Forum Articles
  Welcome back Join CF
You are here You are here: Home | Forum | Should Virgin Media Throttle p2p traffic?

You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most of the discussions, articles and other free features. By joining our Virgin Media community you will have full access to all discussions, be able to view and post threads, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload your own images/photos, and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please join our community today.


Welcome to Cable Forum
Go Back   Cable Forum > Virgin Media Services > Virgin Media Internet Service

Should Virgin Media Throttle p2p traffic?
View Poll Results: Should Virgin Media Throttle p2p traffic?
Yes 49 36.84%
No 84 63.16%
Voters: 133. You may not vote on this poll

Reply
 
Thread Tools
Old 03-05-2011, 18:57   #166
carlwaring
Permanently Banned
 
Join Date: Apr 2011
Age: 58
Services: XL TV, XL Phone, 30mb BB, 1TB Tivo
Posts: 3,722
carlwaring has reached the bronze age
carlwaring has reached the bronze agecarlwaring has reached the bronze agecarlwaring has reached the bronze agecarlwaring has reached the bronze agecarlwaring has reached the bronze agecarlwaring has reached the bronze agecarlwaring has reached the bronze agecarlwaring has reached the bronze agecarlwaring has reached the bronze agecarlwaring has reached the bronze agecarlwaring has reached the bronze agecarlwaring has reached the bronze age
Re: Should Virgin Media Throttle p2p traffic?

Quote:
Originally Posted by roughbeast View Post
On topic. I hope VM decision-makers tap into threads like this. The messages are clear: VM, by all means penalise heavy files-sharing uploaders and downloaders during peak times, but do not penalsise gamers, streamers and tunnelers. If you don't grasp this nettle you will lose custom.

For P2P file-sharers the message is: Please curb your bandwidth hunger until everybody else has gone to bed!! If you don't, we will all suffer.
Couldn't agree more
carlwaring is offline   Reply With Quote
Advertisement
Old 03-05-2011, 19:01   #167
pip08456
Sad Doig Fan!
 
pip08456's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Barry South Wales
Age: 69
Services: With VM for BB 250Mb service.(Deal)
Posts: 11,845
pip08456 has a nice shiny starpip08456 has a nice shiny starpip08456 has a nice shiny star
pip08456 has a nice shiny starpip08456 has a nice shiny starpip08456 has a nice shiny star
Re: Should Virgin Media Throttle p2p traffic?

I knew I'd get him to bite!

Sorry guys!

---------- Post added at 20:01 ---------- Previous post was at 19:59 ----------

Quote:
Originally Posted by carlwaring View Post
Couldn't agree more
The point is I actually agree with shaping/throttling for P2P and newsgroups!

You as usual miss the point totally.
pip08456 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-05-2011, 19:06   #168
carlwaring
Permanently Banned
 
Join Date: Apr 2011
Age: 58
Services: XL TV, XL Phone, 30mb BB, 1TB Tivo
Posts: 3,722
carlwaring has reached the bronze age
carlwaring has reached the bronze agecarlwaring has reached the bronze agecarlwaring has reached the bronze agecarlwaring has reached the bronze agecarlwaring has reached the bronze agecarlwaring has reached the bronze agecarlwaring has reached the bronze agecarlwaring has reached the bronze agecarlwaring has reached the bronze agecarlwaring has reached the bronze agecarlwaring has reached the bronze agecarlwaring has reached the bronze age
Re: Should Virgin Media Throttle p2p traffic?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Ignitionnet View Post
The DUP's 3rd strike means disconnection. See http://www.cableforum.co.uk/board/12...on-letter.html as a recent example.

This is enforcement of the following sections of the AUP:
Well duh! If you break the rules, all bets are off.

Quote:
I was perfectly accurate...
Except not really.

Quote:
...per above the DUP results in disconnection...
Something which is is completely out of VM's contol and therefore irrelevant to the definition.

Quote:
If you wish to be argumentative for the sake of it there are plenty of other forums that will cater for just that desire.
I'm not the one arguing that "unlimited" doesn't mean "unlimited".

Quote:
Apologies - it's just getting a little tiresome.
Indeed. Subject closed. By all means have the last word if you like.




---------- Post added at 20:06 ---------- Previous post was at 20:04 ----------

Quote:
Originally Posted by pip08456 View Post
I knew I'd get him to bite!
You are indeed a master-baiter; or something like that.
carlwaring is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-05-2011, 19:08   #169
Sirius
Grumpy Fecker
 
Sirius's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Warrington
Age: 66
Services: Every Weekend
Posts: 17,059
Sirius has a lot of silver blingSirius has a lot of silver blingSirius has a lot of silver blingSirius has a lot of silver blingSirius has a lot of silver blingSirius has a lot of silver blingSirius has a lot of silver blingSirius has a lot of silver bling
Sirius has a lot of silver blingSirius has a lot of silver blingSirius has a lot of silver blingSirius has a lot of silver blingSirius has a lot of silver blingSirius has a lot of silver blingSirius has a lot of silver blingSirius has a lot of silver blingSirius has a lot of silver blingSirius has a lot of silver blingSirius has a lot of silver blingSirius has a lot of silver blingSirius has a lot of silver blingSirius has a lot of silver blingSirius has a lot of silver bling
Re: Should Virgin Media Throttle p2p traffic?

Quote:
Originally Posted by carlwaring View Post
Well duh! If you break the rules, all bets are off.


Except not really.


Something which is is completely out of VM's contol and therefore irrelevant to the definition.


I'm not the one arguing that "unlimited" doesn't mean "unlimited".


Indeed. Subject closed. By all means have the last word if you like.

If you want to debate the meaning of life, The universe and unlimited will you start another thread please, This one does not need derailing just so you can try to prove a point that has been debated to death on here and is getting BORING
__________________
The UK is now the regime of Ayatollah Starmer the UK's dictator
Sirius is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-05-2011, 19:25   #170
Ignitionnet
Inactive
 
Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: Leeds, West Yorkshire
Age: 47
Posts: 13,995
Ignitionnet has a pair of shiny starsIgnitionnet has a pair of shiny starsIgnitionnet has a pair of shiny starsIgnitionnet has a pair of shiny starsIgnitionnet has a pair of shiny stars
Ignitionnet has a pair of shiny starsIgnitionnet has a pair of shiny starsIgnitionnet has a pair of shiny starsIgnitionnet has a pair of shiny starsIgnitionnet has a pair of shiny starsIgnitionnet has a pair of shiny starsIgnitionnet has a pair of shiny starsIgnitionnet has a pair of shiny starsIgnitionnet has a pair of shiny starsIgnitionnet has a pair of shiny stars
Re: Should Virgin Media Throttle p2p traffic?

Quote:
Originally Posted by carlwaring View Post
Well duh! If you break the rules, all bets are off.
Here we go.

That would be this rule:

Quote:
3.2.1. Virgin Media does not place a limit on monthly network usage. However, in isolated cases (currently less than 0.1% of customers) where excessive network usage at busy times (9am to 9pm) is having a detrimental effect on other users, we may need to take appropriate action in accordance with the terms of this AUP to notify users of the impact they are having and require them to move some of their activity into the less busy period.
So there is actually a peak time limit on the service, it affects 'less than 0.1% of customers' but it's there.

Quote:
Originally Posted by carlwaring View Post
Something which is is completely out of VM's contol and therefore irrelevant to the definition.

Indeed. Subject closed. By all means have the last word if you like.
VM disconnecting people for downloading too much is outside of their control?

This just goes from bizarre to ridiculous. VM are unlimited, except if you break the rules by, err, downloading too much during peak periods, in which case VM can disconnect you without it actually being under their control, and it doesn't affect defining the service as unlimited in any way. Wow to be able to shift the goalposts so much with a straight face must be great.

My first post on this subject was balanced, took account of both points of view, but what a surprise balance isn't satisfactory to you. Once again you follow your usual sycophantic, abrasive and argumentative theme. Had I simply bashed VM fair enough - I didn't. I quite appropriately noted that their service was not unlimited in the sense of having no download restrictions but that it satisfied the requirements of the ASA and Ofcom.

In the name of peace I'll stick you on my ignore list, you saying virtually nothing of value or sense but going out of your way to disagree with people. I've better things to do with my time on here frankly.
Ignitionnet is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-05-2011, 19:41   #171
Chrysalis
cf.mega poster
 
Join Date: Sep 2003
Posts: 12,048
Chrysalis is cast in bronzeChrysalis is cast in bronzeChrysalis is cast in bronzeChrysalis is cast in bronze
Chrysalis is cast in bronze
Re: Should Virgin Media Throttle p2p traffic?

I didnt reply ignition as in my view your post was laid out fair. You gave a double reply so in affect took a neutral stance.
Chrysalis is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-05-2011, 23:15   #172
Daftlad
Inactive
 
Join Date: May 2011
Posts: 1
Daftlad is an unknown quantity at this point
Re: Should Virgin Media Throttle p2p traffic?

Should Virgin Media Throttle p2p traffic? That would be one thing. Problem I'm having now is that after 10 minutes or so of loading up uTorrent my connection is cut completely and a reboot of the router is required.

Glancing through the thread it seems that there are two sides that are either it is fair to throttle because other users of the service are disadvantaged by heavy users hogging bandwidth or it's not fair because VM offer one thing (unlimited downloads) but then go ahead and limit bandwidth in contradiction of that offer.

Me? I'd just be happy (well not so miffed) if they throttled my service instead of cutting me off completely - I only load up once every few months and if they'd leave it I'd be all done in 10 hours.

I think it would be fair to throttle users that are day in/day out maxing out their bandwidth but that it's unfair to throttle the guy that needs a blast of bandwidth every now and again.

Roughbeast (#163) - enjoyed your off topic comment, I was thinking the same thing.
Daftlad is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-05-2011, 08:01   #173
carlwaring
Permanently Banned
 
Join Date: Apr 2011
Age: 58
Services: XL TV, XL Phone, 30mb BB, 1TB Tivo
Posts: 3,722
carlwaring has reached the bronze age
carlwaring has reached the bronze agecarlwaring has reached the bronze agecarlwaring has reached the bronze agecarlwaring has reached the bronze agecarlwaring has reached the bronze agecarlwaring has reached the bronze agecarlwaring has reached the bronze agecarlwaring has reached the bronze agecarlwaring has reached the bronze agecarlwaring has reached the bronze agecarlwaring has reached the bronze agecarlwaring has reached the bronze age
Re: Should Virgin Media Throttle p2p traffic?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Daftlad View Post
Problem I'm having now is that after 10 minutes or so of loading up uTorrent my connection is cut completely and a reboot of the router is required.
Unless you, apparently, have had a "three strikes" letter then VM will not have cut you off.

Quote:
Glancing through the thread it seems that there are two sides that are either it is fair to throttle because other users of the service are disadvantaged by heavy users hogging bandwidth or it's not fair because VM offer one thing (unlimited downloads) but then go ahead and limit bandwidth in contradiction of that offer.
As you can still download whilst under the affects of STM then the service is still correctly described as "unlimited" for reasons given earlier

Quote:
Me? I'd just be happy (well not so miffed) if they throttled my service instead of cutting me off completely - I only load up once every few months and if they'd leave it I'd be all done in 10 hours.
As far as I know VM does not cut their cable customers off without warning; ie the letter mentioned earlier. This is certainly the first I have heard of it. I assume you're on cable and not their ADSL service as that, I believe, has different rules.

My own connection sometimes stops for no apparent reason, requiring a re-boot. Perhaps this is what happened to you?

Quote:
I think it would be fair to throttle users that are day in/day out maxing out their bandwidth but that it's unfair to throttle the guy that needs a blast of bandwidth every now and again.
I completely agree.

I also don't like any kind of STM or whatever. The difference being that I understand why it's there and won't go away just because I want it to
carlwaring is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-05-2011, 08:21   #174
Chrysalis
cf.mega poster
 
Join Date: Sep 2003
Posts: 12,048
Chrysalis is cast in bronzeChrysalis is cast in bronzeChrysalis is cast in bronzeChrysalis is cast in bronze
Chrysalis is cast in bronze
Re: Should Virgin Media Throttle p2p traffic?

since this conversation has carried on my view is what VM are supplying is an unmetered service not unlimited. The 2 are different things, the former means wont be billed for usage, the latter means a service without limits. The service does have a limits as STM is usage based and clearly VM are limiting specific usage patterns with the protocol shaping. I acknowledge within the regulators guidelines its unlimited but my own guidelines it is not.
Chrysalis is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-05-2011, 09:07   #175
Ignitionnet
Inactive
 
Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: Leeds, West Yorkshire
Age: 47
Posts: 13,995
Ignitionnet has a pair of shiny starsIgnitionnet has a pair of shiny starsIgnitionnet has a pair of shiny starsIgnitionnet has a pair of shiny starsIgnitionnet has a pair of shiny stars
Ignitionnet has a pair of shiny starsIgnitionnet has a pair of shiny starsIgnitionnet has a pair of shiny starsIgnitionnet has a pair of shiny starsIgnitionnet has a pair of shiny starsIgnitionnet has a pair of shiny starsIgnitionnet has a pair of shiny starsIgnitionnet has a pair of shiny starsIgnitionnet has a pair of shiny starsIgnitionnet has a pair of shiny stars
Re: Should Virgin Media Throttle p2p traffic?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Daftlad View Post
Should Virgin Media Throttle p2p traffic? That would be one thing. Problem I'm having now is that after 10 minutes or so of loading up uTorrent my connection is cut completely and a reboot of the router is required.
Sounds like it can't handle the amount of connections you're opening, see if you can lower the global connections and connections per torrent a bit. Each connection uses memory on the router and if it's a bit challenged in this regard it can, and will, reboot or lock up.
Ignitionnet is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-05-2011, 11:17   #176
DABhand
Inactive
 
Join Date: Feb 2007
Posts: 640
DABhand is a glorious beacon of lightDABhand is a glorious beacon of lightDABhand is a glorious beacon of lightDABhand is a glorious beacon of lightDABhand is a glorious beacon of lightDABhand is a glorious beacon of lightDABhand is a glorious beacon of light
Re: Should Virgin Media Throttle p2p traffic?

I used to do about 75-100 per torrent on 50mb. Bear in mind some torrents don't instantly max out the speed you can get from the connected peers. Sometimes you have to be a bit patient.

Obviously setting up a TCP and if the torrent client allows it use a UDP port also, and turn off UPnP in the client settings also.. I have heard some routers can be funny with torrent UPnP.
DABhand is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-05-2011, 15:36   #177
|Kippa|
Inactive
 
Join Date: Apr 2005
Posts: 366
|Kippa| has a spectacular aura about them|Kippa| has a spectacular aura about them|Kippa| has a spectacular aura about them|Kippa| has a spectacular aura about them
Re: Should Virgin Media Throttle p2p traffic?

Ignitionnet what would you say is a reasonable price per month for a none p2p thottled connection? (being 50mbit down and 1.5mbit up or 5mbit up if you are a lucky git).
|Kippa| is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-05-2011, 17:13   #178
pip08456
Sad Doig Fan!
 
pip08456's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Barry South Wales
Age: 69
Services: With VM for BB 250Mb service.(Deal)
Posts: 11,845
pip08456 has a nice shiny starpip08456 has a nice shiny starpip08456 has a nice shiny star
pip08456 has a nice shiny starpip08456 has a nice shiny starpip08456 has a nice shiny star
Re: Should Virgin Media Throttle p2p traffic?

Starting price would have to be about £150pm. It would depend on the cntention ratio. IMHO
pip08456 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-05-2011, 18:44   #179
craigj2k12
cf.mega poster
 
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: Stafford
Posts: 4,225
craigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appeal
craigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appeal
Re: Should Virgin Media Throttle p2p traffic?

Quote:
Originally Posted by pip08456 View Post
Starting price would have to be about £150pm. It would depend on the cntention ratio. IMHO
iv seen people paying more than double that for an 'up to 2mb' 5:1 ratio line. that was about 3 years ago, but still
craigj2k12 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-05-2011, 10:28   #180
Ignitionnet
Inactive
 
Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: Leeds, West Yorkshire
Age: 47
Posts: 13,995
Ignitionnet has a pair of shiny starsIgnitionnet has a pair of shiny starsIgnitionnet has a pair of shiny starsIgnitionnet has a pair of shiny starsIgnitionnet has a pair of shiny stars
Ignitionnet has a pair of shiny starsIgnitionnet has a pair of shiny starsIgnitionnet has a pair of shiny starsIgnitionnet has a pair of shiny starsIgnitionnet has a pair of shiny starsIgnitionnet has a pair of shiny starsIgnitionnet has a pair of shiny starsIgnitionnet has a pair of shiny starsIgnitionnet has a pair of shiny starsIgnitionnet has a pair of shiny stars
Re: Should Virgin Media Throttle p2p traffic?

Quote:
Originally Posted by |Kippa| View Post
Ignitionnet what would you say is a reasonable price per month for a none p2p thottled connection? (being 50mbit down and 1.5mbit up or 5mbit up if you are a lucky git).
Say 50 quid, a quid a meg?
Ignitionnet is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply

Thread Tools

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT. The time now is 16:24.


Server: lithium.zmnt.uk
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2026, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
All Posts and Content are © Cable Forum