The Unbearable Lightness of Monitoring: Indirect and Direct Peer Monitoring in BitTorrent
Abstract
It is known that BitTorrent file-sharing traffic is analysed to identify exchangers of copyrighted material. In general, copyright holders can perform monitoring using two approaches: indirect monitoring, where indirect clues of the sharing activity of a peer are considered (e.g., its presence in the peer list of a tracker), and direct monitoring, which establishes connections with peers to estimate their participation in sharing activity. Previous research has focused exclusively on indirect monitoring. We provide a broader characterisation of the monitoring of BitTorrent activity by considering both indirect and direct monitoring. In particular, we review previous work on indirect monitoring, provide features to detect peers engaged in such monitoring, and apply them to identify a number of monitoring organisations. Additionally, we introduce features that detect direct monitors, and provide the first ever measurements of direct monitoring, showing that it is now occurring.
In the press
- P2P, siamo tutti sorvegliati: "Entro tre ore, sanno chi siete", La Repubblica, September 9, 2012
- Lisa Vaas, Honeypot reveals mass surveillance of BitTorrent downloaders, Naked Security, September 6, 2012
- Nicole Kobie, Q&A: watching the BitTorrent watchers, PCPro, September 5, 2012
- Elio Cogno, File sharing, "chi usa Torrent è stato monitorato da almeno 10 società", Il Fatto Quotidiano, September 5, 2012
- John Leyden, You'll be on a list 3 hrs after you start downloading from pirates - study, The Register, September 5, 2012
- Betsy Isaacson, BitTorrent Monitors Watching Popular Files, But Researchers Know How To Spot Them, The Huffington Post, September 5, 2012
- Rob Hastings, Someone's probably watching you downloading that film, file-sharers warned, The Independent, September 5, 2012
- Suzanne Choney, BitTorrent file-sharing users, good and bad, being monitored: study, NBC News, September 5, 2012
- Lucy Kinder, Most illegal downloaders 'are being tracked', The Telegraph, September 5, 2012
- Glyn Moody, New Research Sets The Stage For Next Round Of Cat-And-Mouse Between BitTorrent Users & Snoopers, techdirt, September 5, 2012
- Antonino Caffo, Ecco come controllano chi scarica i torrent, Panorama, September 5, 2012
- Jack Clark, BitTorrent spies can jump on P2P pirates in just three hours, ZDNet, September 5, 2012
- Lexi Metherell, Illegal downloading not going unnoticed: study, ABC News, September 5, 2012
- Mauro Vecchio, BitTorrent, occhio al file sharing, Punto Informatico, September 5, 2012
- Ryan Gallagher, Report: If You’ve Downloaded a Popular Movie via BitTorrent, You’re Probably Being Watched, Slate, September 5, 2012
- Judith Horchert, Filesharer werden massiv überwacht, Spiegel Online, September 5, 2012
- Timothy Lord, Most Torrent Downloaders Are Monitored, Study Finds, Slashdot, September 4, 2012
- BitTorrent study finds most file-sharers are monitored, BBC, September 4, 2012
- Timothy B. Lee, Trading popular files on BitTorrent? You'll be spotted within 3 hours, arstechnica, September 4, 2012
- Chloe Albanesius, Swapping Files on BitTorrent? Prepare to Be Monitored Within Hours, PC Magazine, September 4, 2012
- Curt Hopkins, Most BitTorrent users being monitored by copyright agencies, study finds, The Daily Dot, September 4, 2012
- Paul Marks, Honeytrap reveals mass monitoring of downloaders, New Scientist, September 4, 2012
- Shawn Knight, Researchers: Your IP is logged within 3 hours of downloading a torrent, TechSpot, September 4, 2012
- Dave Neal, Torrent users are being monitored, The Inquirer, September 4, 2012