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Date: 2008-12-17 07:36 pm (UTC)It's worth noting that VM have two different implementations of this. On cable, your download is reduced for a few hours if you manage the equivalent of saturating it for half an hour or so. On ADSL, each week the top 5% of downloaders get throttled for the next week. Given that those 5% are usually responsible for 90-odd% of all traffic (the numbers vary, but are consistently around 5/90 and were like that even back in dialup days), it works quite well and certainly I can saturate my pokey little 1MB connection whenever I want.
The traffic shaping: Ok, almost all ISP implementations of this have been overly aggressive and downright unfriendly network-wise, and if they need to do this aggressively then it's a sign that their backbone isn't up to it. Unfortuantly, it's impossible for any ISP to implement this in a actually useful manner (well-provisioned backbone, priotise VoIP, streaming and gaming) because the tweakers and torrenters will abuse it.
As an aside, whatever happened to the 50:1 cotention ratio? As far as I know residential DSL lines still have a 50:1 cotention ratio, yet no-one seems to realise that this might affect their speed.
IE flaw: thanks for the heads up. The reports I've seen also indicate remote code execution as a possibility. There does seem to be an usually large amount of fuss over at, as it's hardly nastier than previous XSS/drive-by download flaws in IE.
My AV is up to date and is working, so I'm not too worried, though I have seen a lot of IE windows hang/disappear on me recently. I'm guessing those are people attempting to exploit IE7, and managing to instead confuse IE6.