So switching MAC addresses fixed it for you? That wouldn't be too hard
for me to try.

On 05/17/2010 07:41 PM, auditodd at comcast.net wrote:
> I'm betting on Comcast being evil.....
>
> My connection was being throttled to 2MB down.
> While I was out of town, my step-son had problems and disconnected the firewall and connected his laptop directly to the cable modem and was able to get 10MB down.
>
> So I looked on the Smoothwall forums for a way to spoof the MAC address.
> I then proceeded to create 12 fictional MAC addresses and I comment out all but one at a time.
> Then I just reboot the Smoothwall and the cable modem and my download speed is back to 10MB.
> So far it's been 40 days with no decrease in speed.
> They'll probably mess with me the next time I want to use bit-torrent to download some more ISO images....
>
> ----------
> Todd Young
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Jon Schewe" <jpschewe at mtu.net>
> To: "TCLUG List" <tclug-list at mn-linux.org>
> Sent: Monday, May 17, 2010 3:18:52 PM GMT -06:00 US/Canada Central
> Subject: [tclug-list] Comcast being evil or some bad hardware?
>
> I'm trying to capture some large files from my house (on Comcast) to a
> server out of state (not on Comcast). I'm copying the files using ssh
> and a non-standard port.Things are fine for files of a couple megabytes,
> but files over say 10 megabytes stall out part way through. One night I
> got 50MB uploaded all night! So today I started up tcpdump on both ends
> and captured the traffic. I noticed an interesting thing in wireshark
> when the connection stalled out. I got a "TCP Previous segment lost"
> message on the server side and then started getting "TCP Dup ACK" on
> both ends. The server has a SonicWall firewall in front of it and is
> virtualized with vmware. My house is using dd-wrt on a Linksys router as
> my connection. Is this Comcast doing it's filtering for our protection
> or is this just something misbehaving on either firewall?
>
>
>