Jump to content
The Corroboree
Sign in to follow this  
Legba

Is your ISP sabotaging your Internet connection?

Recommended Posts

Link

The Electronic Frontier Foundation, a rights advocacy group based in San Francisco, released a software program last week that lets you track whether your Internet Service Provider (ISP) is purposefully making your connection run slower. Called Switzerland, the software monitors packet forgery, a technique by which ISPs add overhead to your broadband line. Instead of just slowing down the connection, packet forgeries are like adding potholes to a highway that you -- and anyone you connect to -- are travelling. Switzerland uses a separate server for monitoring your traffic: it compares the way your traffic looks to the way it should, and alerts you to any discrepancy.

According to Peter Eckersley, an EFF technologist involved with the Switzerland project, there's just not enough transparency for end-users to know whether a service provider is deliberately tampering with their connection and therefore reducing the value of the service.

"At a technical level, the problem we're really addressing is that there are no existing tools that make detection and examination of modified traffic easy and automatic, Eckersley told me via email. "There have been some tools released that detect specific kinds of interference -- such as modified Web pages or TCP RST spoofing -- but nothing that spots arbitrary modifications."

According to Eckersley, there's also a misunderstanding about the term "Internet throttling."

"The word 'throttling' has been used to describe the network management undertaken by ISPs such as Comcast and Cox against various programs, including P2P apps like BitTorrent and Gnutella/Limewire," he says. "But 'throttling' isn't a very accurate description of what Comcast and Cox were doing, because it suggests that the ISP was just slowing down or 'shaping' the traffic. What we saw with U.S. cable ISPs was not just the slowing of some communications, but the actual injection of forged packets."

Switzerland is a free program, published under the open-source GPL license. Whether it might raise enough red flags to cause ISPs to think twice about manhandling their users' connections is still an unknown.

:devil:

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

ALL isp's do it...

always have, but theres not much can be done about it as its part of the terms and services of the agreement you enter into when you join.

the software is pointless.... its better be freeware.

i mean... in other countries it may be handy but its useless and redundant here....

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

i didn't realise they faked your download limit like that. that explains why people at whirlpool are so confused about their download limits sometimes.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Amulte, are you saying that in the licence I signed I agreed to let my ISP bodge up my downloads?

I better have a look but it sounds a little odd that they would just put that on the paper in plain view.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

IIRC, most agreements either note that speeds may be throttled, or advertise speeds UP TO x mbps or whatever.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

I got a 56k.

But I only get 42k all the time.

I think I being shafted for 10k.

I complained about but they said 42k is great.

So what am I paying for.

I would go with high band but it takes some special modem and other complications.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

^ Haha dev it's worth it, man! :P

You get get a decent modem for not much more than $50 (and you can get sent a free one in cases), and the only other "complications" are picking an ISP and telling them to hook you up.

I do not miss my dialup days in the slightest..

Oh yeah went to check this program thingy out, turns out you need Python to run it - couldn't be fucked.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
Sign in to follow this  

×