Yesterday I changed my ISP to one that allows port forwarding. Today the port forwarding has been enabled by the company and I set it up on the router.

After enabling it, my download and upload speed dropped from peaks of 50 MiB/s and valleys of 4-6 MiB/s to a very stable 2 MiB/s. Nothing else has changed in my qBittorrent configuration. If I close the ports again, the speed goes back to normal. I checked if the ports were open on various websites and all of them show that they are forwarded.

I was looking forward to be able to port forward and connect with every possible peer for years, and today has been a big disappointment in that regard!

Has anyone else seen something like this and if so, can you point me to the right direction to fix the problem?

  • dividedby0@lemmy.dbzer0.comOP
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    20 hours ago

    I’m completely sure! Yesterday it was running ok all day. Today, I port forwarded and left home for a couple hours, after coming home I checked the computer and saw the low speed. The first thing I did was think about what had changed and I closed the ports. The speed went up immediately. I tested it a couple more times with different ports and the same thing happened.

    • Kairos@lemmy.today
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      19 hours ago

      What the fuck?

      Maybe they meter incoming speed? Try running a speedtest using a web server or iperf3 or something.

      • dividedby0@lemmy.dbzer0.comOP
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        8 hours ago

        The speed test looks fine. Maybe they meter it as you say. Guess I’ll have to contact them so they can explain wtf is happening to my connection.

        • Kairos@lemmy.today
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          2 hours ago

          How did you do the speed test? You need to have an open port on your side and another IP address outside your network.

      • _cryptagion [he/him]@anarchist.nexus
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        18 hours ago

        more likely they just know it’s bittorrent traffic. that’s not hard for an ISP to sniff out, if you aren’t using a VPN. it’s not uncommon for ISPs to throttle bittorrent traffic automatically.

        • cassandrafatigue@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          8 hours ago

          And the reasons they do it run the gamut from ‘mildly shitty’ to ‘profoundly shitty’.

          You might consider routing torrent traffic through multiple old garbage laptops on your network, then putting your regular traffic through on an ‘unforwarded’ looking computer at full speed? Might work.

          • _cryptagion [he/him]@anarchist.nexus
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            6 hours ago

            Understandable, but without one you’re totally at the mercy of your ISP. If it turns out they are automatically throttling BitTorrent traffic, there’s nothing you can do without a VPN because on a fundamental level they control your access to the internet. The unfortunate thing about BitTorrent is that it’s not sneaky at all. Your ISP will be able to tell you’re doing it if you aren’t encrypting that traffic.

            • dividedby0@lemmy.dbzer0.comOP
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              6 hours ago

              Yeah, I think I’m just delaying the inevitable. I’ll call the ISP in a couple hours and maybe it will be time to look for a christmas deal with airvpn.