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Pesquisa global por «dpi»

Privacy Isn't Phorm's Biggest Problem guardar - +info

Tags Tags advertising business deep dpi ethics flawed inspection model net neutrality packet ...

Total de 13 tags, guardado por 1 utilizador, criado em 17 de December de 2010

121Media is (regrettably) still out there, and hawking a dubiously effective way of doing ad targeting that effectively breaks the Internet. The comments are recommended reading, to be sure.

http://gigaom.com/2008/03/27/privacy-isnt-phorms-biggest-problem

Deep Packet Inspection in the mainstream guardar - +info

Tags Tags astroturfing bandwidth broadband control deep dpi inspection network p2p packet vendors

Total de 11 tags, guardado por 1 utilizador, criado em 17 de December de 2010

An interesting writeup of the realities (or lack of information thereof) of DPI. Which is still something I'm amazed to see being considered as feasible given the risk of false positives with new protocols.

http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20080327-deep-packet-inspection-for-p2p-traffic-put-to-the-test.html

Detecting packet injection: a guide to observing packet spoofing by ISPs guardar - +info

Tags Tags administration bittorrent dpi ethics filtering inspection internet isp network networking neutrality ...

Total de 16 tags, guardado por 2 utilizadores, criado em 17 de December de 2010

Whatever happened to "the Eleventh Commandment":blog/2004/04/24?

http://www.eff.org/wp/detecting-packet-injection

Will The Recording Industry Pay For ISP Monitoring In The UK? guardar - +info

Tags Tags 3strikes costs dpi internet isp licensing uk

Total de 7 tags, guardado por 1 utilizador, criado em 17 de December de 2010

I've been following this one from afar (thanks to my friends in the UK) and just _love_ the conundrum the BPI has gotten itself into. My view? You either provide a credible and affordable distribution channel (like "iTunes":apps/iTunes), or you're just wasting the taxpayers' money (and the "ISP's":ISP) on things that will never possibly work and only reflect badly upon the recording industry.

http://techdirt.com/articles/20100202/1818428012.shtml