"Exaflood" Disaster Appears Unlikely 72
I Don't Believe in Imaginary Property writes "By now, we've all heard of the 'coming exaflood' that will drown the ISPs in data and smite the wicked P2P users. Fortunately, the 'exaflood' is unlikely to be a disaster. Internet traffic growth is falling year-over-year, and there's plenty of core bandwidth — now handling about an exabyte a month in fact — but the last mile is still slow. So there's a reason that Comcast & co. are worried about losing to P2P, but the Internet itself isn't likely to suffer a meltdown any time soon. And there's plenty of data to counter anyone who says otherwise."
Exafloods? (Score:2, Funny)
We got the cure:
Lots o' suds
Burma Shave [slashdot.org]
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Won't stop the RIAA/MPAA (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Won't stop the RIAA/MPAA (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Won't stop the RIAA/MPAA (Score:5, Insightful)
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Very true. OK, there is a minor cost to distribute, bandwidth isn't free, but it's pretty cheap especially when bit torrent is used.
I was in Home Depot the other day. I wanted to buy some gardening tools as I am going to start work on a vegetable garden. As I walk in I see lots of books, many about how to make a really good garden. Unfortunately for the authors and publishers of those books, I had already learned all I needed to from neighbors, online, and peopl
Re:Won't stop the RIAA/MPAA (Score:5, Interesting)
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The "growth" is the "growth rate" is the "rate of growth". They all mean the same thing, specifically, the change in size over time. To say that growth is falling is exactly the same as saying the rate of growth is falling: the rate of change-in-size-over-time has changed over time.
Yes, you're correct in pointing out that it's the growth which is getting smaller, not the size, but you're incorrect in your assertion that the summary is misleading.
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Internet traffic growth obviously isn't constrained the same
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Still, I'm not sure I see the point of this study. Everybody knows the last mile is the main problem. Most of the Internet is in the last mile! Just as your body contains something like 100,000 kilometers of capillaries, but only a few meters of arteries. So saying the problem is "just" the last mile isn't saying much.
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It's the last mile which is holding it back (Score:3, Interesting)
Now, when they fix that... but maybe by then they'll have increased the backbone as well.
Re:It's the last mile which is holding it back (Score:4, Interesting)
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And here I am, watching news on my TV about a breakdown on the Blue line in Chicago and you are telling me to die while they are talking about injuries...
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The last mile in many places is still limited. However, I think that as the time passes, people is more aware of the different services that they can find and use online. I remember not too long ago, we stressed the networks, sending 40MB emails with videos with my friends, as we start finding sites like youtube, we stopped abusing the email system, replicating mails. There's still people sending huge powerpoint presentations through mail, but cha
Wait for H5N1 (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Wait for H5N1 (Score:5, Informative)
Because most of the jobs that I can think of that could be performed at home on a computer don't require a lot of Internet access. Maybe transferring one or two files from the office network but not any kind of constant data transfer back / forth.
Then you factor in that with so many people at home they'll probably be spending more time slacking off / surfing the net. But people do that at work anyway (I'm a webmaster and I see traffic spikes Monday morning after a weekend slowdown which suggests that people spend most of their time surfing the net from work) so I'm just wondering how you even begin to go about modeling something like that ?
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A million ~1MB Word documents versus countless 10MB-10GB songs/movies/games/compilations of songs/movies/games? I never thought of that. The Internet will be crushed under the weight of office work, ruining everyone's multi-gigabyte torrents.
Exactly. Plus that in the case of a real EMERGENCY, you can kindly ask people to turn off their P2P leeching. I wouldn't do it for corporate chumps too lazy to provide decent redundancy, but in case of an epedemic where people are urged to stay at home I would. ISPs could yank everyone down to a lower tier to curb hogs so they keep the network from choking. As long as the network is operational, I don't think this will be any major part of the problem.
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Wait, refresh my memory. Is H5N1 the flu strain with the ~70% kill rate, or is that something else? The severity of the illness will definitely affect the amount of network traffic produced from people working from home. 'Cause if 100Ks/millions of people contract a really serious flu strain, I doubt they'll be doing much of anything beyond, you know, screaming, moaning, and dying.
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I think the point is that everyone will be stuck at home because they are afraid they _might_ catch something.
Anyway, what will kill the internet is everyone blogging about the tiniest sniffle they get if there is ever a flu scare, and then recording video's of themselves coughing and submitting it to video sites and asking "does this sound like t
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Because most of the jobs that I can think of that could be performed at home on a computer don't require a lot of Internet access. Maybe transferring one or two files from the office network but not any kind of constant data transfer back / forth. Then you factor in that with so many people at home they'll probably be spending more time slacking off / surfing the net. But people do that at work anyway (I'm a webmaster and I see traffic spikes Monday morning after a weekend slowdown which suggests that people spend most of their time surfing the net from work) so I'm just wondering how you even begin to go about modeling something like that ?
Working from home - for many this is going to require a VPN connection, especially for people not accustomed to working remotely. Thats going to require some talk back and forth to keep the tunnel open. Workers accustomed to being on the LAN probably have their mail clients configured in a chatty manner - I know I have different Notes settings for office and remote use, and my office setting is very chatty and noticeably impacts my network responsiveness when out of office. Security software, Active Di
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Prepare for H5N1 now! Grow your own veg. Just think of the money you'd have saved in 2007
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w00t! Where do I sign up for my Medal of Honor?
Re:It's good for the economy. (Score:5, Funny)
w00t! Where do I sign up for my Medal of Honor?
Yes but... (Score:5, Funny)
So long as everyone does not access these copious amounts of data simultaneously
Instead of Laughing at the RIAA.. (Score:1)
You always read/hear people saying that the RIAA has a "fatally flawed business model", and I think that's true. It does seem like there's going to be very little in the means of defense of intellectual property in the future. However, instead of la
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Albums should be given away as promotional material for performances (if ever pressed at all instead of just delivered electronically to begin with). Artists themselves already make most of their money from selling merchandise at performances.
Labels make money peddling plastic discs. Artists pretty much get the shaft.
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- Downloads are free
- Sharing is free
- Physical media (CD's, LP's, DVD's) are sold at a reasonable price that is low BUT also gives profit
- Concerts
- Eliminate record companies, or cut them down HEAVILY
I do realize this is utopia, as record companies are not ready to cease existence, but if we all share our music, we might just kill them.
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What happens when scholars can't sell books because as soon as it's published, it's on the interwebs for free?
Then the universities will have to publish the books, and help the students save thousands of dollars every year at the same time. Without a monopoly-supported, profit-driven market for schoolbooks, effort can be spent on more useful things than writing 10 books with the same content and release new editions every other year to prevent students from buying books second hand.
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You appear to be under the mistaken impression that record companies ever, ever pay royalties.
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How do people out there on Slashdot feel about the decline of intellectual property rights and does anyone have any good solutions to the problems that this would hypothetically ... plague those who depend on intellectual property for their survival?
I would have to suggest some combination of: Patronage, which currently provides us with museums, and libraries, (granted that the 'patrons' in this case are the taxpayers); Collectors, who tend to pay for physical objects anyway, even if the book is already available at the library for 0$, but owning it has considerable attraction anyway to many, and the same can go for recordings, just to a lesser extent; Performance, which doesn't apply to everybody, but the cinema experience will I hope always be worth
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Patronage, which currently provides us with museums, and libraries, (granted that the 'patrons' in this case are the taxpayers);
Collectors, who tend to pay for physical objects anyway, even if the book is already available at the library for 0$, but owning it has considerable attraction anyway to many, and the same can go for recordings, just to a lesser extent;
Performance, which doesn't apply to everybody, but the cinema experience will I hope always be wor
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Simple: sell your music. Why take a small royalty from the label when you can sell your music directly to your customers and keep all the money. You have to pay the bills, but I'm betting you can arrange hosting and an e-commerce site for a low enough cost that you can sell cheap enough to have people buying while still making more actual profit than label royalties would be. The key is to shake loose of the idea that the only way to make money selling music is to collect royalties from a label. Once you do
Last Mile (Score:2)
The "internet" can handle it, the problem is with ISPs? Sounds like a good place for competition and innovation to work. If an ISP cannot handle the traffic they sell to their customers then they shouldn't be an ISP.
Repeat after me... (Score:3, Insightful)
This is another non-story that should not have been posted.
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But perhaps your right - slashdot should only post the outrageous corporate propaganda articles, and ignore the writings that challenge such FUD, leaving each individual to judge BS in isolation.
not the size of the pipe, its the number of users (Score:2)
The future of internet has nothing to do with the capacity of the big pipes behind the ISPs, but the cost of it to the ISP. I don't mean that as capacity increases cost reduces, but that as users demand more the ISP must offer more capacity at the same price - users wont accept less (especially if they're promised unli
Peak Bandwidth? (Score:2, Interesting)
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P2P Throttling (Score:1)
Internet traffic growth is falling year-over-year (Score:2)