Archive for the ‘Comcast’ Category

Google helps found M-Lab to identify ISPs who throttle torrents

February 1, 2009

Google has joined with the Open Technology Institute to help identify which ISPs are restricting peer-to-peer traffic, launching M-Lab to help users discover whether or not they’re being affected.

One of the tools M-Lab will use is Glasnost, a java applet that initiates a torrent transfer between a user’s pc and the remote testing server. It compares the results to the speed of a normal transfer to see whether or not the peer-to-peer traffic is being throttled.

If you’re curious about your own ISP, run the Glasnost test and see what it reports. You’ll have to be patient, though – the recent news about Google coming onboard has increased traffic on the site greatly and it’s having a hard time keeping up.

It’s good to know that once M-Lab is online they’ll have 36 Google servers in 12 locations to help run the tests.

EFF launches tool to monitor ISPs for bad behavior

August 7, 2008

The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) is protecting your rights online again, this time with a tool called Switzerland. Switzerland lets you check your ISPs compliance with net neutrality, making sure they’re not trying to shut down specific kinds of traffic, like BitTorrent and VOIP. Naturally, Switzerland is Open Source.

It’s also a command-line tool, and still in alpha, so it’s not necessarily for everyone. If you’re comfortable with this kind of app, and you’re concerned about your ISP’s behavior, definitely give it a go. How exactly does it know whether your ISP is fiddling around with your bandwidth? The EFF says, “It will spot IP packets which are forged or modified between clients, inform you, and give you copies of the modified packets.” It recognizes packets injected or modified by some of the most popular tools ISPs have been using to mess with p2p traffic, including SandVine and AudibleMagic.