I'm using azureus and am starting to get pissed off because my school is blocking stuff with firewall and is extremely slow.
also, is it possible to convert the ongoingazureus torrent project to bitcomet one??
Name:
Anonymous2005-09-09 23:57
why not just change the ports it uses. chances are the school is only blocking ports. changing to bitcomet wont' help seing as how it has nothing to do with the program itself
Name:
Anonymous2005-09-10 1:12
I did. I changed it to 6002, 6004 and 20050
Name:
Anonymous2005-09-10 1:40
then switching programs won't help you either
Name:
Anonymous2005-09-10 1:44
isn't there any program that can disable the firewall of net provider??
Name:
Anonymous2005-09-10 1:49
>>5
Yes, it's just so easy to take over an entire network and kill processes running as root on the routing servers.
>>12
oh
so are they in a different category? So it's no use to learn hacking when I want to break into the server and mod the shared bandwidth rate to my pc????
>>15
Technically, you could. But you'd be an ass. Better be useful and tell your school how to prevent others from being asses. C'mon, if you want to share files, which is good, you can get some cheap broadband service yourself.
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Anonymous2005-09-11 23:44
>>17
hmmmmmmmm. But this is the only way since I don't want to burn my parent's money
Name:
Anonymous2005-09-11 23:44
>>18
also, I'm in a dorm and I'm not sure if they will service only one room
Name:
Anonymous2005-09-12 0:06
just spend like four dollars a month for access to a good usenet server and forget you even have an upstream bandwidth limit. Plus you get most shit sooner than you'd find it on bittorrent anyway.
You basically just can't use bittorrent when your upstream is clamped. Get used to it because you're not gonna change it.
You COULD try getting a second network card and setting up two connections if you want to be an asshole, doubling your upstream. But it's less of a pain in the ass to just go for some Usenet.
HTTP tunnel. Your school blocks the announces of your bittorrent traffic. Your school is shaping network traffic. Hacking wont change this fact, because they are probably using Cisco routing or a unix-style network. If this is so, then you are going to be hard-pressed to get Bittorrent to work.
Usenet only useful to you if you can actually get on to the server. If your school blocks bittorrent, then they probably block other forms of filesharing as well, which means it's going to be damn near impossible to share those files of yours. Try IRC, perhapse? IRC is a good way to share files, if they don't block that too.
In the end, if you can't do anything, you'd be best to get on the good side of the network administrator(s).
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Anonymous2005-09-12 4:27
>>22
it's not that it's blocked.It's just that it's slow. like 30 kb per sec.
Plus, MIRC seems quite hard to understand compared to other p2ps
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Anonymous2005-09-12 5:01 (sage)
like 30 kb per sec.
Oh my god! No! NOT 30KBPS! ANYTHING BUT 30KBPS!!!1!
Shit.
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Anonymous2005-09-12 5:16
>>23
Is that KiloBytes? If so, request proper capitalization. Bytes is always an uppercase B, and Kilo is nicer with an uppercase K.
30 KB is ok.
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Anonymous2005-09-12 5:54 (sage)
less whining by stupid people please
Name:
Anonymous2005-09-12 7:09 (sage)
Stupid greedy faggot wants the entire dorm network to himself. Fine, go pay for it!
And then people wonder why universities run packet shapers. It's because they'd be sucked dry by internet packrats getting high on useless shit like mp3s, videos, and warez (most which they'll never even use!). 95% of the bandwidth would be soaked up by 1% of the users, leaving everyone else to wonder why they can't read their email, play an occasional game, or (zOMG!) do research for a fucking report!
>>27
well the thing is I'm trying to pull the original bandwidth of the school not the dorm's. Because this school is limiting the bandwidth on my dorm.
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Anonymous2005-09-13 7:36
Because this school is limiting the bandwidth on my dorm.
And why do you think that is, hmm?
If I was a uni sysadmin, it'd definitely be worth my dime to get some shapers from Packeteer, or maybe have couple of the guys spend a few days or weeks developing and testing routers using layer-7 QoS. Slap it in front of the dorms and my life suddenly becomes so much easier.
Instead of having 99% of people bitch at me about a slow network, I'd only have the 1% of packrat warez kiddiez whining... if they have the balls to whine to my face about not having bandwidth to do illegal shit their TOS says they shouldn't.
Oh, boy, would I ever love that. BoFH here I come!
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Anonymous2005-09-13 13:51
>>31
the normal network itself is slow too and almost 70% ofpopulation here is a packrat. How's that??
Name:
Anonymous2005-09-13 13:52
>>31
but youareright about not being able towhine at the school since I'm not even sureifI'mallowed to use dl programs.
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Anonymous2005-09-13 14:15
>>33
Apparently whitespace is also considered a waste of bandwidth.
Oh, I hated jerks like you when I was in the dorms. At the beginning of the school year I had used BT to dl something animejunkies. Left it on over night by accident, ended up uploading over 4GBs. BT didn't work much soon after that. lol.
>>32
If the network is too slow, yet 70% (bullshit) of everyone is a packrat... you haven't noticed a probable relationship here? Hello? Helloooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo?
All the more reason to packet shape.
>>36
I'm so sorry bandwidth isn't free. When you start paying market price instead of flat fee for your leeching, then maybe I'd talk. Maybe you'd like to pay insurance too for when the RIAA/MPAA decide the uni makes a nice example?
>>38
WTF man, without flat fee the Internet wouldn't be nearly as good, populated and resourceful as it is. I cringe from the idea of not having flat fee, and I'm not at all a major leecher.
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Anonymous2005-09-14 20:30
I wish I could get 30 KB a sec
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Anonymous2005-09-14 21:34
>>38
Duh, it's not free, but I paid for room and board that includes a connection. You can throttle all you want and complain about costs, but it's not reason for me not to hate the system. and WTH would the RIAA/MPAA nail me for?!? LOL. Insurance in general is a rip off as well.
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Anonymous2005-09-14 22:38
>>23
Plus, MIRC seems quite hard to understand compared to other p2ps
>>42
Insurance is paying early for an accident that may never happen.
>>44
Yes, they should. I see flat fee as something you pay to do anything you want, be it luser browsing of sports newspapers online, P2P leecher, or server that gets leeched off.
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Anonymous2005-09-15 15:36
>>39
How did you get accepted into a school with dorms? Shouldn't you be in community college? You know... letting someone with a little bit of intelligence to further their education? Because it looks like you have gone as far as your IQ will let you.
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TokenMacGuy2005-09-15 19:06
btdownloadcurses.py
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Anonymous2005-09-16 0:12
>>45
Being one of the people who doesn't leech everything, I'd rather they didn't. Why should the majority of us pay more so a tiny minority can do things that are illegal anyway?
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Anonymous2005-09-16 0:33
>>46
stop getting too pissed off just becuase you made a mistake fool. You are a fag andI wouldlike to know why you are claiming that I'm an idiot. Unless you can give me a reasonable evidence, I will consider you gay. Plus, I'm sure I'm smarter than you in academical way unless you got above 3.8s in PRIVATE schools with all hard courses shithead.
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Anonymous2005-09-16 2:57
What kind of private school did you go to that you can get a 3.8 GPA, yet can barely write coherently? I hope your school was in some other language, for your sake.
1. It is not illegal, or, if it's gray, owners don't care. I download unlicensed anime fansubs and manga, which I end up buying if I like a lot. Companies are cool with this practice. I download stuff that has been on air TV therefore it's been made public. I download open sauce. I download free galleries. I download hentai their creators don't care about. See all the legal/not-care things you can do with P2Ps.
2. It's not a tiny minority. P2P traffic sums for 60% of my country's traffic, IIRC. We're eMule-happy.
3. If you're not taking advantage of your flat fee, it's your loss.
4. You can always get something that's not flat fee and lose, but leave our flat fee intact.
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Anonymous2005-09-16 5:45
>>52
1. It's illegal. No gray here, sorry: Berne Convention. Even that doujinshi, without explicit permission from the copyright holder, is illegal.
2. 60% of the traffic which comes from 5% of the users? Less? I'd like to see a breakdown.
3. Bandwidth isn't free, so in the end everyone will pay more because of you. Thanks.
4. What does this have to do with anything?
Flat fees work because the aggregate total consumption of your group is low enough that your fees can cover the market rate for bandwidth plus running and maintentance costs. A few leechers increase that total by an order of magnitude or more, so everyone must pay considerably higher rates for the service to stay solvent. Simple economics here.
The fact that you're nailed to no higher than 30KBps (oh, the humanity!) by packet shaping is one reason why you and your dorm-mates aren't paying a whole lot more.
I don't have problem leeching some material. I leech too. What I have a problem with are the download monsters, particularly those who start complaining when ISPs put limiters in place in order to remain both competitive and solvent. 30KBps my ass.
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Anonymous2005-09-16 7:28
>>53
1. Yes, I said it's theoretically illegal. But nobody cares about it, and anime corps turn a blind eye because it's even benefical.
2. No, 60% of the traffic which comes from the majority of broadband and even a part of the remaining 56Kers. People gets broadband for this, you can ask anyone who has DSL at random and you'll most surely be told they use P2Ps
3. You are welcome :) . Next time you need it, I'll be paying for ya.
4. Get a shitty non-flat fee access if you love them so much, and leave my flat fee alone, kthx.
WTF, I'm not the dorm guy, I'm an European guy with my own private 2Mbps cable connection.
Oh and BTW, this ISP is leech happy, and it is solvent, in fact they'll double our speed every year so we can leech more.
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Anonymous2005-09-16 8:04
>>54
Whoops, no wonder you seemed a tad too bright. I thought you were that dorm idiot. A lot of what I only applies to uni dorms (I've had to suffer through that shit).
That said, "theoretically illegal" is still illegal. Further, I'd really like to see you back up your assertion in >>2. Anecdotal, but most people I know only use the internet for email and checking news websites. Only the geeks seem to expand and use whatever's available.
>>55
Well, I don't have precise statistical data, but most people I know with broadband use eMule. Ever noticed there are a bunch of Spaniards in eMule (you can see that with some popular mods which use an ip2country database)? Most of the times you'll see more Spanish than, say, Americans, and there's 43 million of us vs some 295.
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