New Network Neutrality Squad — Users Protecting the Net
Lauren Weinstein writes in to announce the new "Network Neutrality Squad" — NNSquad. Joining PFIR Co-Founders Peter G. Neumann and Weinstein in this announcement are Vinton G. Cerf, Keith Dawson (Slashdot.org), David J. Farber (Carnegie Mellon University), Bob Frankston, Phil Karn (Qualcomm), David P. Reed, Paul Saffo, and Bruce Schneier (BT Counterpane). The Network Neutrality Squad ("NNSquad") is an open-membership, open-source effort, enlisting the Internet's users to help keep the Internet's operations fair and unhindered from unreasonable
restrictions. The project's focus includes detection, analysis, and incident reporting of any anticompetitive, discriminatory, or other
restrictive actions on the part of Internet service Providers (ISPs)
or affiliated entities, such as the blocking or disruptive manipulation of applications, protocols, transmissions, or bandwidth; or other similar behaviors not specifically requested by their customers.
We know it will suck.
Here's hoping this marks the beginning of the end for those against net neutrality.
Kdawson just earned karma to post at least 500 crappy stories, at least from my perspective.
It takes a man to suffer ignorance and smile
Be yourself no matter what they say
...awful name. I can't help but think of Geek Squad, and that doesn't make me happy.
Let us not become the evil that we deplore.
They certainly have some big names on the list. I hope that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts, and they're more effective at getting politicians to listen than they were when standing apart.
If Network Neutrality is legalized, it really means government regulation. The Internet regulated by the FTC/FCC, and we know how wonderful that won't be. Do we really think open market operations won't solve the issue? I mean if some ISP's are going to be double charging Google for access, I'm willing to bet Google can easily figure out a way around them.
Jesus saves souls and redeems them for valuable cash prizes
No. Different tiers of internet service are like having a first-class and business-class seating section. You pay for X downstream and Y upstream.
Net neutrality is like saying that the airline can't sell you a first-class ticket, and then bump you down to coach unless you win a bidding war with another guy in first-class after you're on the airplane.
It's not about how fast your general Internet service is... that already works the way you want.
It's about how fast the sites you're getting your content from are, based on how much they pay your ISP. Want to buy TV shows and movies from iTunes? Better hope they paid off your ISP, and if customers in general want good service, Apple would have to pay all of the ISPs. Want YouTube? Better hope they paid up. BitTorrent? Games? Good luck.
Net Neutrality does not mean that the ISP doesn't discriminate against you based on how much you pay. It also doesn't mean that the ISP can't give certain types of traffic higher priority. It does mean that the ISP can't discriminate against traffic based on what site the content is coming from, and I think it doesn't suck, and is very important to understand.
They could do this without govt legislation that won't get things right, or might protect the status quo, or be the wedge that lets govt impose content control.
Report, publisize and let the end users make a fuss when their service is compromized. They can also tout open ISPs and let market forces do the jobs. Sounds like a win-win and much better than waiting for a govt solution that will end up being a pandora's box of unwanted laws that will surely come with any neutrality legislation.
Net neutrality has nothing to do with your ability to buy a faster service from your ISP. It has to do with not allowing providers to prevent you from accessing certain sites or protocols.
The formation of this group is an excellent idea.
Once they start finding and pressuring individual ISPs found guilty of "non-neutral" behavior, it will create incentive for customers to leave that ISP and go to a competitor. Sometimes there won't be a competitor, such as in many rural areas.
The logical progression is to encourage consumers to form their own local groups and move to community-owned Internet access. This new NNSquad should expand their mandate to provide resources that help and encourage communities to achieve network independence.
They can sit on lawnchairs, protecting the BGPs.
I think it's more like the airline charging the receiving hotel to take you. If they don't pay to get you off the plane, you sit there for eight hours.
Not a sentence!
... the word "Squad" like this it makes me think of the Gestapo and Vigilantly groups rather than honest organizations.
Saw some Evangelical Christians once with T-Shirts once that had "God Squad" written on them, brought to mind the same thing.
I don't think you can neatly separate out "good" and "bad" behaviors like this.
What if one customer "requests" that another customer's internet performance be hindered? Is that OK or not? Suppose the request comes about by the first customer hogging more than his share of bandwidth? Is that OK or not? Suppose an ISP provides special low latency connections optimized for VOIP? Is that OK or not? Suppose they slow down large downloads? Is that OK or not?
There are a million gray areas and it's only going to get worse as the net becomes more complex and more integrated into our lives. When the world is covered with a grid of network nodes every meter, when we are online 100% of the time everywhere we go, we are going to need a network infrastructure which is flexible and smart. It's absurd to imagine a bunch of graybeard holdovers from the 1980s delivering rulings saying that somebody violated the rules because he gave this packet priority over that one.
Luckily I doubt this effort is going to go anywhere. Nobody cares what these guys think. The net has moved beyond them.
I think you guys need to read up on the topic. Teired service is NOT like your first class/economy example, though it may head that way eventually.
ok heres the deal. AT&T is mad because Google is making money off selling ads to THEIR users without writing a check to AT&T. the users paid for their access, as did google, but AT&T wants to double-dip, and charge Google for access to THEIR subscribers.
so lets say AT&T and Yahoo! entered into an agreement whereby Yahoo would be the default search provider for AT&T networks. AT&T could then degrade or eliminate traffic to google, in an attempt to sway user preference. would you keep going to google if it took 35 seconds to load, while yahoo comes up at lightspeed?
Teired service comes in two flavors. one is paid for by web providors, the other by customers.
1) Google pays AT&T for perfered access to THEIR customers. google would have to pay off every ISP nation wide if that were the approach.
2) create user packages where the user would pay extra for access to sites that AT&T does not have deals with. For $19.95 you get yahoo, and email. for 29.95 you can get google (but not any of the sites linked therein), and for 59.95 you can get access to the internets 200 most popular sites. full access to the internet available for $.20 per site hit. be sure not to hit reload...
neither gives you any more than you have today, all it does is take away. I pay my bill. if that isn;t enough for them, then they either need to raise their prices, or live with it.
I heard Tim Berners-lee came down on the anti side of NN. I read his arguments and while they are valid from a network engineers perspective, he's completely missing the consumer protection aspect, which is the whole reason the rest of us are discussing NN.
I am not a commodity that AT&T can buy and sell. if AT&T wants to charge companies for access to AT&T subscribers, then they owe us subscribers a check, not the other way around.
Their website (nnsquad.org) is awful. I know it's probably up there to be clean and simple, maybe even temporary, but it's hard to read and involves too much scrolling.
Divulging information about "blocking or disruptive manipulation of applications, protocols, transmissions, or bandwidth; or other similar behaviors not specifically requested by their customers." on a forum is flaky and tacky. Am I supposed to use the forum's search facilities to see if my information is already on their? Get real.
It's a nice idea, and one I'll keep an eye on, even submit information to, but make it usable and readble first.
1. Global warming impacts
2. Poverty in my country
3. Iraq war
4. Profit?
~ In Trust, We Trust ~
...or something that evokes the Internet Protocol.
People need to be reminded of what the ISP's role is: The offer Layer 3 service in the form of IP. Muck around with the protocols above that and you've not only stepped outside the bounds of an ISP, but are guilty of false advertising and data falsification.
I wonder if the big telecoms realize how badly they will be entrenched in cyber-guerrilla warfare with people like you and me if they somehow pull off grasping control of the net. It would be nice and a hell of a lot of fun to have a fully morally justifiable reason to engage in offensive action against the people trying to control information. I just imagine a Thermopylae style engagement between the two sides, and it sends shivers down my spine when I think about what we are actually trying to defend.
It's like saying everybody must fly coach, and nobody should be able to offer first-class or business-class seating.
It's a bit more like this...
Thankyou for flying coach-air, and welcome to coach-France. Since you didn't fly first-class, you may not visit the Eiffel Tower or the Louvre, but you may visit any of the fine attractions on this list of businesses that support our airline. Since you flew during our limited offer, you will be permitted to purchase three souveniers instead of the usual two. And remember, don't try to visit anyone you know in France--that would be a violation of the terms of service under which you flew. We hope you enjoy your visit to coach-France. If you'd like to upgrade your service in order to visit some of the finer attractions in France, your stewardess will be happy to help you make arrangements. Please have your credit cards ready, and remember, it's a violation of Federal law to visit attractions that do not comply with the terms of this airline service.
Its all great running around banging the drum and asking users to 'join the war on non-neutrality' but it's all for nothing if you cannot DETECT non-neutrality in the first place.
/. where someone was writing an application to detect non-neutrality... but it went quiet very quickly. Now the way I see it is that the list contains people that have the skills, or know the people who could write an application that could aid in the DETECTION of unfair practices from the ISP's.
I recall some discussion a while ago here on
The application could be used by the volunteers, and test the various protocols to various hosts (Skype, Google, youtube, TPB) and between the users themselves with various traffic (p2p, ping, tcp/ip, udp etc...) and see if any 'delay' occurs specific to one type of traffic. If it contained an automated reporting tool (OMG Tinfoil hat!!), then the aggregators could see trends across the various providers and not rely solely on one or two users. Of course you're entering a war of cat and mouse....
Before we can go accusing ISP's on non-neutrality, we need the tools to detect unfair play in the first place... anyone know of any?
Mod Parent Up. Very good example, it's not about getting better access, it's about getting access at all.
There are two kinds of fool One says 'This is old therefore good' Another says 'This is new therefore better'- Dean Ing
Bad Analogy here we come!
So say you pay top dollar to fly first class (i.e. you paid for a fast internet connection), but the company that provides the catering for the flight (i.e. nytimes.com) didnt pay top dollar to the airline (ISP) so you get an economy class meal.
The company that provides the in-flight entertainment though (myspace) did pay top dollar to the airline (ISP) so you get top class movies, sports etc on your flight.
The company that makes the seats for your flight (google) didnt pay top dollar to the airline (ISP) so you get a fold-out chair to sit on for your flight (except when it came to this google would hopefully tell the ISP to shove it and everyone on that airline/ISP gets to stand for the whole flight).
You see how that works now? no matter how much you want to pay doesnt affect the service you get.
Or it's like paying for Amtrak first class non-stop to Timbuktu and then being seated on a Greyhound bus that stops in Oswego first.
Or maybe it's like pay for a limo to the airport and a bus with only three wheels shows up at your door, and the driver is Otto from the Simpsons.
Or maybe it's like buying a twelve-speed bike and finding that only three gears work, and they shipped it with a banana seat and a shopping basket instead of the high-quality shock absorbers you paid for.
Where's bad analogy guy when you need him?
"Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
No, net neutrality is like saying that the airline kicks you off the plane because you are black, and the NAACP hasn't paid it's monthly extortion fee yet. You are given a stand-by ticket on the next flight, so you can't complain, because you weren't "blocked."
There are two issues which network neutrality avoids, which are only loosely related. Suppose ISP A calls up site S and says "your site's traffic will get low priority unless you pay us". Now, you might think that if site S wants fast Internet access, they should pay for it. The thing is, site S is already paying for fast access - to ISP B, which is ISP A's competitor. The first consequence of network neutrality is that you can't try to bill your competitors' customers. (In this case, ISP B would probably have grounds to sue.)
The second issue is false advertising. Customer C sees that an ISP is advertising x MB/s connections for y dollars, says "great, I'll be able to download z really fast!", and signs up. Then he finds out that he can't download z as fast as he thought, because BitTorrent/sftp/whatever is blocked or throttled. This is why people are angry at Comcast - it's not just that they throttle BitTorrent, it's that they lie and say they don't.
Network neutrality is actually a redundant rule, to ban things which already unlawful for different reasons.
"Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
No, it is like not allowing the airlines to charge both the passenger AND the city of Los Angeles for a ticket to Los Angels, CA. i.e. Net Neutrality would prevent ISPs from charging both the end user and the web site the end user goes to for access to that web site. ISPs would still be allowed to offer different speeds of service - coach class , business class, and first class. ISPs would still be allowed to ban specific protocols or usage patterns. Net Neutrality just means the ISP is not allowed to bill two different entities for the same service.
I really shouldn't have used someone else's email address for this account.
Or more like "Oh, you're traveling to Washington and staying at the *Ramada*? Well, that means we have to transfer you through Atlanta on the way there (I know, it's four extra hours; you'll miss your meeting? Oh well, should have thought of that before.) You see, Ramada didn't pay us to expedite travelers staying with them. If you were staying at Best Western, you could have had a direct flight."
Those who fail to understand communication protocols, are doomed to repeat them over port 80.
Support the Fair Tax. http://fairtax.org/
Promote peace, kill more bad guys.
From FairTax.org: The 16th Amendment was never ratified, not enough states voted in favor. America: Freedom To Fascism covered this, and more.
I come here for the love
Broadband is not in anyway related to the number of bits you can move in a given time. Its the opposite of baseband.
To you, maybe. To most of the world, the word is being used correctly.
Maybe you just need to deal with the idea that words may have *gasp* multiple meanings which may vary based on context! I know, shocking isn't it...
ISPs claim they need to end Net Neutrality because third-party websites (and pirate networks) are abusing their bandwidth. Don't let them fool us.
Conversely, some people have tried to use the free speech angle in order to defeat ISPs. I believe it is a mistake. Politicians read a letter about ISPs harming free speech, think "raging liberal", and promptly ignore it. That's counter-productive.
The ISPs' assault on Net Neutrality is not about costs. It is not about free speech. It is all about anti-competitive practices. ISPs don't want to let you download videos from iTunes or YouTube, because they have their own VOD services to prop up.
To save Net Neutrality, please focus on the anti-competitive angle in your letters to your Congressperson and Senators.
That web site is.....well.....It should be called "The Glorious People's Revolutionary Website for Network Neutrality".
The problem with quotes on the internet, is that nobody bothers to check their veracity. -- Abraham Lincoln
Let's drop all the bad analogies for a minute (pretend I'm new here) and actually look at the situation.
Net Neutrality is an issue I'm concerned with. However, the only information I get from the Net Neutrality camp seems to be "the-sky-is-falling" sensationalist propaganda. So while I want to support NN, my rational mind says "Hold the phone. This is just an ad-hominem rant, not a rational argument."
Say I'm a network operator. (I am, actually. I have more than one PC at home. And quite a few I'm in charge of at work. But let's also say I'm in the business of renting access to my network -- an "ISP" as we all say.) So I've got a bunch of subscribers paying me a fee for a connection my network. I've also got connections to other operators. Some of those are transit I pay for, some are peering agreements. My customers use those connections indirectly, of course.
Now let's say I'm looking at my traffic logs, and I see that a ton of traffic is going to and from YouTube. So much so that I have to buy more transit to operators connected closer to YouTube. So now I have a bigger bill. And that cost has to be covered (TANSTAAFL).
I could raise rates for my subscribers. Or I could say to YouTube, "Hey, guys, you're a hot ticket. If you give me some more money, I'll buy a faster pipe to you guys. If not, well, you're going to be stuck on an overloaded transit line."
While I do have concerns with the above scenario, it does not make me want to take to the streets with a torch and pitchfork. Can someone explain what is so evil in the above?
If you want to propose scenarios that involve abuse, censorship, wire-tapping, giant insect overlords, etc., that's fine, but please also address plain old business scenarios like the above.
dragonhawk@iname.microsoft.com
I do not like Microsoft. Remove them from my email address.
so according to you any moving of data modulating frequencies is broadband, disregarding the actual width of the spectrum available (wich in turn determines the amount of data that can be transmitted)? you realize that that is absurd, don't you?
entia non sunt multiplicanda praeter necessitatem
from the fifth amendment "nor be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law"
look at the events detailed in my sig. I guess microsoft is now "due process of law".
H.R. 1201 is supposed to require labeling and help prevent this, but it shouldn't be necessary if judges weren't deliberately ignoring the fifth amendment.
redundant laws have to be passed because if not, self interested parties will simply imply the original broader law did not apply to them. NOTE: there is a minimum wealth requirement of 100 million dollars to license this 99% effective legal tactic, thus the reason why the DMCA still stands.
VLC FOR MAC IS DYING! IF YOU DEVELOP, PLEASE SAVE IT!!
I sometimes wonder if "Network Privacy" might be a better thing to advocate than Network Neutrality. Right now, the attacks vs. Network Neutrality are silly made-up positions (e.g. "it's communism!", "so you hate QoS!?", etc.) that have people arguing against things no one actually advocates simply because there isn't a coherent position in opposition to Net Neutrality.
Network Privacy, however, would make it clear that what NN proponents are truly against is having their ISPs spy on them and try to degrade competing services in order to hinder free market competition using their government-granted monopoly powers, government funded lines, etc. And that's not some theoretical scenario, but rather exactly the sort of "revenue expansion" the big telcos announced that they are looking towards. Furthermore, it brings on board those who are disturbed by our government's wholesale, unwarranted monitoring of private online communications.
After all, you can't do the things those of us who support NN hate without spying on the user! You can't degrade their connection to Vonage in favor of your own VoIP service if you don't monitor whether or not they're connecting to Vonage (even if this is incidental to the degradation). The less they're allowed to spy on us, the fewer ways they can screw with our connection. And I think that's a good thing.
It's like saying everybody must fly coach, and nobody should be able to offer first-class or business-class seating.
No,
Net neutrality is like saying that the airline can't sell you a first-class ticket, and then bump you down to coach unless you win a bidding war with another guy in first-class after you're on the airplane.
No,
Net neutrality is like using a vacuum cleaner to pick up lawn clippings, while a dwarf follows behind you with a rake.
Aren't analogies helpful? Everyone always tries to come up with analogies to deal with things, but most of the time they are misleading and even manipulative. Everyone tries to find an analogy which makes their position look best.
I would say, instead, that issues should be analyzed from first principles. If net neutrality is good or bad, just say so, and say why. Don't say it's like a chicken with eyeglasses or a frog jumping out of a pot. That doesn't help.
Have you guys heard of the term Natural Monopoly? The telcom infrastructure is a classic example. I know everyone here on slashdot likes to think less regulation solves everything, but some cases require it. There is NO free market solution to this problem because there will never be enough competition, so we need the government to step in and protect the consumer. Otherwise, the monopolies (telcos) are free to go on limiting capacity, price gouging, and (just now) implementing packet filtering if they don't start getting kickbacks.
Many universities try to indoctrinate students, but the all-time champion in this category is surely the University of Delaware. With no guile at all the university has laid out a brutally specific program for "treatment" of incorrect attitudes of the 7,000 students in its residence halls. The program is close enough to North Korean brainwashing that students and professors have been making "made in North Korea" jokes about the plan. The Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE) has called for the program to be dismantled.
Residential assistants charged with imposing the "treatments" have undergone intensive training from the university. The training makes clear that white people are to be considered racists - at least those who have not yet undergone training and confessed their racism. The RAs have been taught that a "racist is one who is both privileged and socialized on the basis of race by a white supremacist (racist) system. The term applies to all white people (i.e., people of European descent) living in the United States, regardless of class, gender, religion, culture, or sexuality."
FIRE reports that the university's views "are forced on students through a comprehensive manipulation of the residence hall environment, from mandatory training sessions to 'sustainability' door decorations." Residents are pressured to promise at least a 20 percent reduction in their ecological footprint and to promise to work for a "oppressed" group. Students are required to attend training sessions, floor meetings and one-on-one sessions where RAs ask personal questions such as "When did you discover your sexual identity?". Students are pressured or required to accept an array of the university's approved views. In one training session, students had to announce their opinions on gay marriage. Those who did not approve of gay marriage were isolated and heavily pressured to change their opinion.
The indoctrination program pushes students to accept the university's ideas on politics, race, sex, sociology, moral philosophy and environmentalism. The training is run by Kathleen Kerr, director of residential life, who reportedly considers it a "cutting-edge" program that can be exported to other universities around the country. Residential assistants usually provide services to residents and have light duties, such as settling squabbles among students. Kerr and her program are more ambitious. She has been quoted as saying that the job of RAs is to educate the whole human being with a "curricular approach to residential education." In this curricular approach, students are required to report their thoughts and opinions. One professor says: "You have to confess what you believe to the RA." The RAs write reports to their superiors on student progress in cooperating with the "treatment."
The basic question about the program is how did they think they could ever get away with this? Most campus indoctrination is more subtle, with some wiggle room for fudging and deniability. This program implies a frightening level of righteousness and lack of awareness. But the RAs have begun to back away a step or two. After telling the students the program is mandatory, the RAs sent an email saying the sessions are actually voluntary.
----------------
In one-on-one sessions with RAs (Resident Assistants), University of Delaware students were questioned: "When did you discover your sexual identity?" In dorm meetings, they were pressured to pledge their allegiance to university-approved views on race, sexuality and environmentalism. When FIRE (Foundation for Individual Rights in Education) spotlighted the indoctrination, a university official defended the "free exchange of ideas." A few days later, the program was canceled.
How can academics talk about "critical thinking" while turning residence halls into reeducation camps? Well, they meant well. Everyone agrees they meant well. If only academics were capable of thinking critically about their own assumptions.
Thanks to FIRE's links to ResLife (Re
Putting a bunch of Jews in charge of protecting from censorship? Isn't that a bit like letting the fox guard the henhouse?
Tim Berners-Lee is pro net neutrality! In his own words:
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=2732548432852483380
Imagine the electricity company charging $.10/kWh for your lights, and $.20/kWh for your television.
Ridiculous, right? That's similar to what the ISP's are trying to do. They'd like to charge (for example) $1/GB for accessing comcast.com, and $15/GB for accessing google.com.
are they gonna ride around in a psychedelic painted heavily armed RV? filled with routers and other crap?
Wow, that's a great point. I hadn't considered that problem before--when you put it that way, NN begins to look not only appealing, but quite pressing as well. That's a rather grim picture of the future of the (NN-less) internet that you paint...
Another loud, annoying special interest group that will be beaten into irrelevancy by 2008. Film at 11.
Let's stop dilly-dallying and just change "-1: Overrated" to "-1: Disagree" or "-1: Doesn't Subscribe to Groupthink".
I was hoping they had a daemon we could volunteer to run.
All the daemons would create a mesh which would be used to measure ISPs speed automatically.
Any unfairness would be quickly spotted.
Who knows maybe the mesh could even be used to escape a limiting ISP?
First of all, thanks for starting with a clear explanation of what the problem is (AT&T pissed at google).
I worry about exactly how such a law would be written, however, if congress felt it had to act to preserve "net neutrality".
What should such a law say? What well-accepted principle should it be defending?
I don't think the issue is free speech. I think is has to do with government established infrastructure monopolies.
I would start by observing that certain companies were given the exclusive right to dig up the streets and lay fiber/cable or were given enormous subsidies to do so, and are therefore huge government established infrastructure monopolies.
If the government gave you the exclusive right to build infrastructure at huge taxpayer expense, then it is reasonable that you be required to operate in an open and non-discriminatory way. Imagine if power companies could charge different electricity rates to differnet companies/neighborhoods based on how much money they could afford to pay. Now THAT'S a principle everyone can agree on. I don't see what it has to do with free speech.
If however, your company built a private network without special government privilige and you sell services to the public (or you resell internet service and don't own the infrastructure) I see no reason why you shouldn't be able to offer internet connectivity that restricts which sites you can go to based on third party deals (say a hotel wants to prefer google as the search engine their guests can use so they block throttle yahoo and others and that google offsets the cost of the internet service at the hotel).
It's not that I want hotels to operate that way, it's that I think if some group of hotels tried to do that, it would be annoying enough that the hotels that didn't do that would get more customers.
In other words, I only see net neutrality as an issue when a monopoly on internet service exists. I only see that existing in the last mile because of cable companies being given exclusive right of way or other companies being given huge subsidies to build infrastructure.
and they're jousting at windmills. Dumb networks are inefficient. As QoS becomes more important, traffic shaping will become more prevalent. Trying to kill that will make the internet obsolete.
Without net neutrality, you can just sign up for Fox News' new ISP. Any attempt to read about poverty, war, or pollution will be redirected instantly to more positive stories.
The US free market: two halves of a government-granted duopoly are free to set the market price.
Their HTML is actually very clean and beutiful. The layout of the page on the otherhand could use some work.
Although I have no information on Google's specific use of services, I would suspect that Google (like many content providers) already does pay AT&T for "preferred" access to THEIR customers. It's called private peering, and it's used quite often to reduce delivery costs.
Private peering is essentially a contract between one content provider (e.g. Google) and one distributor (e.g. AT&T), whereby AT&T accepts to deliver the content for a lower price only to its own customers. It's different from regular transit, in that AT&T isn't just passing the content along to another provider (say Comcast) for delivery. Signing private-peering contracts with the major providers used by your customers is a way to drastically reduce costs of delivery, and also ensures a better QOS, as Service Level Agreements are easier to establish (you're not handing the content to someone who then hands it to someone else at which point you lose track of it; instead, you are handing it to someone who pledges to deliver it directly, and if it isn't delivered you know who to blame). In the sense that you get better reliability, you could call that "preferred" access.
Does it violate network neutrality? In the end, probably not considerably, even though - because you're more likely to be held accountable if you fail to deliver - it probably does increase reliability. However, content providers don't pay more by doing that, as on the contrary they do it to cut costs.
Network neutrality would be violated if AT&T were charging considerably different prices for different companies. I'm not sure how this is regulated, but given that private-peering is a contract between two entities, the prices probably do vary. But when it comes to regular transit delivery, I believe most network providers will charge the same rate to everyone.
Network neutrality generally implies that a customer has equal access to all websites for the same price, and that content distributors have equal access to all end-users (price may vary here, as transit costs differ depending on the customer's location).
This space up for sale.
None of those things are POSSIBLE unless they're snooping on your packets. If they can't peek inside them, they won't be able to favor advertisements over your email.
Will they have enough clout to do something about the rampant port blocking? After all, this is against the main things that the Internet was designed for.
Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
Please start here...
International list of "Bad ISPs" that throttle torrent protocols, and god knows what else...
http://www.azureuswiki.com/index.php/Bad_ISPs
Cheers,
ADeptus
No trees were killed in the making of this post; however, many trillions of electrons were horribly inconvenienced.
So I, as a network operator, am required to subsidize Joe Schmoe, by paying for fast pipes to his servers?
(I'm using definitions which suit my purposes a bit there, of course, but so are you with the "The forces of market competition have given way..." bit. (In a true laissez-faire free market, competition is all about survival of the richest. Which is why a pure free market is a bad idea. But I digress.))
Point being: TANSTAAFL. If a given site is pulling more traffic, someone has to pay for that. It can be subscribers directly. That means that nifty cable, DSL, or FiOS feed gets more expensive. Maybe it's $90/month now instead of $30 or whatever. Or the cost can be pushed on to the sites that are pulling the traffic. Google, Microsoft, et. al. have deep pockets and are willing to pay for fast pipes. Why should I, as an operator, be forced to turn them away? Is it just to protect the noble idea of the little guy in a big world?
Don't get me wrong, I've got nothing against the little guy. He often deserves to be protected. And depending on who you ask, one of the jobs of government is to protect those who cannot protect themselves. So maybe the government should be protecting Joe Schmoe for that reason. But let's call a spade a spade: This isn't about "neutrality", then, it's about market controls intended to keep big money from smothering the little guy. Right?
dragonhawk@iname.microsoft.com
I do not like Microsoft. Remove them from my email address.
Okay, so, in that case, "net neutrality" really means "universal pricing", i.e., legislative prohibition against first-degree price discrimination. That I can support with little reservation. However, I've seen quite a few different claims for what NN is (see other replies to my post), and not all of those claims match yours. I suspect it is a problem for NN that everyone has a different definition. It's hard to get behind a cause when nobody knows what it is.
dragonhawk@iname.microsoft.com
I do not like Microsoft. Remove them from my email address.
I sympathize with where you're coming from -- that the Internet should be this utopia, where access and information are free, and everyone is equal, and censorship is interpreted as damage, and so on. But we don't live in that world. Infrastructure is freaking expensive. Somebody's got to pay for it. Somebody always has, too. Back in the bad old days, Internet access was rare. You generally had to be associated with a university or other think-tank, and commercial use was prohibited. This is not a new idea.
We can also turn the money argument around. If I can afford it, why *shouldn't* I be able to pay extra to have my packets delivered first? Shall we outlaw FedEx, since it means big business can afford to have their mail delivered sooner?
The situation isn't as cut-and-dry as the propaganda would like us to believe.
dragonhawk@iname.microsoft.com
I do not like Microsoft. Remove them from my email address.
It's not anyone's *fault*. Where the heck did you get that?
You can't magic transit out of thin air. Somebody has to pay for it. The cost must be covered. This is a law of nature.
Let's turn it around: Say Google or Microsoft or even freaking Wikipedia comes to me and says, "Hey, we'd like to connect our fat pipe right into your core infrastructure, to give our end-users a better experience". They're essentially offering to pay me to give them better access. (They're paying in bandwidth, but it's the same scenario I originally proposed, just from the other direction. Just barter instead of cash.) Is that Net Neutral?
dragonhawk@iname.microsoft.com
I do not like Microsoft. Remove them from my email address.
Define "artificial". I assume you're thinking of a rate limit in a router somewhere. Okay. But what if I, as the evil operator, just put a low-capacity link on the router to YouTube or whoever. Is that "artificial"? If not, why wouldn't the evil operators just do that to get around the rule? If it *is* artificial, who is going to pay for the bigger transit tubes I need to buy?
Um, that's not how most IP networks work. You don't request bandwidth. I have routers, and I have transit links. Since it's a packet-switched network, traffic to or from YouTube makes its way across my mesh using whatever it can.
Is that what's being proposed? Wouldn't that situation self-correct, as YouTube would quickly stop paying their ISP, the evil ISP goes out of business, and some less-evil ISP gets YouTube's business instead. Right?
That really depends on what the users are paying for. Most of the time, they're paying to connect their PCs to AT&T's network. The idea is that AT&T's network is connected to other things the users want to access, but none of that is really spelled out. In the case of AT&T, it's *already* the case that other ISPs and hosting centers are paying AT&T for bandwidth. AT&T is a "tier 1" or "backbone" network operator. Everybody pays for the privilege of connecting to their network. So what you're describing is already happening, and has been since the 'net stopped being a government research project and went commercial.
Now, AT&T will have peering agreements with other tier 1 providers. AT&T needs to connect to MCI, and MCI needs to connect to AT&T. If the traffic exchange between the two is roughly equal, they will often decide to just connect each other for free, rather than paying each other equal amounts of money. It saves paperwork. But as soon as either party thinks they're not getting a good deal, they'll drop the peering agreement in a heartbeat.
I have no idea if AT&T is peering with Google or not, but if not, why shouldn't they be able to charge Google to connect to their network?
The Internet is not a sandwich, a taxi, an airplane, or any other bad analogy. The Internet is a group of inter-connected, autonomous networks. Please address that. If the only thing you can do is offer up bad analogies, then I'm afraid you're not going to convince me.
I suppose part of the confusion is, "What are you paying for when you pay your ISP?" You see, you can't really pay for "the Internet". The Internet doesn't exist as a tangible thing. It's an abstract concept. You can't route packets through an abstract concept. So how can we look at this? Are you paying for your ISP to connect to their network, with the hope/understanding that they have other customers/peers you happen to want to talk to? If so, those customers/peers still have to pay. Or maybe you're paying your ISP to deliver packets to a given destination (or as close as they can get them). Okay, but in that case, the other end has to pay to deliver their packets back to you. And you can't argue that you're paying for both directions, because believe me, Google's feeds are not free.
dragonhawk@iname.microsoft.com
I do not like Microsoft. Remove them from my email address.
Packet-switched networks are pretty much all concentrated very close to the point of subscribe connection. You're not paying for a pipe direct to Google. You're paying for a pipe to a DSLAM or CMTS or switch. Past that point, you're in a big mesh where everybody is mixed with everybody else. The inter-connections in that mesh are not equal to the aggregate of the subscriber "last mile" links. If they were, you'd essentially have the circuit-switched PSTN all over again. Do you really want to be paying thousands of dollars per month for leased lines?
If you want to talk contracts, go check your Terms of Service. Most ISP TOS's don't obligate them to do a damn thing. You're sure as hell not paying them to provide access to any particular destination.
dragonhawk@iname.microsoft.com
I do not like Microsoft. Remove them from my email address.
Sorry, but you already are a commodity. Just ask the credit reporting bureaus. They charge businesses for access to your private financial history. Hell they even charge you for access to your own information.
I think you're right and the users should be the ones getting paid. But, just like individuals, corporations can always be trusted to act in their own best interests before anyone else's. If they can benefit from it and get away with it you bet they'll do it. The solution is to put in place an equally powerful opposing force. That's going to be difficult.
Question everything
Pretty sure. I've been involved in network operations for 15+ years. I used to run a Fido BBS, back before the the days of the commercial Internet. I used to work for a small ISP and DSL CLEC reseller. I still participate in the ISP-Planet and NANOG lists. I'm presently the IT Manager for a small manufacturing company (~120 employees, ~70 computers, two Internet connections, and OpenVPN-based remote access).
How about you, since you bring it up? How are you qualified to comment on network operations?
5 Mbit/sec *to where*? How about I give you 5 Mbit/sec for $5/month? Sound like a good deal? Okay, what if that 5MB/sec is to a DSLAM with only a 56 Kbit/sec frame line for it's connectivity to my core router? Or what if it has a 5 MBit/sec link to my core, but there are 5000 other subscribers on it, too? You seem to think the Internet exists only as the subscriber loop.
dragonhawk@iname.microsoft.com
I do not like Microsoft. Remove them from my email address.
I absolutely agree that the present monopoly/oligopoly is extremely unhealthy for both the commercial and network operations aspects. However, it seems to be that the way to address that is to attack the problem. Don't try to keep coming up with new laws every time the big bells find a new way to be evil. Treat the disease, not the symptoms. There are various ways that could be done. Divestiture is one, but we've seen that didn't work too well in the long run. Structural separation seems like it might be viable and effective -- in situations where the ILECs truly couldn't interfere with the CLECs, things actually worked okay, for a little while, until the market melted down.
We can ask the government to regulate the business aspects of the monopoly providers, or we can ask the government to get involved in network operations. I think we're better off with the former.
dragonhawk@iname.microsoft.com
I do not like Microsoft. Remove them from my email address.
If you adjust your analogy slightly to include Best Western and the airline in question being owned by the same parent company you'd have it about as exactly as an analogy ever can.
I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.