
QBITTORRENT FOR MAC BIG SUR TORRENT
Indeed, one of the most popular BitTorrent sites - Pirate's Bay (its name alone pretty much gives away its function) - has been described as "famous for their blatant disregard for intellectual property rights." Another site, TorrentSpy, recently closed down because the "legal climate in the USA for copyright, privacy of search requests, and links to torrent files in search results is simply too hostile."īitTorrent's downloads can be a giant bandwidth hog.
QBITTORRENT FOR MAC BIG SUR DOWNLOAD
Although there are certainly legitimate uses for BitTorrent, its primary use (as far as I can tell) is to illegally download commercial movies and television shows. The rationale in a nutshell is this:īitTorrent's primary activity is illegal. While I would welcome such a bandwidth boost as the most "neutral" solution, I believe some defensive management by Comcast is acceptable here. At the very least, it moves away from the slippery slope of multiple tiers of Web sites, each with different speed limits - a concept that could destroy the democratic nature of the Web, making it almost impossible for smaller startup sites to get the traction they need to grow.īut why, you may ask, should Comcast do anything punitive at all? Why shouldn't Comcast instead attempt to increase its bandwidth to handle the load, if necessary? Good questions. While both of Comcast's solutions have come under fire by some proponents of network neutrality (a principle that I strongly support), Comcast's new approach seems preferable to me. In other words, instead of a "censorship" of a specific site, Comcast will instead go after individual users whom Comcast views as abusing the network. It would now "take a more equitable approach toward managing the ever-expanding flow of Web traffic." In particular, "instead of interfering with specific online applications" (aka BitTorrent), "it will manage traffic by slowing the Internet speeds of its most bandwidth-hogging users when traffic is busiest."

Last week, as reported in the New York Times, Comcast announced a change in its strategy for dealing with BitTorrent. So you should not be surprised to hear that Comcast has been making it difficult for its subscribers to download files from BitTorrent sites.

The free-wheeling BitTorrent, a peer-to-peer file sharing protocol that rose to prominence in the wake of Napster's demise, has never been held up as a bastion of ethical use of the Internet. Corporate and conservative Comcast has never been a friend of Internet neutrality.
