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Author Topic: Comcast blocks BitTorrent traffic.  (Read 13583 times)

Offline TheHalf™

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Comcast blocks BitTorrent traffic.
« on: October 23, 2007, 12:36:29 pm »
Posted by Declan McCullagh: C/Net News.com

For a few months Comcast has been the subject of scattered reports that say it throttles BitTorrent traffic.

TorrentFreak said in August that Comcast was surreptitiously interfering with file transfers by posing as one party and then, essentially, hanging up the phone. But when we contacted Comcast at the time, it flatly denied doing it.

Thanks to tests reported Friday by the Associated Press, however, it's clear that Comcast is actively interfering with peer-to-peer networks even if relatively small files are being transferred.

Complete story----> http://www.news.com/8301-13578_3-9800629-38.html


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Offline Synbios

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Re: Comcast blocks BitTorrent traffic.
« Reply #1 on: November 01, 2007, 01:17:49 pm »
I have comcast and haven't noticed anything yet...

UPDATED ARTICLE here:

http://www.dslreports.com/shownews/Consumer-Groups-Want-Comcast-Fined-For-Traffic-Shaping-89024

Offline TheHalf™

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Comcast blocks BitTorrent traffic. Follow-up!
« Reply #2 on: January 09, 2008, 12:53:40 pm »
By Ryan Paul  | Published: January 08, 2008 - 11:55PM CT

The FCC is preparing to investigate accusations that cable provider Comcast is disrupting peer-to-peer file-sharing traffic on its network.

A study conducted last year by the Electronic Frontier Foundation and independently verified by the Associated Press revealed that Comcast interferes with BitTorrent and Gnutella sessions by sending TCP "reset" packets to users. Despite the growing body of unambiguous evidence, Comcast still denies allegations that it specifically targets BitTorrent. Comcast vice president David Cohen told us that the company's traffic control mechanisms conform to the FCC's definition of "reasonable network management" practices (which are allowed by the FCC), but critics don't agree that Comcast's management is anything "reasonable." The FCC today indicated that "reasonable" practices should be transparent.

Complete story: http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20080108-fcc-to-investigate-comcast-bittorrent-blocking.html

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