steven36 Posted September 19, 2015 Share Posted September 19, 2015 New data published by Canadian network management company Sandvine reveals that BitTorrent's share of total Internet traffic during peak hours is going down. For the first time since the file-sharing boom began it has dropped below 10% in Europe and the same downward trend is visible in the Asia-Pacific region.Over the years we have been following various reports on Internet traffic changes, specifically in relation to BitTorrent.Five years ago file-sharing dominated Internet traffic across the globe, but this pattern has slowly started to reverse.Online entertainment services such as YouTube and Netflix have already taken away a large chunk of BitTorrent’s “market share” in North America and the trend is carrying over to Europe and the Asia-Pacific region.The latest report from network management company Sandvine reveals that torrent traffic is now responsible for ‘only’ 8.44% of all Internet traffic in Europe during peak hours, compared to 17.99% two years ago. Top 10 Peak Period Applications (Europe, Fixed Access) This doesn’t necessarily mean that there’s less torrent traffic, as overall bandwidth use may have doubled in the same period as well. However, other online entertainment services are gaining ground during peak hours.With 21% YouTube currently accounts for most traffic and Netflix is also on the rise, even though it’s only available in a few countries. In the UK and Ireland Netflix is already good for 10% of peak downstream traffic.The same pattern is observed in the Asia-Pacific region although BitTorrent still tops all other services there.Top 10 Peak Period Applications (Asia-Pacific, Fixed Access) At a quarter of all downstream traffic during peak hours, BitTorrent’s traffic share is down a few percentage points compared to last year. YouTube is currently in second place there with little over 20% of the total traffic share.Since the recent dip in BitTorrent’s traffic share is relatively limited, it’s hard to tell whether the absolute bandwidth transferred by file-sharers has also declined in this region.Finally, it’s worth noting that file-sharers worldwide may be more likely to use a VPN. This would lower the traffic share as well, underestimating the BitTorrent traffic numbers.Time will tell whether the downward trends will continue in the months to come, and how the global differences in BitTorrent usage will develop.Source : TF Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Cereberus Posted September 19, 2015 Share Posted September 19, 2015 could it be that more people are using vpn, thus hidding torrent traffic bandwidth as regular http ? that could explain it.but then again if torrent % went down, then http would go up % ? has it :/ ?PS: surprised they didn't put popcorn into that list. cause i hear it's beginning to gain traction in recent years due to it's ease of use for torrent newbies. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
steven36 Posted September 19, 2015 Author Share Posted September 19, 2015 could it be that more people are using vpn, thus hidding torrent traffic bandwidth as regular http ? that could explain it.Most people who use VPN use Europe ips so if anything it should caused BitTorrent traffic to rise in Euopre only thing a vpn does is change you're ip so BitTorrent trolls cant get it or gets you around some blocks . Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Cereberus Posted September 19, 2015 Share Posted September 19, 2015 could it be that more people are using vpn, thus hidding torrent traffic bandwidth as regular http ? that could explain it.Most people who use VPN use Europe ips so if anything it should caused BitTorrent traffic to rise in Euopre only thing a vpn does is change you're ip so BitTorrent trolls cant get it or gets you around some blocks .yes it does pretend your from another country to circumvent restrictions. one such use i can think of is netflix usage for countries that don't natively support it.but from what i heard it's also possible to encapsulate your traffic packets to avoid traffic shaping from knowing your torrenting.also it's encrypted traffic so they can't see what your doing. :xunless of course they convince the vpn to cough up your data to check your history details. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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