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SafeMedia Corp. Tells House Hearing
“There Is a Smokescreen of Misinformation About How contaminated P2P Networks
Operate”
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I applaud your committee for taking a hard look at
how the redistribution and search features of many popular P2P file sharing
networks pose serious privacy and security threats to consumers, students,
businesses and the Government,” said SafeMedia CEO & Chairman Safwat Fahmy.
Washington, DC & Hollywood, Calif. —SafeMedia Corporation CEO and Founder, Safwat Fahmy
outlined the dangers and risks of contaminated P2P networks today (Tuesday,
July 24, 2007) in his written testimony before the U.S. House Of Representatives
Committee On Oversight and Government Reform, at the “Inadvertent Filesharing Over Peer-To-Peer Networks” hearing.
The SafeMedia Chairman focused how P2P networks operate, the features and
characteristics of “contaminated” P2P networks. Fahmy also explained in his
written testimony how SafeMedia’s technology was developed to address illegal
sharing of copyrighted materials on contaminated P2P networks and how it will
help to protect consumers, students ,businesses and our national security from
the serious privacy, identity theft and security risks.
“In layman’s terms, Peer to
Peer networking (P2P) allows individual users to transfer files directly to
each other without going through a central server,” Fahmy said. “In the traditional Client/Server model, the
client sends requests to the server and the server responds to these requests
and acts on them. This is how the
popular downloading service “iTunes” operates and this is how
"MySpace" and "YouTube" work as well. In contrast, with P2P networks, each computer
serves as a peer and functions as a client with a layer of server functionality
– the individual peers communicate and exchange files directly with no controls.”
Historically, Fahmy told the Committee
hearing, “P2P networks were developed to overcome limitations on bandwidth and
processing/storage so arguably there were some benefits to using P2P networking
as opposed to the client-server model. But frankly, the historic reasons for
developing P2P networks do not exist in today’s world: limitations on bandwidth and processing/storage
are easily remedied by clustering many low cost servers and the deployment of
wideband fiber to deliver even more powerful performance than P2P networks.”
“P2P technology is clearly
a usable, freely available tool for research and education and we support
the lawful use of uncontaminated P2P networks,” he said. “The legal and innovative uses of P2P technology
highlight the importance of being able to differentiate between legitimate
uses of P2P and ‘contaminated’ P2P networks.”
Fahmy also said, “It is no
secret that in order to avoid liability for the creation and distribution of a
network that allows users to illegally transfer copyrighted material, most
popular filesharing networks have no accountability of ownership, contents or
participants,”. He pointed to an accurate, in-depth and “no smokescreens” U.S.
Patent and Trademark Office (USTPO) report, published in March, which said, “That
file sharing programs pose a real and documented threat to the security of
personal, corporate, and government data.”
In his closing testimony Fahmy
said, “As an experienced computer technologist (35 years), I would never
recommend that Congress mandate the adoption of a particular technology to
address the vital issues you are examining today. However, I do believe that the only way to
protect individuals, companies and the U.S. economy from the dangers of
contaminated P2P including identity theft is for Congress to act decisively on
recommending that technical solutions be adopted that eliminate the threat of
contaminated P2P.”
SafeMedia has developed
patent pending business solutions combining P2P Disaggregator technology (P2PD)
and a Digital Internet Distribution Solution (DIDS) that prevents contaminated
P2P networks from indiscriminately accessing users’ computers. P2PD is based on
many advanced technologies created specifically for network operations,
resulting in far higher, scalable processing capacity than the network
bandwidth it serves. It utilizes the
following technologies:
·
Adaptive
Fingerprinting and DNA markers: The P2PD library of all P2P clients and protocols is
the world’s largest and most current library of fingerprints and DNA markers
and is updated every 3 hours.
·
Adaptive
network patterns: Not all
protocols can be easily identified with a single set of packets. As such, P2PD is set to monitor packet flows
and adapt its technique based on what it has already seen and what it sees
now.
·
Intelligent
libraries: SafeMedia’s experience libraries are knowledge-based,
created from the actual operations of the subnet, and include specific logic
markers in addition to the derived adaptive network pattern analyses.
·
Remote
update and self-healing: All
maintenance actions-updates, integrity checks, sanity validations, system
housekeeping, and self-defense are remotely performed through SafeMedia’s
servers with no delay in network operation.
·
No Invasion
of User Privacy: P2PD detection
does not invade user privacy, does not record and track user IP’s, does not
decrypt any traffic, and allows the execution of all current security
techniques (Tunneling, SSH, etc.).
·
Accuracy: P2PD is
fully effective at forensically discriminating between contaminated and
non-contaminated P2P traffic with no false positives (i.e., identifying another
protocol as the targeted protocol) whether encrypted or not.
·
Speed: P2PD operates at network speed with little or no
latency.
Fahmy also insisted that such
solutions would best be achieved without putting any additional burdens on
people who use the internet. “At
SafeMedia, we believe we have such a solution and I am confident that, in time,
the marketplace will show that we have the best technological solution,” he
said.
[Editors note: For media interviews contact George McQuade, MAYO Communications,
818-340-5300. For more information about SafeMedia Corporation product line
visit www.SafeMedia.com
or call 561-989-1934.
To hear today’s testimony from the U.S. House Of Representatives Committee
On Oversight and Government Reform, at the “Inadvertent
Filesharing Over Peer-To-Peer Networks” hearing please visit: http://oversight.house.gov/story.asp?ID=1430
]