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 | reply to X_Digit
Re: A little convo from AT&T "...you can only assume..."
See. Your whole argument just fell apart, right there. You're making arguments, based on assumptions. Well, you don't have to assume anything! You can read all about it. In fact, follow the links that Laird Popkin provided, below. Did you know that Bittorent, itself, is also one of the core members of the P4P group? What interest would they have in "hampering" P2P for consumers?
Also, why would ANY company do something that they wouldn't benefit from? I don't see what you're arguing there. Also, why does something, that benefits a company, necessarily mean that it's to the detriment of consumers? You act as if corporations and consumers on constantly on opposite ends of a balance scale, and that neither can benefit without hurting the other. If P4P can increase the efficiency of P2P, then that would lessen the load on carriers' networks, letting them allow P2P, instead of hindering it, a la Comcast. | | |
|  | hey genius....
What do you get when you put a megacorp in between P2P?
Do you even know what P2P stands for? | |  | I don't even know what your last post has to do with the previous ones, but I'll answer you anyway.
P2P stands for "peer to peer". However, you are obviously taking that at face value, suggesting that connections between peers are actually point-to-point, with no "middlemen" inbetween. If you're only sharing files between users on a private LAN, then sure. However, if, like most people, you use P2P applications over the Internet, then you are most assuredly traversing the networks of AT&T, Verizon, and the like. These "megacorps" aren't just now trying to get between P2P users. They have always been between P2P users. They are just working on technologies to increase the efficiency of P2P protocols on their networks.
Now, what exactly are you arguing about? Or did you just type a knee-jerk response to a valid critique of your post? | |
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