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Take it from someone who's wasted too much time trying to educate such people. Trying to educate most p2p filesharers is an exercise in futility. The smart filesharers already don't use regular p2p applications. They adopted alternatives a good while back. It's true hiding one's ip address is not possible, however making it no longer matter is and that has been well proven already, though most p2p filesharers simply won't do research on the issue themselves let alone want to do very much reading in general. I classify those people as kaziots (ala kazaa users). Thus pay them no mind. For they are trolls and often unclean (have virii infected systems) and usually don't have anything worth sharing anyways. Only reason people like us still try to educate anyone, is for the few rare filesharers that can be enlightened. Heck most people still use internet explorer as thier primary webrowser. When much better alternatives exist (firefox, netscape 8, etc). The trolls will always care about speed and quantity over quality and safety. "... A person is smart, people are dumb scared animals and you know it..."not an exact quote for the first mib movie, but you get the point. |
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Seems this post has not really interested many people so far, really it's no big surprise, considering how little most people care about being targed by the **aa's and thier filesharing clients disrupted by isp's. Still with the current i2phex version, the network is still around and there are some users. i2p itself has undergone major changes recently and is scheduled to go through even more in the near future. Things on the i2p network are rather unclean at that moment, many sites and services are down, there is a new irc network running over it. i2phex also has changed some, it's website is currently down and it's developer is offline, probably just on vacation though. However i2phex users forge onwards regardless. i2phex now has it's own forum on planetpeer.de and it seems there are some people dedicated to providing services and distributions for it. I did notice more documentation for i2phex has appeared lately, just the usual user guides, etc. Also worth noting is this recent post on the i2p forums. If that doesn't spark a flame war, well I don't know what will. Anyways recently some people have mentioned something troubling, seems the gnutella networks are having trouble? Sources disappearing, slow speeds, various client applications having even more problems than usual, wonder what is going on? Are people finally getting too fed up with them and just leaving? Have they simply moved on to bittorrent? Given the state of other filesharing networks and clients, it probably isn't such a bad idea to use i2phex. Taking everything into consideration, i2phex actually comes out ahead of most other filesharing applications. So far, I have found nothing that would not make me want to use it. Nobody has presented a strong and well informed case against it. At the very worst, it's still better than using exceem, kazaa and the rest. |
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I just had alook at www.i2p.net. Opening Words: "I2P is an anonymous network, exposing a simple layer that applications can use to anonymously and securely send messages to each other. The network itself is strictly message based (ala IP), but there is a library available to allow reliable streaming communication on top of it (ala TCP)" This may all be very good, but what it has has to do with p2p file sharing I have no idea ..... oh and btw I'm not going to continue reading or contributing to this thread! |
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Wow. Tons of people are very silly on here. Here is a couple points I will make: 1. *Users* - ignore this thread. Pay attention again when I2P is released. 2. *Developers* - At least take the time to understand what I2P is. It might be worth your time to make your gnutella client compatible with I2P. Azureus already has preliminary support for I2P integrated into their client. With I2P, IPs are replaced with Base64 definitions. So you would not be reinventing gnutella, just making it work over a different protocal. I2P *does* have good documentation on their main site (it's not just a forum anymore, nor has it been for awhile): http://www.i2p.net |
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Hummm.... If devs are implementing I2P, that might help make people against P2P make an argument that devs are encouraging copyrighted sharing by any means. If I don't want to be traced on the web, I'll use a simple proxy. If I want an anonymous P2P, I'll turn towards Freenet which has a good goal of a free internet to compensate censorship. I2P is NOT a transparent P2P and would not be a welcomed addition to a P2P. Too much room for abuse either by users or corporations. Can you name a single P2P that integrated I2P by its main devs? What were their justifications, if any? Also, as LODR points out, a protocol over another protocol isn't really a worthy solution most of the time... Ciao
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Okay. Let me try another approach. This thread turned pretty ugly pretty fast. The only point of this thread was: Gnutella Developers might want to research I2P. It can be learned about here: http://www.i2p.net As for examples of mainstream P2P devs that have already investigated and started using I2P, the main one is Azureus. Since 2.3, Azureus has had preliminary I2P support. Thier justification, anonymous BT. I never said it hid IPs. I don't think anyone here did. I'm sorry if you were misled. Before you ask me how it's anonymous then, just go research it on it's site. Again, this is not for users yet. If you are just a P2P user, I don't think it's worth your time to look into I2P yet. As stated: "People should not use I2P" So please, let's keep this civil eh? I'm really not some spam bot. You can check my Reg date on these forums for proof of at least some credibility |
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Hi isamoor, Your info looks pretty good (along with what I already know about i2p). The only problem is, that the changes in i2phex are extremely hard for the phex-maindev to use, because the programmer of i2phex denied cooperation (I had a discussion about this with GregorK). I think it sad, that often it requires that type of people to get something running, but hey, that seems to be a fact of human psychology. I'm quuite glad, that i2phex exists, and I hope, that such a step will be taken again (but maybe a bit more structured next time, we were quite exstatic when that guy first said, he'd try it, and I think, we'll try to do what we can to help building such a version of phex again, when the dev agrees to make the changes in such a way, that both projects profit, i2Phex and the standard Phex, which means that sharing of code must be possible).
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Both i2phex and i2p have recently undergone major updates. I2Phex has been tweaked for better transfers and been given a system tray feature. While i2p has had many bugfixes and gained much better network compatibility. Anyone with a fast broadband connection is welcomed to come join the invisible gnutella network. As it is not really designed for dialup speeds. The major problems that both i2p and i2phex had in previous versions are gone. Remember unlikew with other gnutella clients, you do not need to run software like peerguardian, mess around with blocklists without being 100% protected. With invisible gnutella your ip address is not used and you do not even know the ip addresses of the other peers. As the i2p network grows you gain greater protection and anonymity. With already over 400 peers and growing, now is a great time to join the network and become invisible. |
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