Only 11 per cent of BitTorrent use is legitimate: Study
- 23 July, 2010 14:18
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The University of Ballarat has published a research paper claiming 89 per cent of BitTorrent files it studied during a certain period were confirmed to infringe copyright, a result immediately hailed by the Australian Federation Against Copyright Theft (AFACT) as a victory in its war against file sharing.
In the report - available in full online from AFACT's web site (PDF) - researchers from the university's Internet Commerce Security Laboratory analysed the most popular BitTorrent trackers on the Torrentz website on April 21st, 2010 and scraped the information from them.
Torrentz is a search engine which combines results from many different BitTorrent search engines. The University of Ballarat tracked sites including Demonoid, MightyNova, TorrentBay and BitReactor.
More than a million individual torrent files were tracked by the university over the course of the study. However, the university found that just four per cent of torrents - more than 15,000 - were responsible for 90 percent of seeders.
In the BitTorrent system, a seeder is a BitTorrent use who has downloaded all of one file and is now hosting it rather than simultaneously downloading chunks.
"Of the torrents in the top three categories (movies, music and TV shows), there were no legal torrents in the sample," the university's paper reads.
According to Paul Watters, director of the laboratory, a total of 117 million downloads had been completed across more than one million torrent files.
AFACT - which represents a number of content providers such as film and television studios - immediately jumped on the paper, stating it showed that legitimate use of the BitTorrent software was minor.
“All it takes is an Internet connection and the BitTorrent software to efficiently distributing large files amongst users," said executive director of AFACT, Neil Gane.
"It may be a legitimate software but, as we have always maintained, it is the preferred software for sharing unauthorised copyright content. The research found that movies and TV shows made up 72 per cent of all torrent traffic yet not one copy was legitimate.”
Actor, Roy Billing - who has had roles in Underbelly - said file sharing was having "a detrimental effect on the movie and TV industry", with "no returns" going back to content creators.
iiNet ramps up
The news comes as iiNet - which has been enmeshed in an ongoing court case with AFACT over claims its customers infringed copyright through BitTorrent - this week stepped up a war of words with the organisation.
Yesterday iiNet chief executive, Michael Malone, posted a link (PDF) to a letter iiNet chief regulatory officer, Steve Dalby, had written in reaction to an article involving AFACT in industry newsletter Communications Day yesterday. In the article, AFACT said it wanted to see ISPs collaborate with content providers on an industry code to tackle copyright infringement.
Malone described the letter as Dalby responding to "AFACT bullshit".
"AFACT's poor attempts to present itself as the voice of reason are belied by their ongoing negative and unproductive behaviour," wrote Dalby. "This disconnection from reality is not difficult to spot."
"AFACT have made it very clear -- their idea of cooperation is for ISPs to disconnect their customers when they demand it. If we don't do their bidding they'll tie ISPs up in the courts. That's not cooperation, that's an attempt at coercion and is, therefore, a poor model for a commercial relationship or an industry code of conduct."
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