I don't claim it's changed. I claim it carries a specific meaning today. Whether that meaning is compatible with a definition from 1994 or not is aside my point.
Your view is that is carrys a smaller meaning today then it used to, this isn't true, as with more technical terms is meaning has been broadened as the concept has been developed, P2P now also includes systems like folding@home and SETI@Home.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peer-to-peer
It verifies everything I've been saying. It even has two nifty little diagrams illustrating what I mean about how P2P is decentralized and stands in complete contrast to the centralized server-client model that driving millions of pirates to a handful of proxies would ultimately resemble.
Once again you don't know the difference between a centralized P2P Filesharing network and a decentralized one, a centralized one is simply one where all the peers connect to a central server to find out where the other peers are and what they have to share. A decentralized one doesn't have that single start point and isn't dependent on any of the servers.
Adding proxy servers or VPNs do no stop a system from being a Peer to Peer system, as only the route changes, and the route the information takes is not what makes a peer to peer system.
Peer - ADSL Modem - Internet Switch - Internet Switch - Internet Switch - ADSL Modem - Peer
Peer - ADSL Modem - Internet Switch - Internet Switch - Proxy Server - Internet Switch - Internet Switch - ADSL Modem - Peer
That what will happen, the proxy server becoming just another point in the chain of connections connecting you to the peer, also the number of proxy servers are extremely high and it will never end up with everyone using just the one server, not that that would accurately matter since a proxy server and a VPN are simply acting as a network switch, forwarding the data like your own route does. It doesn't change the data, the protocol nothing, it just forwards the data to the correct computer which is what every router and switch on the internet and in people home do anyway. If you have two people in your home download the same file on a file sharing system both computers will use your local router, by your definition that would mean your not using a P2P network.
Also to add, your definition would mean that every P2P network that crosses the seas isn't a peer to peer network, because all of the data has to be funnel down one of the few lines that cross say the Atlantic passing though common routers on ether side.
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