Does Comcast slow down bandwidth on purpose?

l Xes l

Banned
Feb 3, 2005
3,459
0
0
I do a lot of downloadin' thru bit-torrent client... i basically leave my computer on 24/7 to download.. mostly animes... however, last month i lost my connection for about 3 days... and ever since then my downloading speed seems to be certainly lower than before...
Internet speed itself doesn't seem to be affected but my DL used to be around 150-300KB/s... now it hangs around 50-70KB/s...
I have not changed any setting in my computer so i dont think it's anything that i did that'd slow down the DL speed... yes i am behind a router with opened port..
i've tried it out without the router but there seems to be no difference in dl speed...
did Comcast slow down my DL speed?... anything i could do to improve this?
 
S

SlitheryDee

Did Comcast do any"upgrades" that you're aware of? I know that I lose service for hours at a time due to Cox doing "upgrades" although I haven't noticed any changes in performance.
 

l Xes l

Banned
Feb 3, 2005
3,459
0
0
I'm sure it's not spyware of any sort..
I have read somewhere ISP's do this sometimes to save bandwidth or something..
 

Megatomic

Lifer
Nov 9, 2000
20,127
6
81
Have you received any mail from Comcast that you haven't opened yet? Perhaps you have been snagged for downloading illegal content... Just something to consider.
 

l Xes l

Banned
Feb 3, 2005
3,459
0
0
nope.. i didn't receive anything.. and i dont really download anything illegal... just some anime... ones that are not licensed...
 

Megatomic

Lifer
Nov 9, 2000
20,127
6
81
What is your monthly bandwidth limit? Usually it is a TOS requirement to not exceed that amount. Maybe they are "helping you" follow your TOS?
 

l Xes l

Banned
Feb 3, 2005
3,459
0
0
what's TOS requirement?... how do u figure out the monthly bandwidth limit?.. just call em?..
 

cryptonomicon

Senior member
Oct 20, 2004
467
0
0
first off, yes, comcast has an amount of bandwidth that is "too much". they won't disclose how much this is, but there IS an amount.

second, comcast is horrid over the last month. their last upgrade has completely messed up and overloaded parts of their network. marketing first, customers later.
 

cecallred

Member
Apr 29, 2005
29
0
0
A friend here uses Comcast and I tested her computer, network card and modem (cable), finally they admitted there was a problem, after something like 3 weeks. They did "something" on their end... most likely changed out a card... and now it's fine. She complained and they gave her a rebate. Worth a try but you'll have to really let them know you're not happy.

Cec
 

uOpt

Golden Member
Oct 19, 2004
1,628
0
0
They fatfingered something in their network, probably a central router, and are now running on some emergency equipment. Pretty safe guess.

In a cable network, it would be very complicated to limit (not cut off) single customers, especially if they want to do it by port/service.
 

Zepper

Elite Member
May 1, 2001
18,998
0
0
broadband cable is a shared resource - data rates will vary with the number of users. Very unusual drops usually caused as mentioned above.

.bh.
 

n7

Elite Member
Jan 4, 2004
21,281
4
81
They are likely throttling you.

Here in Canada, one of the big ISPs, Shaw, uses this crap to effectively throttle all P2P traffic to the point where it's almost impossible.

It's disgusting, but there's not much you can do about it, since the majority of the stuff they are throttling isn't legal anyway.

I had to switch ISPs due to it.
 

Zepper

Elite Member
May 1, 2001
18,998
0
0
broadband cable is a shared resource - data rates will vary with the number of users. Very unusual drops usually caused as mentioned above.

.bh.
 

corkyg

Elite Member | Peripherals
Super Moderator
Mar 4, 2000
27,370
240
106
Originally posted by: Zepper
broadband cable is a shared resource - data rates will vary with the number of users. Very unusual drops usually caused as mentioned above. .bh.

A lot depends on where you live. Cable Internet is shared bandwidth. In my area, the speed has increased - nearly doubled in the past 2 months. Every time you get a new subscriber on your local scene, you give some of your speed.

Last month, Comcast warned us about an outtage - and it lasted about 15 hours. During that time they connected all new fiberoptic lines, and when it was done, we had a significan speed increase.