Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
The Courts The Almighty Buck Your Rights Online

Comcast Pays Out $16M In P2P Throttling Suit 176

eldavojohn writes "Comcast has settled out of court to the tune of $16 million in one of several ongoing P2P throttling class action lawsuits. You may be eligible for up to $16 restitution if 'you live in the United States or its Territories, have a current or former Comcast High-Speed Internet account, and either used or attempted to use Comcast service to use the Ares, BitTorrent, eDonkey, FastTrack or Gnutella P2P protocols at any time from April 1, 2006 to December 31, 2008; and/or Lotus Notes to send emails any time from March 26, 2007 to October 3, 2007.' $16 million seems low. And it's too bad this was an out-of-court settlement instead of a solid precedent-setting decision for your right to use P2P applications. The settlement will probably not affect the slews of other Comcast P2P throttling suits, and it's unclear whether it will placate the FCC."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Comcast Pays Out $16M In P2P Throttling Suit

Comments Filter:
  • Typical! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by SirLoadALot ( 991302 ) on Wednesday December 23, 2009 @09:18AM (#30534400)

    Once again the lawyers are the only winners. $16 is farcical, and the total $16 million is a rounding error for Comcast -- it doesn't serve as much incentive against bad behaviour in the future.

    • Re:Typical! (Score:5, Insightful)

      by SirLoadALot ( 991302 ) on Wednesday December 23, 2009 @09:20AM (#30534420)

      Also, although I am not in Comcast's service area, if I were I don't think I would want to sign a piece of paper saying I used one or more P2P services between two dates. The MPAA and RIAA are way too aggressive to give them even a sliver of help for $16.

      • Re:Typical! (Score:5, Funny)

        by Inda ( 580031 ) <slash.20.inda@spamgourmet.com> on Wednesday December 23, 2009 @09:31AM (#30534484) Journal
        Amateur porn. Say you were downloading amateur porn. When people ask me how to download movies and music, I tell them I only use P2P for amateur porn.

        Replace one taboo with another and watch the reaction you get. It is an interesting reaction because which one is worse (for the British prudes)?

        People, at their own peril, take me too seriously.
        • Re:Typical! (Score:4, Insightful)

          by xaxa ( 988988 ) on Wednesday December 23, 2009 @10:27AM (#30534912)

          British prudes

          They certainly exist, but they don't have control over the media. After 21:00, supposedly when young children are no longer watching, pretty much anything except porn is broadcast on normal channels. Before that time nudity would normally be non-sexual.

          The full rules for broadcasters [ofcom.org.uk].

        • Linux CD and DVD images. It's the fastest way to get a burnable Knoppix ISO image.

          Check your md5sums and PGP signatures, of course.

      • by tepples ( 727027 )

        I don't think I would want to sign a piece of paper saying I used one or more P2P services between two dates.

        I, for one, welcome the opportunity to sign a paper saying I downloaded Ubuntu, because I did.

      • Re:Typical! (Score:5, Insightful)

        by supersat ( 639745 ) on Wednesday December 23, 2009 @10:04AM (#30534696)
        World of Warcraft uses BitTorrent to distribute its patches. Every WoW player using Comcast can make a claim without admitting to anything that the MAFIAA might use against them.
        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          by MBGMorden ( 803437 )

          There's also Linux distributions. I can honestly say that I downloaded several Linux ISO's over the previous year via Bittorrent. I can't say that's ALL I downloaded, but I did use it for that :).

        • In theory you are correct but fat load of luck proving it in court with the MAFIAA litigation machine grinding you to smithereens.

      • Absolutely correct. It's like having to sign a paper publicly admitting you have some socially unacceptable disease in order to receive the benefits of the suit. You shouldn't have to shame yourself -- or in this case expose yourself to risk of prosecution and/or increased review by lawyer-happy third parties interested in your online P2P activity. You would be painting a big target on yourself and if you were ever actually accused of distributing / downloading items via P2P you've just removed your "couldn
    • Re:Typical! (Score:5, Interesting)

      by elrous0 ( 869638 ) * on Wednesday December 23, 2009 @10:20AM (#30534852)
      Not only that, but it basically immunizes them against further lawsuits on the issue. Sometimes, I think some of these class action suits are the result of a collaboration between the companies and some lawyers. The lawyers get a big payday, the companies get immunity from anymore lawsuits, and the consumer gets screwed.
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by jambarama ( 784670 )
        Comcast is not immunized from further suits. As long as you don't take part in the settlement, you can still sue them individually. Alternately, although it is unlikely a judge will certify another class over the same issue, it has happened before (see asbestos lawsuits).

        Class actions let you bring suits where no one person has been harmed a meaningful amount. How much legally-cognizable value did you lose from having P2P interrupted? Probably not enough to sue over. Without class action, comcast
        • Re:Typical! (Score:4, Insightful)

          by shentino ( 1139071 ) <shentino@gmail.com> on Wednesday December 23, 2009 @11:31AM (#30535520)

          That class action settlement means nothing without an injunction to stop Comcast from further meddling.

          • You're right, there is no binding precedent or permanent injunction, but a ruling can go either way - comcast could have gotten permission to screw with their network in the future. Of course a settlement isn't as good as a favorable ruling, but it does signal to others that they can expect meddling to cost $16M and a lot of bad publicity. Plus, the incident brought the FCC down on this kind of behavior, so ISPs have that to worry about too.
        • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

          by Uncle Rummy ( 943608 )

          As long as you don't take part in the settlement, you can still sue them individually.

          Actually, as with most class action settlements, everybody is opted in by default, and you must explicitly opt out in order to retain your rights to sue on your own. Didn't hear about the settlement in time to file a claim or opt out? Gee, that's a shame.

          From the table at the bottom of the official settlement page [p2pcongest...lement.com]:

          Exclude Yourself: Get out of the Class You may ask to get out of the Class and keep your right to sue on your own about the claims in the lawsuit.

          Do Nothing: You remain in the Sett

          • Actually, as with most class action settlements, everybody is opted in by default, and you must explicitly opt out in order to retain your rights to sue on your own. Didn't hear about the settlement in time to file a claim or opt out? Gee, that's a shame.

            Nothing's written in stone, especially when agreements are made without your consent. While it's always best to take action in a timely manner, it is possible, in some cases, to argue that special circumstances warrant "turning back the clock." Note that

        • I know $16 isn't much, but really how much do you think is reasonable for a few months of p2p interruption on a residential cable line?

          Considering they did that while at the same time advertising "unlimited internet" it should be worth the monthly fee x however many months (counting even fractional months as 1 month) the interruptions occurred. Of course, if you were smart enough to block RST packets on the affected ports, there really isn't much to complain about.

      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward

        Your suspicions are correct. My company actually initiated one of these class actions after getting sued by an unscrupulous customer with an unscrupulous lawyer. Their case had no merit whatsoever, but it was about the 5th such case - clearly seeking an "it's cheaper to settle than litigate" settlement. We got the unscrupulous lawyer to bite on the idea of owning a class action suit. We then answered his subpoenas, helped him contact the class and get certified and then settle. It immunized us from any

    • Re:Typical! (Score:4, Insightful)

      by PopeRatzo ( 965947 ) * on Wednesday December 23, 2009 @10:32AM (#30534962) Journal

      $16 million is a golf bet for the CEO of Comcast. They'll make $16 million selling cable porn this afternoon.

      I'm trying to think of the last time a corporation was fined or sanctioned in such a way that it really changed their behavior. Anyone want to give some examples?

      • by Bigbutt ( 65939 )

        Honestly. Didn't Comcast just buy NBC? They'll just cancel some show (what's on NBC anyway?) and that's that.

        [John]

      • Re:Typical! (Score:5, Informative)

        by drew30319 ( 828970 ) on Wednesday December 23, 2009 @12:35PM (#30536132) Homepage Journal
        Although it wasn't a fine, McDonald's changed its business practices when sued for the dangerous temperature of their coffee. While the case has been the butt of many, many jokes the jokes (and vitriol) are primarily based on misinformation.

        Between 1982 and 1992, over 700 people had been seriously burned by McDonald's coffee that was brewed at a temperature that was not fit for drinking; at the time they were serving coffee at a temperature of 180-190F, a temperature that can result in third-degree burns in as little as two seconds. They had already paid claims as high as $500,000 for burns resulting from these high temperatures but had apparently done nothing to change their procedures to prevent future injuries.

        Enter 79-year-old Ms. Liebeck and the infamous "coffee lawsuit." In 1992 she purchased a cup of coffee at a McDonald's drive-thru; placed the cup between her knees; and removed the lid to add cream and sugar. The cup slipped, spilling the coffee onto her cotton sweatpants which absorbed the hot liquid, resulting in serious burns.(1) This brief exposure to the coffee resulted in burns over 16% of her body, 8% of which were third-degree burns requiring skin grafts on her groin, buttocks, and thighs. She was in the hospital for eight days as the result of these injuries.

        She requested $20,000 from McDonald's to cover her medical bills (which were $11,000) but McDonald's only offered $800. After filing suit a third-party mediator advised settlement of $225,000 but McDonald's refused. At trial the jury found Ms. Liebeck partly responsible for her injuries (20%) with McDonald's liable for the remaining 80%. She was awarded $160,000 ($200,000 less 20%) for compensatory damages (actual damages plus injury and harm) as well as $2.7M in punitive damages (intended to punish the harming party). The jury came up with the punitive damages amount based on two day's sales of McDonald's coffee throughout the franchise.(2) The jury's intention was to send McDonald's a message in an attempt to get them to change their business practices.

        It worked. Days after the verdict the coffee served by the same McDonald's location was twenty degrees cooler. Additionally the restaurant now adds cream and sugar to the coffee for you at the drive-thru, mitigating the risk of a repeat incident.

        Unfortunately this "example" of how to change corporate behavior has served as a rallying cry for corporate interests. When it's the businesses that control media spin it can become difficult for individuals to properly position stories that are "pro-consumer."

        I agree that $16M is unlikely to affect change at Comcast (at least to the extent that their customers would like) but feel that it's a step in the right direction. I'm one of the "affected" customers here and will take my $16 and move on; nothing would preclude me from filing suit if they were to recommence (or continue?) their behavior in the future.

        --------

        (1) Despite common belief to the contrary, Ms. Liebeck was not the driver of the car. She was a passenger. Additionally, the driver, her grandson, actually pulled the car over and came to a stop to allow Ms. Liebeck to carefully remove the lid. She had taken what many would consider to be the steps of a "reasonable" person.

        (2) On appeal the punitive award was reduced to $480,000 and the parties eventually settled out of court for an amount presumed to be in the neighborhood of $600,000.
      • Not quite [fiercetelecom.com], unless he's betting 75% of his salary.

        Granted, $16M is still just half a percent of their net income for 2008, but half a percent is probably enough. For someone making $50k/yr, half a percent of that would be $250 -- enough of a penalty to make most people take notice.

      • by sjames ( 1099 )

        Ford, over the Pinto. It's really sad I have to look back to the '70s for an example.

    • by cawpin ( 875453 )
      From the description :"and either used or attempted to use Comcast service to use the Ares, BitTorrent, eDonkey, FastTrack or Gnutella P2P protocols at any time from April 1, 2006 to December 31, 2008;" Well, I think their $16 million just blew up. Since bittorrent is a P2P service, I'm sure any one who used bittorrent AT ALL "attempted to use Comcast service" to download something.

      Personally, I think they should have to pay $16 to all of us.
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Gerald ( 9696 )

      $16 isn't a lot. However, I'm still going to apply for the settlement and will make it part of a larger donation to the local food bank and/or homeless shelter. I encourage you to do the same.

  • $2000 to make up for years of slow ISO downloads,
    $15,998,000 to punch deep enough to hit Comcast's pain receptors.
  • Ok I realize I have my tin hat firmly on but does this sound to anyone like the old you won a boat trick to catch wanted people.

    Hey p2p users you can get $16 come register at our office to pick up the money.

    On another note, what happens if no one claims money like this from class action suits?

    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by base3 ( 539820 )
      I predict a sudden and marked increase in the reported userbase of Lotus Notes from between March 26, 2007 and October 3, 2007.
    • by mcgrew ( 92797 ) * on Wednesday December 23, 2009 @09:56AM (#30534652) Homepage Journal

      There are a lot of people (I'm one) who uses BitTorrent, etc. to download Linux distros, FOS software, music that the artist encourages you to share (and there's more of that than there is RIAA music), etc.

      P2P is not proof of illicit activity, although the RIAA wants everyone to think it is.

      • P2P is not proof of illicit activity, although the RIAA wants everyone to think it is.

        Absolutely correct. But to the uneducated masses, P2P users are all downloading illegal materials. Just like Tor users.

        Educating people is the only way to clear this up.

        • P2P is not proof of illicit activity, although the RIAA wants everyone to think it is.

          Absolutely correct. But to the uneducated masses, P2P users are all downloading illegal materials. Just like Tor users. Educating people is the only way to clear this up.

          I'm not sure if "education" is the word for "when monied interests are involved, don't assume you know anything about a subject until you've investigated it for yourself." Maybe "common sense" is a better word for that?

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by tepples ( 727027 )

      Hey p2p users you can get $16 come register at our office to pick up the money.

      If I had to go to an office to get my check, I'd bring a burned copy of OpenDisc [wikipedia.org] (free software for Windows) and give it to whoever would give me the check.

  • ... this efficient new way for RIAA and MPAA to identify people to sue - for $16 I am of course very likely to say "hey, I use p2p!" (or go through the shame of admitting that I use Lotus Notes) and then wait for the gazillion dollar lawsuit to come my way for downloading Ubuntu 7...

  • Gotta love it. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by system1111 ( 1527561 ) on Wednesday December 23, 2009 @09:20AM (#30534426)
    Got love how everyday people will get sued by corporations for many times their annual income ( $80,000 a song) but when it comes to corporations getting sued it equates to a far lower ratio. Any one else think its kind of silly.
    • Re:Gotta love it. (Score:5, Insightful)

      by mcgrew ( 92797 ) * on Wednesday December 23, 2009 @09:42AM (#30534562) Homepage Journal

      I don't think it's silly, I think it's a damned shame.

    • The problem is many of the laws on the books that crimes that ordinary people are committing were once ones that only organizations can do.

      Lets just use Copyright infringement, back even 20 years ago being able to copy music from one device and spread it to millions of people needed a lot of money and resources. Today one person can do it and have it spread like wildfire. But the laws for fines for such actions are still based on the old model. Sure it would $80,000 good fine for say a Radio Station to P

    • Yes. Unfortunately U.S. laws are usually written to favor corporations at the expense of individuals.
      • by dkf ( 304284 )

        Yes. Unfortunately U.S. laws are usually written to favor corporations at the expense of individuals.

        Actually, they're (mostly) written to pretend that there is no difference between people and corporations. If you think these two classes of entity are one and the same, clap your hands together and say "I believe in bailouts!"

  • 1%? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by MikeD83 ( 529104 ) on Wednesday December 23, 2009 @09:21AM (#30534430)
    Assuming someone paid for only internet access at $35 per month during the time Comcast was infringing their rights they would have paid Comcast $1,155. Comcast is only required to pay damages of 1%? Wow... that's Comcastic!
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Croakus ( 663556 )

      ... during the time Comcast was infringing their rights ...

      How were their rights infringed? This seems like a simple breach of contract. Comcast was contractually obligated to provide a certain service and failed to do so.

  • Ummmm.. (Score:3, Interesting)

    by natehoy ( 1608657 ) on Wednesday December 23, 2009 @09:27AM (#30534464) Journal

    I'm a Comcast customer, I was throttled, I've never used my connection to download music or movies (TV shows and OSS only), and I still don't think I want to apply for my $16 pittance.

    Prediction: The sharks who ran this class-action suit aren't going to be satisfied with $6.4 million (the usual 40% of $16 million), and they're going to make a few more bucks sell the names and details to RIAA/MPAA so everyone who receives their $16 will be slapped with a $999999 gazillion lawsuit for illegal file sharing. Most of the P2P users end up disconnected and eventually homeless after the spate of ruinous P2P lawsuits, Comcast gets to dump their heaviest-bandwidth users, everyone wins except the granny whose next door neighbor mooched off her WiFi and got a copy of Avatar.

    "A strange game. The only way to win is not to play."

  • Tell me (Score:4, Funny)

    by Dunbal ( 464142 ) on Wednesday December 23, 2009 @09:36AM (#30534522)

    As part of the settlement, does Comcast get to hand over names and addresses of all the claimants to the MPAA/RIAA for a nice tidy sum, say, $16 million?

    • I don't think Comcast will necessarily have access to the names and addresses. Usually Comcast pays their money to the lawyers who initiated the class action suit, and the lawyers then divvy it up by the approximate number of people in the class, minus their traditional 40% that they keep. Then, any unclaimed amounts, they keep. Plus they have the names and addresses which they keep.

      It won't be Comcast handing the names and addresses over to MPAA/RIAA. I'd actually trust Comcast with that information mor

      • Tell me, who wants to exclude themselves from this lawsuit, and maybe hire one of those country type lawyers, say like one of those that live in New York for a "real" case that will not just be settled? I have had too much trouble with my Comcastic service, and tired of even my Internet being throttled. I can go to Speedtest.net and it automagically lets Google load up the page. Without it, even Google may have a hard time. I have actually resorted to having TabMixPlus reload the Speedtest.net tab about eve

        • The lawyers working this have no interest in paying you the $16. They have no interest in stopping Comcast from doing this. Their interest in both ended when their bribe check to the judge cleared and they got granted "class action" status. From that point forward it was all about maximizing the settlement and minimizing effort.

          Comcast knew this, of course, and pulled some money out of petty cash so the lawyers could make $6 million in cash today and move on to the next righteous-looking yet profitable c

      • It won't be Comcast handing the names and addresses over to MPAA/RIAA.

        Comcast will soon own half of Universal Studios, which is in the MPAA. But then every major TV news outlet is in the MPAA too.

    • Without specific lists of things you downloaded, the RIAA/MPAA can't do anything. Methinks the paranoia is running a bit too rampant on this one.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by jlarocco ( 851450 )

      How can people on Slashdot be so fucking dumb? If Comcast wanted to sell your name to the RIAA or MPAA, they already have all the information they need. Hell, they could hand over your credit card number, if they wanted to.

      Yeah, Comcast sucks, but use your fucking brains, people.

      • by Dunbal ( 464142 )

        but use your fucking brains,

        Hmm let's see. If I was Comcast I could invest in a) a whole army of staff and hardware to collect data on users who were using bit torrent, edonkey, etc, then risk being sued by giving that data to a 3rd party, or b) I could get the LAWYERS for the plaintiff to collect that data for me, and hand it over to a 3rd party without ANY risk of legal fallout (after all, the exact terms of the settlement are confidential). Hmmmmmm, I dunno - which is better? Brains

  • It's a trap! (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Hognoxious ( 631665 )

    used or attempted to use Comcast service to use the Ares, BitTorrent, eDonkey, FastTrack or Gnutella P2P protocols

    They'll give you 16 bucks, and the RIAA will take 20 grand!

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Comcast in my area will start cutting connection to your modem if you use full bandwidth bittorrent for more than a few minutes. Reset your modem, and you're fine for another couple minutes, then it's out again.

    If you turn off bittorrent, or throttle the settings back to rediculously low levels (say, 384 kbps download and 32kbps upload), there's no problem at all. If I pull a couple hundred megs down off a website or do a huge ubuntu update at full speed (1.8megabytes a second or so) I never have any proble

    • by tepples ( 727027 )

      Comcast in my area will start cutting connection to your modem if you use full bandwidth bittorrent for more than a few minutes.

      For me, it's not Comcast but the router. If I torrent without throttling, the router crashes, and I have to power-cycle it to get it going again. I don't think the stock firmware versions on home NAT-router appliances are intended to handle dozens of simultaneous inbound connections.

      If I pull a couple hundred megs down off a website or do a huge ubuntu update at full speed (1.8megabytes a second or so) I never have any problems

      That's because you have only one connection open at once.

      Who the hell needs 50mbps downloads except bittorrent users

      Businesses, multi-family residences, and people watching HDTV streams.

  • by Fished ( 574624 ) <amphigory@gma[ ]com ['il.' in gap]> on Wednesday December 23, 2009 @09:55AM (#30534640)

    Dear Comcast's Lawyers,

    I'd like to receive my $16, as I was unable to download numerous hit Hollywood movies and popular music at acceptable speeds while on your service. I was affected while using such protocols as E-donkey, Bittorrent, Limewire, Gnutella, and anything else that might get me sued. Please send the check to my address above.

    Yours Truly,

    Fished's Ex-Wife

  • by Darth_brooks ( 180756 ) <.clipper377. .at. .gmail.com.> on Wednesday December 23, 2009 @09:56AM (#30534654) Homepage

    Phase 1: Find as many geeks in your area that are eligible for the settlement.

    Phase 1a: Jump through the hoops this settlement will likely require ("Submissions must be sent on a 3x5 index card, handwritten in blue ink with no misspelled words, and a tiny drawing of a European Swallow hand drawn in the lower left hand corner not to exceed 13% the total area of the card...")

    Phase 2: ????

    Phase 3: Have everyone deposit their checks, then send $16.00 donations to the EFF, OpenSSH Foundation, FSF, or FOSS project of your choice.

  • used or attempted to use Comcast service to use the Ares, BitTorrent, eDonkey, FastTrack or Gnutella P2P protocols

    Ok, so if your Blizzard updater got throttled, you can't say a word? You have to sign a paper confessing that you used one of those specific P2P client, where 99% of the users are downloading copyrighted material?

    Yeah, there's nothing to fear, comrade, come in and sign this paper for your huge 16$ check.

  • by bilturner ( 907791 ) on Wednesday December 23, 2009 @10:18AM (#30534818)
    I'm a Comcast user, and as soon as I fire up bit-torrent my cable-modem starts resetting every 2 minutes or so. That has to be Comcast. Takes my cable-modem a minute to cycle through the reset sequence, during which time I'm offline. This tactic seems more egregious, though. Before, they were just interfering with packets. Now they're interrupting my service. Turn off bit-torrent, cable modem and service runs like a charm. Mysterious, isn't it....
    • by Zontar_Thing_From_Ve ( 949321 ) on Wednesday December 23, 2009 @11:18AM (#30535408)
      PPalmgren's suggestion is certainly worth investigating, but have you tried throttling your upload speed on your client? I had some serious problems until I cut way back on my upload speed and that made things calm down. I have no issues with downloading as fast as possible, but things start to get very bad for me if I allow the default unlimited speed on uploads. I have AT&T and not Comcast, but maybe you might look into that and see if it makes any difference.
    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      I had this same issue. It is Comcast, but it is because they gave you a faulty modem (either crappy, broken or misconfigured). File a complaint, then demand a new modem.

      Also make sure to get a new modem directly from Comcast. Many of the at-home technicians are outsourced to other companies. At least in my area, most of these companies just take defective modems from one location and then use it at the next house call (this was verified by two Comcast employees). If you get it directly from a Comcast l

  • Obviously (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Ogive17 ( 691899 ) on Wednesday December 23, 2009 @11:01AM (#30535226)
    Obviously Comcast's reaction to this news will be to increase their fees to each consumer by $17.
  • Yes, there should be legal repercussions for a company doing something like this to its customers. Unfortuneately, lawyers aren't cheap and companies can pay to have more of them. While more doesn't mean better, it does reduce your chances of being able to go up against such a company. Of course it would be different if you identified the people who were wronged by this ahead of time and had each one chip in five bucks for a legal team ($5 X 1 million people, you get the idea).

    Regardless of this, getti

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by shentino ( 1139071 )

      Do the words "monopoly" mean anything to you?

      Comcast apparently sucks...but does it suck bad enough that, when there's no other game in town, it's better to just do without?

  • You may be eligible for up to $16 restitution if you live in the United States or its Territories, have a current or former Comcast High-Speed Internet account, and either used or attempted to use Comcast service to use the Ares, BitTorrent, eDonkey, FastTrack or Gnutella P2P protocols at any time from April 1, 2006 to December 31, 2008

  • Still going on? (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Ornlu ( 1706502 )
    Oddly enough, I'm moving to Houston in a week, so I need to sign up for an ISP. Comcast is the only cable provider in the whole city, so they've got the market cornered on speed. I did the whole "chat now" thing that popped up when checking availability. I asked about bandwidth caps and P2P throttling. They referred me to a tech hotline. Here's the gist of the conversation with the CS tech rep: I've got 3 questions, 1) To your knowledge, does Comcast throttle P2P traffic? 2) To your knowledge, does Com
  • Hmm... (Score:5, Funny)

    by Spykk ( 823586 ) on Wednesday December 23, 2009 @12:05PM (#30535842)
    Hmm, I'm not sure about all this. I'm going to have to check with admiral Ackbar on this one.
  • P2P for all updates (Score:3, Interesting)

    by drew30319 ( 828970 ) on Wednesday December 23, 2009 @12:49PM (#30536260) Homepage Journal
    I've wondered for some time (and often aloud, but nobody has ever responded) as to why more software updates aren't done via P2P?

    Benefits:

    (1) It's more efficient for everybody (I would imagine that bandwidth for folks like MS / AVG / even SourceForge would be lower by at least a magnitude of ten)
    (2) It further legitimizes P2P
    (3) It forces ISP's hand in treating bittorrents like all other traffic

    While I appreciate that the tin-hat-wearers may believe that the MPAA / RIAA wouldn't want such a move I wonder if there are technical aspects of which I'm unaware?
    • by eltaco ( 1311561 )
      I totally agree, but when we look at the big economic picture, essentially what this practice does is transfer the cost of bandwidth / traffic from the companies offering the downloads to the isps.
      many isps, especially in the states, can't do their one single job properly; transfering data. they dont want to put money into upgrading their infrastructure, they want to make the net a one-way street and they want to get paid handsomely for it.
      isps having to pick up their own slack and actually doing properly
  • Throttling? Comcast apparently blocks BitTorrent period, at least in my district. It stopped working about 6 months ago. Thanks for doing me a favor and preventing me from "infringing" by downloading an Ubuntu disc. Assholes.

On the eighth day, God created FORTRAN.

Working...