Come on anon-sbi this could be good for you
And I have found no evidence of uTP (which has been there since uTorrent 1.8) giving faster peers priority myself, that's why I'm asking.
Come on anon-sbi this could be good for you
Trackers are going to start discriminating because some people have an unfair advantage in seeding over others. Good one.
Would you be please tell me the Version and the Build so I can test it..causing the client to secretly report all your torrent activity to them
Also, One thing I was curious of:
I remember reading this article here: http://filesharingtalk.com/vb3/f-ne...nate-the-need-for-isp-throttling-375275/page2 , and in many places UT 2.0 was very poorly received for the many connotations that there would be heavy throttling to accommodate this new fangled "uTP" feature. However, it seems like that has mostly subdued now.
It looks like the development team of uTorrent has implemented a new feature into the 2.0 client that is considered "unethical" by us, as well as many other BT sites. This feature causes uT 2.0 to prefer uT 2.0 over any other client out there
I wonder whether they would still be such fanboys if they knew about uT history, specifically the callback function the uT dev team has added to uT a couple of years ago (after they were bought by a company associated with the MPAA), causing the client to secretly report all your torrent activity to them
As I read on the webz, there was a lot of coliding views on those same nasty rumours, so I couldn't be arsed and moved on to Vuze until today.
It is heavy, but it easily has more features than any other client I know of.
I like uTorrent for many things, call me fanboy or whatever
Would you be please tell me the Version and the Build so I can test it..
Now let's see who's gonna run..
Edit: Btw, the deal was announced "December 7, 2006", so that would be between 1.5 - 1.7
With uTP, uTorrent (and the Mainline client) will become network aware by throttling itself if congestion in the network is detected. This will have a huge impact on ISP networks according to Simon Morris, BitTorrent’s VP of Product Management. “If uTP is successful it should result in a multi-billion dollar windfall in terms of savings for ISPs,” Morris told TorrentFreak
This means that the new uTorrent will eliminate the need for ISPs to throttle BitTorrent traffic in their networks. Of course, uTorrent users will also be affected by the new protocol. When needed, uTorrent will decrease the upload or download speed to avoid congestion.
According to Morris it’s mainly the upload speed that will be affected. “The throttling that matters most is actually not so much the download but rather the upload – as bandwidth is normally much lower UP than DOWN, the up-link will almost always get congested before the down-link does,” he explained.
:glagpinch:If you don't know how DHT works, then please.. for the love of every god men ever believed in.. Don't write just to sound like you know.
First, let me answer the claims:let's look at this:
1- Private tracker, you're safe! DHT disabled
2- Public tracker, your IP & Info hash for files you're downloading are distributed anyway, on any version of uTorrent or any other BitTorrent client.
I suggest reading this
http://wiki.theory.org/BitTorrentDraftDHTProtocol
That's one possible solution for people who know about this issue. Most people are not aware of it.router.utorrent.com and router.bittorrent.com? Those servers deliver some DHT nodes for you to bootstrap after installing. If concerned, just block those IPs and ask a friend for his dht.dat file.
anon-sbi proof of the new ut2 build favoring its own will come to light when uppers when you see ut2 being the upper(only seeder) on a box it will give to other ut2 clients others clients will find it hard to connect to the seeder and other ut2 peers.
Not sure how to give you your proof, but get someone to connect on a linux box rtorrent or transmission under those conditions and see how you go.