More Evidence of Comcast Internet Filtering

October 22, 2007 | by Geoff Duncan

New allegations have cable operator Comcast deliberarely disrupting file-sharing systems other than BitTorrent, and even Lotus Notes.

Last week, the Associated Press published evidence that U.S. cable operator Comcast is deliberately disrupting the file-sharing service BitTorrent; shortly thereafter, the Electronic Frontier Foundation published a report that the cable operator seems to also be deliberately disrupting the file-sharing service Gnutella, and possibly also interfering with message exchanges with the corporate messaging system Lotus Notes if they involved large file attachments.

The EFF reports that attempts to operate a Gnutella peer-to-peer sharing node on a machine connected to the Internet via Comcast produced inconsistent results ownin to the reception of forged reset packets which, essentially, tell the sending and receiving computer to stop talking to each other. These reset packets aren't being sent by the computers on either end of the connection, however; instead, they are apparently being forged within Comcast's network and directed to the machines, each with forged address information.

The shutdown technique is virtually identical to that cited by the Associated Press in its investigation of BitTorrent sharing on machines using Comcast Internet service. These so-called "man in the middle" attacked involving forged packets are typical of network attacks; however, in this case, they appear to be generated by the ISP itself in a deliberate effort to either block or manage certain types of network traffic.

The EFF also noted a report from Kevin Kanarski that Comcast is apparently using a similar technique to disrupt messages sent via Lotus Notes which bear large file attachments.

Although peer-to-peer service BitTorrent is best-known as a haven for illegal distribution of copyrighted video, music, and software, the company also transfers fully licensed video and music, and can (and is) used to transfer perfectly legitimate content. Similarly, peer-to-peer transfer technologies power services like Skype and Joost. Some of these services could compete directly with Comcast's cable television and on-demand video offerings.

Comcast has not commented on the nature of any filtering techniques it may employ on its network, or whether it used forged packets to regulate traffic and services.

Post Your Comment...Comments

don stephens on Aug 13th, 2008 at 5:47 PM:

My download speed with comcast drops every night around 9pm. see foryourself.

:::.. Download Stats ..:::
Download Connection is:: 1699 Kbps about 1.7 Mbps (tested with 1536 kB)
Download Speed is:: 207 kB/s
Tested From:: http://testmy.net/ (Main)
Test Time:: 2008/08/12 - 7:40pm
Bottom Line:: 30X faster than 56K 1MB Download in 4.95 sec
Tested from a 1536 kB file and took 7.406 seconds to complete
Download Diagnosis:: May need help : running at only 27.28 % of your hosts average (comcast.net)
D-Validation Link:: http://testmy.net/stats/id-1B0YGP47N
User Agent:: Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 7.0; Windows NT 5.1; .NET CLR 1.1.4322; .NET CLR 2.0.50727) [!]

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