From 24 July, Internet traffic directly between Rhodes PCs and the Internet will count towards your download quota. For most users, this will not have any effect, since web browsing and downloads through the proxy servers already count towards your download quota. However, applications which transfer data between your PC and the Internet directly, such as FTP transfers, peer-to-peer networks, Skype or other phone-over-Internet systems, etc. will now count.
Until now, direct Internet traffic was controlled using a separate system to the download quota system which controlled web browsing. These will be integrated. As a result, if you download a very large file from an FTP server, you will find that for the following 14 days, both web downloads and all direct transfers from that PC will be slowed down or even blocked. Similarly, downloading large files from the web will cause both web downloads and direct transfers from that PC to be slowed.
The intent of this change is to ensure that those relatively few users who use Rhodes' Internet bandwidth for direct transfers will be subject to the same limits as the many who only use the web. Doing so will be fairer to all members of the University, should improve Internet response times for those who have not exceeded their quotas, and allow us to increase quotas for all users in future.
More information about the download quota system can be found at http://www.ru.ac.za/systems/quotas/. If you have further queries, please contact the Software Support Helpdesk at support@ru.ac.za.