The reason that upload rates are so slow is because ISPs don't want to police people's usageMost ISPs ToS don't let you run any kind of server, and instead of investigating and shutting them down one by one, they just cripple upstream speedsIt's a crappy way to do it and it inconveniences most people who would use it legitimately (like Ben), but it's a small price to pay compared to the ISP doing more draconian throttling.There's no difference in uploading and downloading. It's on the same connection, just in opposite directions. It's a manufactured limitation.I'm on a university campus, so the speeds are kinda skewed...45 Mbps down 2mbps up (as you can see they even do it here)Not sure how I can get 45 Mbps when the LAN speed is only 10 mbpsMy family at home gets 25down/2up IIRCI mean, the "fastest" connection the ISP there offers is 50down/5up....a 45mb difference is totally stupidAnd the ratio of down to up speeds is different...they offer four packages. from cheapest to most expensive the upstream is 8x faster, 12x faster, 12.5x faster, and 10x faster than the upstreamNow if you look at Verizon FIOS, they make a little more sense, at least in their middle package25mbps up AND downSure it's expensive, but you're not going to get 25mbps upstream with any other provider for home serviceAlthough their ratios are a lot more strange...15d/5u, 25d/25u, 50d/20uIt's ironic that Cox's 50/5 connection costs $35/more per month than Verizon's 25/25but the sad part is FIOS isn't available everywhereI'd gladly punch out 25mbps of my downstream for an extra 20mbps of my upstream and save $35/month in the processI think 3 MB/s is enoughI never understood ISP monopoliesI mean, there's ONE cable provider and ONE DSL providerThat you can use at your householdHow is that legal?I mean, I understand that there isn't a monopoly in "The Internet", since you have those two choices, and dialup, and cell data via 3g/4gBut someone needs to slap the FTC and tell them that there's if a company (DSL) can't compete with another company (Cable) because their infrastructure is not physically capable of matching the speed of the other, something needs to be done to allow other companies to step in and provide compititionDon't quote me on this, but IIRC, ISPs don't have to let other companies use their infrastructure, which is one cause of the monopoly. That's how railroads used to be until the government took over. You had to switch railroad companies because the tracks were physically different, so you couldn't stay with one company.
Juggler... 5mbps down, 100GB cap... what region are you in?
I'm in the Philly area and I get 20-21mbps down
Comcast is lame. Period. But they've got alot of people by the balls, and they know it.
(in regards to piracy)Even if it's five people in the whole country doing it. It's still illegal and thus, a justification (albeit a poor one) to do what they do.