OptimumOnline Bans uploads to P2P networks 508
An anonymous reader writes "In disturbing news this week Cablevision's high speed broadband unit OptimumOnline has sent letters to subscribers warning that uploading to P2P networks will no longer be tolerated. Obviously bowing to record and movie industry pressure the letter includes a link to a page that gives directions on how to disable file trading on 18 P2P services from KaZaa to Xolox. If you don't comply, they will cut the cord. I remember not to long ago where OptimumOnline ran TV ads touting the ability to grab music from the Net. The story on this can also be read here."
Once Again (Score:4, Insightful)
The cable company capitulated because the legal expenses to fight the threat of legal action is more than sending out a letter to each user. It's really that simple. If this isn't a SURE sign our legal system needs a review, then I don't know what is.
cluge
Re:Once Again (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Once Again (Score:4, Informative)
Second, I have a copy of the original TOS I got when I signed up, and it doesn't say anything about not running servers. I checked it again to make sure when they spammed me this time (5 emails about not running Kazaa - thanks).
Re:Once Again (Score:2)
Re:Once Again (Score:2)
Re:Once Again (Score:2, Insightful)
And they don't stop kazaa and those things by blocking ports, they have some software they've been testing that automagically lowers your upload cap to 128kbit (from 1Mbit) if you exceed some threshhold. And they won't admit it or tell anyone what the threshhold is.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Once Again (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Once Again (Score:2)
Re:Gun Control (Score:2)
I love that word; it's so...
subjective.
Re:Gun Control (Score:2)
Huh?
Legitimate \Le*git"i*mate\ a. 1. Accordant with law or with established legal forms and requirements; lawful.
Re:Gun Control (Score:3, Interesting)
Guns have tons of legitimate uses that cannot be carried out with any other tool: hunting, sport shooting, defense.
You mean no other tool if you want to sit on your lazy ass up in a tree stand and hope something comes within 100 yards of you. I have nothing against hunting with a gun, just trying to show a different viewpoint.
Yes, obviously sport shooting as that does require a gun but the others are bull. You can hunt with many tools like arrows, traps, spears, rod and reel, sling shot, knife, stun gun etc... Might be a little harder from a distance but people have been using these for thousands of years and still do, well not the stun gun.
P2P networks have no legitimate uses at all that cannot be (better!) carried out with another tool.
Just because a tool might seem better for what you are doing does not make it better for everyone. I have downloaded and upload gigs worth of car pictures, street racing videos, local track racing videos, and amature videos (not porn either) from P2P, all non MPAA/RIAA and free to distibute. Where else can I find a repostitory of these things? Where else can I post and share my material with others and NOT have to go through a third party commercial entity that charges per GB or can hold a few GB's of material for as cheap as P2P can do from my home PC? Add that it be non centralized and searchable for everyone to use freely and participate. Sure I can search around with Google and find stuff on web pages here and there, some on usenet and very little on IRC but all of these combined are many orders below what I can find on P2P.
Re:Gun Control (Score:2)
The best tool for working around censorship is the photocopier. We had this argument in the context of Freenet a few months ago. The conclusion was that there is no non-trivial legitimate use of this sort of decentralized technology. In an oppressed country where speaking one's mind can lead to imprisonment or worse, the audience to which you want to send your message certainly does not have computers. Technology like this is useless for circumventing unjust censorship. But running off a thousand copies of something and passing them around clandestinely will work as well today as it did in the 1700's.
well, it is illegal (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:well, it is illegal (Score:4, Insightful)
They are also stifling legal uses such as freely distributable bootlegs, indy music from bands that want everyone to download a copy etc. Sure, most of it may be trouble, but this hampers legitimate use as well.
furthurnet.com (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Independent bands have no bananas (Score:3, Interesting)
I can understand if the RIAA, or some guild or union has a rule or a bylaw to that effect. But that doesn't make sense to me for two reasons.
1) What reason would the Government of the United States of America have to get involved with something stupid like this. Not only paying songwriters, but setting a specific price by law? WTF? In 50 years when inflation makes that worth even less than it is now, will congress change the law to 20 cents?
2) Define a songwriter. If I write a stupid song about my trip to Walmart (let's call it Ode to Church Road), and then I perform it with my PC's mic, and share it via Gnutella. Does that make me a songwriter? If someone then downloads it, am I then automatically entitled to 8 cents? If I write a stupid song and then perform it, can I share the file loaded with keywords for porn and movies and other artists, so that unsuspecting people download it, and then rake in the money 8 cents at a time? Sure, by US law any time anyone writes a note on a napkin, that is automatically copyrighted, but that's a little different. That's just saying "you created this, so you own it". It's not saying "you created it, now someone got a copy you are owed $0.08."
This just doesn't make sense to me. You could be right, but can you provide any links or anything to back up this claim?
I did find a few links that say US law has a *CAP* on what a songwriter can charge in royalties of 8 cents per song. But that's not the same thing. That doesn't mean that a songwriter has to get paid at all. It just says that 8 cents is the most he or she can charge.
Now don't get me wrong. I'm not defending copyright violation. If I rip my copy of Dr. Dre's The Chronic to MP3 and "share" it. Then that's illegal. Regardless of songwriter fees or not. Dre (or his record label at the time, or someone who is not me) owns the copyright on that album. I have received no licensee in writing, verbal, or implied to redistribute his works.
But, your example with the indy bands is flawed. Many indy bands write their own music. In which case, they don't have to charge anything for it. If they want to distribute it for free, they can do so, since the $0.08 figure is a maximum, not a minimum (unless you know something I don't, which I haven't completely discounted). What happens if My indy band (let's call them "Don't Throw Knives At Me", I like that name) wants to do a punk cover of The Unknown Stunt Man [canisius.edu] (theme to the TV show, The Fall Guy [tvtome.com], written by David Somerville, Gail Jensen & Glen Larson and originally performed by Lee Majors)? Does my shitty indy band have to contact Somerville & company, or pay up to $0.08 for every song pressed? Well, as far as I can tell, yes. But my knowledge in this area it limited.
So where am I going with this rant? If someone breaks the law, you go after them. Simple. If Don't Throw Knives At Me records a punk cover of The Unknown Stuntman, we either owe the songwriter up to $0.08 per physical copy that gets distributed, or we have to work out a special deal with them. But if *I* write "Ode To Church Road", and perform it with Don't Throw Knives At Me, then I don't owe myself any money unless I say I do, which is stupid, because then I'd have to pay income tax on what I paid myself and I'd wind up loosing money (
As to how one verifies that I didn't unconsciously plagiarize another song, that's stupid too. In this case, the burden of proof is on any accuser. The artist doesn't have to prove that each and every work they ever write is original. That's like having to prove documentation to prove that something I'm selling on ebay isn't stolen. It may or may not be a good idea, but it's not required. It can't be unless someone makes an accusation. And even then, I believe the burden of proof is on the accuser, is it not?
One last tangent:
I find this 8 cent law interesting. Until I read your post and did some digging, I was not previously aware of it. What I find interesting it the fact that it only applies to physical media, yet it applies to MP3s and other digital file based media. I'm assuming this is because unlike a radio broadcast (to which this statute does not apply) when you share via MP3, a new, permanent copy is made. But how is this different from me tape recording the song off of the radio (which is legal, I believe because of time shifting rulings, please correct me if I'm wrong)? Does a songwriter technically have to get a royalty off of that too?
Again, I'm not 100% sure on any of these points, this is just how it appears to me, based on the information I was able to gather and my ability to interpret it. Any lawyers in the house with relevant experience care to chime in?
Sources:
Texas Tech University [ttu.edu]
House.gov [house.gov]
Re:well, it is illegal (Score:5, Insightful)
You just shot your logic in the foot with the "probably".
The law does not work on Probably, and Maybe. It either is unlawful or it isn't. Sharing copyrighted files is illegal in many places, but networks that *can* share copyrighted problems are not.
Guns are bad in many cases and should be restricted, but they are not illegal. They can be used for good or bad. Perhaps P2P needs some restrictions, but not outright prohibition.
Re:So its their job to enforce laws? (Score:2, Insightful)
You are saying it would be ok for Ford and GM to put monitors on all of our cars so that if we exceed the speed limit they can come take the car back? How about we get smart money going to make sure we pay every cent of our taxes and never use it to buy anything illegal? Condoms should come with monitors too? Wouldn't want to let us go sticking them into prostitutes, animals, or other men where it's illegal.
It doesn't SEEM heavy handed, it IS heavy handed. Not everyone is ready to bend over like you and accept being treated like a criminal for refusing to be disneyfied lumps of consumerism.
If bandwith consumption is their issue, then they can always go the capping/rate increase route.
those using "illegal" should understand the law (Score:5, Informative)
Clearly not all shared content is illegal (although there is little doubt that most of it is). Small artists have been able to use it legally for self-promotion, a perfectly legal use that the RIAA is also glad to put a stop to, as it might slightly impeed their ability to steal from artists.
Re:those using "illegal" should understand the law (Score:2)
Telephone companies are common carriers. ISPs, including cable modem operators, are technically "information service providers". A DSL ISP service has two separable components, the DSL (common carrier) and the ISP. This distinction matters in various areas of law and regulation.
Now it is true that legally, ISPs are often not responsible for content put out by users. But sometimes they are, and they have certain responsibilities. I don't think that Cablevision (ISP) is responsible for copyright violations by peer-to-peer subscribers, but they could be asked to "take down" certain users or content. This type of thing keeps lawyers busy.
Re:well, it is illegal (Score:2)
Cable internet services are designed for downstream data at high rates, as are the cable plants (the RF networks themselves). Upstream is a huge problem, and P2P represents a substantial portion of network traffic... scaling to meet the demand placed on the network by a small segment of users (P2P bandwidth hogs) does not make good business sense. Ask any cable operator, look at specs for cable equipment, do a little research and you'll see that limiting upstream, specifically going after P2P usage, is a coming trend that makes sense. This massive upstream used by a small proportion of users is the same as running a high traffic FTP server on a residential service. It is abuse. Whether it is illegal or not isn't relevant, P2P costs ISPs money and hurts other customers by degrading network performance.
Global Dissem Via P2P Is Not Fair Use (Score:2)
That's banal sophistry, I'd have to say. Why would you have a reason to "share" something with someone who already has it?
Suppose I grabbed tomorrow's New York Times off their satellite feed to a regional printing plant. Then, I print up a zillion duplicate copies, wait until the real paper hits the streets and proceed to distribute it all over New York City, to people wo already have a copy. Think that'd be called fair use? Think the Times' wouldn't have a field day with me in court? The only difference between that and dumping music on the P2P networks is the use of a different distribution media. And that means zip to the law.
People who upload copywritten material are placing it on a globally accessible network. They have no idea who is going to download it. "Sharing" the entirety of a copywritten work with the entire globe is not fair use.
As far as I'm concerned, anyone who argues that kind of activity is legal is either deliberately ill-informed or convinced that his own sense of morality takes precedence over the legal system.
Upload vs. Download (Score:2, Insightful)
Right... cutting off the upstream means you can't UPLOAD music... you can still download all you want.
Re:Upload vs. Download (Score:2)
Re:Upload vs. Download (Score:2)
Uploads Only (Score:2)
So basically, everyone on that ISP is forced to be a leech. Given that most people on P2P networks are already leeches, this won't be much of an effect.
Yeah, right (Score:2)
I'm sure the excessive bandwidth being used by tens of thousands of customers letting people leech pirated music and movies from them 24/7 has ABSOLUTELY NOTHING to do with it. Don't like it? Find a different provider.
Re:Yeah, right (Score:2, Insightful)
"Bandwidth may only be used for buisiness and educational purposes. Do not waste our bandwidth on anything frivolous or we'll take it away. Mneh."
Can you point me to where it was?
Re:Yeah, right (Score:2)
In other words, using an ISP's network is a commercial transaction, not a right.
Re:Yeah, right (Score:2)
They are not losing so much bandwith on upstream. Point is people can track if you are hosting music/movies, etc. They cannot as easily track if you are downloading it (b/c if they host it themselves for offer it's just as illegal).
Umm...no (Score:2)
Also, they don't mention Direct Connect, so if I did use them I'd still be ok.
Bait and Switch? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Bait and Switch? (Score:2)
Re:Bait and Switch? (Score:2)
Re:Bait and Switch? (Score:2)
In the current environment, I think OptimumOnline is making a smart move. Depending on how various lawsuits and legislation shake out over the next couple years, they could easily revisit the issue and allow P2P uploads again, but until then they are limiting their own legal exposure.
Re:Bait and Switch? (Score:2)
Re:Bait and Switch? (Score:2)
Besides, I would doubt that their motivation for doing this is anything besides $$$ and consideration for their other users. I work for a university and we bandwidth capped p2p stuff with a packetshaper [packeteer.com] not for the "moral" or legal aspect of it. We wanted the bandwith that we were paying for! Before limiting the p2p protocols, something like 80 to 90 % of the data leaving the university was due to p2p, and like this cable provider's customers, I doubt most of them even realize the volume of data that they are "sharing".
DMCA Violations (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:DMCA Violations (Score:5, Insightful)
Jerk.
Re:DMCA Violations (Score:4, Informative)
Re:DMCA Violations (Score:2)
Re:DMCA Violations (Score:2)
Re: [clueless about] DMCA Violations (Score:3, Insightful)
We recieve a list of copyright materials that were sucessfully downloaded from the individual.
That's kind of surprising, because that could be illegal, for whoever's doing the downloading. But I wouldn't put it past anyone...
As the law currently stands, we have to uphold the request of the copyright holder, and if we don't do this then we can have legal action brought against us.
ROFL. You don't have to uphold the request in this case. (And you can have legal action brought against you either way; the DMCA can't prevent that.) I think you're confused about the infringement liability exemptions. You might want to take a look at this [eff.org].
But to summarize:
Yes, an ISP only has DMCA immunity from liability for infringement of copyright involving content stored on their servers if they designate an agent, comply with notice & counter-notice time limits, etc. That's probably what you're thinking of. See USC 17 Ch. 5 S 512(c).
But that's irrelevant, because we're not talking about content stored on the ISP's servers.
The ISP has blanket immunity for content that passes through their network but isn't stored there more than transiently. This is covered a couple of paragraphs up in S 512(a). (Notices could be involved, but only if a proxy is maintaining content that has been removed at the source; and we're not likely to find an inward transparent proxy on a network with an AUP that prohibits servers. =)
If you don't like the law, I would suggest contacting your senator.
Heh. And if my ISP constantly tries to cover their ass at my expense (but can't even get that right, since they don't seem to know where their ass it), then who do I contact? Their shareholders? =)
Re:DMCA Violations (Score:3, Interesting)
For DSL, I'm paying for a constant speed anyway, and they damn well better let me use it.
For 56K, nobody cares.
Re:DMCA Violations (Score:2)
Re:DMCA Violations (Score:2)
Re:DMCA Violations (Score:2)
Re:DMCA Violations (Score:2)
Re:DMCA Violations (Score:2)
Actually (Score:2)
Re:DMCA Violations (Score:2)
Oh, you mean staff gets special concideration? funny that
Re:Tough luck, cowboy (Score:2)
Letter is a little misleading... (Score:2)
If they would have said "some files", or even just "files", then that would have been more truthful. "the files" means the same as "all files".
Re:Letter is a little misleading... (Score:2)
Of course, we know "the files" means "the files you have selected in the program to share", but the hacker-scared users will see "all the files" and be scared into going to do what they say.
not really for power users (Score:3, Interesting)
Optimum Online doesn't seem to have a good method of tracking or enforcing these rules. I've been running servers off my home OOL cable connection for over a year, and they've never said a thing, though I've contacted technical support for other unrelated issues.
Anyone else have any problems with running servers on Optimum Online? I'm running POP/SMTP/HTTPS/SSH services for my own use.
I'd be interesting to hear stories from people who have been told to shut down servers or reduce their bandwidth usage.
Re:not really for power users (Score:2)
P2P-obsfucation apps however exist only to violate copyrights, and therefore the ISPs must shut down customers when notified or risk DMCA lawsuits.
Your ISP doesn't have to know what you're doing (Score:2)
I'll leave setting up the P2P-like program for encrypted packets as an exercise for the student (It's been done at least a couple of times thus far...)
Re:Your ISP doesn't have to know what you're doing (Score:2)
Re:Your ISP doesn't have to know what you're doing (Score:2)
Sure thing there, peppy! You'll find yourself quickly disconnected, though. ;)
Bell Sympatico and Rogers Cable both have (or had, at one point in time) wording in their AUPs that forbid "commercial grade virtual private network" software from being used on their connection.
"Hey! That's encrypted traffic!" *plonk!*
Re:Your ISP doesn't have to know what you're doing (Score:2)
OOL has no such policy. OOL has the following restrictions:
1. No servers.
2. 1 MBit up/10 Mbit down modem caps.
3. Port 80 is blocked.
4. No bandwidth abuse
Recently they have been applying 1 & 4 to people running ftp/p2p servers. My understanding is the criterea they use is continuous use of 1 Mb/sec for more than 3 hours continuously, with multiple upload ip destinations. When this is detected they apply a reduced upload speed cap of 150K/sec.
Hmm. (Score:2)
Other links and info (Score:4, Informative)
Basically, their excuse is security related, which is crap since more security problems occur with Internet Explorer, IIS and Windows itself than with P2P software...
As mentioned at DSL Reports, the upload is being capped at 128kb/s, NOT banned... Here's a quote from one of the links above (by HaveOOLnow)
No, it affects all uploads. If you upload at a certain rate for more than a certain amount of time, you automatically get capped [at 128kps]. But all you have to do is call them to get uncapped. The system is just designed to make people aware of the fact that they might have P2P apps running in the background.
The cap seems to be about 6 hours in length. Quite horrendous, but we all saw this coming, right? To be honest, I'd rather this and have unlimited download/uploads, than both... *shrug* Or, maybe if it only happens when the server is being heavily used (evenings and such).
Re:Other links and info (Score:2)
Business impact of preventing p2p file transfers (Score:2)
It is our job as customers to prove not only that the customer is always right, but that the loss of business (and revenue) due to failure to cater to customer, rather than the legally questionable demands of an organization borne of greed and nepotism, which seeks to control not only products of it's members but all music and other entertainment materials, over which it has no legal standing whatsoever.
--CTH
Obviously? (Score:2)
How do you figure? Perhaps they've simply noticed that their network isn't capable of handling as much upstream as they've been getting lately (cable is asymmetric), and they determined that P2P was the reason.
2 can play this game; Ban optimumOnline IPs on P2P (Score:2)
Having individual clients that don't share is one thing, having entire networks that don't is much bigger problem.
I think it's time P2P clients start including easy ways to ban entire IP blocks.
This would also provide OptimumOnline customers another reason to (i) complain to OptimumOnline about the policy and/or (ii) change providers.
not banned (Score:2)
use of these services can lead to network problems that may result in your upstream speed being temporarily reduced to control this abuse of service.
It sounds like they're going to throttle bandwidth on these ports, which makes perfect sense to me.
Re:not banned (Score:2)
The number of 'news' items that are a total waste of time to read could be drastically reduced, giving slashdot readers what they want: "stuff that matters".
Has nothing to do with copywrite. (Score:2, Insightful)
My two cents,
This article is completely innacurate . . . (Score:5, Informative)
Here's why: The cap is not a new portblock (they already block 80 to discourage webhosting), but simply a different cable modem config file with a lower upstream maximum. The ordinary config for OOL is 10 megabits down and 1 megabit up. the altered config file is 10 megabits down and only 150 kilobits up.
Obviously this is a solution that was implemented to control bandwidth, not specific applications. If OOL were to start battling p2p apps, it would come in the form of a portblock or traffic shaper - NOT an upload throttle.
To the author of the story, please do your homework. You can start in the OOL forums on BBR:
http://www.broadbandreports.com/forum/cable,opt [broadbandreports.com]
It's their own damn fault, then. (Score:2, Informative)
Sounds like the idiots that run the place have no fucking clue how the cable system works. Upstream bandwidth is severely limited because it runs on lower frequencies (5-42 MHz) with fewer channels to work with. Assigning every user an entire megabit of upstream data when each node is only capable of handling about 10 megabits is a recipe for disaster -- put a few heavy P2P users on the line and you'll be saturated in no time.
Cox Communications and Time Warner both cap upstream bandwidth at anywhere between 128-384k, and nothing more. They have successfully managed their bandwidth from the start and hence don't have to backpedal in a panic, pissing off thousands (millions?) of subscribers.
This is OOL's fault -- not P2P, not the end users.
Re:This article is completely innacurate . . . (Score:2)
False advertising? (Score:2, Interesting)
"We want you to stay online and stay protected while enjoying the best performance of Optimum Online high-speed Internet access"
Now correct me if I'm wrong, but doesn't "Internet access" pertain to full use of all ports? Wouldn't they have to be selling "Web, e-mail, and IRC" access or something to block ports?
Uploads? (Score:2)
I feel for the users (Score:2)
They are basically being held guilty by default. What a crock of shit.
Enjoy. But if you don't like it, dump the service please, and stop supporting them.
(standard "but $X is only service in my area" whinings need not apply)
Yawn, not a common carrier (Score:2)
Of course they can and will do what they're threatening. There's a reason why it pays to have your provider be classified a common carrier, and not some entity that will block your connections at whim... If you didn't see this coming you need to be hit upside the head with a cluestick...
Re:Yawn, not a common carrier (Score:2)
That's because you're using Verizon as an ISP. Use another ISP that won't block, but use Verizon's DSL.
interesting what is outlawed... (Score:2)
You can still download stuff with the p2p protocols. You can even accept file requests ( and acknowledge them ) with a p2p protocol. And you can still use SMTP to send files, even ones that the RIAA doesn't like, to other people (peers). It would serve OptimumOnline right if someone applied this concept to deliver any file now transfered from their users over p2p through their mail servers instead.
Sometimes doing what people tell you that you are allowed to do can be the best revenge.
It's about BANDWIDTH, not content (Score:2, Informative)
Then I remembered that I'm getting mad bandwith/$ (link: fastest ISP's [dslreports.com]). I've measured 6 Mbps to an OOL server and 3.8 Mbps to the other coast. For $30/month. DSL would be 700 kpbs (about 1/10th) for $50/month.
Also, it's their business and they've had a "no servers" policy since before I subscribed. I wouldn't want anyone telling me how to define my business. If we don't like it we can vote with our wallets. But this compromise is easy for me.
That said, I am an occasional P2P user, and I think sharing is appropriate to the model. I'll be looking into how much usage it takes to draw any attention and if the penalties are temporary caps (vs. being booted). But at this rate and price, I don't want to get booted!
List of products restricted reveals their motives (Score:2)
It's obvious that 'security' isn't their motive in this move. If you look at the products listed, it's obvious that they're trying to block p2p applications which, among other things, distribute music files. If 'protecting people from themselves' (that their 'security' really means) is what they're after, they would also have included Freenet and GNUnet.
"Bandwidth Stealing" (Score:2)
Now, if the access providers want to put a cap on the amount of bandwidth you use, and tell you this up front, then I have no problem. But, if they want to change the terms of your contract, and if they want to decide which "approved" service you can connect with, then I have a big problem. You should too! It's your resource, you paid for it. Use it.
Recording companies should be happy. (Score:2)
Since I began downloading audio/video from the internet, My purchaces of same have:
The issue is bandwidth abuse. (Score:2)
Despite speculation that this action is due to pressure from the movie/music industry, nobody has any hard evidence this is the case.
What is definitely true is that the nature of network use is changing - when the original cable protocol (DOCSIS 1.0) was designed bandwith utilization was 30:1 down to up, so DOCSIS 1.0 was designed for this sort of asymmetric load. This was before the days of VPN, sending digital photos to grandma, videoconferencing, etc. Unshaped traffic right now is running more like 2-3:1. With some optimization it's possible to get a DOCSIS 1.0 network to efficiently handle 10:1, but that's still a long way fron 2:1.
The result is that there is a big strain on upload channels in cable networks right now. Even OOL, which has the best bandwidth/customer right now is feeling the pinch.
DOCSIS 2.0 equipment, which is just starting to roll out is capable off symmetric operation - cable operators really want this for a variety of applications, however they also have an equipment plant with relatively new 1.0 hardware and generally a huge amount of debt. It's hard to predict how fast 2.0 will be rolled out.
As an Optonline customer... (Score:5, Interesting)
First they have been running "brown-outs" in Brookhaven township (Suffolk County, NY.)
Second the Helpless Desk has been telling people to turn of and especially DISCONNECT their routers when they call for outages. They do not explain themselves they simply tell people to disconnect the equipment. Then when the problem is not resolved they tell the customer to leave the Router out of the mix and wait a while. "Do not hook the router back up.," they implore.
Third, and this is just heinous, the cable technicians have been "chopping the lines" of customers they suspect have either extra cable runs, or (God forbid) who have Satellite Dishes. I live in Farmingville and not only has this happened to 6 (SIX) of my neighbors but one of those fukkers was in my yard when they were supposed to be working across the street. My wife confronted the guy and he told her that satellites were unreliable and "anyting" can happen to them and that she should consider going back to cable. I came out and exlained that if he didn;t get off my property I'd bury him in it. I took his plate number and Van number and Cablevision has denied he was even in the neighborhood. We are pressing charges along with our neighbor's who's Sat Dish lines he cut. I doubt we have a rogue installer.
As soon as DSL is on this block we're switching.
Re:As an Optonline customer... (Score:2)
Second the Helpless Desk has been telling people to turn of and especially DISCONNECT their routers when they call for outages.
Well DUH! The help desk drone isn't trained to support routers. It also says specifically in the OOL contract that they don't support routers.
You can you 'em if you want, but they aren't going to help you with 'em.
Lessig talks about this (Score:4, Insightful)
As for peer-to-peer and that it trades only illegal stuff, well that's hogwash. Yes, p2p is being used for a lot of file sharing right now and most of it is still protected by (an outrageous system of) copyrights. But p2p is an infant and there is no way to tell what it will be used for in even one year's time. I bet that p2p users will outwit the cable companies, bypass them and, unless they open their networks, make them irrelevant.
What will come in the place of cable. Hell, I don't know, but the cable industries stands of today feel a lot like aol's work of yesterday. Aol's dying. Cable will be next. Something else will take its place.
Until then, if you've got access to dsl and you value openness, call Verizon or whoever. The phone companies are the only ones who have to leave things open. Though, that might change. Things are getting creepy under the Generalisimo Bush. Egad.
Re:Nothing new to my daughter (Score:2)
Re:Nothing new to my daughter (Score:2)
Once when he was running a public port 21 ftp, he got a letter from the RIAA listing ~50 of his mp3z that he was sharing that were copyrighted--they simply told him to stop sharing those files. He did. End of story.
A guy in my dorm last year was also part of the big Drink or Die (is that the name? the warez circle) bust though.
Re:Ban Versus Recommendation? (Score:2, Informative)
Umm, no. That would be horribly bad. Gonna have to call shennanigans on that one. Most P2P software shares a private directory within the C drive (or the C:\my documents\my music file, depending on version) but I'd be amazed if you could point to ONE P2P program that shares the ENTIRE FRICKING C DRIVE BY DEFAULT. No way.
Re:No uploads? (Score:2)
It's the fact that "P2P" has begun to stand for more than a network technology where information is transfered from computer to computer without another server in between, but also taken on the idea of obsfucation of the originator's identity so that those who wish to enforce copyright laws have a harder time doing so.
Re:No uploads? (Score:2, Insightful)
Technically many service providers can ban the use P2P applications on this condition. Although rarely do ISPS enforce this rule. But for a cable customer, the bandwith is shared and the upstream is really easy to congest. One valid argument agaisnt peer to peer networking services is that users from all over the world in downloading files from users of the service clog up the upstream bandwith for valid users of the service.
Now why should you be mad at Optimum Online? Because they didn't enforce their rule on no servers to BAN P2P networks a long time ago. In fact their advertising implicitly specified that P2P networks were one reason for signing up with their service. Maybe if they banned them from the beginning as violating their server rules they wouldn't be such hyppocrites.
I admit I haven't done more research so I do not know if they sent it out to all users of their service or just the residential cable users. Commercial accounts of most services do NOT have a restriction against using servers. Because most commercial users of high bandwith service want to run web servers or other things for their businesses. Therefore there is no basis for using the no server rule to ban P2P networks since there isn't a no server rule. Additionally invoking a no server rule against commercial customers would be extremely ineffective since most sign up to run servers.
Re:Make my Christmas special (Score:2)
7513 Colshire Drive
McLean, VA 22102-7508
Bring contraceptives.
Re:One of two things will hapen: (Score:2)
Re:One of two things will hapen: (Score:2)
OO is offering a consumer-class service that comes with huge download bandwidth and little upload bandwidth. If you want huge upload bandwidth, you have to pay for it.
Bye bye, leech! (Score:2)
Re:Always stuck to CDs myself (Score:2)
I mean, the whole redhat/mp3 playing thing... that is just brilliant. Young troll-lings take note: See how he blends the reader's naivete about linux, with the average users frustrations at having to learn how to use an OS, or install software. See how he makes it look as if there weren't any number of mp3 players, both for X and the command line... several of which are probably default installs (Wouldn't know myself, and all you redhat weenies can bite me, I use Slack!). Think about this, "mpg123 filename" is as simple as it gets, but this master troll banks on the likely assumption that most windows lamers here at slashdot won't have a clue. It all plays into the FUD that we hear every day about linux, and yet maintains some air of plausibility... I mean, if you knew nothing of linux, except the gossip that it's difficult to use, you could believe him yourself!
But then, that's just the beginning, he follows up with a true masterpiece, including a subtle, yet direct contradiction. Does the PC in the dining room not have "crappy computer speakers" ? Can a cheap Big Lots CD alarm clock have anything much better than those? And for the piece de resistance, when has Walmart, or any retailer for that matter, ever in the history of the compact disc, sold a new album by any performer (dare I call Bon Jovi an artist?) for $8.00 ? It just does not get any better than this, folks. Those with less expertise might never even notice that they've been trolled.
*Applause*
SteweyGriffin, please, marvel us with some more of your brilliant trollery, it's hard to remember that it truly is an artform, some days.
Re:Usenet's time has come (Score:2)
exceptions (Score:4, Informative)
The other example Transmission Films [transmissionfilms.com] is distributing high quality movies protected by DRM via Overnet [overnet.com].
The Internet Archive [archive.org] has terabytes of share friendly information, they are evalutating several p2p platforms for helping to keep their bandwidth bills down. I've downloaded Redhat ISO's from edonkey, when they first come out the primary distro point and mirrors are swamped for at least a week.
Re:What, exactly... (Score:2)
Uh... perhaps because the author of the story doesn't know what the hell they are talking about. OOL is NOT blocking p2p networks, they are decreasing the upload cap on users that have high upload traffic to multiple ip ports for long periods of time.