Darquan
Well-Known Member
Agree with davidgrm - notification from iBurst about these things would be nice. I was so happy when I could finally play some games last week without changing anything on my side I almost
from joy 
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Please disable shaping/throttling for Planetside 2 game.
Will get the server IP address in a bit
I dont have issues with you, in fact its great to see somebody at iBurst whi tells it like it is. Perhaps you can get you PR people to read the last couple of pages. We would like to know these things BEFORE they happen, so if stuff goes wrong we know why. When the shaping first started I was forced to ask server admins in Germany to look at the game server logs to see why I was being kicked off all the time. They then told me that the punk buster service said my connection was dropping packets. But I dont pay them to waste their time to investigate. I do pay iBurst for a service and if they are going to experiment on a live platform (which is just dumb:wtfI would at least expect them to notify us in ADVANCE.
You keep on saying its illegal, but if that were the case why doesn't ICASA stop them, they raided them once -they must know about it. ??? It doesn't seem likely that a company will break the law knowingly.P2P throttling is illegal, if anyone cares...
It is illegal. I can’t speak as to why ICASA hasn’t done something about it, in all probability they simply aren’t aware of it, or think it is too trivial a matter to pursue. I don’t know. However, technically it is in their mandate; protecting democracy and ensuring free and open airwaves and access to information is one of their chief responsibilities. So I’ll leave that one up to you. If you want to take it up with them, here’s their contact.You keep on saying its illegal, but if that were the case why doesn't ICASA stop them, they raided them once -they must know about it. ???
Companies regularly violate the law. It’s to be expected. In fact the amount of criminal fines that corporations pay per year, globally, is approx. $780 million. These are just the ones that they are actually forced to pay (meaning violations in first world countries, 3rd world countries don’t have the resources or power to fine them.)It doesn't seem likely that a company will break the law knowingly.
. It seems unlikely that a company will go out of its way to do what you are saying they are doing. it doesn't add up.
Well the P2P shaping/throttling is real and they are doing it. They have admitted that they are doing it. Is it legal? I dont know but it is very poor practice when you dont tell your clients what you are doing behind the scenes. If I used P2P and joined iBurst only to discover I could not do it during the day I would be a very unhappy camper
Well the P2P shaping/throttling is real and they are doing it. They have admitted that they are doing it. Is it legal? I dont know but it is very poor practice when you dont tell your clients what you are doing behind the scenes. If I used P2P and joined iBurst only to discover I could not do it during the day I would be a very unhappy camper
IThe court found this to be a mechanism of censorship and in violation of an ISP legal obligation to net neutrality. Like I say there are many cases of this globally, all illegal. Iburst is one.
So what can be done about it?
To be honest I'd rather have P2P throttled to nothing if it means my web browsing/business services is faster.
I am not opposed to throttling P2P download services (especially torrents for piracy) during normal hours if it means surfing and gaming can work smoothly. As long as I get a decent experience and less lag-deaths its cool. It is just that they need to inform us of changes so we can be on the lookout for issues, either here or on social media. Being in the dark about what changed and why it is affecting me grates my gears.
Sounds great but I've learnt that in the world of IT telling the end-user you changing something means they'll blame you the next time their kettle doesn't boil...
The shaping policy has always been disclosed. Here are some other blokes to target as well: http://mybroadband.co.za/news/adsl/79569-adsl-and-p2p-traffic-in-sa.html
As I have already stated, I dont use P2P so it does not affect me. But unfortunately iBursts method of rolling out changes directly onto a system that paying customers uses without doing enough testing meant that i DID affect me. Also the fact that they did not notify users that they were going to make changes. Over the past years there have been many many times that I have had a slow ping, slow downloading, no connectivity etc. I now wonder how many times that was just caused by iBurst techies experimenting on a live system like they did with the P2P filter
My problem is service given once a problem is reported...
Having a really bad connection again tonight. Can't even open FB to see if there is anything on the iBurst page there. Worked fine last night![]()