 00:00.

    • http://profiles.google.com/zerianis10 Christopher Kidwell

      Sounds like you need to get on their case about this. I’m fine with throttling if it is done based on current usage, but NOT this timed throttling bullplop.

    • Lor

      I definitely still get speeds above 1MB/s between 18h and midnight (with torrents).

    • Myfakeemail

      internet provided by cable sucks. had 10mb account that used to go down to 1mb all days. used to be good at mornings and midnight. its that all the neighbors share a single connection, and at peak hours and with all of them downloading, youtubing, etc at the same time, it is hell.

      just changed to optic fiber, slightly more expensive. 10mb at around 80usd month. its been ok at all time of day.

      thats the way here in Mexico at least.

  • http://twitter.com/Drfootlong Drfootlong

    This is already incorrect for the UK, Virgin media didn’t throttle their 50mb tier at all but about a year ago introduced pretty heavy throttling for all users at peak times, same with O2, they used to be great but their p2p throttling is really heavy now, no matter what tier you are on. Sky and Be both offer throttle free even at peak times still.

    • Anonymous

      I’ve been with Be for more than a year and I’ve been very happy with them. Although they advertise a 24Mbit downlink, I can only get 12-13Mbit sync rates (due to the distance to the phone exchange and the quality of the wiring), but I’ve never observed any slowdowns or throttling below this.

      • gae

        I use BE 24Mbit, torrents download @ 2.2mb/sec all day at any time of day as much as I want.

      • Alistairm85

        BE are excellent, agreed. Consistent speed no matter what time. I moved over to TalkTalk and it’s perfectly clear they throttle, but there are ways around it ;)

    • Scrutinicle

      I used Virgin in the past and they throttled heavily if you downloaded anything for more than 20 minutes solid during ‘peak hours’ – 18:00 to 21:00 (not just P2P traffic, even http traffic). Made it impossible to watch BBC iPlayer during those ‘peak’ times, because nearly all BBC programmes are 25-30 mins long so the stream would begin buffering for the last 5 to 10 minutes! They didn’t just throttle your traffic for the peak period either – once they began throttling your connection the throttle then lasted until about 07:00 the next morning. It was like a kind of punishment for using their bandwidth. Needless to say they got dumped very quickly.

      I switched to O2 and I don’t get any noticeable throttling at any time. They kindly gave me 12 months of FREE broadband because I already had a mobile phone contract with them and after the free period ended they give a reduced price monthly fee for their broadband if you still have a phone with them (contract or something like minimum £10pm top-up on PAYG).

      From what I’ve heard, BE are one of the best around (they’re owned by O2) and never throttle any traffic at all.

      As always, YMMV

  • Bobhoskins

    O2 do not throttle, i have been with O2 for over 3 years and havent been throttled yet

    • Ihateshaping

      Legacy packages aren’t throttled. New packages are.

      See http://www.o2.co.uk/assets2/pdf/O2_Broadband_Fair_Use_Policy.pdf & http://broadband.o2.co.uk/home/ofcom.jsp

      Nice article TorrentFreak. You get what you pay for!

    • Christophe Thomas

      they do in Czech Republic though … I have an inside source that seems to confirm just that and it matches my own experience. Now there is not point throttling “just” in little Czech Republic. I would bet a case of beer they do it across their infrastructure in the EU. Well- to be fair with O2 – they also provide an easy workaround if you subscribe for TV with them … :)

      • Tommy Christopher

        You can’t subscribe for TV with O2 in the UK, so I’m betting that case of beer that they’re running different services across the EU depending on the different local infrastructures.

  • http://www.facebook.com/Amak1131 Samuel Anderson

    Are you sure Cox throttles? I’ve never noticed a speed drop and I once used 900gb in a month. Granted, I ran bittorrent at night to limit my impact.

  • Guest

    What’s the point of throttling information?

    KILL THE MAFIAA

    • Guest

      Some ISPs throttle to keep the network bottlenecks from choking.

      I work for a small ISP and we had to do this on some of our public 802.11g hotspots. Don’t get me wrong, we have nothing against P2P, but imagine 10 users on access point, with 3-4 of them trying to use BitTorrent at the full speed. Nor OpenWrt (Linux SFQ/ESFQ qdiscs, to be exact), nor Mikrotik succeeded in fairly dividing the bandwidth.

      Obviously, we’ve tried to increase hotspot density first, but this did not help much. So we’ve throttled BT, provided remote-hosted BT client as a service (i.e. with FTP and web access to downloaded files), and started to roll out wired (100Base-TX Ethernet) connectivity.

      Yet, I don’t see a reason to throttle P2P on, say, DSL line.

  • Anonymous

    I can only wonder how they separate out BT throttling from peak time general network throttling? Some network data restrictions are not about BT.

    I have always welcomed heavy network use for any data reason when it gives them good reason to upgrade the infrastructure to support greater data rates. The worst thing is when the network easily handles all data and they see no reason to upgrade.

    So bring on the titanic data of P1080 HD video and above streamed to several devices all over peoples homes. Squeeze your ISP’s cable until it bleeds and weeps.

    • Anonymous

      Unfortunately you are right. It has to get worse before it gets better. I had BSkyB for a while and during peak time the speeds were appalling. The problem was that they were not buying up enough bandwidth from BT, their wholesale provider. The fix for this wouldn’t even be difficult because all the hardware is already there but in the interests of making money Sky decided they could afford to loose a few customers. The question is how much load does the network need to be under for these greedy ISP’s to reinvest in them. We have been with a really small ISP called Xilo since then and they have been great but they are way more expensive.

      • dofn

        Unless you got the awful ‘Sky Connect’ product, then Sky have their own LLU network which has rather consistent speeds, is pretty good, and has no limits (former EasyNet LLU network). Presumably your exchange doesn’t have the Sky LLU kit, and hence they gave you the ‘Connect’ product which does use BT Wholesale (and is tripe).

        • Anonymous

          Yep. Unfortunately our exchange has no LLU capability yet so we are stuck with BT and BT re sellers.

      • dofn

        They aren’t resellers, they just use the BT Openreach network as a transit between the end-user and the ISP. The entire rest of their network (i.e. most of it), including all of their own hardware and peering arrangements are independent. So reselling it ‘aint. (this is wrt your reply, which is nested too deeply to reply to).

  • Canadiantelcosux

    you forgot the second biggest ISP on the West: Telus.. as far as I know they don’t throttle at all. I could be wrong though. That’s what I have read backed up by my own experience with them. Before, Telus I was with Shaw that did heavily throttle bittorrent traffic.. As far as Rogers goes, ya.. they are the biggest bunch of F&$% in Canada (well maybe second biggest after Bell).. but definitely the worst for throttling.. they have recently been reported to the CRTC (Canadian Telecom regulatory guys) by the Canadian Gamers Association on the grounds that their torrent throttling technology is also heavily affecting other applications (games, skype….) which seems to be due their (and Cisco’s) lack of competence. The CRTC has since set out to do absolutely nothing about it and is asking consumers to their research (their job) for them providing evidence and so on.. and even when the evidence was provided, they still chose to do nothing.. well you get the idea…

    • TQ

      I’m with Novus in Vancouver(a local ISP to metro vancouver) and they don’t throttle at all either.

    • Mcoules

      Yep, Telus may have some pretty sucky practices otherwise, but their Internet service is spot on. I’m really surprised Bell is not at the top of the list, and Rogers throttles over 70%? That’s crazy!

    • Mcoules

      Yep, Telus may have some pretty sucky practices otherwise, but their Internet service is spot on. I’m really surprised Bell is not at the top of the list, and Rogers throttles over 70%? That’s crazy!

    • http://college-of-the-serf.myopenid.com/ College of the Serf
  • http://www.facebook.com/madwolfa Pavel Vovk

    Comcast is not throttling, but monthly 250GB data cap on ALL speed plans is just ridiculous.

    • Green Karmic

      Don’t complain, I’m capped at 120GB with Videotron, using their “Ultimate Speed Internet 30 Mbps” plan. Even the highest plan, which is 150$/month caps at 200GB. They charge penalties for every byte you download passed that cap.

      • http://profiles.google.com/zerianis10 Christopher Kidwell

        We should complain. You should be given enough bandwidth allowance to use your service at the HIGHEST rated speed you are guaranteed downloading 24/7, period.

        Personally, I have seen that Comcast doesn’t enforce their data caps all that well if you say “Hmm…… well then, I will just have to switch and you won’t be getting my 60 bucks a month anymore!”

        They backtrack REAL quick when you do that.

        • Guest

          “We should complain. You should be given enough bandwidth allowance to use your service at the HIGHEST rated speed you are guaranteed downloading 24/7, period.”

          Really? Are you paying for dedicated banwidth from your ISP? If not, quite your whining and moaning.

      • Christophe Thomas

        jeez – how do you guys survive ? Or do you get some sort of gold dust with each single IP packet?

      • gae

        I have looked at Canadian ISP’s and you guys really do get the worst deal ever.
        The prices are silly, I mean really silly for the level of service provided.

  • Phil Landry

    With videotron in Canada, they do not throttle but with the advertised 8mbps I never go faster than 1mbps (BT, HTTP or FTP)

  • http://twitter.com/charlesjbarry Charles J. Barry

    With Bell-Aliant FibreOP in Atlantic Canada they don’t throttle at all and you get the full speed advertises (30, 70, 170 Mbps down/30 Mbps up).

  • http://twitter.com/charlesjbarry Charles J. Barry

    With Bell-Aliant FibreOP in Atlantic Canada they don’t throttle at all and you get the full speed advertises (30, 70, 170 Mbps down/30 Mbps up).

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  • Guest

    I find Rogers (Atlantic Canada, cable provider) doesn’t throttle as much since they introduced bandwidth caps. Now they want you to go over so they can bill for overages. Once you hit the maximum overage charge though it seems to go back to excessive throttling.

    • Arvaco

      I’m with Bell in Ontario. I have 130+ gigs a month before I go over my cap but they still throttle. I find it depends on the day and time though. Monday to Friday during the business day and evenings (gamers) it can be quite slow. But after midnight and weekends there doesn’t seem to be an issue. But I will say when they throttle it’s painful, I’ll see download speeds of 5kB/s and trying to open a web page is nearly impossible, but when I shutdown utorrent everything instantly goes back to normal

  • Anon

    Canada:
    Best: Videotron (3%)

    as a content producer they happily forward threatening letters based on US laws and will be the first to give away your identity when the lawsuit shitstorm hit Canada

    I will stick with my throttling ISP thanks

  • deadsteve

    Verizon FIOS FTW

    best upload/download evar

    Verizon has always been open and awesome.

    even DSL is wide open

    • Anonymous

      My FIOS Ultimate 35/35 w/Cable gets about 45/45. Not only does Verizon not throttle, but you usually get HIGHER throughput then advertised. Often MUCH higher. Hooray for Verizon FIOS.

      GTE (Verizon predecessor) used to throttle our DSL at work when we went Crazy on Usenet (often exceeding our 1.5 Mbps package back in the day.)

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  • JohnIngram

    Meanwhile in Texas Specifically Deanville Texas, you are stuck with about .35 mb or less than the government standard for broadband which is 5.0mb/sec (broadband.gov)

    Texas needs to upgrade their shit, they suck

  • ThumbsUpThumbsDown

    If these companies were focused on maximizing fiber optic throughput capacity, that is to say building the infrastructure required by social/consumer demand under appropriately competitive market conditions, then it must be said that the demand exists and has existed with which to pay for the infrastructure plus a fat (if not extortionate) profit without imposing on consumers “Throttling” or “200gb monthly data limits” or all the other fine print chokepoints which deny the consumer the needed services at a price the consumer can afford.

    But, why should these companies be expected to price on the basis of actual supply and demand, when they can price on the basis of scarcity
    by imposing contractual controls to restrict availability? Put another way, why would they build out the infastructure to its actual potential of abundance when that would only limit their ability to exact a maximum (extortionate) profit from a market in which regulators are dead at the wheel and consumers are more scattered than rabbits at a wolf convention.

    My point is that, with respect to their customers, these companies have the ability to act with more or less perfect unison: They can google each other’s prices and terms, mutually adjust their boiler plate language, combine to pressure the legislatures. In effect, they act not as traditional oligopolies (which can be thought to compete against each other to the benefit of consumers), but as integrated and unified monopolies (which are not obliged to compete away their dominance over customers). If this is true, then these companies should be strictly regulated as utilities and confined to their defined social purpose, That is: Building out the infrastructure to technical capacities and efficiencies and pricing it and managing it such as to benefit the whole society.

    My sympathies to anyone who takes comfort because just now one company is doing less throttling or is offering more generous “data limits. That’s just one scattered rabbit talking to the wolf.

    • http://torrentfreak.com/ Rob8urcakes

      Abso-fecken-lutely spot on. Well put my friend and thanks :)

  • Mikel Magnusson
  • http://torrentfreak.com/ Rob8urcakes

    In the UK my TalkTalk telecom/ISP (a company owned by Tiscali UK Ltd. Reg.No. 3408171) still uses strings of copper wire to connect me to the internet even though I have fibre-optic cable installed too.

    But the two different cables are owned by different companies who don’t cooperate to give the consumer the best service available, so competition and capitalism fails the consumer yet again. And still the government-appointed regulator who’s job it is to ensure competition does nothing to resolve this stupidity,

    As the above article stated -
    “In Great Britain, TalkTalk used to limit a third of all BitTorrent traffic, but this was reduced significantly by the end of 2009. They now only slow down BitTorrent during peak hours which resulted in a 12 percent throttling rate early 2010. Tiscali and BT Group are exposed as the most heavy throttlers while Virgin Media, O2 and BSkyB have had relatively low percentages throughout the measurement period.

    Worst: Tiscali and BT Group (27%)”

    I can also confirm that TalkTalk throttle me between 18:00 to 00:00 EVERY day regardless of usage.
    But they’re still better and cheaper than BT
    *slaps face

  • http://lundman.myopenid.com/ Guest

    http://isp.oshietekun.net/
    The Japan ISPs, top has A-Rank, either no cap, limit or similar. Or has a way to get no limit (sign up for static-IP)
    B-rank, with caps/limits per day/month,
    C-rank, always limiting p2p
    then the shitlist, list of the worst ISPs.

  • http://twitter.com/icanhazsake Ninja

    Go to the options in your bt client. Enable encryption and set it to forced, randomize port (or at least change it, ISPs tend to keep ports throttled even if you turn on encryption). Problem solved. If behind a router it could be tricky and it depends on the router but change the port and it should work wonders, even if you can’t set it to random.

    With more and more companies using bt-like networks for distribution of content throttling will be illegal soon enough. Major win for bt and it shields the protocol against MAFIAA.

    • Anonymous

      i’m doing both encrypt and random port with transmission, but at&t has cut download speed by 1/3 – 1/2 and seeding just isn’t happening – i see “connect” but no “downloading”

      • Guest

        You have to port forward the port you use in BitTorrent client then check if your port is open “to the world”

        canyouseeme(dot)org

  • Anonymous

    Dutch XS4ALL customer – not being throttled.

  • http://dan.cx/ Daniel15

    Clearwire probably don’t actually throttle, they just have a horribly slow network so it seems like they’re throttling :P

  • Anonymous

    Oh wow, OK now that jsut has to be downright annoying. Wow.
    real-privacy.it.tc

  • phood

    Does any legal content flow through BT? Or only pirated stuff?

    • Guest

      Of course “legal content” flow through BT. Just few examples: Linux distributions, YouTube videos, free movies (yes, they exist!)….

    • LQ

      Yes, lots of large open-source software packages are distributed that way. It’s much more efficient.

  • https://truefriender.com carbonfiber

    As ISPs do this they are going to force us into more private and more closed networks that are not subject to their scrutiny, check out truefriender.com hopefully services like that will be a little more resistant to this kind of thing.

  • Coder

    I’m in UK on AAISP- best ISP by far. They limit the internet usage (I get 4gb daytime/100 gb non-working hours which is plenty), but they are quick, and run by nerds for nerds. They even have ipv6.

  • Anonymous
  • Arthur Dent

    I have used both Rogers and Videotron in Canada, and I can say that Videotron is 10,000% better. Rogers is MUCH slower, especially the upload speeds. I have the highest and most expensive package, and upload speeds are capped at 100 Kb/s. That’s unacceptable. And try downloading a torrent; as soon as a download speed reaches a certain level (a tiny fraction of Rogers’ advertised speed), all torrents instantly become crippled. Videotron had faster download speeds, and its upload speed was FIVE TIMES that of Rogers. Oh, and you could download torrents too, all at a lower price.

    Of course, due to Rogers’ criminal business practices, we as consumers don’t have a choice in Canada. Both Rogers and Videotron are regional monopolies. They know they can offer substandard service at inflated prices, and there is nothing we can do about it. I sincerely hope that some other company comes along and offers a superior product. Rogers’ customers are so disgruntled, that anyone providing even marginally better service would destroy Rogers overnight.

    • http://profiles.google.com/zerianis10 Christopher Kidwell

      Not likely to happen, since Rogers and Videotron after research are given one of those ‘fiat of the government’ basically allowed monopolies and protected monopolies.

      • ThumbsUpThumbsDown

        Do you think it would more likely happen; say, for example, if citizens got angry enough to vote say 70% of current legislators out of office and replace them with politicians who knew clearly that they would be thrown out of office faster than you can say jumping jack flash unless they brought these monopolies under control?

        It’s said that death wonderfully concentrates the mind; but, for these poiliticians nothing, not even death, concentrates the mind like the knowledge that they will certainly not be reelected.

        • http://profiles.google.com/zerianis10 Christopher Kidwell

          Nope, I don’t. The fact is that it is a choice between bad, somewhat less bad, and worse when it comes to politicians in most parts of the world.

          A better solution to this would be to totally and forever ban politicians from having ANY contact with companies outside of monitored and recorded conversations in their government office.

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  • guest

    Disclaimer: I work for one of the ISPs on the data list provided and know for a fact that we do not throttle any protocols across our network (its my job to monitor these things) but the data still depicts a value > 0. I’m interested in what the error rate for these tests are.

    • Guest

      Great and I am Santa.

    • Zig

      Read the datasets on the site (as linked in TFA), it clearly states that even sites without throttling gave some false positives and that there was a margin of error which decreased with the increase of tests/valid tests.

      “Glasnost seems to generate false positives of around 10% prior to August 2009 and of 4-5% after that – so some ISPs who do not throttle BT at all may show some positive results. The number of valid tests is important because the more valid tests done, the more reliable the results in the last column. E.g., ISPs for whom we have only 11-30 tests per quarter (only 1-2 tests per week) will be highly variable and thus less reliable than ISPs for whom we have >450 tests per quarter. We do not show results for ISPs with less than 10 results per quarter.”

      http://dpi.ischool.syr.edu/MLab-Data.html

  • Derp

    From experience i can confirm that ISP Ziggo from the Netherlands also throttles. from a max of 1 mbps clean to 13 mbps while using a vpn tunnel, same torrent same time(120/10 connection).

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  • http://drvid.ca D. Starr

    Rogers in Canada is probably the worst ISP for throttling BT traffic in the world! It’s completely castrated. Explain to me how their 35M connection achieves 5-10 Kbps maximum (!!!) download speed in Transmission. Now explain to me why anyone would pay for this.

    • http://profiles.google.com/zerianis10 Christopher Kidwell

      Contact them and get on their case about this. This is not legal in Canada, they are not allowed to say that “X protocol is bad and we won’t allow it on our networks!”

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  • Guest

    Virgin Media throttle during these times:
    Mon-Fri 5pm-12am
    Sat-Sun 12pm-12am

    Which is a pain… as I have to set up my downloading in the morning before going to work!

  • Lucker

    i’m using NETIA – polish provider. i must be lucky :D All day , all night – 14mbps

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  • http://blademccool.myopenid.com/ BladeMcCool

    The cable and telephone companies spend a lot of money to pay skilled technicians to wire up the neighborhood level service distribution boxes. The green ones and the brown ones, you know what I am talking about. Have you ever opened up one of those to see the intricate work that was done? Can you imagine what would become of this work should something like a molotov cocktail find its way inside one of these wiring boxes? I’m suggesting that it would not be pretty, and done correctly it would be quite difficult to pin it on anyone since these things are not exactly well secured or monitored. Putting all this together, we can suggest to ISPs that the cost of not fucking with our bittorrent traffic might just be lower than the cost of fucking with it.

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  • Fake

    Bandwidth can’t be stockpiled.

    Artificial scarcity hurts the economy.

    Networks and airwaves should be seized for public use by Eminent Domain – they are the roads of the next century.

    • http://profiles.google.com/zerianis10 Christopher Kidwell

      Bingo! That is what I have told Comcast the few (once a year) times they have called to get on my case about “using too much bandwidth”.

      I told them that they are fine and dandy to slow me down when I am downloading if I am causing a bottleneck for other people…. however, I am not going to adhere to that artificial bandwidth cap and if they try to make me? I will pull my account AND tell everyone I know to do the same.

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  • Yatti

    Rogers is the worse ISP in Canada… They throttle everything except for standard web browsing.

  • http://getaseedbox.com GAS

    A good reason to use a seedbox and download data to your desktop using HTTP, FTPS download. These can’t be restricted too soon ;) http://getaseedbox.com/

  • http://getaseedbox.com GAS

    A good reason to use a seedbox and download data to your desktop using HTTP, FTPS download. These can’t be restricted too soon ;) http://getaseedbox.com/

  • http://getaseedbox.com GAS

    A good reason to use a seedbox and download data to your desktop using HTTP, FTPS download. These can’t be restricted too soon ;) http://getaseedbox.com/

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  • Ahmed Almohamady

    You should try Egypt ISPs .. I’m in TEData, for 12 hours everyday I get my full speed on torrents (200-220kbps), on the other 12 hours my torrent speed goes down to (50-60kbps)

    Reduced by 73% 12 hours everyday… Now, that should be the worst ISP ever..

    • http://daikirai666.livejournal.com/ -dai-

      7.2/2Mbps on 3 Indonesia here. With HTTP downloads, I can get up to 400-600kBps, but why the hell uTorrent can only transfer like 0.1-0.5kBps?

      So my condition is worse orz;;
      *eventually I proxied the uTorrent connection with a port-80 proxy. The speed’s not great, like 100-150kBps max and 20-30kBps average, but at least it works ==;;*

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  • Penguin_raf

    I am from Poland and use UPC…have 25mb package and I never see any issues with d/l / /u/l speeds.. Around 2.5-3.0mbs down and up to 200kbs up..when I was living in nyc I had time warner 10mb package and I had around 1mb top d/l speed…so it seems the ratio stayed the same.

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  • Anonymous

    Comcast at 3%, huh? Well I’m most definitely in that 3%. I connect to peers for about 2 seconds before the connection gets cut off.

  • John

    Looking for a seebox? or perhaps wanting to move to a new place cause your current provider is charging too much? Check out Pulsed media…

    http://pulsedmedia.com/clients/aff.php?aff=006

    They have a ton of different options. Both 100mbps and 1gbps servers. And, they dont get all their servers from OVH like a lot of resellers, they get servers from many different providers to always have the best and fastest speeds. Currently they have a 1TB HDD, 2GB ram server for only 21.95€/Mo, unmanaged! And with your choice of OS!

    They also have a starter version with 70GB HDD, 250MB Ram unmetered for only 11USD a month as well as a 8TB hdd, 8gb ram server for 150 USD a month!

    One of the greatest things is that you can pay in monthly,quarterly, semi-annually, or annually payments…the more months you pay for the better the price per month!

    Check them out…

    http://pulsedmedia.com/clients/aff.php?aff=006

  • BTGuard - BitTorrent Anonymously

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