Also, to address a few other points:
Yes, Barret, they are looking at (politely) bitching out the offenders and leaving the rest alone. It seems like a good idea, though I think some of it should be automatically done. (Calling people takes time, and other customers could be suffering because of them.)
Tessian, I could log into work and pull up a graph to prove my point about P2P percentages, but it would be the kind of information that I couldn't pass around. Instead, I'll quote the
source I used for the Internet in general. Frankly, based on the graphs I've seen, I find the figures to be rather low in P2P percentages.
Also, Tessian, you seems to think that other countries live in this "Internet utopia". You mean like Japan?
They are really cracking down on P2P users.
And Kupek/Andrew, at first, the "unlimited" model worked. The ratio was high enough that you could buy more bandwidth (or upgrade equipment, split nodes, etc.) when you needed it. Now, with the use of bandwidth far exceeding its demand, the model doesn't work. Yes, companies are now advertising bandwidth caps, because they realize that the unlimited model no longer works.