Google Spends $1 Million For Throttling Detection 99
foamrat writes "Google has awarded $1 million to Georgia Tech researchers so that they can develop simple tools to detect Internet throttling, government censorship, and other 'transparency' problems."
Tools to detect transparency problems (Score:2)
"Did your phone call end without a complete sentence? Please post the sentence fragment."
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Fail
Throttled!
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I wish Slashdot would just block the substring "MichaelKristopeit" from all user registrations. (and block his IP address) I mean people with mod points are doing a good job keeping him in the -1, but for those of us who browse at -1 when moderating, we're sicking of seeing this crap.
Google (Score:3)
Re:Google (Score:5, Insightful)
It cannot be ignored that they want to data-mine you to dump ad impressions down your consumer gullet; but this does mean that they view anybody else trying to do so as "competition" rather than "our bestest buddies in profit"(as with ISPs and Phorm/NSA for instance).
Similarly, their desire to operate communications services without hindrance is not identical to an ideological stance in favor of freedom; but the end results are substantially closer than are those of entities that wish to hinder communications services in order to raise prices, or prevent "piracy", or the like.
I don't trust them; but I would say that their self-interest aligns atypically well with much(though certainly not all) of what would want from the ideal internet. I do trust them to follow their self interest. I would certainly prefer the internet according to some genuinely freedom-focused entity; but those tend to be penniless ragtag optimists, rather than corporate behemoths....
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It's always funny to watch an anti-corporate person trying to pay a compliment to a corporation without appearing hypocritical.
Re:Google (Score:4, Insightful)
What's funny about it? He's basically saying that Google (mostly) does things that he likes, just not for the reasons he'd like them to. It's a perfectly reasonable position to take.
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>>What's funny about it?
It's funny in the same way as trying to watch a Republican say something nice about Obama. He hates corporations, but has to bend over backwards before saying something nice about one.
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It's not nearly as funny as watching people whine and complain about a system of elected rich old fucks fucking over everyone else in favor of a system of unelected rich old fucks fucking over everyone else. You see by constructing a neutered paper tiger and calling it government, then calling the actual government something else, all of a sudden everyone is magically free from government, or something.
Re:Google (Score:5, Interesting)
Corporations are complex systems designed to serve the (typically financial) interests of their owners. Within the limits imposed by the principal-agent problem, this is supposed to mean that the people who run the corporation serve the interests of the shareholders, by some combination of upping stock prices or issuing dividends.
Because of that, trying to infer the behavior of a corporation from the human motives of the guys at the top is typically going to be a bad model: one should instead expect that the corporation will act in the interests of its shareholders.
I was under the impression that that was pretty much the standard model of corporate behavior. If that counts as "anti-corporate"(rather than, say, somebody actually challenging the notion of 'limited liability investments', or even just asserting that having mercilessly self-interested entities around is a bad idea...), then what kind of bowing and scraping would I need to engage in to be "pro corporate"?
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Furthermore, the internal economy of a large corporat
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You'd have to happily submit to the corporation and willingly, nay, smilingly hand over your dough and your data, then drop your pants and bend over in case any of the janitors feel like assrape. The CEO obviously can buy better ass than yours with the cash you just gave him.
Your grasp of the situation is pretty apt, and you put it more eloquently than I ever could. Good work :-)
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>>Welcome to Slashdot, where contentless posts that contribute nothing to the discussion are rewarded with +5 insightful.
Perhaps the moderators were as tired as I was of hearing about how all corporations are evil, and only large governments can save us from the unmitigated greed of capitalism.
And yet, oddly enough, America prospered and had more freedoms than the USSR, communist China, or socialist France.
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To be fair, his anti-corporate point was that IN SPITE of Google being a corporation out to make a buck, most of the results of its actions end up being good for the internet as a whole. THAT'S insightful. It's like discovering that the door-to-door salesman that you may hate has gone ahead and filled in the pot-holes and filled in the cracks to get to the houses easier.
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As you note, though, my bafflement about how I managed to be "anti-corporate" is only increasing. All I really did was apply a vag
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I felt your statement was spot on in regards to Smith's position on profit seeking agents. Shaka's remark says more about his/her own position than yours. Shaka reminds me of Jack Nicholson's character Colonel Nathan Jessep in the movie "A Few Good Men", when the good Colonel scolds the prosecutors for sleeping under the very blanket of freedom he provides and then questioning the manner in which he provides it.
I recently read Smith's "Wealth of Nations" again and found his insights very profound in light o
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Which, logically, means that we should be planning to stab their back first. Might I suggest hiding something nasty (for them, at least) in the GPL v4?
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Barring executive bungling, Google can reasonably be expected to continuously act in its perceived interests. On the minus side, this means tracking you to operate their advertising operations. On the plus side, this means viewing others who would wish to do so as competitors, and a comparatively high unwillingness to "play ball" in or
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Easier way to do good as a business:
In other words, maybe it's because of Google's founders' altruism that you now don't have to trust Google's altruism.
Boot Strapping... (Score:5, Interesting)
a suite of Web-based, Internet-scale measurement tools that any user around the world could access for free
So, what happens if the Web-based suite is throttled or censored?
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That's the handy thing about such a tool: unless fantastically mal-architected, it is pretty likely that anybody who messes with access to it is up to no good. The real target is those who try to keep their hands clean while simultaneously bringing out the iron fist.
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a suite of Web-based, Internet-scale measurement tools that any user around the world could access for free
So, what happens if the Web-based suite is throttled or censored?
You'd think the tool wouldn't be throttled at all. Censored maybe, but why throttled? Better to promote the connection to any speed checking sites and give the user a false sense of fulfillment.
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Collage appears to be automated stenography [wikipedia.org]
I don't think that really fits here?
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What they are doing is re-inventing the Internet Weather stations that have existed for a decade or so. (Think MRTG but on a much larger scale and with rather more sophisticated output.)
Well, ok, they're maybe adding in the capabilities of the open-source pchar [kitchenlab.org] utility, which gives you the packet loss and maximum throughput of every hop between any two points on the net.
Throw in the Internet Routing Registry Toolset [isc.org] and you've a complete system.
Tell you what, if Google is going to give a million bucks for a
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So on what grounds do you have more credibility than Georgia Tech? I mean you've basically just called GT Researchers frauds and snake oil salesmen, so is that backed by any evidence?
I'm not expert in this field, nor an expert on "Internet Weather Stations" so I won't even try to assess the applicability of these tools. I'm sure if packaged correctly they could be a viable suite to do what you say, and if it is so easy why don't you go monetize it?
And sure if a government entity had won this award, I'd ag
Good - more transparency (Score:4, Insightful)
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As usually a brief case left with Honest Abe will certainly fix the problem.
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http://www.kitchenlab.org/www/bmah/Software/pchar/ [kitchenlab.org]
http://www.isc.org/software/irrtoolset [isc.org]
http://oss.oetiker.ch/mrtg/ [oetiker.ch]
http://www.caida.org/tools/ [caida.org]
If you want transparency, you can always do it yourself. Why wait for Google? You've a list of tools right there that will tell you who is throttling, when, where, how, by how much, and maybe even what they had for breakfast.
http://www.internettrafficreport.com/main.htm [internettr...report.com]
http://www.internettrafficreport.com/namerica.htm [internettr...report.com]
Then there's the Weather Channel for geeks. That sh
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1 [engadget.com], 2 [chillingeffects.org] and 3 [google.co.uk].
HTH.
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#2) Nifty. Got anything juicy to put in the comparator? Cause aside from some sites being re-ordered and some ads being different, I'm not
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To quote WoW Users: ^
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Ah, 3. That old chestnut.
What would the results be like if the most popular search algorithm could be trivially gamed?
Look in your spam folder to find out.
HTH.
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Ah yes. Resilience through obscurity.
Google can be and is already trivially gamed. The market for doing so is huge and effective.
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The ulterior motive is that Google's interests are different than ISP's interests, and that ISPs may end up bullying Google to give preferences to their customers in return for Google's traffic not being "slowed down".
If people knew that an ISP was throttling, Google can point that it is the ISP's doings, not Google. Right now, a slow website is usually the website owner's problem, and the ISP would likely never get blamed, especially if traffic to other places was not affected.
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Just imagine if google's cloud-based tablet (http://www.infopackets.com/news/business/google/2010/20100420_google_tablet_rivals_ipad_with_cloud_open_source.htm) had to go up against the iPad4 on an ATT-dominated wireless infrastructure. With ATT's selective bandwidth throttling and caps, you'd effectively be pitting glorified notepad.exe vs. technological opium.
It's pretty clear that the ATT bandwidth cap and purchasing of T-mobile is getting on the nerves of the corporations that have invested so much inf
How long until they are labeled as evil terrorists (Score:1)
Unfortunately I am only half joking with.
I for one... (Score:5, Insightful)
Really appreciate that google consistently places them in the proper position of an infrastructure provider, setting up their monetization to be supported by open, fair access.
I don't trust "intent," but I do trust a business that is set up to maximize profit when things are best for the "little guy."
Their APIs are a joy to work with, too.
I want a million bucks too! (Score:5, Funny)
If Country = "Canada"
Then Print "Yes, you're are being throttled!"
Elseif Country = "China"
Then Print "Yes, you're being censored, I hope you can read English or this will be really confusing!"
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PROFIT!
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End
Re:I want a million bucks too! (Score:4, Informative)
Elseif Country = "USA":
Then Pr^CHello, this is agent Smith. For your own safety, please stop visiting these terrorist sites. This is your first and only warning.
Was overdue. (Score:2)
First Post!!!! (Score:5, Funny)
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Already exists? (Score:1)
Wasn't there a page/site that did this awhile back? I seem to recall that there was. I can't remember if it was related to a university or not.
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http://broadband.mpi-sws.org/transparency/bttest.php/ [mpi-sws.org]
ISPs (Score:1)
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I also live in Ontario, Canada. I was on Rogers until about a month ago when I got fed up of their throttling. I switched to Teksavvy cable, which rents/leases the bandwidth from Rogers. As soon as the switch happened I noticed a HUGE difference in my download and upload speeds, and this was before I switched to the new cable modem that I bought from Teksavvy! The comparison is like night and day.
Proof enough that Rogers throttles? It's obvious to me and anyone else thinking logically. How they can deny tha
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>Criminal behaviour, if you ask me.
Rogers, Shaw, Bell and Telus should be illegal but hookers and blow gets your company anything you want, even the politicians.
$1m for `ttcp` and `ping`? (Score:2)
OK, maybe just a bit more than these ancient tools, but _really_? GOOG have some of the phattest pipes around and ought to be monitoring RTT and bandwidth variations all on their own.
Or rather, I'm severely disappointed they're not already monitoring. Or maybe they are, and this is just dezinformatzia.
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Doubtful, few ISPs are stupid enough to throttle those tools.
Buffer Bloat (Score:3)
Re:Buffer Bloat (Score:4, Interesting)
The original gatech study showed not only bufferbloat, but enormous variation of base latencies in the first mile for different brands of cable modem as well as for different kinds of DSL and wireless technologies.
Slides: http://www.caida.org/workshops/isma/1102/slides/aims1102_ssundaresan.pdf [caida.org]
Some commentary: http://gettys.wordpress.com/2011/02/17/caida-workshop/ [wordpress.com]
I look forward to the followup!
Real speeds across the internet (Score:2)
Comcast (Score:2)
Comcast must be shitting their pants right about now.
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Comcast must be shitting their pants right about now.
Why? Someone might find out they're throttling? I thought everyone knew that already.
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Most people don't know. We geeks know. And someone like Consumer Reports might use the data and publish it. One can hope!
An example of such a tool - ICSI Netalyzr (Score:2)
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It's very easy to be cynical about Google given their stance on privacy, but at this point there is no indication that there will be an attempt to monetize this technology. Moreover, George Tech will be providing the tool, not Google. Google just said, here's a million dollars to make the tool. Five years from now we'll have a better idea of the real purpose of this initiative but given they did not purchase a company, and as to yet the lead researcher on the topic is not a senior Google person so I'm wi
Full Press Release (Score:1)
The full press release with more information (including attribution to Nick Feamster on this project, who has past work in both anti-censorship and developing network neutrality tools) is here:
http://www.cc.gatech.edu/news/georgia-tech-pursue-transparent-internet-1m-google-focused-research-award
And do what about it? (Score:1)
Seriously. Google has done little or nothing to get itself out from under blatant censorship by the Chinese government. Just what are they going to do when every backbone dangler is subtly manipulating mercantile network traffic for their own profit? Wave vague statistics at them?
Google says: (Score:1)
"You WILL see our advertising!"
Google Rat (Score:2)
While Google is making nice press with their "good" things, they're still running their recently introduced service where they report China based VPN users to the Chinese government, incl. what they search for. No other search engine does this. Google has gone form great to most evil in my book, just because of this. I've posted this to a number of places, but nobody seems to care about the lives of people who use VPN's in China and the risk of the Chinese government being made aware of the controversial th
I can tell you who throttles right now (Score:2)
It will only cost you 5$ and i can tell you who already throttles right now.....the UK,
http://yro.slashdot.org/story/11/03/22/2237225/UK-ISPs-Hatch-Plan-To-Block-the-Pirate-Bay-and-Other-File-Sharing-Sites [slashdot.org]
wow putting 2 and 2 together is a great payday.