<p>im using utorrent which is not allowed on the schools network, if they find you are using it, they will shut down your internet. is there any software i can use to disguise it? i have encryption forced, but any proxy software that i should be using?</p>
<p>also, what cap should i put on my download speed? i have it on 50 kb/s right now.</p>
<p>There is no way I’m going to help you with this and no one else should either because you’re asking for how to violate school policies and perhaps the law.</p>
<p>Or find some place with free wifi that doesn’t block torrenting. It is NOT worth losing your university internet connection, let’s grow up here.</p>
<p>Well since it does have its perfectly legal uses as well. They probably just block the default port. Also Forced encryption would help as well, which would effectively make it very difficult to pickout the packets with torrent info, besides seeing a large amount of data flow to a single ip in the network. Also use peerguardian to block peers that are bad for you.</p>
<p>you should read about the Boston University student who forced his way and used torrent illegally downloading and sharing 30 songs and was hit with a 675k fine.</p>
<p>Beyond the nontrivial legal and moral issues, one of the biggest reasons that college networks get bogged down is student use of torrent sites for downloading. </p>
<p>You know, you can rent a DVD these days for $1. Try that instead.</p>
<p>Also, there is the possibility that your university has a [url=<a href=“http://dtella.org/]Dtella[/url”>http://dtella.org/]Dtella[/url</a>] network, which allows students to easily share files over the university’s local network. This form of file sharing is extremely fast and virtually impossible for the MAFIAA to detect, as all data transfers stay within the university’s network.</p>
<p>I’m not going to give any advice due to legal issues violating you’re schools policies. Basically, there are methods as mentioned above (encryption) and if you research enough it will work. There are also other methods that do protocol encapsulation. Best way is this:
Torrent if it’s legal, if it’s questionable, do it off campus. Sounds like you’re school is using a DPI (Deep Packet Inspection)/Protocol Analysis or similar device on their network. I’d be real careful and avoid it all together then… You DO know there’s ways of getting stuff via HTTP right?</p>
<p>Seems like they do monitoring via deep packet inspection.</p>
<p>In any case, university internet access is a previlege, not a right. It is an optional service provided to you on behalf of the university for your convenience. However, one of their terms is no torrents - so stick with it.</p>
<p>In fact, it’s technically inappropriate to use university-provided internet for even stuff that aren’t related to your studies (inc’l posting here). The problem with that, though, is that it’s completely impractical. However, this isn’t necessarily the case with torrents because they are extremely bandwidth intensive compared to “regular” internet usage, and usually have no place in an academic setting, legal or not.</p>
<p>With that in mind - you really should get your own connection. However, if you really insist, you can run an encrypted VPN tunnel by using one of those privacy services. Just remember - this is an extra cost, and albeit very unlikely, if you’re caught, be ready to face the consequences.</p>
<p>Do people use DC++ on your campus? At Oregon State, Utorrent wasn’t blocked, but people who used it too much would sometimes lose their internet privileges. People would use DC++ to share things within the network, which was constantly getting new content from a clique of geeks who used ultra-fast outside connections to download as much stuff as possible, then copy it onto a few computers (with 20-terabyte hard drives) that were hooked into the school’s network. So anyway, yeah: check out DC++.</p>
<p>Check to see if you are limited to a certain bandwith. If not, don’t worry about the download/upload cap. Encryption is a good first step. Never forget to load the ipblocklist via ipfilter manually in utorrent or use an automated program like peerguardian. Stay away from public torrents and use private trackers instead. Make sure you know the policy. Most of the time it’s not torrenting that’s illegal, it’s torrenting copyrighted things that’s illegal.</p>
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This too. You can get 720p TV shows fast enough to stream after just 5 seconds of buffering. Make sure you get [url=<a href=“JDownloader.org - Official Homepage”>http://jdownloader.org/]jDownloader[/url</a>] so you don’t have to deal with all the annoying aspects of MegaUpload, RapidShare, etc.; it’ll automate all those downloads. There are many sites on the internet with links to MU/RS downloads. PM me if you want a link to one.</p>
<p>I got a little letter from the RIAA that my school sent me. It pretty much just said, this is a warning, delete your pirated album (which ironically was Asher Roth) and don’t do it again.</p>
<p>The best way to go about it is not to do it on campus at all. You can see if your campus has something like DC++, but the sure-fire way to use torrent to get your files is to run a cheap little computer at home as a server with a huge hard drive. Use something like realVNC to control that from your computer on campus, download the files at home (utorrent has a scheduler to regulate the times that it down/uploads), RAR the files, and send them to your college computer (using gSpace, your own FTP server, what have you).</p>
<p>The way that colleges get word of you torrenting, even if they don’t use DPI or any form of content regulation is that copyrighters (record firms, movie companies, game companies, the lot) monitor the TRACKER, take the IPs of the people using it, trace them, and sent an angry letter to the person doing the torrenting. If that’s you, the school gets notified and given the exact IP/MAC address that it came from. So, you get disconnected or get a C+D notice.</p>
<p>I am going to set up a system somewhat like what I described for my own use over winter break, though I’ve been having extremely good luck with private trackers, which tend to be much harder to observe… anyone who is into PTs knows how hard it is to get a What.CD invite… Especially if you don’t intend on doing any uploading.</p>
<p>I find it funny how he asks how to do something and the first replies do not answer the question but instead scold him without knowing his need for torrents.</p>
<p>Putting you entire career in jeopardy just to download a handful of movies and songs doesn’t seem much of a fair tradeoff, wouldn’t you agree? Don’t bother trying to get around the security, it’s not worth it. Did you not hear about the Boston U student? He thought he was clever, until he was slapped with a near 500k fine. </p>
<p>Think about it.</p>
<p>And in response to mockingbird- if he’s doing something legal, then he wouldn’t have to worry about circumventing the law now, does he?</p>