It’s easy. For first step:
Just download latest Utorrent Bittorrent Client here: http://www.utorrent.com/
To learn more about traffic shaping, go here : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Traffic_shaping
Basically, its a technology used by ISP to control p2p networking among internet users. You will feel your download speed decrease suddenly after been affected by it.
First, after you have finished downloading the latest version, portforward your router, and setup in the Speed guide option, please turn to this configuration.
There you go! Its finish!

November 14th, 2006 at 10:40 am
i have to say…it’s hell useless
November 18th, 2006 at 2:00 am
yeah!! i’ve tried it before…nothing change….:((:((
now i changed to rapidshare if i wanna dL some stuff hehe
November 24th, 2006 at 4:16 am
diefish: it depends on how the isp is capping the bandwidth.
deboq: you’re right. It is better to use rapidshare or other file-sharing service if you want to share stuff right now.
July 31st, 2007 at 2:48 am
Hmmmm….there’s no effect in my µTorrent 1.7.2.
It’s d**ned useless.
Hry Fuad! Please tell me how to avoid traffic shaping on BitTorrent(r) 6.0 BETA. I heard it has a same engine like µTorrent.
July 31st, 2007 at 2:50 am
October 12th, 2007 at 10:02 am
C’mon guys, let’s get real, do you really think you can dodge ISP traffic shapers this way? These bastards use some sophisticated pieces of gear that can recognize and detect P2P traffic pattern, would that be BT encrypted or not, EDonkey obfuscated or not, gnutella and many many others, they can even completely squash Skype for example or simply degrade it, vendors of these evil boxes are the likes of Sandvine and Ellacoya but also other more mainstream networking equipment vendors such as Cisco who’re coming up lately with DPI functionality as there is more demands for it in the ISP market. Virtually every ISP is suffering dearly from P2P as they have to pay hefty upstream badwidth charges to their service providers, so, P2P is definitely viewed as the grand-daddy of all evil… There is unfortunately little you can do about this other than shop for another ISP not as heavy-handed on deep-packet inspection & shaping, every now and then, their detection methods are reverse-engineered by the P2P client geeks and by-passed, but it takes these vendors a few weeks to spin new S/W updates which they propagate promptly to all their ISP customers, a little like the endless chase of virus/anti-virus applications… The only viable and sustainable way around is a VPN service to a place where Internet-related laws are way behind…
October 18th, 2007 at 6:14 am
I’ve using “deluge”, windows version and my download speeds have come to normal speeds, in spite of the traffic shapping that my ISP is doing.The problem is that deluge crashes too many times.
Testing now a new one called “Lphant”.
Its working great so far.
November 24th, 2007 at 8:09 am
its about as much use as a fart in a shit fight
all the major isp’s have traffic shaping of one form of the other , either checking data on perticular ports or watching the packet types to determin data content
its a rip off , thay claim to sell us unlimited broadband then once thay have our money we get didly squat
the internet is being taken over by the greedy capatilists
February 20th, 2008 at 10:01 am
try azureus wiki, virgin were messing with my traffic completely (when i started torrents it would kill everything)
but azureus wiki has a guide for 5 levels of isp traffic shaping avoidance and a guide to isps.
this seams to be level 1/3 if you disable legacy its 2/4
its not clear if this is encrypting handshakes, data or both.
but azureus with special settings and possibly tor (im not using that) will protect you from most traffic shapping,
Infact throw in abit of client filtering & tor to server and they can only see that your using your bandwidth.
April 27th, 2008 at 8:03 pm
I’ve a got a book teaching how to uncap most cable modems and fake ISP (to avoid the first connecttion between the cable an the provider), therefore you uncap the modem (of course I’m being extremely simplistic).
The information is out there, but you have to remember the risk of uncapping (if you download hundreds of Terabytes, it is more probable that you get caught).
There are also kits and a lot of “how-to” stuff in hte internet,
May 22nd, 2008 at 4:09 am
try DELUGE