Re: Which port to forward ? by pg
pg
Wed May 07 00:19:51 PDT 2008
On May 6, 11:59 pm, "N. Miller" <anonym...@msnews.aosake.net> wrote:
> On Tue, 6 May 2008 20:00:13 -0700 (PDT), hsyq...@gmail.com wrote:
> > I've been trying to download something from RapidShare but the
> > download often fails.
>
> > A typical download session starts well ... over 50KB / S.
>
> > Then it precipitates. Going down gradually to 40KB/s, 30KB/s, 20KB/s,
> > 9KB/s, 3KB/s, 1KB/s and then it either hang, or stops.
>
> > My PC links to the Net via a router, and my thinking is that perhaps,
> > just perhaps, if I can forward the correct port to the router,
> > downloading from RapidShare would be smoother.
>
> > Now the question is, which port to forward?
>
> > Regular downloading from website and from FTP doesn't seem to be a
> > problem. Only when I try downloading via RapidShare or Megaupload that
> > the precipitating effects take hold.
>
> > Is there a special port that these file-sharing services use? If so,
> > which port?
>
> > Please help !!!
>
> Port forwarding is useless for downloading files from a web site. Normal
> HTTP and FTP downloads do not require port forwarding. One might guess, from
> your description of the symptoms, that your ISP is just throttling your
> connection after transferring a certain amount of data.
>
> --
> Norman
> ~Oh Lord, why have you come
> ~To Konnyu, with the Lion and the Drum
The guy did mention that downloading via http or ftp doesn't give him
any problem, and my thinking is that if the ISP is doing the
throttling, won't the ISP be throttling on all the other downloads as
well??
Or is it possible that the ISP has a special software setup to
selectively scan for anyone downloading from particular sites such as
the mentioned "rapidshare" / "megaupload" and when the bot finds out,
it starts the throttling routine???
I'm just very curious.