Feed on Posts or Comments 08 September 2008

Category ArchiveP2P



Xbox & PS3 & P2P & Web 2.0 Ethics & Sony & Web 2.0 Leo on 07 Sep 2007

Is Editing Wikipedia Pages Anonymous?

Well the simple answer is no. The ability to view which IP addresses have been editing pages in Wikipedia has always existed, but now a student from Cal Tech has gone ahead and not only simplified the process, but has also created a searchable database of IP addresses making changes to pages. The website, Wikipedia Scanner, is straightforward and easy to use, just one warning though, the site is very time consuming!

But in a good way!

It’s fun and interesting searching through pages and IP addresses to find who is changing what- you never know what you might uncover!

For instance, did you know Sony once changed Halo 3’s Wikipedia page to say “Halo 3 won’t look any better than Halo 2?”

Ouch…

The funniest part is that the list goes on and on, from corporations too government agencies, it seems everyone is making changes to Wikipedia pages.

Happy hunting everyone!!

P2P & Web 2.0 Jon on 26 Jul 2007

Torrents on your mobile phone

A quick post from something interesting I spotted in Pete Cashmore’s Mashable blog (and then a few other places). The post is about uTorrent, a BitTorrent client that is designed to work on your mobile phone. To date, there have been apps that let you access your P2P activity remotely (i.e. so you can set up a torrent at work to start downloading at home), but uTorrent Mobile is a simple browser-based application designed to let you do this on your phone.

What does this mean? There is still a lot of work to be done and connection speeds to become faster, but obviously the ultimate goal is to be able to fully access peer-to-peer networks and their content on your mobile phone and eventually to quickly download content to your mobile device. Translation - information and files moving back and forth even faster and into your pocket. Think about it, your law-breaking friend (because you don’t do that sort of thing) could download that Family Guy episode from a P2P network straight to his iPhone without having to wait for that darn single stream to finish (and without paying Fox because he is soulless). As phone connection speeds get faster, they get more storage capacity and they become better at playing media, this will surely begin to happen. Then, of course, not only could you pull from people’s computers on P2P networks around the world, but you could be file-sharing with everyone who had a phone. Yikes. No doubt Hollywood and music labels shudder at this thought - it’s tough enough as it is to regulate content sharing… Well, it’s not here yet, but on its way.

uTorrent officially launched on July 25th.

Also see - Slyck News and NewTeeVee.com for reviews and info.