Fwd: Crackdowns don't slow Internet piracy
Fergie (Paul Ferguson)
fergdawg at netzero.net
Wed Jul 14 21:10:39 UTC 2004
This is an interesting article -- not necessarily off-topic, given
snippets such as:
"The popularity of file-sharing is costing the largest Internet
service providers $10 million per year each in bandwidth and network
maintenance costs, CacheLogic said."
and
"It estimates Internet users around the globe freely exchange a
staggering 10 petabytes -- or 10 million gigabytes -- of data,
much of it in the form of copyright-protected songs, movies,
software and video games."
and
"CacheLogic, which provides filtering technology for many of the
world's largest ISPs, derived its results by monitoring daily
traffic flow across its clients' networks."
I was wondering if the NANOG readership-at-large had any experiences
in this regard, concerning any of these statements, since I couldn't
find anything of any real technical substance on CacheLogic's web
page.
See:
http://money.cnn.com/2004/07/13/technology/internet_piracy.reut/index.htm?cnn=yes
Thanks,
- ferg
--
"Fergie", a.k.a. Paul Ferguson
Engineering Architecture for the Internet
fergdawg at netzero.net or
fergdawg at sbcglobal.net
More information about the NANOG
mailing list