For proof go get
FrostWire 4.21.8 and follow
the instructions I published in their forums.
Since I built and installed those two tiny filters for IP and keywords the number of spambot-
spoofed search hits abruptly shrunk to just a few hits at most and for the past few days, totally
stopped. I have been blocking spam since long before P2P existed and it's pretty safe to say
that I am starting to get pretty good at it. It only took me a week to clean up FrostWire's search
results to the point where you must try hard to find any automatically generated spam at all.
I'll see if I can translate those rules into Shareaza's format next because it will make gnutella
one of your favourite networks again and those spammers might just try to target G2 next.
Don't forget that gnutella still has more users than G2 and eMule combined so ignoring it
is giving up on a resource at least as valuable as the others.
Why would the spammers be on gnutella if there weren't a lot of people using it? What would
you do if they migrated to the smaller networks with the same machinery they used on gnutella?
It would be in your best interests to keep them where they are because only gnutella is big and
strong enough to keep them occupied. Having a working gnutella servent at a time when 20-30
million americans are looking for safer alternatives to bittorrent will bring a lot of people in for a
look and Shareaza is now at a point where it will look too good to pass up. Even though it never
had ultrapeer capability there will always be plenty of the existing servents giving it a connection.
Being "good for leeching" is actually very good for a sharing network. The strength of networks
like gnutella and G2 despite being "good for leeching" for twelve and ten years running is ample
proof they work well, that people still use both and that most of them always shared freely.
The myth that most gnutella and G2 users are leeches is not only completely wrong but is quite
unfair to the 75-80% of uses who share freely without being forced to do so. You can easily
verify that percentage by running BearShare and watching it's handy statistics window. Even
though the number of BearShare users is down to only ten percent of the 2005 levels the
percentage of "leeches" has held steady and the total amount of shared files is still over five
million and just under 60 terabytes. That's with BearShare alone. There are many more users
of the other gnutella servents and there's no reason to think they behave any differently.
I use many networks constantly to share over 2000 files and 30 gigs. They all are better than
each other in various ways but none are inferior to the rest. People are not so selfish that they
have to be forced to share and no P2P network has ever needed any extra help. In fact, not
forcing sharing cuts down the glut of popular files and makes it easier to find stuff you really could
never find by other means. Think of gnutella as being like G2 and emule but a lot bigger with
many more files. When you block the spam like I do you would see that for yourself and
leave it turned on all the time.
As for the AP2P contractors' spying: They look for
uploads because
only that is copyright
infringement,
not downloads. Even if they could document your downloads they wouldn't
bother because they couldn't even send a DMCA takedown, much less sue you for copying
and distributing because downloads aren't proof you did any of that. Using protocols that
force sharing make you potentially liable for copyright infringement every time you use them to download
a copyrighted file; so since sharing is the only thing the MAFIAA looks for online
it is indeed
sending up a flare that they can not only home in on but use in court against you.