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Re: Should i worry?
Well if we use 250gig as an example figure.
on 10mbit VM's bottom tier once can do 3.2tb a month if full speed 24/7. 250 gig a month is probably enough for 98% of customers. Whilst for downloading 24/7 its less than a 10th of capacity. Better to do this then pretend its unlimited and have issues with trying to curtail usage. |
Re: Should i worry?
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The current system works fine, and is dead reasonable. Unless one actually tries to break the system by going all mental and turning it all the way up to 11 24h a day the system works fine. We do not need to go back in time to a metered system, if we do things like Youview will not be practical and we'll all have to switch away from VM in 2012 which we mostly don't want to do. So long as VM and other ISPs keep up with normal usage developments we'll all be fine. One other comment. Downloading torrents of copyrighted material is not illegal. I am not one for doing this, but I am fed up with trolls coming on here and trying to claim this is covered by criminal law in some way when we all know this is a civil matter. Stop trolling. It's not big and it's not clever. |
Re: Should i worry?
Trolling ?
Oh dear. Instead of reasoned discussion you start calling people names. I have my view you have yours, we'll leave it that shall we. |
Re: Should i worry?
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I agree with Chrysalis and they need to do stop fobbing people off with the "unlimited" service and instead provide minimum guaranteed speed/qos with monthly data caps instead |
Re: Should i worry?
Didn't we figure out already torrents (and all other P2P combined) use something like less than 1/4 of VM's network capacity?
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Re: Should i worry?
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Whatever your view is, whatever your or my ethical position is, downloading copyrighted material is still not illegal. Criminal law has nothing to do with it. You might just about say it is illicit (though since the advent of tape recorders that is debatable), but it is certainly not illegal. You can pretend all you like, but it won't make it so. This is not a point of view, it is the current state of the law in this country. It has been discussed to death all over the internet so you know it, I know it, we all know it. Why then would you come on to a forum and claim otherwise, accusing people of criminality when you know your claims have no foundation, knowing it will just wind people up? Are you saying it is not for trolling purposes? If so please explain your reasoning, since you're so fond of reasoned discussion. |
Re: Should i worry?
100mbit - Digital Theft Licence and i bet if you checked the users storage you would find 99 out of 100 have Gigs of copyright infringed stuff, some are also some dumb they will openly gloat about it ??
I honestly wish ISPs would come crashing down on some of you retards. Yes im pee'd off cos i can see clear as day light the effects that 5mbit uploads being maxed by teenage torrent ***** has destroyed my gaming experience for the past 5 months |
Re: Should i worry?
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Re: Should i worry?
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the last 2 nights in a row my utilisation (tbb latency graph) has peaked at midnight which suggests significant p2p/nntp activity on my port however prior to these last 2 nights I hadnt noticed a jump. http://www.thinkbroadband.com/ping/s...690c2401fe.png Can see there how late at night my peak is, and that my port appears to be congested for almost the entire day. Congestion at dusk suggests background downloading/uploading activity aka p2p/nntp as the amount of people online then should be minimal. Sandvine who manage traffic for comcast I believe said now days the % of download activity that is torrents is barely a 1/5 but its a significant amount of upload traffic. http://www.sandvine.com/news/global_...and_trends.asp |
Re: Should i worry?
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It's also been noted that the shaping seems as much use as a chocolate fireguard when people really try and hide what they're doing, which is why protocol agnostic solutions are the future and will be on a cable ISP near you in time. ---------- Post added at 10:12 ---------- Previous post was at 09:57 ---------- Quote:
http://img256.imageshack.us/img256/4...inereadout.jpg Quote:
59.68% torrents + 3.64% PPStream + 1.76% ED2K gives you 65% without even needing assumptions. It's not a huge leap to imagine areas where an upstream is running at 50% 24x7 due to P2P or NNTP encapsulated in something else, this is a problem for cable companies throughout the world and one VM are addressing, however it's a more complicated process than the initial shaping deployment. |
Re: Should i worry?
I did say its significant on upstream ;)
The table clearly shows we behind the times in live media entertainment tho. VM really simply need to enforce a quite strict upload usage that applies 24/7 (given congestion isnt just peak) and that severely restricts upload speed when this limit is reached, it should apply to 'all' traffic. Basically if you like a much stricter STM thats 24/7. As well as forcefully keep upstream ports to below 40% utilisation, to allow the optimistic 10mbit upload for 1 user per channel. |
Re: Should i worry?
Once we get Netflix, and the UK is a priority market for them to move into, things will change a bit. We benefit from iPlayer and other things in the interim though.
Keeping upstreams forcibly below 40% utilisation is silly, 10Mbit up on an 18Mbit channel is fine depending on circumstances as previously discussed repeatedly. There are uplifted areas with over 200 modems on a single channel running just fine. The next iteration of traffic management you will find much more to your liking though Chris :) |
Re: Should i worry?
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Re: Should i worry?
Ignition I agree 40% is silly.
This is due to the fact they released 10mbit upload on 18mbit channels tho. When in reality they should have used minimal 36mbit QAM64 channels or 2 bonded 18mbit channels for 36mbit.. That would then allow utilisation to hit the 80% figure and still support a top tier customer starting an upload without causing noticeable congestion. 40% of 18mbit is about 8mbit, which gives the 10mbit free for a user to max out their upload, one out of 200 users uploading at any given time is hardly a remote possibility. ---------- Post added at 12:17 ---------- Previous post was at 12:12 ---------- Quote:
couple of ladies were on dragons den last week with their wedding filming service. They were asked why they charge what they do. The story was they started at about £250 and ended up at £850 with gradual price increases, initially they were making a loss so had to increase, however it turned out their current price is way above their costs at around £500 and was decided on based thats how far they could push without losing sales. Barring the uk adsl market which is somewhat weird most business charge what they can get away with and can often bear no relation to costs. There is a new contract drawn up between the US media sector and various governments, some are apparently signing it soon, the EU not yet. This contract will mean new laws which violate various privacy rights and mean a much more restricted internet for the sake of the 'minor' issue of reducing copyright infringement. That sounds bad? Here comes the more scary part. It will make it law for them to count every infringement as a lost sale without any supporting evidence other than the infringement and they can also value the lost sale at something different to what the product is sold for, eg. a mp3 might be on itunes for 99pence but they can value it at £10. This is clearly going to be a new revenue stream for them and probably has very little to do with lost sales but rather simply a new way for them to make money. Oh and of course it wont have any affect on prices of legal content. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-Counterfeiting_Trade_Agreement |
Re: Should i worry?
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While torrents eat 60% of upstream bandwidth way less than 60% of people torrent, many people barely use a GB of upload per month. |
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