10 Internet Myths to Stop Believing

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  • čas přidán 24. 07. 2024
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    ▼ Time Stamps: ▼
    0:00 - Intro
    0:16 - Internet vs World Wide Web
    1:03 - Deep Web vs Dark Web
    1:57 - Private Browsing Makes You Invisible
    2:34 - HTTPS Connection Means Trustworthy Website
    3:08 - Megabytes vs Megabits
    4:27 - An Excellent Thing
    6:06 - Higher Bandwidth = Everything's Faster
    8:10 - Viruses Only Come from Downloading
    9:27 - Social Media Sites Own Everything You Post
    10:28 - Browser Extensions Are All Safe
    11:47 - VPNs & Tor Guarantee Privacy
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  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 464

  • @ThioJoe
    @ThioJoe  Před rokem +254

    Let me know if anyone knows what “pro-level gaming” internet even means

    • @here_is_Peet
      @here_is_Peet Před rokem +36

      You can play fortnite with your grandma!

    • @mattp12
      @mattp12 Před rokem +43

      It means internet so fast you see into the future and win every game with ease

    • @lunarvisz
      @lunarvisz Před rokem +3

      3rd

    • @WohaoG
      @WohaoG Před rokem +5

      8:24 Your file is encryption(also great strategy to give people a time limit to give you what you want so strict you can't fill out your payment info)
      Where do you get this amazing stock footage?

    • @spartanipods
      @spartanipods Před rokem +9

      Single-digit ping

  • @michealrosen
    @michealrosen Před rokem +186

    I'm glad you brought up the vpn point, alot of people online have massive misconceptions on vpns.

    • @serpent77
      @serpent77 Před rokem +22

      Sadly this was intentionally done by VPN providers...

    • @janami-dharmam
      @janami-dharmam Před rokem +3

      you can certainly learn a lot from the Instructions given to the VPN service providers by the Govt of India. Usually these are just copied from the Chinese but you still get the idea. One of the important instructions is that the VPN service providers must preserve logs. Also no cash payments and proper ID for the customers must be preserved.

    • @serpent77
      @serpent77 Před rokem +5

      @chichi but that would defeat the entire purpose of the VPN.
      The policies you describe lets the government assume someone wants secrecy due to nefarious actions. i.e. "guilty until proven innocent". However there is a myriad of reasons to want secrecy that aren't based on doing "bad things" one of the most prevalent in the USA right now is looking for trans, gay, or abortion related health care. Some in the government would like to hunt those people down like criminals, while others support a person's right to body autonomy. Those people need secrecy to protect yourself from tyrany.

    • @Grif_on96
      @Grif_on96 Před rokem +5

      As i like to say - there is no such thing as 100% anonymity on the internet , but no one is going to take the time to trace your Tor session just because you are watch green youtube :)

    • @anullhandle
      @anullhandle Před rokem

      Pretty sure it's nsa running tor exit nodes not that it matters all that much. Might be fun to do a video on how powerful collecting just meta is.

  • @dontown-lb5ke
    @dontown-lb5ke Před rokem +148

    I was an Alpha-tester for the ARPANET in 1969 when I was in High school here in Vancouver,Canada. They brought a Telex machine to the school & hooked up a telephone handset to an acoustic modem. We sent an 'email' to nearby SFU. It's hard to believe the Internet is 54 yrs old!

    • @bikeny
      @bikeny Před rokem +11

      One more letter to that and they'd have to change their name. So, I had to search for it since I'm in the States. Simon Fraser University?
      I'm a few years younger than you, so I didn't get to any computers til college. We had punch cards. I, too, am awestruck with it.
      BTW, that Imax comparison was an awesome way he explained the difference for what speeds you'd need.

    • @dontown-lb5ke
      @dontown-lb5ke Před rokem +8

      @@bikeny I was one of the 1st students @ Langara College in 1971 when it opened. I took Data Processing @ learned to program on a Honeywell 200 with only 32K memory. Lots of punched cards! Cheers.

    • @likebot.
      @likebot. Před rokem +4

      @@dontown-lb5ke I think I met you in a comment section before. You were one of the first ever to send an e-mail, or maybe I met one of your classmates. I'm on the right-hand side of Canada. My experience was a bit later getting into computers as a young teen in the mid-70s. I used a BBS in the early-mid 80s that relayed messages to ARPANET so relayed internet e-mail was available to me, but my first internet account wasn't until 1988.

    • @pyp2205
      @pyp2205 Před rokem +4

      Wow that must have been interesting to test.

    • @susear5939
      @susear5939 Před rokem +3

      Interesting seeing history being discussed in this comment thread. I'm a kid in comparison. My first experience with an internet connection was during the last legs of dial up in the early 2000s.

  • @Jon717
    @Jon717 Před rokem +22

    I don't understand how some people still believe incognito mode is anonymous. When you open up a new private tab, whether that be on a Chromium based browser or even Firefox, it straight up tells you that your activity can still be monitored.

    • @hugofontes5708
      @hugofontes5708 Před rokem +8

      People see windows with text and just instinctively ignore everything

  • @PitchWheel
    @PitchWheel Před rokem +225

    As a network high school teacher I am happy to say that I try to teach these things 😅

    • @TheSlickmicks
      @TheSlickmicks Před rokem +20

      I wish my high school taught networking when I was a student there.

    • @AlDunbar
      @AlDunbar Před rokem +2

      I didn't get network training in high school either. But I graduated in 1967, by which time I was aware that things called computers existed, but had never seen one, let alone used one.
      Learned Fortran at uni, but only touched a card punch machine. In grad school we finally had access to terminals, but PCs were still a ways off.

  • @kaseyboles30
    @kaseyboles30 Před rokem +202

    One reason networking uses bit and not bytes is because it was there when some systems used other sizes. There were 4 bit and 9 bit machines for example. And today there are 32 and 64 bit machines, however these came mostly after the big explosion of 8 bit cpus. Also not all those bits per second are user data, there various layers of control and routing and so on that must also communicate to even have a connection.

    • @ThioJoe
      @ThioJoe  Před rokem +55

      Interesting

    • @likebot.
      @likebot. Před rokem +10

      @@ThioJoe I disagree with the poster. Communications is serial except inside the machine. Baud is bits-per-second because one bit is sent at a time. An APP might tell you Megabytes per second, but it's just dividing what's happening by 8.

    • @LukasDzunko
      @LukasDzunko Před rokem +11

      Main reason for difference is signalization. For example, each 8-bit on serial port require start bit, optional parity bit and 1 / 1.5 / 2 stop bits. One byte is up to 12 bites "on wire". Same is for Ethernet. There is preamble, mac header, IP header, payload, cksum, etc. It is easier to just calculate frame size in bits and then divide it by bits per seconds (wire speed) to see how much payload you can transfer ... Usable size may change depending on configuration ... ISP advertise "wire speed", but download speed may wary depending on protocol and configuration.

    • @kaseyboles30
      @kaseyboles30 Před rokem

      @@LukasDzunko Yep, the lowest level of the overhead to even have a connection, and thus the most important.

    • @okaro6595
      @okaro6595 Před rokem +1

      It means sense as it is essentially a sequential stream of bits. Various protocols pack the data differently. Back in the modem era 10 bits were used per byte unless you had an error correcting modem in which case it was 8 bits but then there was some header information. Also the data could be compressed which in some cases actually increased its size.

  • @TheBorzoi
    @TheBorzoi Před rokem +19

    In regards to internet speed.
    It seems a large amount of people don't realise that even if you have the fastest connection in the world, you're still restricted by the upload speed of whatever you're downloading from.
    I work at a hosting company that hosts a lot of dedicated and virtual servers. We get an alarmingly high amount of customers complaining that when they try to upload something to their server, it's only going at 10Mbps when their server has a 100Mbps connection and don't understand that it's because their local connection is only 10Mbps, not that there's a problem with their server network.
    If you think of it like a group of runners who all need to stay together. You're only going to be as fast as the slowest runner.

    • @Nerotique
      @Nerotique Před rokem

      You can't expect users to make sense.

  • @nmac101
    @nmac101 Před rokem +19

    2:28 ah yes, i love the SAMPLE TEXT internet browser

  • @RasmusSommerNielsen
    @RasmusSommerNielsen Před rokem +5

    One old myth or saying is that "Once something is on the internet it stays there forever", a lot of things that was put there 20-30 years ago is now completely gone. I feel so old sometimes.

  • @shanent5793
    @shanent5793 Před rokem +26

    Higher bandwidth connections can have lower latency because of reduced head-of-line blocking. Shared media (eg. passive optical networks or cable) are time division multiplexed, so a higher bandwidth connection gets a larger share of the media, hence it transmits more often without waiting for a time slot.

    • @TjPhysicist
      @TjPhysicist Před 11 měsíci

      This, I always assumed higher plans had better priority due to various reasons (some entirely made up and avoidable , others real)

  • @douglaswilkinson5700
    @douglaswilkinson5700 Před rokem +18

    Theo, I was using ARPANET at Rand Corporation in early 1980. Boy have things changed!

  • @KojiKazama
    @KojiKazama Před rokem +13

    The bandwidth one is something I have been trying to explain to people for years. In fact I remember a kid some years back saying that he got his parents to upgrade to gigabit fiber so he can download movies super fast. But he was using an old 7200rpm HDD.

    • @howiedewin3688
      @howiedewin3688 Před rokem +1

      Regardless of how super-duper a system, there will always be a bottleneck.

  • @ICE0124
    @ICE0124 Před rokem +24

    One thing that i say which is related to faster internet = faster everything is, usually just because your internet can download the file at 100mbp/s doesnt mean the server uploading the file to you is going to be at that speed so even if you have a gigabit internet doesnt mean you will download the file at one gigabyte per second because the server might not be uploading it at that speed and it might be way slowly like 5 mbp/s instead. Also there can be a hardware limitation like your drive might not be able to write data at 100mbp/s even though your internet can download at that speed.

    • @IndyColts1987
      @IndyColts1987 Před rokem +6

      Bingo, there's a very small section of increased bandwidth that means increased speeds. Getting more bandwidth is mostly just geared toward multiple devices and users making use of simultaneous connections.

    • @janami-dharmam
      @janami-dharmam Před rokem +3

      The faster speed is available only upto the local server. There are several speed test software available and most will suggest a local server close to your service point.

    • @benjaminvlz
      @benjaminvlz Před rokem +1

      @ICE124 The first thing that came to my mind when I read your comment was file hosting sites like Depositfiles, Keep2Share, FileJoker, Rapidgator etc. When you download a file from one of those sites, they're able to limit the speed at which the file is being downloaded. For example, if you're a free user, the download speed is incredibly slow and if you want to download files faster, you have to pay for a premium account. You could have the highest speed internet in the world, but it'll make very little difference if you're downloading a file from a site that's limiting their speed.

    • @-_lIl_-
      @-_lIl_- Před rokem

      and your computer might not have enough cpu/gpu/hard-drive power to even process all of that at once

  • @tanja_the_fox
    @tanja_the_fox Před rokem +55

    This video was heaven. So many myths I'm daily raging about. Busted. Thank you

  • @YouVideo85
    @YouVideo85 Před rokem +14

    Myth: Wi-Fi and the Internet are the same thing. False. All Wi-Fi really does is allow wireless devices to connect to a network without using wires. It also should be noted that just because you’re connected to a network using Wi-Fi or even Ethernet doesn’t always mean that you will have a working Internet connection.

    • @mycelia_ow
      @mycelia_ow Před rokem +4

      Yes, WiFi is just a network type. It allows internet connection, but itself doesn't contain the internet. Networks are separate, too many people don't understand this.

  • @VENZUL0
    @VENZUL0 Před rokem +4

    Love the fact that you post the names of the stock photos & videos you used. I detest channels that feature non-applicable stock that doesn't even illustrate the content.

  • @Peekofwar
    @Peekofwar Před rokem +7

    I'd say latency is a more important statistic for multiplayer games. Speed is one thing, but if it takes five seconds to get from the server to your machine, it's meaningless.

  • @misophoniq
    @misophoniq Před rokem +11

    Your "random idea" @13:49 is in fact true. If you are already a suspect in some sort of digital "misbehaviour", government agencies CAN in fact cross-reference your connection to a VPN and the connection to a website to collect evidence against you. Even if the traffic itself can not be monitored, you connecting to a certain VPN IP and that same VPN IP connecting to a monitored website can provide enough additional evidence if you are already a suspect.
    A lot of VPN providers offer you "Double VPN" or whatever they want to call it specifically for this scenario. You will connect to a VPN IP, which will connect to another VPN IP, which will connect to your destination. That way, any loggin done by an agency or whoever can do that will show totally different IP addresses from your side and the website that is being monitored. 

    There are probably ways to tackle Double VPN connections too, but I haven't encountered any of those situations in real-life yet.

  • @overdev1993
    @overdev1993 Před rokem +9

    darknet: many people think that is one big part of the internet which is not true, there are a lot of dark networks which aren't connected at all.

  • @GameIT.
    @GameIT. Před rokem +10

    Man! You always come up with interesting videos! 😮

  • @jrsimeon02
    @jrsimeon02 Před rokem +4

    Even though they are different in definition, I still call the internet the web because 1) it's easier to explain to non-tech people and 2) my generation was exposed to the internet as a collection of web pages and nothing else.

  • @Artista_Frustrado
    @Artista_Frustrado Před rokem +5

    i never get tired of your Stock video selection

  • @djahren
    @djahren Před rokem +10

    It would have been cool to talk about download speed vs latency as far as things (particularly games) being faster.

  • @pabloqp7929
    @pabloqp7929 Před rokem +1

    Thanks for the security tips, keep em coming as always 🎉

  • @brianbrino4310
    @brianbrino4310 Před rokem +7

    Thio you are simply the best in showing me all subjects that I did not understand clarifying them and giving me not only more light but helping me to understand complex things much better! Thank you for your awesome video!

  • @kepler186f4
    @kepler186f4 Před rokem +2

    Another great vid! Thanks!

  • @thisislilraskal
    @thisislilraskal Před rokem +2

    I always learn something from your videos. Cheers mate. Sending power and blessings from Melbourne Australia

  • @GogoTheSomeone
    @GogoTheSomeone Před rokem +3

    These videos are always nice

  • @xDB8x
    @xDB8x Před rokem +4

    3:42
    actually the windows file explorer shows file sizes in "mebibytes" but since it shows the unit as MB it seems like "megabytes".
    but that would just complicate things even more 😂

    • @TheEudaemonicPlague
      @TheEudaemonicPlague Před rokem

      What are you talking about? What the hell is a "mebibyte", anyway? Windows Explorer shows file size in kilobytes...I just double-checked to be dead certain. So, I gotta ask...what the hell are you smoking?

  • @TyphonNeuron
    @TyphonNeuron Před rokem +3

    Videos like this are your best. Thanks.

  • @shinichixx
    @shinichixx Před 7 měsíci

    love your videos. this one especially is very eye opening.

  • @Lofote
    @Lofote Před rokem +2

    A chrome extension can't do everything a virus can do. At least in Windows it runs in the low integrity level, it can't read or write your document files or attach to any other running program.

  • @CarlosXPhone
    @CarlosXPhone Před rokem +5

    Interesting myths, especially the tor/VPN one. I knew it talks to networks, but no idea governments would be able to create a bridge between you and them. Wouldn't surprise me if they have dedicated servers for this exact reason.

  • @chriskrisxtinct
    @chriskrisxtinct Před rokem +2

    When data is being transmitted, it is done in its smallest form, bits (1s & 0s). So ISP advertise bps (bits per second) to indicate their network transfer speed (rate). Bytes are more used to represent storage sizes.

  • @Vikval5329
    @Vikval5329 Před rokem +1

    Very usefull information. Thank you!

  • @unicorn_tamer
    @unicorn_tamer Před rokem +2

    I 've been working with computers for the past three years and there were still a few things I wasn't aware of!

  • @majorbuzz
    @majorbuzz Před rokem +3

    I called my ISP that bought the local region of the internet provider that I have used for 20 years to see if I could get the bill for my 100 MB or Mb, whatever it is😂 internet service lowered. The response was to try to sell me twice my current speed for half of what I was paying. For 2 years. Then WHAM !I educated them on what gaming uses just as you explained. I have a dozen devices on my network and never has the internet speed been an issue. I advocate for my friends because many of them are bought by the ads but never do the research.

  • @electricerger
    @electricerger Před rokem +1

    Salesman: This thing can have so many Megabits per second.
    Me, an intellectual: But how many baud

  • @larryfontenot9018
    @larryfontenot9018 Před rokem +2

    Something that wasn't quite correct was when he talked about web site privacy and said that deleting browsing data on your end doesn't affect data collection for the site. That's true of statistical data, but untrue of personal data. The idea of collecting data or having private accounts for a web site goes back very early in the history of the world wide web. It was realized that if you have to collect browsing data or account information for potentially millions of individuals, even if it was only a few kilobytes apiece that was going to start taking up more storage space than a national library, which in turn would be expensive to set up and take up real-world physical space too for the servers.
    So the "cookie" was invented as a solution, and it worked so well that it's still being used and has expanded in function. A cookie is a data file that the site creates and stores on _your_ computer instead of the company's. By having data, tracking and login information stored on the user's system, it saves the site owner tons of money and storage space.
    Software that cleans up cookies and your web browser's data cache does indeed affect the site owner's ability to mine data other than statistics on how their site is being used. It affects their ability to track your use of their web sites and direct advertising at you because all of that information is stored in cookies, and cleaning out the browser cache means that if you go back, the entire web site has to be re-downloaded because you've deleted all of the data your browser got from that site before.
    In short, privacy software can make a big difference. What you won't delete is your account, IP address and generic statistical information the site gets about how it's being used. But specific information like "I just logged in to look at lawn mowers on Amazon" can be removed.

  • @nntvog86
    @nntvog86 Před rokem +1

    Data transmission from the inception has always been using bits / megabits since it doesn't know what data type it is transmitting and only cares about actual throughput.
    Data storage uses bytes / megabytes since one byte is one character so to give a sense of how big the file is (how many letters it contains).

  • @4WheelerinMiami
    @4WheelerinMiami Před rokem +1

    Thanks ThioJoe for the info.

  • @danman32
    @danman32 Před rokem +3

    The probable main reason network (including internet) is in bits is because it is serial rather than parallel. You might have noticed that SATA is rated in bits, not bytes. Why? Because the S in SATA is for serial.
    Remember modems you'd connect to your phone? Yep, serial and rated in bits. OK, technically baud which doesn't necessarily equate to bits but usually does.

  • @doomanime61
    @doomanime61 Před rokem

    Thio is the best at 10 things I didn't knew

  • @Ideas1003
    @Ideas1003 Před rokem +1

    Thank you very much for the nice topic

  • @richerDiLefto
    @richerDiLefto Před rokem +3

    The World Web Web not being the same thing as the Internet is literally one of the first facts they tell you in the most basic of HTML classes.

    • @hugofontes5708
      @hugofontes5708 Před rokem

      A shame browsers and computers don't come with those anymore

    • @dk14929
      @dk14929 Před rokem

      @@hugofontes5708 computers used to come with HTML classes?

    • @hugofontes5708
      @hugofontes5708 Před rokem

      @@dk14929 not exactly but that's kind of the joke

    • @rizkyadiyanto7922
      @rizkyadiyanto7922 Před 10 měsíci

      world web web

  • @MFLP1998
    @MFLP1998 Před rokem +4

    What about clicking links and downloading stuff through a virtual computer? Or even on windows sandbox? Arent't they able to attack personal stuff if the connection goes through the own wifi?

    • @slxdy
      @slxdy Před rokem +6

      VMs will only protect your host machine from malware attacks. If you use your VM just like your host machine and give it all your data, your data is pretty much as vulnerable as the data you provided on your host machine

  • @marknrogers
    @marknrogers Před rokem +2

    Thanks. I learned some things!

  • @htwingnut
    @htwingnut Před rokem +4

    MBytes vs Mbits makes sense to me. Raw data is in bits. Although part of it is fault of Microsoft. Considering Microsoft continues to use SI metric decimal prefixes (MB, GB, TB, etc) for binary values (which should be MiB, GiB, TiB, etc). If you display BITS per second you can convert however you like to Gigabyte or Gibibyte.

  • @Enygmate
    @Enygmate Před rokem +2

    3:10
    I wish everyone used the same system we do in France, because a byte is technically referred to as an octet. So we use mo for MB and mb for mb, that way it's much easier to understand the difference without relying on capitalization.

    • @MrJest2
      @MrJest2 Před rokem +1

      That's actually a good idea, and it's logical. The "bit" and "byte" terminology came from early mostly English speaking programmers being kind of silly in their terminology, as people often do. But "octet" (eight of something) makes more rational sense to anyone learning from a Latin-based language perspective. It is, perhaps sadly, highly unlikely to ever spread out further than France and French-speaking countries.

    • @hugofontes5708
      @hugofontes5708 Před rokem +1

      ​@@MrJest2 this has me wondering why they still call bits "bits". But anyway, any programmer knows that puns are more important than clarity so bits and bytes it is, rip nibbles though

    • @kypdurron
      @kypdurron Před rokem

      @@MrJest2 Octet is actually an English noun, it has a definition on wikipedia for computing or for a music band of 8 people.

  • @drewo.127
    @drewo.127 Před 11 měsíci

    Thank you so much for explaining this part: 9:28
    I’m glad that even though social media websites provide users the tools to upload and share anything they want, that doesn’t mean that those companies are now the owners of everything you post! (And saying that out loud, already sounds a bit too crazy even for sites like Google, CZcams, and even Meta/Facebook!) CZcams (and most sites) just have a royalty-free license to use your content, (text, videos, whatever) however they want, but that includes literally just allowing you to post on their site, and have your post visible on your account, on their site! BUT that does not really mean they are like Disney or the like, where you (supposedly) sign the rights away to your projects and stuff. (Although I think that’s where contract negotiation comes in? I’m not sure…)
    I’m glad to know that technically I not only retain ownership of all my post history and videos and stuff on all my accounts, but that technically, the nanosecond I create something, I own the rights to it!
    Granted, an actual registered copyright is more secure, but from what you said, it sounds like you don’t really need to worry too much about going to copyright offices and register copyrights on everything you literally make and share online! (That’s just a lot of stress that I can’t bother with right now anyway!😅)

  • @fundominant
    @fundominant Před rokem +1

    so switch on VPN and access through Tor browser?

  • @13thravenpurple94
    @13thravenpurple94 Před rokem +1

    Great video THank you

  • @Lampe2020
    @Lampe2020 Před rokem +2

    9:14 I usually just notice that Firefox updates when I open a new tab after a background update happens because it shows me "Du måste starta om Firefox för att installera uppdateringen" (or YT breaks because Firefox refuses YT access to change to the next page URL).

  • @TheSanpletext
    @TheSanpletext Před rokem +3

    I have 1000M down speeds, it's 25€/month (unlimited data). Cheapest was like 18€ 300M. I think I can spare that 7€ extra even 'tho it doesn't actually make that huge of a difference.

    • @RolandHazoto
      @RolandHazoto Před rokem +1

      for a lot of major ISPs here in the States that difference in speed would be a cost difference of at least $40 USD. I don't think I've seen a Gigabit plan in the US for less than $70, but a 300Mb could be as little as like $30.

    • @CONTINUUM2
      @CONTINUUM2 Před rokem

      1 Gbps, unlimited data. So funny if give you limited data, let's say: 1oo MB/month. 😂😂😂😂😂🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @WyattOShea
      @WyattOShea Před rokem

      I have gigabit down but only 50mbps up (thanks Australia) but man is it expensive at $149 a month. Why do we have to pay so fkn much when people in the EU seem to pay basically nothing a month lol

  • @AdmiralADD
    @AdmiralADD Před rokem +2

    Im wondering about the interaction between Tor and a decent VPN. Would the VPN routing end up circumventing the nature of Tor making you “less secure” than using just Tor? How about vice versa? Or would it be more akin to nested protection making your activity more difficult than either of the others on their own?

  • @panzerofthelake4460
    @panzerofthelake4460 Před rokem +1

    What about connecting to tor via a VPN? does that work?

  • @akashmihir84
    @akashmihir84 Před rokem +1

    Streaming zoom meetings in IMax 😂😂😂

  • @TheTNTer
    @TheTNTer Před rokem

    me: buys stuff in incognito
    also me: so you see, i never bought anything because all trace of it has been deleted!
    the confirmation email:

  • @VALVEgamesENJOYER.
    @VALVEgamesENJOYER. Před rokem +2

    What hapend if the windows folder is
    reamed?

  • @joshuaanothereraseddad

    Great video sir! I actually felt not dumb regarding some common misused/misunderstood tech terms. The funniest "bit" was when you hit on the: higher bandwith equals everything faster, nonsense. I'm watching this video with no problem on prepaid Comcast internet with 5 other devices connected. Never had any problems with normal internet surfing and video watching. So, there is that.

  • @legendofphil
    @legendofphil Před rokem +1

    On my way home earlier today I actually saw a small van for a new local ISP offering 1GB fibre Internet. If it's true that would be some expensive equipment needed for it. Most consumer routers only take gigabit from the ONT.

    • @TjPhysicist
      @TjPhysicist Před 11 měsíci

      Nah. At least not anymore with the expensive. It's still true that most consumer equipment is Gbe (though that's changing with many motherboards having 2.5Gbe slots) gigabit Internet is popular here. And the rentals on equipment is not much more expensive than it used to be. Over gigabit though, it's only useful if you say living with a bunch of people who all want gigabit to their computer and a bunch of wifi6e devices (can easily get 800-1200Mbps in real world situations). And as I said 2.5Gbe is getting to the point of being affordable if a little on the expensive side. Honestly it's mostly for multiple heavy users like when I was sharing a home with 5 buddies at uni.
      I personally wired my entire home for 10Gbe with 2.5Gbe Wi-Fi (half duplex. Obviously) and to my desktop. It's entirely useless even if I did get the 5Gb plan from Bell Canada tbh, cuz it's just me. I get gigabit both ways now for $50 flat. (And it really is gigabit, real world download speeds, even over WiFi)
      With the multigig stuff, you get an ont+router+6e AP box with the plan, which is a bit too expensive unless it's multiple people ($150+ iirc). The 6e can get you gigabit plus WiFi and the router has a few gigabit ports to connect multiple gigabit devices and iirc at least one 10Gbe port

  • @rekire___
    @rekire___ Před rokem +6

    I can't believe you missed the most most important myth on the internet.
    _There is no girl, there is always and only dude_

    • @misophoniq
      @misophoniq Před rokem +2

      There ARE girls on the internet, but not the ones that always happen to live 5 minutes away from you, feel lonely and are in for anything. ;-)

  • @BstarBme
    @BstarBme Před rokem +2

    You missed one about internet service. If you have a 100 Mbps device and you download something. It will peg you bandwidth in task manager, but it will only show 10 Mbps in steam or epic. No one really has explained this which I'm sure has people scratching their heads.

  • @juanrestrepo7973
    @juanrestrepo7973 Před rokem

    So I have a huge question... When you log in on chrome to sync. That means no matter what I do I'm being tracked by google?

  • @anmarams
    @anmarams Před rokem

    You always remind me of the good guy from super bad movie 😂

  • @RemthangpuiaKhiangte
    @RemthangpuiaKhiangte Před rokem

    We need part 2

  • @mariandyp.9801
    @mariandyp.9801 Před 11 měsíci

    Thank You Thio, very good information, so many misleading terms. Very educational.

  • @_SJ
    @_SJ Před rokem +6

    6:34 The way you said "over a gigabit" is so funny 😂

  • @jessen00001
    @jessen00001 Před rokem +2

    Thanks ❤🎉

  • @ahmedelmenshawy9513
    @ahmedelmenshawy9513 Před rokem +1

    Hello, I know what I wanna to ask about is off topic really, I have watched your link about " Here's Why USB Drives Disappear in Windows Sometimes (+ How to Fix) ", you really have explained lots of issues in that topic, except one I wanna ask about, there was couple " Removable Disk with No Media " in your video, and I have the same with my USB stick, so I wanna know if you can give solution about how to fix it, I already tried everything, my removable USB stick will work with certain devices like TV or Projector and it wont be shown on any PC, I really have tried all solutions, but the removable USB stick wont even work or let me do anything with it on PC, and it doesn't have any programs or anything except couple videos, and it's Lexar 128 GB - Jumbdrive S55 ... Thank you

  • @unitedfalls3001
    @unitedfalls3001 Před rokem

    This is the greatest video on the entire internet. I wake up I watch this video, I eat I watch this video, I drink I watch this video, I breath I watch this video, I fart I watch this video, I watch other youtube videos and I watch this video, I brush my teeth I watch this video, I close my eyes I watch this video, I sleep I watch this video, I die I watch this video. This is the video of videos, it is the greatest video of all time. I used to be a criminal, part of gang dealing crack. I used to fart while not being on the toliet and burp in public and have doodoo stains but after watching this video my entire life and my entire life perspective has completely shifted around and now I am a good non criminal person. This video is the greatest video on the entire youtube platform. I love this video I would do anything for this video I would die for this video. This video has completely changed my life, thank you for this video it has saved me from absolutely and utterly everything and anything this video has completely utterely changed my whole entire life from start to finish and not for the worse but for the better. Without this video I don’t even know if I would have two eyes. When I don’t watch this video I have one eye but when I watch this video I get two fully seeable eyes. This video is the video of videos. This is the greatest video that video had ever video’d video’erd on in the videotape recorded in iPhone video. This is THE VIDEO. This is the greatest video that thy eyes can see, thy ears can hear and thy mind can acknowledge. This video is so unbelievable good that when. I try to express its true goodness and sanctity I can’t in the English language. I would have to invent an entirely new language just for the level of awestruck and absolute amazement this video has grasped unto myself. This video is so great that it is indescribable to language, you would have to telecommunicate to even grasp the tip of the surface of how unbelievably glorious this video actually is. This video goes beyond all borders and surpasses all expectations even possibly literally imaginable to the world humans mind. This video has turned me from a drug addicted monkey to a fully matured grown human being, no other video on the planet is like this. This video has the secret of the universe and the secret of all knowledge. This video has all the secrets to life hidden inside of it. Such an unbelievably great awesome awestruck spectacular magnificent glorious videotape that no one can imagine how unbelievably great this video is. Please send this video to your mom, your dad, your brother, your sister, your moms aunt, your moms uncle, your dads aunt, your dads uncle, your grandmother, your grandfather, your wife, your son, your daughter, your sons wife, your daughter husband, your sons kid, your wifes kid, your pet ape, your pet monkey, your pet gorilla, your pet chimpanzee, your pet turtle, your pet tortoise, your pet cat, your pet dog, EVERYONE. Send this video to all your descedants and offspring. Spread this video across the earth across the mountains this video is so good. THIS VIDEO IS THE VIDEO OF VIDEOS, IT IS *THE* VIDEO. such an amazingly good video👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻❤❤❤❤❤❤
    I lied, not a good video 2/10

  • @STG24
    @STG24 Před 6 měsíci

    7:31 ok, that can be really useful, specially when you have a lot of people using the same internet, like my cousin's house, that almost always my cousins, my father's siblings and my grandma breaks the wifi connection completely, or at least when i visit them

  • @ecwnikos
    @ecwnikos Před rokem +1

    thank you

  • @streamtabulous
    @streamtabulous Před rokem +1

    web meetings in Imax hahahahaha

  • @abdumudi2
    @abdumudi2 Před rokem +3

    Yo, I need to learn more about internet :)

  • @gosnooky
    @gosnooky Před rokem +1

    The byte is the most discrete amount of data that can be stored, and the bit is the most discrete amount of data a network can measure, hence why network speeds are reflected in bits whether it's megabits or just bits (e.g. 9600 baud in the olden days)

  • @XtomJamesExtra
    @XtomJamesExtra Před rokem +5

    Higher Bandwidth means everything is faster: He's not wrong, but also not right either. This is complicated so stay with me; bandwidth is measure of not just the speed at which something is loaded, but latency. Lower tier internet connections tend to have low upload speeds relative to download speeds, and these speeds are determined between point of origin and the ISP's server. The speed between the ISP's server and any remote server hosting a site, game, etc for your service isn't determined by the download speed but the upload speed from you to the ISP's server and then downstream to the remote server you're accessing. The slower the uploaded speed the greater the latency. You could have a 1 gbps download asymmetric connection with 1 mbps upload speed, and you'll never see more than 1 mbps download from the remote server you're accessing. Higher bandwidth connections are far more likely to have symmetric download upload, especially considering that higher bandwidth connections tend to be fiber optic lines and there's no point in limiting the upload speed. This translates to lower latency and faster ping, which translates to your connection to a server gaining priority over higher latency connections. This is how network shaping works within the TCP/IP instruction set. Lower latency connections gain priority because they can be served information faster than high latency connections.
    To put this simply a symmetric internet connection that is 50 mbps down and up will have faster connectivity and populate more of your download bandwidth from any remote server vs an internet connection that is 100 mbps down and 10 mbps up.

    • @paulbarnett227
      @paulbarnett227 Před rokem

      Bandwidth /= latency.

    • @XtomJamesExtra
      @XtomJamesExtra Před rokem

      @@paulbarnett227 I never said it did, I said that latency is tied to upload speed and how fast the remote server Thinks your speed is.

    • @WyattOShea
      @WyattOShea Před rokem +1

      I'm on the highest speed tier available that isn't business grade internet in my country which only has 50mbps upload but 1000mbps download lol it's laughable that it's so slow on the upload but NBNco (Australia) won't change it because then there would be no incentive to businesses to have the business grade connection in their eyes 🙄. Oh it's also expensive too at $149 a month but it's cheap compared to a business grade connection which is like $399 minimum and even then you only get 1000 down 400 up for that price.

    • @stephenJpollei
      @stephenJpollei Před rokem

      bandwidth is not a good metric of latency. latency is the wall clock time it takes a packet to travel from source to destination. If you go from something slow like 56K modem to 2 Mbps then latency will improve greatly. A 1500 byte packet at 56k might take 226milliseconds just to transmit. At 2mbit, a 1500 byte packet might take around 6 milliseconds. So you can easily shave over 200 milliseconds just from the higher bandwidth. Going from 2mbit to 30mbit might shave off some more time, but round-trip-times between New York and London might be 90 milliseconds. Other factors like speed-of-light, queue/buffer wait times, routing decision time, etc start to matter more.
      An asymmetrical 1mbps up, 1gbps down... can certainly get more than 1 Mega-byte per second down. A tcp ack packet takes less bytes than a tcp packet full of data.... plus a tcp ack packet can and regularly does acknowledge more than one received data packet. I mean the asymmetrical connections have enabled fast downloads for decades.
      For tcp, lower latency doesn't necessarily mean lower throughput. There has been a lot of tuning for long fat pipes. During the initial stages, higher latency means higher round-trip-time, so it will take longer to get to max speed... but it should get there.
      If you just care about download then 10up/100down will perform better than 50up/50down. An ack packet can be maybe 60 to 120 bytes, so a ten-fold reduction is not an issue. Plus an ack packet can acknowledge more than one packet.... Again, asymmetrical connections have enabled fast downloads for decades.

    • @danatmonst3594
      @danatmonst3594 Před rokem +2

      @@WyattOShea Its shocking how far behind other countries our internet services are here. Not only is it expensive internet access, we also still have caps on our usage for most plans.

  • @barneybarney3982
    @barneybarney3982 Před rokem +1

    10:15 there is another reason, one file share in Czech republic got in trouble few years back because they ware saying that content you upload to them is now owned by them, if you gonna share or upload to fileshare something like child p0rn or other content from same category, Facebook or fileshare dont want to "own it".

  • @STG24
    @STG24 Před 6 měsíci

    6:48 yes, that's true, I mean, for almost all games, I play some online games and they even kick me for my low internet, so it's suspicious, but normally they use almost no network (but sometimes my pc even blocks use of network for no reason)

  • @jamiesworld1690
    @jamiesworld1690 Před rokem

    How u access tor or how u use tor

  • @ericvulgate
    @ericvulgate Před rokem +3

    I never grant extra permissions on apps.
    I don't need another tracker on me.

    • @MrJest2
      @MrJest2 Před rokem

      Hell, my cell phone (that my wife insisted I get "for emergencies") largely lives on my desk. I think I've installed two apps. Unless I'm traveling far from home without her - a rare occurrence - and she makes me take it with me, I don't use it. Some 30 years in the tech industry told me all I need to know about these "personal spy devices"... and most of the time if I do travel with it, it lives in my EMF-sealed center console box. The last time she wanted to use it to make an "emergency" communication with me, it didn't come through until 4 days later... because I was in an area with no cell coverage at all (Death Valley). I really have very little use for the thing...

  • @jrpeet
    @jrpeet Před rokem +1

    Really helpful

  • @overdev1993
    @overdev1993 Před rokem

    also another usecase for megabit/kilobit is video encoding like for livestreaming or in video editing software

  • @dannestrom
    @dannestrom Před rokem +10

    You explained the difference between MB (Megabyte) and Mb (Megabit), but many also write those as mb, which would be millibit. My favourite one is gb. I call it a gigglebit, because it's a laughable small amount, and of course gbps (gigglebits/s).

    • @TheOddLia
      @TheOddLia Před rokem

      I guess grammatically, yes, but “Millibits” don’t really exist (in a data context). That implies a thousandth of a bit, and you can’t have a fraction of a binary digit otherwise it’s not really binary.

    • @PexiTheBuilder
      @PexiTheBuilder Před rokem +3

      Size does matter, size of letter.

  • @TIPDYT
    @TIPDYT Před rokem +10

    You forgot the most common misconception. WiFi VS Interent

    • @mycelia_ow
      @mycelia_ow Před rokem +1

      That one is kinda obvious, though many people even don't understand that.

  • @DryPaperHammerBro
    @DryPaperHammerBro Před rokem

    2:33 Epic sample text

  • @jnsdroid
    @jnsdroid Před rokem

    My favorite internet myth is that it isn't just a series a tubes

  • @Provocateur3
    @Provocateur3 Před rokem +1

    At 4:00 you talk about bits v. bytes. To the 8:1 rule, what about other bit overhead? (Stop bits, parity bits, other overhead such as that associated with beginning & end of file, packet management) As a general rule would 10:1 be a better approximation?

    • @paulbarnett227
      @paulbarnett227 Před rokem

      Agreed, when overheads are taken into account 10:1 is what you see in practice.

    • @Provocateur3
      @Provocateur3 Před rokem

      @@paulbarnett227:
      Thanks.

    • @misophoniq
      @misophoniq Před rokem +1

      Stop bits, parity bits and other bits are still transmitted as bits. I'm pretty sure service providers don't care about how useful the actual bit is as long as they can advertise it as being transmitted.

  • @jomschristopherdelacruz5068

    Also make a video about
    Google Chrome vs. Tor Browser

  • @Michaelpalmer4k
    @Michaelpalmer4k Před rokem +1

    Speaking of higher bandwidth I've been on the fence about getting faster internet solely for faster downloading from steam.

    • @0bsmith0
      @0bsmith0 Před rokem +1

      It's awesome being able to download games or other software without waiting forever.

  • @BeIlG
    @BeIlG Před rokem

    These are GREAT common misconceptions that really do cost users and have been exploited! thank you!

  • @fostena
    @fostena Před rokem

    Recently I lent a 2TB Hard Disk to a friend of mine. Highest bandwidth transfer, ever

  • @Kratosordinson
    @Kratosordinson Před rokem

    Thanks for this informative video

  • @PiltdownSuperman
    @PiltdownSuperman Před rokem +1

    A concept I don't know is the difference between VPN and Proxy. Epic and Opera browsers have built-in proxies. Does the difference between those and VPNs even matter?

  • @user-tg7pi6lu6v
    @user-tg7pi6lu6v Před rokem +12

    for gaming your download speed doesnt matter at all, its all about the ping. the lower, the better.

    • @Carhill
      @Carhill Před rokem +4

      Latency and line attenuation.
      The only thing worse than being a fifth of a second behind the server is having every 3rd packet get lost on the way.

  • @TjPhysicist
    @TjPhysicist Před rokem

    7:08 wait, are you telling me you DON'T do zoom meetings in imax?
    Also: first time commenter so: hello, "fellow Tj"

  • @happieplantnl
    @happieplantnl Před rokem +1

    I've used 50mbps forever, we have some smart home stuff, and sometimes we stream in 2 devices at once. I download lots of stuff and game alot and I have never had slow internet when using ethernet!

  • @garymartin9777
    @garymartin9777 Před rokem

    One related comment about data rates. ISP's don't lie about the point-to-point data rate you subscribe to and pay for. A 100 Mbps connection really does send/receive each packet at that rate. However, ISP's do not advertise congestion speed reductions as they are variable and depend on instantaneous congestion on their network. For example, if you sail down an Interstate highway on-ramp at the speed limit (say 65 mph) but find congestion on the Interstate itself you must slow down. The speed limit is a certain value and on the short ramp to the highway you achieve it but the end-to-end speed is measured as much less.

  • @BobIoNix
    @BobIoNix Před rokem +1

    You missed the obvious one myth: FCC CE BIS etc standardized phones and computers, servers do not fail. This is so untrue, as someone who has almost exploded Nokia 2.1 phone battery and Compaq laptops with burnt usb ports, i know exactly how unreliable these standards are in this internet age. Please dwell some light on these cases too

  • @Alex_192.
    @Alex_192. Před 9 měsíci

    The reason why people think a secure connection means a trusted website is because when the connection isn’t secure it tells you not to enter any private information, which they think is because the website is malicious when it’s actually because an insecure connection means hackers can intercept it.