BitTorrent Still Dominates Internet’s Upstream Traffic

New data published by Canadian broadband management company Sandvine reveals that BitTorrent can be credited for a quarter of all upstream Internet traffic in North America, more than any other traffic source. With heavy competition from Netflix and other real-time entertainment, BitTorrent’s overall traffic share is falling.

Source: TorrentFreak, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and ANONYMOUS VPN services.

uploadMany Internet traffic reports have been published over the years, documenting how traffic patterns change over time.

A decade ago, long before the BitTorrent boom began, studies indicated that BitTorrent was responsible for an impressive 35% of all Internet traffic.

In the years that followed Internet traffic distribution underwent a metamorphosis, as video streaming took off with the launch of YouTube and later Netflix. As a result BitTorrent lost a significant share of total Internet traffic, in the United States at least.

However, BitTorrent is still here today and arguably more popular than ever before.

A new report published by broadband management company Sandvine reveals that torrent traffic is now responsible for 29% of all U.S. Internet traffic in North America during peak hours, up from 25% last year.

This means that well over a quarter all megabytes uploaded during the busiest time of the day can be traced back to torrents.

Traffic share in North America during peak hours

sandvine2015

The increase is noteworthy as BitTorrent’s traffic share has consistently dropped in recent years, as other data sources grew more quickly. This drop is still visible in the overall peak hour traffic, where BitTorrent went from 5% to 4.4%.

This downward trend doesn’t mean that BitTorrent users share less data, as overall bandwidth usage has increased as well. However, Netflix, YouTube and several other entertainment services have certainly grown stronger.

Looking at the downstream traffic, we see that BitTorrent’s share during peak hours dropped to ‘only’ 2.7%. For the first time, both Amazon and iTunes are now using more data than BitTorrent and Hulu is closing in as well.

While BitTorrent has many legitimate uses most data is transferred by pirated files. This means that Netflix and the others are direct competitors for the popular file-sharing protocol.

Looking at the larger picture it’s clear that BitTorrent remains extremely popular in North America, but competition from legal services is growing.

It will be interesting to see how this trend develops during the years to come. It will certainly take a while before any other data source overtakes BitTorrent in terms of upstream traffic.

Source: TorrentFreak, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and ANONYMOUS VPN services.

Spike TV orders 10-episode series for Red Mars written by Babylon 5 creator

The Kim Stanley Robinson trilogy will premiere on TV in January 2017.

According to sources speaking to Variety, Kim Stanley Robinson’s Red Mars has been green-lighted for a 10-episode TV adaptation on Spike TV.

Each episode will be an hour long, and J. Michael Straczynski, creator and writer of Babylon 5 and co-creator of Sense8 will serve as Red Mars’ writer, co-executive producer, and showrunner. Vince Gerardis, co-executive producer of Game of Thrones, will also serve as executive producer on Red Mars with Straczynski. Robinson will reportedly be an on-the-set consultant.

The Red Mars project has been on Spike TV’s plate for some time, but the network only just decided to move full-speed ahead with it, according to Variety. The show will go into production this summer and premiere in January 2017.

Read 2 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Early look at 2015 greenhouse gas emissions is good news if true

Estimate shows a slight decrease, even as economies grow.

(credit: Chauncey Davis)

We recently covered an analysis of global emissions of greenhouse gases in 2014 showing an encouraging slowdown in the growth of those emissions. Particularly encouraging was the fact that this slowdown occurred along with continuing economic growth rather than simply reflecting an economic downturn. With the critical Paris climate negotiations currently underway, a group of researchers organized by the Global Carbon Project has published a commentary in the journal Nature Climate Change projecting that 2015 emissions will actually be lower than in 2014. You shouldn’t declare 2014 the Year that Carbon Peaked, though.

The researchers’ estimates for 2014 look a lot like those from the US report. They show an increase in fossil fuel and cement production emissions of 0.6 percent over 2013, which is much lower than the 2.4 percent annual growth rate over the preceding decade. Using an obviously incomplete dataset for 2015, they project a decrease of 0.6 percent (with error bars from a 1.6 percent decline to 0.5 percent growth), even as global GDP increased. This comes amid a continuing trend of less emissions per unit of GDP.

The current story of changing trends is largely told by China. Economic growth there has slowed (but not stopped) recently, and significant efforts to move away from a dirtier industrial economy, and away from the use of coal, contributed to a projected 3.9 decrease in emissions for 2015, according to the researchers. China’s emissions are likely to rise again, but the Chinese government has pledged to hit the peak by 2030.

Read 2 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Google’s OnHub gets designer shells so you won’t want to hide your router

Google’s OnHub gets designer shells so you won’t want to hide your router

WiFi routers work best when they’re not tucked behind your gadgets, stuck on the floor, or otherwise positioned where you can’t see them… because if you can’t see them, the antennas have to work harder to blanket your space with wireless connectivity. So Google’s come up with an interesting way to get you to stop hiding […]

Google’s OnHub gets designer shells so you won’t want to hide your router is a post from: Liliputing

Google’s OnHub gets designer shells so you won’t want to hide your router

WiFi routers work best when they’re not tucked behind your gadgets, stuck on the floor, or otherwise positioned where you can’t see them… because if you can’t see them, the antennas have to work harder to blanket your space with wireless connectivity. So Google’s come up with an interesting way to get you to stop hiding […]

Google’s OnHub gets designer shells so you won’t want to hide your router is a post from: Liliputing

Pushy patients downvote doctors for giving antibiotics responsibly

Doctors pressured to give unneeded drugs that spur resistant, deadly infections.

A plate of Staphylococcus aureus bacterial colonies growing amid white, antibiotic-emitting discs. The clear spots indicate that the antibiotic on the disc can kill the bacteria; growth around a disc means the bacteria are resistant to that emitted drug. (credit: Nathan Reading/Flickr)

Antibiotics can kick many ailments, but they don’t fight everything—like anything caused by a virus, such as the flu, and most colds. Taking antibiotics for such problems is not only useless, it’s what helps microbes develop resistance to the drugs, which in turn leads to difficult-to-treat, often-deadly infections.

Yet doctors face a daily dilemma: to be good doctors, they must only prescribe antibiotics when the drugs are needed. But to make patients think they’re good doctors, they must hand out antibiotics freely—at least according to a new nationwide healthcare survey in England.

The survey, which included nearly a million patients and 7,800 practices, found that patients were least satisfied with family doctors who were frugal with antibiotic prescriptions. In fact, the amount of antibiotic prescriptions a practice doled out was a leading predictor of its patient satisfaction ranking. The finding, published in the British Journal of General Practice, suggests that responsible use of antibiotics for the greater good may mean doctors take a hit in their patient popularity.

Read 3 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Pixel C review—New hardware ignores an Android tablet’s core problem: software

A “productivity” device that can only display a single app at a time?

SPECS AT A GLANCE: Google Pixel C
SCREEN 2560×1800 10.2" (308ppi) LCD
OS Android 6.0.1 Marshmallow
CPU Eight-core Nvidia Tegra X1 (four 1.9 GHz Cortex-A57 cores and four Cortex-A53 cores)
RAM 3GB
GPU Maxwell
STORAGE 32GB or 64GB
NETWORKING Dual Band 802.11b/g/n/ac, Bluetooth 4.1, GPS
PORTS USB 3.1 Type-C, 3.5mm headphone jack
CAMERA 8MP rear camera, 2MP front camera
SIZE 242 x 179 x 7 mm
WEIGHT 517 g
BATTERY 9000 mAh
STARTING PRICE $499 for 32GB

$149 for keyboard

Google is back with yet another Android tablet. The latest hardware effort, the Pixel C, comes from an odd place inside Google: the Pixel team. Usually a "Pixel" is the latest, fancy high-end Chromebook, but with the Pixel C, the traditionally Chrome OS-centric team decided to make an Android tablet. It's not just a tablet, though, there's also a clip-on keyboard base making it a Surface-style convertible.

While the Pixel team brings a great all-aluminum body and minimal design, our unit had a ton of quality control issues. The touchscreen frequently failed to register taps and scrolling was unreliable. We also often had the keyboard disconnect from the tablet, which caused typing to go crazy. Many have wondered what was taking the Pixel C so long to come out, and we wonder if issues like this contributed to the late launch. While our review unit didn't come in a retail box, as far as we can tell, we tested a retail unit.

Even on paper, the Pixel C doesn't seem like a great idea. The company keeps iterating on hardware for an iPad competitor, but hardware was never really an Android tablet's big problem. The problem has always been software—mainly, the lack of tablet apps and the lack of an OS that really takes advantage of a big screen aren't fixed by new hardware. While we've seen hints of a split screen mode that would greatly help things, it's not present here. That makes the Pixel C tough to recommend when iOS and Windows are both much more capable on large screens.

Read 36 remaining paragraphs | Comments

FBI admits it uses stingrays, zero-day exploits

The “queen of domestic surveillance” inches closer to hot-button topics.

(credit: Aurich Lawson)

The head of the FBI's science and technology division has admitted what no other agency official has acknowledged before—the FBI sometimes exploits zero-day vulnerabilities to catch bad guys.

The admission came in a profile published Tuesday of Amy Hess, the FBI's executive assistant director for science and technology who oversees the bureau's Operational Technology Division. Besides touching on the use of zero-days—that is, attack code that exploits vulnerabilities that remain unpatched, and in most cases are unknown by the company or organization that designs the product—Tuesday's Washington Post article also makes passing mention of another hot-button controversy: the FBI's use of stingrays. As reporter Ellen Nakashima wrote:

One area of controversy is the bureau’s use of cell site simulators, or Stingrays, which mimic cellphone towers to elicit signals from cellphones in an area, including from innocent bystanders. The FBI has long been secretive about the tool’s use, and has even made state and local law enforcement sign nondisclosure agreements.

Though the agreements typically state that the local agency “will not­ . . . disclose any information concerning” the equipment, Hess insists that the FBI has never imposed a gag on local police. For the record, she said, the bureau does not object to revealing the use of the device. It’s the “engineering schematics,” details on exactly how the tool works, that the FBI wants shielded, she said.

Another group that remains shrouded is OTD’s Remote Operations Unit. There, technicians with a warrant hack computers to identify suspects. Euphemistically called “network investigative techniques,” that activity has stirred concerns similar to those raised with the use of Stingrays.

For one thing, the warrant applications do not describe the technique’s use in detail. So judges may not really understand what they are authorizing. Hess said that agents can describe the process more fully to a judge in closed chambers. That’s if the judge knows to ask.

Privacy advocates also worry that to carry out its hacks, the FBI is using “zero-day” exploits that take advantage of software flaws that have not been disclosed to the software maker. That practice makes consumers who use the software vulnerable, they argue.

Hess acknowledged that the bureau uses zero-days—the first time an official has done so. She said the trade-off is one the bureau wrestles with. “What is the greater good—to be able to identify a person who is threatening public safety?” Or to alert software makers to bugs that, if unpatched, could leave consumers vulnerable?

“How do we balance that?” she said. “That is a constant challenge for us.”

She added that hacking computers is not a favored FBI technique. “It’s frail,” she said. As soon as a tech firm updates its software, the tool vanishes. “It clearly is not reliable” in the way a traditional wiretap is, she said.

The Post also includes counterpoint from privacy advocate and American Civil Liberties Union Principal Technologist Christopher Soghoian. He referred to Hess as the "queen of domestic surveillance" and opines: "if it's high-tech and creepy, it's happening in the Operational Technology Division."

Read 1 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Google Fiber talking to Chicago and LA about gigabit deployments

17 metro areas could get Google Fiber, but expansion is still behind AT&T.

Map of Google's fiber plans. (credit: Google)

Chicago and Los Angeles are in the running for Google Fiber deployments, with officials in both cities talking to Google about whether network construction is feasible.

"Home to a combined 6+ million people, Chicago and LA are the two largest metros we’ve engaged with to date," Google said in an announcement today.

Google Fiber is available in just three metro areas: Kansas City in Missouri and Kansas; Austin, Texas; and Provo, Utah. With the addition of Chicago and LA to the list of potential fiber cities, there are now 17 metro areas that have a good chance of getting Google's $70-per-month gigabit Internet service.

Read 4 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Deals of the Day (12-08-2015)

Deals of the Day (12-08-2015)

Didn’t get around to buying a Nexus 7 tablet for $110 last week? No problem. Now you can get one for just $100. Want a tablet that doesn’t have 2013-era specs? The Asus ZenPad S 8 inch tablet features a 2048 x 1536 pixel display, an Intel Atom Z3580 processor, and support for up to 4GB […]

Deals of the Day (12-08-2015) is a post from: Liliputing

Deals of the Day (12-08-2015)

Didn’t get around to buying a Nexus 7 tablet for $110 last week? No problem. Now you can get one for just $100. Want a tablet that doesn’t have 2013-era specs? The Asus ZenPad S 8 inch tablet features a 2048 x 1536 pixel display, an Intel Atom Z3580 processor, and support for up to 4GB […]

Deals of the Day (12-08-2015) is a post from: Liliputing

Spielentwicklung: Unity 5.3 unterstützt WebGL

Mit Version 5.2 führt die Engine Unity neue Werkzeuge ein, dazu kommt eine Reihe grafischer Optimierungen. Vor allem aber gibt es nun offizielle Unterstützung von WebGL und verbesserten Support von iOS 9. (Unity, API)

Mit Version 5.2 führt die Engine Unity neue Werkzeuge ein, dazu kommt eine Reihe grafischer Optimierungen. Vor allem aber gibt es nun offizielle Unterstützung von WebGL und verbesserten Support von iOS 9. (Unity, API)