Re: Why block web hit counters?



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On Sep 17, 1:28 pm, Leythos <v...@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
In article <1190059751.582641.307...@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>,
chil...@xxxxxxxxxxx says...

By using the
service I use (run out of Bajamar, Mexico), you would have your
network admins playing "whack a mole", trying to block you.

Wrong, your solution would be blocked, by default, on properly secured
networks.

I have a new solution. I just added TVU the talk show and sports
events we cover, and our listenership has gone up, during times when
the TVU feed is active. Becuase of the way that TVU works, it would be
very difficult to block the TVU stream of our stations. While TVU is
meant for online TV broadcasting, it works well for online radio as
well. I just finished the first talk show of mine with the TVU feed as
one of the feeds offered, and many corporate networks in Hawaii,
Australia, and Asia were tuned in. I also saw a lot of connections to
my TVU stream coming from Tor nodes, so TVU will apparently interface
well with Tor. There is one P2PTV related site that gives instructions
how how to bypass filtering and use virtually any of the P2P TV
programs out there now (and there are probably a few dozen such
networks out there now) with an open proxy server. I tested them and
it really works, which is why I added TVU, and intend to add other P2P
feeds for my talk show and our sports programming later on. Sopcast,
PPMate, PPStream, etc, are many other services that now sell
broadcasting subscriptions, allowing us to expand our reach and avoid
filtering/montoring in most schools, corporations, and institutions,
around the world, becuase of the way these P2P radio and TV networks
work.


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