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Folks who watch Sazae-san will know that at the beginning of each show, Sazae goes round Japan looking at tour... ( more » )
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Canal Figure
This 1/7 scale figure of Canal is based on a Yamashita Shunya illustration and will be released in October by ... ( more » )
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School Girls Skirts
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Code Geass Deleted S...
SPOILER ALERT! For some reason they deleted this from Geass EP 13. Via Neta where you can see two more. ( more » )
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Watase Nozomi
Could this be the first PVC figure with pubic hair? This is Nozomi Watase illustrated by Tony Taka and PVC-if... ( more » )
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Car Vending Machine
As you already know, Japan has vending machines for everything from used pantsu to vegetables. But did you kn... ( more » )
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Pedo Bear Caption
Hijacked from NightRiver. I really liked this one ^^; Original text from NightRiver below.Not only do they... ( more » )
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日本語/Japanese  Tue 03/18 11:55 JST
There has been much talk over the past few days about a recent announcement that Japanese ISPs are going to forcibly cut off users who share files over the internet. But the English press have worded the news to sound different to what was reported in Japan.

Yomiuri English news talks about how P2P users of Winny etc will be cut off from their ISPs and that "The move aims to deal with the rise in illegal copying of music, gaming software and images."

However, the Japan Internet Providers Association released a press release which states that they are after heavy users of Winny and similar P2P software due to the load that those users are placing on the network and not because of any illegal copying. The extra load caused by heavy P2P users causes instability for other internet users.
Nikkei BP also report on the crack down of heavy Winny users but mention nothing about copyrighted material.

There was however some discussions about some sort of crackdown due to copyright material but that was a last September.
While heavy P2P customers may be bad for an ISPs network, cracking down on all forms of P2P including torrents would also be bad for the ISPs - they would loose customers would just cancel their subscription and go elsewhere. This is one of the reasons why I believe that P2P will still live on for quite a while in Japan - just as long as one does not over do it by downloading a zillion GBs of dolphin care material via Winny.

For those who don't know, Winny is Japans most used P2P software - one can find just about *anything* on it. While old material disappears after time with torrents, Winny always seems to have what one maybe looking for.
Member 0ne has a tutorial on how to set up Winny at his blog for those who are interested in internet security.

Winny is also the cause of many embarrassing cases of intellectual property loss - there is a virus that goes around the Winny network that zips up files on ones local drive, takes a snapshot of the desktop and then sends it to the Winny network. Many companies have lost customer information and even a police sargent lost over 10,000 items of data belonging to the metropolitan police - he was using Winny at work... (source).

Today I thought it would be interesting to talk about what sort of restrictions ISPs have in your region. I hear that some of you have a cap on the amount you can download? None of the ISPs over here cap internet usage - its usually a flat fee and one can use as much as they want.

Thanks to the 61 people who sent the yomiuri, tech crunch and gizmodo links.

Nearly forgot to mention about the photo - didn't have a picture of somebody being arrested due to heavy Winny usage so thought I would show an unrelated pic of the office with the new Ikea lights above the figures and near the window ^^;
File sharing in Japan (click to enlarge)
Categories
Polls
Martin Wandering in Taibei
Student, Spiral Warrior
Registered on 2008/02/04 10:01
Back in the States there's a little worry that one'll get busted for file sharing, but here in Taiwan it seems to be a non-issue. 

I look forward to a shining future in which the obsolescence of copyright law will have been recognized and information and media will be freely available to all. Also, we'll live in space colonies.
(ID #157629) Posted on 2008/03/17 21:21
Last{[0]}Raven in ☆DANNYCHOO Site ☆
Raven, AMV & MAD maker, Otaku
Registered on 2008/01/02 12:55
i only file share work documents that are like group work. lol
(ID #157630) Posted on 2008/03/17 21:24
Exiled_Gundam in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Castoffable figurines fan
Registered on 2007/08/22 14:09
ISP here do cap speed for torrent, but some torrent client (like Deluge) somehow can bypass it
(ID #157633) Posted on 2008/03/17 21:25
GundamJehutyKai in Foundation II Stellvia
IT Client Support
Registered on 2007/09/12 21:33
Generally speaking, My ISP which I was with (and will be with again, once they reconnect me after moving home) doesn't restrict download speed but I'm pretty sure it throttles general traffic in the evening as I have noticed slowdown in my surfing late in the evening. Nothing too major tho and everything still works so I don't have any major complaints. Downloads are still (relatively) speedy.
(ID #157640) Posted on 2008/03/17 21:37
Registered on 2007/05/27 12:46
haha!another case of the odex paradox on p2p sharing!!(-~-)
(ID #157642) Posted on 2008/03/17 21:41
Felix the Cat in Irvine, California
UCI Student
Registered on 2007/10/23 13:32
As far as torrenting goes, I haven't really heard of many restrictions.  My ISP hasn't had a problem with my dowloading, but my friend has lost internet access for a while because he went past his limit.  Forgot which ISP it was.  The only thing I've had to do is adjust ports for downloading, gaming, etc.  Nothing big.
(ID #157644) Posted on 2008/03/17 21:44
CrazyO in Germany
Registered on 2008/02/18 13:41
As far as i know in germany you cant sue someone for downloading copyrighted material but for sharing. And its not allowed for your ISP to look what you did on the internet except the police suspects you of heavy crimes (terrorism, child pornography and the likes). The european government also recently decided that ISPs dont have to expose their users for crimes related to civil law.

But some time past since the last time i checked for those things. They could have changed...
(ID #157647) Posted on 2008/03/17 21:55
Panther in Urban Hell (Singapore)
Deathseeker
Registered on 2007/12/24 09:20
Chow Yuen Fatt - "Welcome to Singapore!" I believe Xedo explains everything about file sharing here! Unrelated - love the lights Danny. Got a recommendation for a light for a Detolf cabinet though? I doubt I can wall mount any in my room for a variety of reasons.
(ID #157652) Posted on 2008/03/17 22:19
Timotei in Sweden
NEET
Registered on 2008/02/17 09:28
Sweden is in berserk mode to catch people that shares here. Though there has been like 5 cases, so it's not like it's a big chance one will get caught. 

Thepiratebay had a bit problem, it's a sad world we live in. 

I mainly use Utorrent and Share( it's alot safer I heard). 
(ID #157654) Posted on 2008/03/17 22:30
windbell in Singapore/シンガポール, Tokyo/東京
Web Developer/ウェブデベロッパー, Photographer/写真や
Registered on 2006/12/25 12:20
Friends on IRC nickname me 'Winny' ^^;

We don't have a cap on the bandwidth and pay a flat fee. But due to the ODEX incident I have not been downloading much. In the worst case scenario there's SSH to resort to...

Is that the Karsten Chair from IKEA? I have one too, pretty comfy. 
(ID #157656) Posted on 2008/03/17 22:34
Dead Snake in Redhill, Singapore
Internship student
Registered on 2007/05/12 03:11
apparently my network admin just sliced off my speed from a shared 512kbps into private 32kbps connection....
well...can't complain since it's free ^^;;;;

but most(I think all) of the isp here aren't restricting torrent/p2p, the problem is that the isps here doesn't have any decent speed for almost anything
(ID #157660) Posted on 2008/03/17 22:47
Fabian in Germany
student
Registered on 2008/01/09 00:24
Over here one ISP is known for throttling file-sharing and especially Bittorrent-traffic even if the customer has a flat rate.

But then again, this is a good reason for an extraordinary cancellation of the contract, because the general terms and conditions don't say you have to be cost-effective when using the ISPs services.

What worries me a little bit is a law that forces our ISPs to store connection data (mobile phone, e-mail, internet) for six months. So far only the police and intelligence services can access this data and the former only after an investigating judge allowed them to do so.

So far this hardly has anything to do with copyrights but I think this might change soon. The European Commission wants to allow copyright holders to access this data in an attempt to fight the sharing of copyright protected stuff over the internet.
If these plans are carried out we will have the absurd situation that it's easier for the film and music industry to access the ISPs data than it is for the police.
If you ask me it's pretty obvious that a few black suitcases changed hands a while back, because for me it's hard to believe that the European Commission really is that dumb.

German file-sharers may be lucky, because it's highly likely that our Federal Constitutional Court will overturn the law forcing the ISPs to store the connection data (for a long time) in first place by the end of this month. It's obvious that this law is unconstitutional. 
(ID #157667) Posted on 2008/03/17 23:01
Hatix in Antwerp, Belgium
IT, Programmer, ...
Registered on 2007/04/25 05:14
Well, Belgium was (and still is) quite well known for its expensive broadband and download/upload limits. But it's getting better due to more competition.

Years ago I started with a broadband connection of 50eur with a limit of 10gb (of which was 1gb upload, so basically only 9gb download). Then they changed it to 15gb (woohoo), of which 1.5gb upload. Now it's better, now have a broadband connection of 40eur and 100gb download&upload. But it's only slowly going to unlimited, with some providers giving unlimited upload but still limiting download. There are of course always more expensive connections or business connections...
I wish it was here like in Sweden of Japan...
(ID #157669) Posted on 2008/03/17 23:03
Caitlin in Japan
Dancing Monkey
Registered on 2008/03/07 21:56
Glad to see that and I hope they're not lying or padding their words.  I'm not a Winny user or a heavy bandwidth user but I do like some US shows that I can't get here, even with satellite TV.
(ID #157673) Posted on 2008/03/17 23:07
CrazyO in Germany
Registered on 2008/02/18 13:41
i cant reply here, is this normal?

anyway @fabian: do you have any sources for this? Because the latest things i found are saying the opposite: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2007/08/03/europe_music-downloads_identification/
(ID #157693) Posted on 2008/03/17 23:35
Nai in Hungary
IT
Registered on 2007/08/23 02:02
In Hungary, the two main ISP providers has limits (150gb-250gb / month) of downloading, and after that they issue you with a warning, then ban, if you dont hold yourself back. But there are many other isps, mainly little ones who dont care about this, but, only in the capital of Hungary. In the countryside the people are not that lucky, only 1 or 2 isp providers.
(ID #157699) Posted on 2008/03/17 23:54
Ben-Ohki in Ottawa - Canada
Programmer
Registered on 2007/12/03 11:30
One of Canada's largest ISP (Bell Sympatico) recently admitted to throttling speeds after many years of denial. While Canada's laws a little more vague than in the US, Canadian ISPs will indeed comply with warnings from US IP owners when abuse is reported - I should know (I was sent a take-down notice once for torrenting some software)... of course, nothing ever came of it and it was my first warning anyway. My ISP would rather keep my $45 per month than to let me leave to find another ISP. :P
(ID #157700) Posted on 2008/03/17 23:58
Ejlan in Sweden
Student
Registered on 2008/01/07 05:31
Here in Sweden we have a flat fee and no cap that i know of. And atm we Swedish users don't have much worry about(i may be a little after on this but i think it's still correct) since they aren't allowed to collect out IP addresses and mostly of the heavier p2p users use torrents or other more private alternatives    
(ID #157705) Posted on 2008/03/18 00:05
kurodesu in México, Mérida, Yucatán
Blogger, Coder, GFX Designer, Anime Lover, Miruku's Lover
Registered on 2007/09/05 11:18
@DANNY:

I know this is not the place to ask for Mirai Gaia, but I'm really interested on getting it ( and wishing to pay any amount of money for it :D
Mail me if you read this :( 
(ID #157707) Posted on 2008/03/18 00:05
Aaronime in Mars, Canada
Human
Registered on 2007/07/27 10:28
w00t~! Canada! Just the fact we're right beside big brother USA that has the world's largest entertainment industry- and downloading torrents/p2p/filesharing isn't illegal here! Infact they protect us when there's an issue with MPAA or w/e. 
They sometimes block Canadian IPs, but i've been using proxies ever since the beginning of high school =D
(ID #157718) Posted on 2008/03/18 00:15
CrazyAnimeTuga in Portugal
Student
Registered on 2007/01/03 02:12
I don't have a download cap anymore thx to plus 7,5€ XD on my internet bill.
The internet was made to share information with everyone and that information involves everything, from music, video, images, news but it was made to be shared as personal gain only and according to international laws information no matter its origins its free. So this things of blocking ISPs and crap is just plain wrong. 

There is no decline in the music industry, not in the movies either. The bands don't earn much money from the selling of their CDs only the distributors do and the bands win almost nothing their real money comes from concerts. Anyone who likes a good movie goes to the cinema or wait till it comes out on DVD or Blu-Ray because downloading them you'll only probably get a good image but the true image and sound quality are inside the original disc.
(ID #157725) Posted on 2008/03/18 00:21
microdark in Portugal
University Student
Registered on 2007/12/05 02:02
File sharing is easy on Portugal, even the isp provider ease it up, there is n limit at the port range (I saw people in other countries complaining that they can't use P2P) and the traffic limit is wide large (I've got 80gig of international download, ilimited national download as well as upload for 35€). The is the legal problem to, recently, one of the great P2P distribution site(torrent, named Btuga, for those that are interested) was closed by the police and the owner was charged of copyright infringement. I don't have trouble because most anime, 95% of it, isn't licensed in Portugal, so there isn't any problem(I have some in portuguese to =P ).
(ID #157728) Posted on 2008/03/18 00:27
lostandfound in a UFO... catcher...
Part human, part student, 100% loser
Registered on 2007/10/22 02:10
Shhh! Don't tell anyone... Oh yeah! I'm not from Singapore...
(ID #157742) Posted on 2008/03/18 00:48
chuy in Thailand
Student
Registered on 2007/09/28 23:58
 I don't have a data usage limitation. But the speed is usually slower in a peak time. Unfortunately, connection to oversea is not really good. I usually get about 10-50% of my real connection speed when connecting to oversea.
(ID #157747) Posted on 2008/03/18 00:53
Evil King in Vlaardingen, the Netherlands, Earth
Student and full-time otaku
Registered on 2007/12/19 00:24
Some ISP's here still have download limits, but it seems to be disappearing. I most often use the newsgroups, but the newest shows go from the torrents. I recently switched from Azureus to uTorrent and I'm loving it: the latter doesn't soak up RAM to impossible levels.

BTW I just love the office Danny and how you nicely fit the figures in there. My room is just crappy if it comes to displaying, in the attic with crooked ceilings and no free walls...
(ID #157763) Posted on 2008/03/18 01:31
Fabian in Germany
student
Registered on 2008/01/09 00:24
@CrazyO: Looks like I confused the European Commission's plan to filter the internet traffic with our government's plan to give copyright holders easier access to the connection data of ISPs.

So it's not the EU Commission but the German government/Bundesrat that...err..cares 'a little bit' too much about what the content industry wants.

As far as sources go:
(German): http://www.heise.de/newsticker/EU-Antipiraterie-Plaene-finden-Beifall-im-Bundesrat--/meldung/105097
http://www.ipjur.com/2007/01/german-government-passes-bill-for.php3

The latter is written by an patent attorney so it's mainly about patent enforcement, but most of this applies to ordinary copyright enforcement as well. I haven't found a better source in English language.
(ID #157772) Posted on 2008/03/18 01:44
Benjamin Takeyo in Lieu de la batille decisive
ひきこもり/Hikikomori. Suits my current state more than a 大学生/University Student. ^^
Registered on 2007/12/04 23:16
Well, based on my experiences on these three countries.

In order of when I first had broadband experience:

Australia - medium to high speed with silly download quota and Telstra. No torrents blocking/shaping, except if your ISP is Exetel. 
Well, then again, there is TPG with their 150 GB plan... but I left Australia before I had the chance to taste that plan, and I was with TPG, too! >_< 

Indonesia - the bare minimum speed to be called broadband, however unlimited download is available at a more affordable price. No torrents blocking/shaping.

Malaysia - the best I've had so far. Low to medium speed, unlimited download at about half the price I paid in Australia and Indonesia. My ISP (Izzi) don't shape/block torrents, however TM Nuts and many other ISPs block.

Japan still rule! There will be 1.2 gbps connection there in the near future, right?.. drollllll ^^
(ID #157778) Posted on 2008/03/18 01:58
Boris in USA
Interactive Media Design and Graphic Design
Registered on 2006/12/26 00:12
Rather then upgrade their network they seem to want to filter the traffic. :-( Same thing is happening in USA with Comcast ISP (cable internet). They are now limiting your data if you download too much and you can receive an angry email from them saying you been downloading illegal copyright materials. They are mostly doing this because of network load. Since they have a very large number of users and main monopoly in most areas. Also, with FiOs internet by Verizon (which is faster then cable) they need to keep their server running fast.

I agree that P2P even with restrictions and ban of users will not go away. Its a large part of the online life. There will always be ISP that does not filter traffic and they will receive users that move away from ISP that does limit/filter traffic. (sorry I wrote too much) hehe

^_^
(ID #157779) Posted on 2008/03/18 02:01
PoWeR in Your Spawn
Spawn Camper
Registered on 2007/08/28 05:12
Thats a relief lol... anyways I can't even file-share that much with a 30kb/s Broadband connection... (Cursed Shawcable charges too much)

kinda makes me envy ppl living in Japan lol
(ID #157792) Posted on 2008/03/18 02:13
laughingman in Canada
McMaster Engineering Student Fall 08
Registered on 2007/11/18 11:58
spread the love in the gray side of the law in Canada. Piracy is such a gray issue here, that no one seems to openly arise the question of restrictions; well, the American companies have been trying to sway Canadian legislatures to do something about it, but it won't happen for a while I'm guessing.

Anyways, share the love, but if you love so much, try and get the actual copy is what I always like to say. I usually end up buying the whole cd's of certain artists whose song I've downloaded, and even the same for Manga read off the internet and movies. 
(ID #157800) Posted on 2008/03/18 02:23
squee in Singapore
Techie
Registered on 2007/09/27 05:11
The reason unlimited access high speed internet exist is for us to download lotsa stuff fast. Who the hell is gonna get say 10mbps unlimited connections to read emails.
(ID #157803) Posted on 2008/03/18 02:32
Tami in Germany - Cologne
WebDesign, Coding, Administration
Registered on 2007/12/16 10:42
Hmm i quit using any kind of file sharing tools a long time ago... prolly over 6 or 7 years ago.
Though the current stuff ongoing in germany about the laws and such is quiet annoying, though Fabian did cover it himself enough. ;)
I never had any troubles with the ISPs i had in my past over "to-much-traffic" or whatever, seems i have been lucky (and yes i do DL a loooot... just not via filesharing tools - to afraid - i have other means ^^).
As for your IKEA lamps, i see you got the ones i use too. Though i don't know if it's because it's a picture or whatever but i think the top shelf gets to much light compared to the lower ones... maybe try to adjust the light better?
In any case, now that i see how your shelfes are i would have went with indirect lightning from under the shelfes - little fluorescent tubes from computer case modding or such, they have easy to hide small 12V cables too. Their light isn't to bright but makes a nice warm atmosphere around the figures i would think, it works for my BONDE rack though. ^^
(ID #157804) Posted on 2008/03/18 02:34
squee in Singapore
Techie
Registered on 2007/09/27 05:11
The reason unlimited access high speed internet exist is for us to download lotsa stuff fast. Who the hell is gonna get say 10mbps unlimited connections to read emails.
(ID #157806) Posted on 2008/03/18 02:41
Vincent III in Richfield, Ohio
Student
Registered on 2007/03/22 09:32
It's good you clarified what the situation was exactly, due to I always thought it was an anti-p2p crackdown.  Regardless I still think this is going to do more harm than good.  I can't say this for everyone, but P2P has opened me up to more anime, music and games then I could even imagine 10 years ago.  I do refuse to download domestic (US) materials, but I only download import materials due to lack of being able to even listen to it in the US without buying it for a high price.  All the J-Rock and J-Pop getting more popular in the US is more than likely from P2P.  Most big animes that get popular here are first popular from P2P.  If there is a game, movie or album I enjoy, I will go out and buy it.  If they cut that off, I believe they are cutting off this new-stream of Japanese Culture to people interested in it.
(ID #157807) Posted on 2008/03/18 02:42
microdark in Portugal
University Student
Registered on 2007/12/05 02:02
It's seems that the country's with the highest speed connections, like Japan, are the ones having trouble, guess that they haven't learned that speed isn't all, if the centrals (don't know the name given to them) can´t handle the amount of connections and the speed, then, they should upgrade first this and them give a boost to the speed, this is what is happening in Portugal, first the central, then the line and last, give the speed.
(ID #157809) Posted on 2008/03/18 02:44
MrShawn in Houston, Texas
Student
Registered on 2008/01/19 15:28
The USA has too much to worry about. They dont focus much on the people that steals files from the rich.
(ID #157818) Posted on 2008/03/18 02:58
Saku in Toronto
Web Developer
Registered on 2008/02/07 23:38
Here in Canada, file sharing is a grey matter as someone already says and there is no rules (AFAIK) that really states that you can't use p2p (download and upload).

Based on my experience with multiple ISPs, they really hate it when you do file sharing (uploading files) because I think it puts too much load on their network in comparison to download. Hence why some ISPs are probably throttling your speed when you use p2p softwares especially torrents.

I know for a fact that my ISP rogers cable throttles my internet every friggin time I use torrents and even suspend my internet for couple hours (tech supports probably gonna say " there is no problem with our network " line when you call XD. I did a little experiment with this by opening 15 files at the same time using torrents and left it overnight. When I woke up, I got no internet until I called tech support -.- .

In addition, they block certain ports so your D/L and U/L speed on torrent is uber slow unless you can find an unblock port.

As for myself, I strictly use mIRC and direct download because having torrents really causes some major lags on my online gaming.

Rogers has bandwith limit caps on each of their internet package ,however, if you go over, there is no extra charges as long as it's within reasonable amount XD.

Sorry for the long comment XD
(ID #157823) Posted on 2008/03/18 03:17
Akiba-Kid in California, USA
Online Shop
Registered on 2008/01/17 11:35
I remember one time, my hard drive crashed and I lost many of the precious stuffs(let's call them health materials).  I bought a new hard drive and put Winny on full drive to get all my datas back.  I guess I downloaded about 200GB worth of stuffs and then I got a letter from my ISP telling me that if I keep using bandwidth like that, they will ban me from their service.  

I guess that can relate to this post somewhat.  But I don't use my bandwidth like that anymore but if my hard drive crash again, who knows...
(ID #157826) Posted on 2008/03/18 03:21
neko in Switzerland / Japan
IT specialist
Registered on 2007/02/10 15:13
filesharing in switzerland is also on the gray side of the law, well partially. As long as you don't upload you don't have to fear anything.
That's why more and more ppl here are using Usenet.
I started to use Usenet a few months ago and it's awesome, never got that much speed from another "filesharing" software.

Actually i upgraded my connection to 25Mbit down and 250Kbit up.
The only thing my ISP is doing when someone uses too much bandwith (like 200-300GB DL per month) is setting the download speed a little bit back :) for a short time. haha
(ID #157829) Posted on 2008/03/18 03:29
super rats in Philadelphia, PA (USA)
Everything
Registered on 2007/01/15 11:33
I don't do file sharing.

Really, all I want to do is say, man that's the kind of office I want to work in.  Figures and a big wall hanging.
(ID #157830) Posted on 2008/03/18 03:29
Requiem in Mars
Web developer
Registered on 2007/11/07 18:18
 The load problem is of course the service provider's fault, but I'm not complaining.

 The short story is, they were offering an unlimited (or very high) amount of bandwidth that they knew they couldn't deliver but though nobody would use. This is like selling a 100mg box of pocky that is only 70mg, its a major fraud.
 
 But their carelessness allowed the flourishment of heavy traffic protocols like bittorrent and has benefited a lot of customers.
(ID #157848) Posted on 2008/03/18 05:01
e-jump in Malaysia
Test Engineer
Registered on 2007/12/22 21:34
I used to be a heavy DCC/BT downloader/leecher.  But since our network here is crappily slow and unsteady thanks to old backbone, I cut my activity accordingly, and baing considerate to other users.
But then again, users in malaysia are kind of noob in BT, and once they just learnt how to BT, they tend to abuse it and download the internet 24/7.
Typical 'JAKUN'.
(ID #157849) Posted on 2008/03/18 05:15
まっすぐGO! in Melbourne, Australia
Registered on 2007/11/19 18:46
Here everyone is limited. I get 10GB a month, but I'm waiting for ADSL2+ to be built so I can get 40GB + 110GB off peak (1am-7am).

So it's the same as Japan except Japan is limiting people to maybe 10,000 GB instead of 10GB.

I used Winny a few years ago but I couldn't find much on it. It could be that I wasn't connected long enough to connect to lots of people. I use bittorrent, then IRC.
(ID #157859) Posted on 2008/03/18 05:43
qingy in center of the galaxy
SMS
Registered on 2007/10/06 05:09
starting to look like another ODEX incident from my vintage point. i'm not about to write anything incriminating against myself on this public blog so i'll just give my opinion of the practice of file sharing.

this is an often debated issue in regards to copyright laws and personal privacy, but nearly everyone that uses the internet practices some form of file sharing, whether it'd be downloading music, movies, or sharing photos over e-mails. while some of it may be illegal, a large portion of the population do not do it with the intent of hurting the music and movie industries. in fact, it has been shown that people who download and sample music are more likely to purchase the music then people who do not. those that say otherwise just want to make more money. instead of trying to stop file sharing, people should be coming up with ways to embrace the idea and make money from it.

in regards to the news of ISPs cracking down on file sharing, i personally think of it as a hollow threat from a practical standpoint. you have internet users that practice file sharing, but you must remember that these guys are paying customers of ISPs. aggressively cracking down on your customers only hurt you on the long run due to loss of business or reputation. at the end of the day, its best not to anger your paying customers or else you'll just be screwing yourself over. just look at what ODEX did, and now they're hated by the entire anime community in Singapore.
(ID #157864) Posted on 2008/03/18 05:54
Angelyro in Dublin, Ireland (French inside ;)
Credit Risk Analyst
Registered on 2008/02/24 23:45
Well, I have 2 point of views:
- from France
- from Ireland

From France, you can have 20m connection uncap + free phone toward 50 countries + free digital TV for 30 euros per month. Optical fiber is coming in specific areas, you can have 100m/100m for around 45 Euros uncap. 
Problem: Olivenne chart want to repress illegal dl by graduated repression going ban you from using internet for years & writing your name onto a blacklist.

From Ireland where I m living now, I have a 512ko uncap for + TV via cable internet for 60 euros per month ! I m missing France :x.
(ID #157871) Posted on 2008/03/18 06:01
chun in home feeling sleepy LOL
part time illustrationist, doll clothing seamstress
Registered on 2007/01/09 14:33
love your office danny! :D I love my home office too, it's not as neat as yours tho ^^; (My husband tries - I think he does a great job already, but I have a lot of stuff LOL)
(ID #157892) Posted on 2008/03/18 06:56
Henry in Makati, Philippines
anime/cosplay events organizer
Registered on 2006/12/25 19:17
isn't this voluntary?

but whatever it is, this is a drastic move by the Japanese ISP Association but what they are doing is self-destruction.

here, we don't have a cap on the download size but we do have a cap on the speed that you get. the higher the speed, the higher the fee that you'll be paying. the speed here is pretty decent but i want japan's dl speed =3

and yeah, i too share files over the intarwebs =3
(ID #157901) Posted on 2008/03/18 07:37
Edward in Michigan U.S.A.
Troubleshooter, Universal Exports
Registered on 2006/12/24 12:02
It wasn't al that long ago that Comcast was controlling data upload for P2P users.  Essentially they where using software to detect P2P traffic and making it difficult for users to