republican-creole
Search:  

 
theme to black backgroundlet page decide theme
 
   All ForumsHot TopicsGallery






how-to block ads


 
Forums » Debate Springs Up Over CNN P2P Use » passing the buck
Search Topic:
Uniqs:
740
Share Topic:
RSS topic:
toggle:
flat / full
normal / watch
Post a:
Post a:
*I* Decide »
« Let's Share our metered bandwidth with strangers.  
AuthorAll Replies

patcat88

join:2002-04-05
Jamaica, NY

passing the buck

Cheap ass mofos.

Passing on their upstream bandwidth bill to consumers. I hope this is ad free if you pay for it with your upstream. All of this would be fixed if there wasn't a conspiracy among ISPs to not allow multicast across their backbones, since then you wouldn't need to pay for such large links. All "upstream" problems would be solved if ISPs supported explicit multicast (list all the IPs to forward the packet to in the IP header, no IGMP needed). P2P's bandwidth toll would also exponentially go down (and duplication speed will skyrocket).


MxxCon

join:1999-11-19
Brooklyn, NY
clubs:
here you go

cornelius785

join:2006-10-26
Worcester, MA

reply to patcat88
uh, as far as i know, nearly all residential internet connections do NOT pay for upstream bandwidth use. so i fail to see how cnn is 'Passing on their upstream bandwidth bill to consumers'.

what is so wrong with P2P for mass video distribution? is it really any different from p2p distribution of other files? who gives a shit if the cnn's upstream bandwidth usage decreases as long as i get to see the content i want to see and it isn't utilizing 100% of my upstream capacity?

Angrychair

join:2000-09-20
Jacksonville, FL
So upstream transfers don't count in all of the caps that have been popping up recently? Good to know.


Eat Me

join:2002-09-25
Sussex, NJ
·PenTeleData
·Future Nine Corpor..
·VOIPo
·Vonage

reply to cornelius785
said by cornelius785 See Profile :

uh, as far as i know, nearly all residential internet connections do NOT pay for upstream bandwidth use.
With my ISP, upstream bandwidth usage counts against the 100GB cap.


Transmaster
Don't Blame Me I Voted For Bill and Opus

join:2001-06-20
Cheyenne, WY
Oh I see now the Communist News Network is doing what amounts to mooching bandwidth. Sorry not from me.


TKJunkMail
Enjoy the sun
Premium
join:2002-03-03
Avalon, NJ
·Sprint Mobile Broa..
·Comcast

reply to patcat88
said by patcat88 See Profile :

Cheap ass mofos.

Passing on their upstream bandwidth bill to consumers. I hope this is ad free if you pay for it with your upstream.
This is just another instance of a content provider trying to shift their costs from themselves to the ISP. The fact that CNN felt compelled to hide the fact that they were doing this makes it even more obvious.

If you don't want Octoshape P2P software on your computer and you already let it on by mistake, do the following:
Fortunately, the Octoshape program isn't hard to find or remove:

* Step 1. To find out whether the Octoshape app is running, you can use Windows' built-in Task Manager. (Right-click a blank space on the Task Bar, and then click Task Manager.)

As Susan Bradley shows in a blog post, when you're viewing a live stream from CNN.com, you'll see in Task Manager a service called octoshape.exe. (In the illustration on her blog, instances of the service are shown to be consuming 63MB of RAM, but a lot of this memory may be taken up by the Flash Player itself.)

* Step 2. To remove Octoshape's app, you can use the Control Panel in either Windows XP or Vista. In XP, the applet is called Add or Remove Programs. In Vista, it's Programs and Features. The "Octoshape add-in for Adobe Flash Player" is the name of the program to uninstall.

Strangely, there isn't an uninstaller for the Mac version of the app. You have to manually delete the Octoshape folder.

--
My BLOG .. .. Internet News .. .. My Web Page


tshirt
Premium,MVM
join:2004-07-11
Snohomish, WA
·Comcast

reply to cornelius785
said by cornelius785 See Profile :

what is so wrong with P2P for mass video distribution?

Because it's inefficient. Rather then a single streamed/downloaded file per user, instead you download it and then up load it to one or more others.
sure it takes the load off CNN (who would hopefully own/ lease high efficientcy servers, optimized for video connectted directly to major backbones) instead putting the burden on generally less efficient individual PC's at the end of the last mile.
In this case because they didn't clearly disclose (bold print on the pop up.) what they were installing, and that it isn't actually nessesary, I think CNN owes an apology to all users, those who downloaded AND those indirectly effected.


LeftOfSanity

join:2005-11-06
Felton, DE

reply to Transmaster
said by Transmaster See Profile :

Oh I see now the Communist News Network is doing what amounts to mooching bandwidth. Sorry not from me.
Yea, I would expect this from Faux News.


insomniac84

join:2002-01-03
Schererville, IN

reply to patcat88
It is ad free. And the only reason this sucks is because it improperly uses 100% of your upload bandwidth. It does not limit itself to a reasonable amount. The telcos and cable companies are already stealing your upload to sell for other things(all bandwdith comes symmetric, getting less means they are using the difference between the download and the upload for other things to make money). So by already having low uploads speeds like 1mbit or 512mb, this app kills your connection in exchange for watching video.


BF69

join:2004-07-28
Camden, TN

reply to Angrychair
said by Angrychair See Profile :

So upstream transfers don't count in all of the caps that have been popping up recently? Good to know.
They sure do count.


RARPSL

join:1999-12-08
Suffern, NY

reply to patcat88
said by patcat88 See Profile :

Cheap ass mofos.

Passing on their upstream bandwidth bill to consumers. I hope this is ad free if you pay for it with your upstream. All of this would be fixed if there wasn't a conspiracy among ISPs to not allow multicast across their backbones, since then you wouldn't need to pay for such large links. All "upstream" problems would be solved if ISPs supported explicit multicast (list all the IPs to forward the packet to in the IP header, no IGMP needed). P2P's bandwidth toll would also exponentially go down (and duplication speed will skyrocket).
Are you talking about IPv4 or IPv6 Multicast? Neither version list the addresses in the TCP/IP headers. With IPv4, BTW, each MC session stream between the server and the user is separate so there is no bandwidth savings. With IPv6, there is ONE stream between the server and ALL the users on that node (the modem is set to listen not only to its own private unicast address [as it currently does with IPv4] but also to the IPN address allocated to that MC stream). With IPv4 MC, you have the equivalent of watching a TV Show via VOD while with IPv6 MC it is the equivalent of watching the show via tuning to the channel that is broadcasting it.

Bill03
Premium
join:2007-11-26
Richmond, VA
clubs:


1 edit
reply to insomniac84
said by insomniac84 See Profile :

...The telcos and cable companies are already stealing your upload to sell for other things(all bandwdith comes symmetric, getting less means they are using the difference between the download and the upload for other things to make money).
All bandwidth is not symmetrical. It depends on the technique. Let's take the cable company. The downstream carriers, in most cases, are utlizing 256QAM as their modulation. 256QAM gives you ~42 Megs of throughput. The upstream carriers, with the exception of areas implementing docsis 2.0, are using 16QAM as the modulation. That's about 10 Megs on the throughput.

So even though you COULD get symmetrical speeds, you are not getting them right now because the of the difference in up and downstream throughput to the modem. In time, after they ramp up the upstream modulation and carrier widths, you will get symmetrical offerings.


Richard B
Fur It Up

join:2007-06-22
Portland, OR
reply to cornelius785
Very simple I do not want a multi billion dollar media firm access to my network behind the firewall or upstream bandwidth. It is what I do not us P2P applications.

patcat88

join:2002-04-05
Jamaica, NY

reply to RARPSL
said by RARPSL See Profile :

With IPv4, BTW, each MC session stream between the server and the user is separate so there is no bandwidth savings.
Somehow I don't belive that. Thats the definition of uenicast.

said by »en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IP_Multicast :

* Multicast: A multicast address is associated with a group of interested receivers. According to RFC 3171, addresses 224.0.0.0 to 239.255.255.255 are designated as multicast addresses. This range was formerly called "Class D." The sender sends a single datagram (from the sender's unicast address) to the multicast address, and the intermediary routers take care of making copies and sending them to all receivers that have registered their interest in data from that sender.
With IPv6, there is ONE stream between the server and ALL the users on that node (the modem is set to listen not only to its own private unicast address [as it currently does with IPv4] but also to the IPN address allocated to that MC stream).
I know current multicast systems do not store the "destination" IPs in the header. But there is a concept RFC for doing that »tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5058 . This technology is a no brainer, push-to-talk, group webcaming, p2p, remove having to use p2p-like technologies to push TBs of content b/c your too cheap to pay Akamai (Steam).

nOv1c3

join:2006-11-08
Whitney, TX
reply to patcat88
CNN = corupt news network
-
Forums » Debate Springs Up Over CNN P2P Use*I* Decide »
« Let's Share our metered bandwidth with strangers.  


Thursday, 10-Dec 14:04:44 Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Hosting by www.nac.net - DSL,Hosting & Co-lo | feedback | contact
over 10 years online! © 1999-2009 dslreports.com.
page compression OFF
Most commented news this week
· [200] Sprint Sued For Distracted Driving Death
· [131] AT&T Launching New 24 Mbps U-Verse Tier
· [82] 3G Network Test Says AT&T Is Tops
· [79] AT&T Hints At Usage-Based iPhone Data Pricing
· [72] Mediacom Unveils 105 Mbps Pricing
· [69] WPA Cracker: Test WPA-PSK Networks In 20 Minutes
· [66] Sprint Poised For A Turnaround?
· [51] The Future Of Wi-Fi Is Bright
· [47] Site Leaks Yahoo, Verizon Fed Data Share Pricing
· [45] Microwaving Your Innards Is Not 'Extreme'
Most people now reading
· [WIN7] Well, I was dumb, but do I have recourse? [Microsoft Help]
· IMG 1.7 (IMG Updates and Discussion) [Verizon FIOS TV]
· Will Gearscore die now? [World of Warcraft]
· New Mediacom Email [Mediacom]
· 60GB would only last us two days! [TekSavvy]
· Cross Server Dungeon Experience [World of Warcraft]
· Icecrown 5-man strats [World of Warcraft]
· Battered Hilt Delimma [World of Warcraft]
· Windows 7 boot manager editing questions [Microsoft Help]
· Connecting to Google Voice Via SIP [VOIP Tech Chat]