nanog mailing list archives

Re: Online games stealing your bandwidth


From: "Jeffrey S. Young" <young () jsyoung net>
Date: Sun, 26 Sep 2010 09:35:37 +1000

t

On 26/09/2010, at 6:43 AM, Matthew Walster <matthew () walster org> wrote:

On 25 September 2010 21:16, Rodrick Brown <rodrick.brown () gmail com> wrote:
I think most people are aware that the Blizzard "World of WarcCraft" patcher
distributes files through Bittorrent,

<snip>

I once read an article talking about making BitTorrent scalable by
using anycasted caching services at the ISP's closest POP to the end
user. Given sufficient traffic on a specified torrent, the caching
device would build up the file, then distribute that direct to the
subscriber in the form of an additional (preferred) peer. Similar to a
CDN or Usenet, but where it was cached rather than deliberately pushed
out from a locus.

Was anything ever standardised in that field? I imagine with much of
P2P traffic being (how shall I put this...) less than legal, it's of
questionable legality and the ISPs would not want to be held liable
for the content cached there?

M


IMHO,

Sooner or later our community will catch on and begin to deploy such
technology.  P2P is a really elegant 'tool' when used to distribute large
files (which we all know).  I expect that even the biggest last-mile 
providers will lose the arms race they currently engage in 
against this 'tool' and start participating in and controlling the flow of
data.  

Throwing millions into technologies to thwart this 'tool,' technologies such
as DPI only takes away from a last-mile provider's ability to offer service.
I believe this is one reason the USA lags the Rest of the World in broadband
deployment.

Ultimately, I believe it will make sense to design last-mile networks to
benefit from P2P (e.g. allow end stations to communicate locally rather
than force traffic that could stay local to a central office through a session-
based router).  Then take advantage by deploying a scenario such as the 
one you've outlined to keep swarms local.  Before we do that though, 
we need to cut the paranoia about this particular tool (created by the 
RIAA and others) and we need to see a few more exec's with vision.

jy  

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