ReadWriteWeb

Trend Watch: P2P Traffic Much Bigger Than Web Traffic

Written by Richard MacManus / December 6, 2006 10:30 PM / 23 Comments

While looking through Mary Meeker's 2006 Web 2.0 Summit presentation, I was struck by the figures on page 19: "Peer-to-Peer (P2P) traffic was 60% (and rising) of Internet traffic in 2004, with BitTorrent accounting for 30% of traffic, per CacheLogic". You can definitely see why this is the case, as P2P is normally used to download very large media files - music, movies, etc. But still it makes you realise just how big P2P currently is on the Internet and, given the increasing amount of video coming onto the Web, how crucial it is going forward.


Source: Mary Meeker presentation, via CacheLogic

I followed up by checking out the CacheLogic webpage, which has an interesting research presentation on its homepage entitled True Picture of P2P Filesharing. Also note that there is an updated 2005 version of the report on the site.

While it is difficult to measure P2P traffic, CacheLogic identified BitTorrent and eDonkey as being larger than FrastTrack (KaZaA). They noted later in the 2004 presentation that KaZaA, the former #1, is now "declining rapidly". Gnutella is noted in the 2005 report as seeing growth in the US. Interestingly, by August 2005 "eDonkey 2000 has overtaken BitTorrent to become the world's largest P2P file trading network".

The larger trends at play here (as outlined by CacheLogic) are:

  • P2P is not in decline, in fact it is growing at a sharp rate (see Meeker's slide above).
  • The "vast majority" of P2P traffic is of files > 100MB. While most of this is video, there are other things such as CD images for open source software (see graphic below).
  • CacheLogic says that a "significant proportion of the user population" is using P2P, not just a few heavy users.
  • They call it the "killer application for broadband"


Source: Mary Meeker presentation, via CacheLogic

Do you use P2P?

Read/WriteWeb would love to know from our readers if you use P2P, and if so:

a) What do you use it for? (music, movies, etc)

b) What P2P network and/or application do you use?

Please leave a comment, because it'd be interesting to see what Web-savvy people use P2P for.


2 TrackBacks

Listed below are links to blogs that reference this entry: Trend Watch: P2P Traffic Much Bigger Than Web Traffic.

TrackBack URL for this entry: http://www.readwriteweb.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-tb.cgi/2894

» P2P a major force in Internet Traffic from David Van Couvering 's Blog

In 2004 60% of all Internet traffic was point-to-point (P2P) and growing. What I'd like to understand is how P2P works in terms of security... Read More

» 2006 Web Technology Trends from Read/WriteWeb

It's December already and so it's about that time to reflect on what has happened in Web Technology during 2006 - and ponder what 2007 may bring. Over the next few weeks Read/WriteWeb is going to publish some in-depth posts... Read More

Comments

Subscribe to comments for this post OR Subscribe to comments for all Read/WriteWeb posts

  • I think there will be another traffice from web based API and mashup application. Such as RSS/Atom Aggregators(like sharpreader, anothr.com, bloglines.com, etc.). People will choose more such tools instead of visiting web page directly. As well, there will be more feed reader based x-casting traffic emerge.

    Posted by: Isaac | December 6, 2006 11:05 PM


  • I use utorrent as my own personal tivo, and Linux ISOs.

    Posted by: MissM | December 6, 2006 11:28 PM


  • No P2P here, but I do use newsgroups to download binaries.

    Posted by: Twan van Elk | December 7, 2006 12:12 AM


  • My favourite: Gnutella - Limewire
    But bittorrent and Azureus are rising.. Vudeo can explode.

    Posted by: Emre Sokullu | December 7, 2006 12:25 AM


  • Torrents have lifespans, so bittorrent is good for current content - as mentioned video such as TV shows and documentaries are great from bittorrent as long as you are timely.

    Posted by: Toolman | December 7, 2006 1:26 AM


  • I use Azureus and am currently in the middle of downloading MAME ROMS. I pretty much use it for software ISO's (Open Source) and The Daily Show (since it isn't available in NZ). Speed is a big problem in NZ as they shape the P2P traffic.

    Posted by: barnacle | December 7, 2006 1:28 AM


  • I use ¬µTorrent because it is just simpler than Azureus, sleeker I guess. I did not use many of the features in Azureus, but in the end it is an interface preference thing, no real superiority.

    I download music, and I also use it as my personal tivo. I have a concern however, that by doing that I actually make my favorite shows ratings drop, so yeah...

    Posted by: Gerald | December 7, 2006 4:36 AM


  • I use ¬µTorrent to download videos of US TV shows.

    Posted by: Mayank | December 7, 2006 5:03 AM


  • I use Azureus to download TV Shows.

    Posted by: Baher | December 7, 2006 5:08 AM


  • I use Peer Impact - a commercial closed p2p network that sells \rents movies ,music and games and they revenue share with uploaders .

    www.peerimpact.com

    Posted by: Matt_ | December 7, 2006 5:29 AM


  • I used to use Bittorrent, Overnet, Soulseek, but lately I don't have the time. As far as apps go, I like eMule and BitComet best.

    Posted by: franticindustries | December 7, 2006 9:47 AM


  • Skype is my p2p network of choice, though I'm not sure if Meeker was including Skype and its kin in the data.

    Posted by: Phil Wolff | December 7, 2006 10:10 AM


  • I tried Azureus, but was frustrated because it seemed to want me to leave my computer naked to the Internet to be able to work: disable my firewall, disable my router, open up ports, etc., etc. I think I must be missing something here, but are all these P2P folks willing to run the risk of trojan horses and worms?

    Posted by: David Van Couvering | December 7, 2006 10:28 AM


  • I am sure the p2p will take a great role in the coming future, maybe the biggest competitors for web.

    www.ezecho.com

    Posted by: Denver Wang | December 7, 2006 10:34 AM


  • This is simply because ALL the traffic on P2P networks is over 4megs. Sometimes up to 800megs.

    There are no/not many 500k downloads, everything is large files.

    Posted by: David | December 7, 2006 10:53 AM


  • David: no, you don't need to run Azureus "naked". There's a good Wiki for it with hints and tips, but having said that, some firewalls are inflexible and may not let you set up the appropriate traffic policies.

    The biggest thing ever though will be P2P Spam, once it becomes possible. Remember, you read it in this comment first. :)

    Posted by: Juha | December 7, 2006 11:55 AM


  • a) Yes. Music, videos, Linux ISOs

    b) Client (Network(s)): Ares (Ares), eMule (ED2K, Kad), Filetopia (Filetopia), KCeasy (Ares, Gnutella, OpenFT), Limewire (Gnutella), Shareaza (Gnutella, Gnutella2), Soulseek (slsk), uTorrent (BitTorrent)

    Posted by: LANjackal | December 7, 2006 12:30 PM


  • P2P spam!? The mind boggles... I guess this means we'll start to get 500MB videos from Nigeria :-)

    p.s. interesting bit of news just come across the wire: BitTorrent Inc. Acquires µTorrent
    ref: http://blog.wired.com/monkeybites/2006/12/bittorrent_inc_.html

    Posted by: Richard MacManus | December 7, 2006 6:30 PM


  • spam is on the decline so highly doubt that p2p spam will ever appear... I think there will be a higher chance of p2p identity theft.

    Congrats to Utorrent the best damn bt software out there!

    Posted by: westsider-josh | December 7, 2006 7:13 PM


  • I don't use P2P software, generally. This is mainly because I am not interested in gathering illegal content, and there is a dirth of quality legal content on P2P networks.

    Posted by: David Mackey | December 7, 2006 7:48 PM


  • i use ares and i download cd images

    Posted by: juan_bp | December 9, 2006 12:13 AM


  • I use it for books (technical books and classics mainly), japanese anime and mange, movies and television shows. the chinese torrent sites if you read chinese, are fantastic resources for pirated software (which I don't).

    3 years of battle star galactica and counting.

    The significant other uses it to watch the live soccer games he doesn't get on Singapore cable from the Spanish and Dutch League.

    I use the private P2P networks on bitcomet and azureus. P2P tv sites (mainly Chinese) like P2Pants and others are chockful of spyware like wow trojans, so we now have them on a virtual machine, but are a better alternative to not watching the game at all.

    Posted by: Karen Teoh | December 11, 2006 7:58 PM


  • I use Gridfold. The P2P streaming software I am importing from China. This is where TV and radio are going. OT why is TV cap'd but not radio?

    Posted by: Drew | December 16, 2006 5:49 PM




RECENT JOBS


RWW READERS


TEXT LINK ADS


RWW PARTNERS

adaptiveblue

Yahoo Buzz