Do P2P Blocklists Keep you Safe?

Written by Ernesto on April 15, 2007 

Recent findings by researchers from the University of California, Riverside, show that 15% of the IPs people connect to on the Gnutella P2P network are blocked by blocklist applications such as PeerGuardian. Statistics like this do not prove anything about the effectiveness of these lists, however, according to an insider who worked for several anti-piracy organizations, blocklists significantly decrease the risk of getting caught by the MPAA or RIAA.

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In a recently published paper, the researchers analyzed the results of a large scale experiment where they examined the number of hits they received from blocklisted IPs in a real P2P network. For a period of 90 days the researchers collected data using three differnet blocklists (PeerGuardian, Bluetack, and Trusty Files) on the Gnutella Network.

Their main conclusion: a user who is not using blocklist software is practically guaranteed to be monitored.

Other conclusions from their research are:

1. 5 blocklist ranges encountered during the experiments contribute to nearly 94% of all the blocklist hits.
2. Most blocklisted IPs belong to government or corporate organizations.
3. Very few blocklisted IPs belong directly to content providers such as record labels.

The researchers also note that the top 15 most encountered IPs operate from so called BOGON IP ranges, which can’t be traced back to a specific owner. This suggests that these sources deliberately want to stay anonymous, which could indicate that they are up to something.

The paper has some interesting findings, and does provide some insight into the workings of blocklists. However, it doesn’t say much about the accuracy and effectiveness of these blocklists.

In an attempt to find an answer, TorrentFreak asked an expert in the field, who worked with several anti-piracy organizations, how effective these lists are. His guess was that approximately 75 - 80% of IPs used by the anti-piracy companies he worked with are on these blocklists. This means that they offer some protection, but that they’re not foolproof.

The cat-and-mouse game between anti-piracy organizations and blocklist managers such as Bluetack will probably continue for a while.

Previously: This is How We Catch You Downloading

Next: Mosts Popular DVDrips on BitTorrent (wk15)

31 Responses

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26 Nov 21, 2007 at 00:53 by barafuda

last night i cannotconnect throught internet andit gaves a private IP add , no default gateway. Am i being tracked? pls reply….

27 Jan 11, 2008 at 19:52 by Google

I Think,İt is very nice information…

Hitchhiker Nation

28 Jan 25, 2008 at 19:14 by A. Person

I have had various anti-piracy cronies attempt to scan my IP, and PG2 has blocked them all. If you are feeling paranoid, just change your IP adress, that should shake them. Open Start —> Run, and type cmd. At the black screen, type ipconfig/release and ipconfig/renew on seperate lines. Job done.

=)

29 Feb 06, 2008 at 17:09 by Johnny

I just got peer protection because of some of the comments i read on a few torrents about tracing downloads and uploads. Honestly, i see all sorts of stuff apparently being blocked….Am I sure its really doing anything? no, but like everyone else says, its better than nothing!

P.S. AXXO, your efforts are greatly appreciated and reliable! You deserve much thanks! It is nice to see you are also a human being!

30 Feb 22, 2008 at 04:22 by digbee

uhhh, anyone ever think that these anti-p2p guys work from home on a normal home connection ie. comcast etc…..

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