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did you? |
> Oh btw Unregistered, the Limewire's superpeer concept is > unnecesarry complicated in my eyes (so is the 3 step > handshake). Can the Ultrapeer proposal be tweaked or simplified? Certainly! > Anything else you want to badmouth about my technical > background? *yawn* Nope, i've said what i've wanted. |
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How stupid do you think we are? |
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Serious answers please. |
Vinnie now has a excuse to cluster, he can simply put in superpeer code. It doesn't have to work properly or at all (like BS works correctly anyway). He doesn't have a excuse to pass spy packets anymore, he connects to his site directly every time BS is started, it can check for new versions at that time. He doesn't have a excuse to spray connections to open slots of a non-BS clients just to get it sucked into his BlackHole for free support. So as long as BS still sends spy packets, and creates a BlackHole I say BLOCK IT! LimeWire isn't as bad, but you never know what company will buy them out and then you are stuck with more greed. |
> Clustering of only Limewire clients is a technical non-issue and > unfair against any other client. Please do read over my posts. Nowhere did I say clustering LimeWire clients together is beneficial to the network. I said clustering Ultrapeers (of which, only LimeWire currently implements) will increase the search horizon while at the same time decreasing bandwidth utilisation. Don't try to tell me it doesn't, because I use LimeWire and have implemented Ultrapeers in an php-gtk based gnutella simulation/test app I wrote (no it's not going to be public). |
SpamWarez Quote:
from http://www.cydoor.com/Cydoor/Company/CompanyPrivacy.htm The small print: <FONT COLOR=MAGENTA><FONT SIZE=-1>"What Cydoor Technologies Does Cydoor Technologies delivers content to software applications that use Cydoor's advertising technology. In the process of delivering this content, as well as performing online transactions, Cydoor will sometimes query you by means of a registration form for demographic data (gender, age, interests, marital status, salary, area code, country, and education). We will not collect personally identifiable information such as name, address, or telephone number. All of this information is aggregated for the purposes of reporting to advertisers and ad sales organizations the performance of their ad campaigns, and to deliver content targeted to your interests. Because Cydoor Technologies derives its revenue mainly from advertising, providing such aggregated demographic data is essential in keeping our service free to users. Use of Unique Identifiers Cydoor no longer assigns a unique user ID. Use of Cookies According to the standards of the Internet advertising industry, third-party ad servers associated with our technology make use of cookies. Cookies, by default, are enabled in the browser, and the user can turn them off via the cookies disabling menu. Third Party Privacy Please be aware that Cydoor advertisers or Web sites that have links in software on our network may utilize demographic information about you. This privacy statement does not cover the information practices of those Web sites linked from software on the Cydoor Network. From time to time, Cydoor works with third-party ad servers such as Valueclick, Commission Junction, Adventures, Advertising.com, RealMedia and BeFree and others to serve advertising to the Cydoor Network. Please visit these providers individually to learn more about how they handle privacy."</FONT></FONT> <I>"Please be aware that Cydoor advertisers or Web sites that have links in software on our network may utilize demographic information about you."</I> What the h@ll does that mean? It says above there is no GUID, and also implies above that only aggregated data is collected .. so WTF is this disclaimer about web sites utilizing demographic information about me? What, they download the aggregated statistics when I visit, to figure out that I'm probably a white male in my teens-20s with a PC? OK, that doesn't sound too bad, but if there's no GUID and also if cookies are served 'according to the standards of the internet advertising industry', HTF do they know I'm a member of the aggregated data? I'm guessing they get around the fact that cookies served 'according to the standards of the internet' are only sent back to the originating server by having say an ad on their page which is hosted by CyDoor's server somewhere, and also having a private link to CyDoor which tells them when one of their victims accesses the ad. I call that spyware. As they say, they have deployed their spamware to over 50 million users .. I wonder how many web sites they work with? Probably quite a significant number, I'd say. Quite a little network. <FONT COLOR=MAGENTA><FONT SIZE=-1>"Providing Cydoor with your email address will enable us to send Cydoor-specific technology updates, as well as special offers and promotions from our business partners. "</FONT></FONT> Gee, isn't that nice? 'Darling, look, a new technology update for our spam service has arrived, go tell the kids!' <FONT COLOR=MAGENTA><FONT SIZE=-1>"Security This site has security measures in place to protect the loss, misuse and alteration of the information under our control. User demographic information is not kept on Cydoor's computer, but rather on the user's computer. Email addresses provided to us are kept on a secure server. Only authorized employees of Cydoor Technologies will have access to this information."</FONT></FONT> Gee, that's good security, using the users win98 PC to store their demographic data. How can this be so, if the only data they use is aggregated? Are they saying they store their aggregated data on our PCs? I don't think so. Any idea what the filenames are? I bet there's plenty shared out by those newbie windows users who share out their whole hard drives. I think the truth has been dealt somewhat economically here... Quote:
http://groups.google.com/groups?q=To...l.co.uk&rnum=6 <FONT COLOR=RED>"From: Tumbleweed (spamtumbleweed@tumbleweed.freeserve.co.uk) Subject: Re: Windows 98 dialling up for unknown reason... AHA!! Newsgroups: alt.windows98 View: Complete Thread (3 articles) | Original Format Date: 2001-04-25 06:14:04 PST "Tumbleweed" <spamtumbleweed@tumbleweed.freeserve.co.uk> wrote in message news:9c6fce$ce7$1@newsg1.svr.pol.co.uk... > > > > "ByTor" <ByTor@snowdog.com> wrote in message > news:MPG.15507712e9feac4e98984a@news.frontiernet.n et... > > In article <9c6640$gu7$1@newsg2.svr.pol.co.uk>, > > spamtumbleweed@tumbleweed.freeserve.co.uk says... while attaching C4 > > explosives to computer and foaming at the mouth! > > > > > My Win 98 PC has started trying to dial out (to my ISP) for no apparent > > > reason. I have a fully up to date virus scanner operative all the time and > > > don't appear to have viruses. How can I find out why its trying to dial? > > > CTRL-ALT-DEL tasklist doesnt show anything. > > > > > > -- > > > Tumbleweed > > > > > > Remove 'spam' from email replies (but no email reply necessary to > > > newsgroups) > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Have you recently installed any programs? Check the settings in new progs > > to see if they have some kind of auto check in them......If you are > > familiar with firewalls than ZoneAlarm can show you what it is when it > > tries to dial out because it will ask for your permission to let it go > > through.....It's free and won't expire, you can get it here: > > > > http://www.zonelabs.com/ > > > > Very popular and easy to use.... > > > > Good Luck! > > > > Thanks to you and Starbase. I now have a suspect, Getright (even though I > have no outstanding files to download but I wonder if its checking for > updates), but I'm going to try the apps you recommended to check for sure. > Seems its not Getright, Zone alarm caught a program called 'javarun.exe' trying to dialout. Which is associated with something called 'topmoxie'. Looks like some sort of advertising thing. I shall be having a strict words with my kids later :-) and topmoxie is now toast. Thanks -- Tumbleweed Remove 'spam' from email replies (but no email reply necessary to newsgroups)"</FONT> Quote:
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Nos |
why dont you guys just sit down.. write a book to each other and send it via mail.. i think this would be easier :) |
Ultrapeers and clustering Ultrapeers grouping together loosely will increase the horizon as AFisk and others are trying to assert. Ultrapeers grouping together tighly, ie ultrapeers 'preferring' ultrapeers over leaf nodes will have a decreased effect in increasing the horizon, plus will reduce the service that ultrapeers provide to leaf nodes. This is easy to understand in terms of the physical property surface area - the surface area of a ball is small compared with the volume. Stuff inside the ball is not exposed at all to the outside world. Ultrapeers should be like a loose mesh - interconnected but loosley. I don't know how loosely/tightly they are connected in reality. I bet AFisk does. There will be a mathematical description which will show the best balance of ultrapeers-to-leaf nodes to achieve the optimum horizon in terms of # files shared. It could be quite complex (like requiring supercomputers to solve) if all factors are taken into account, but an illustrative example should be possible. I would suggest that in addition to this balance of ultrapeers to leaf nodes, there should additionally be a coded reserve of connections which can be used by non-ultrapeers-capable hosts, otherwise you will end up with a closed limewire ball, as it seems moak fears. Can anyone give us a description of the ratios or algorithms used in selecting the connections? If they're wrong, then limewire should fix them - ultrapeers are only just launched, there is plenty of room for 'tuning' them. It would be interesting to have information on gnucleus's superpeers too, and how the two interact, if at all. Personally I think this ultrapeer stuff belongs in it's own thread, this is not the core issue. Nos |
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Morgwen |
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