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> Many of the simulations showed that throttling without backoff was
> superior to throttling with backoff. Backoff is intended to prevent
> throttling from throttling the whole network down to nothing because of
> a small number of very slow nodes causing lots of failures when too many
> requests are routed to them.

Thanks for the answer.

I still am lost as to why all my connections are backed off. I have noticed 
that shutting
down everything but freenet makes the problem less. At least for a couple of 
hours after
start up. My CPU usage is at 100% all the time currently, so i think that it 
might be
because my node just doesn't comprehend what is being asked of it fast enough 
and
therefore it backs the peers off. This in turn creates the state where all the 
peers are
backed off and thus no place to rout through, something very weird begins to 
happen after
that, i am still looking for any correlation between what i've been doing and 
the node's
performance.

- --
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 "None of us are free until all of us are free."    ~ Mihail Bakunin
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