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Competitors Ally With Comcast In FCC P2P Filings

crocoduck writes "Right before the deadline passed for filing comments in the FCC investigation of Comcast's traffic-management practices, telecoms and other cable companies submitted a slew of comments defending Comcast's actions to the FCC. 'Just about every big phone company has filed a statement challenging the FCC's authority to deal with this problem. AT&T, Verizon, and Qwest all submitted lengthy remarks on February 13th, the last day for comments on the proceeding (parties can still reply to comments through the 28th). "The Internet marketplace remains fundamentally healthy, and the purported 'cure' could only make it sick," AT&T's filing declared. "At best, the network-management restrictions proposed by Free Press and others would inflict wasteful costs on broadband providers in the form of expensive and needless capacity upgrades — costs that would ultimately be passed through to end users, raise broadband prices across the board, and force ordinary broadband consumers to subsidize the bandwidth-hogging activities of a few."' P2P fans have also weighed in."

51 of 220 comments (clear)

  1. Needless? by MachineShedFred · · Score: 5, Interesting

    "expensive and needless capacity upgrades" which the US Taxpayers ALREADY PAID FOR THROUGH EXCISE FEES?!

    The telcos can eat a bag of dicks.

    --
    Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
  2. Needless capacity upgrades? by urcreepyneighbor · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The "capacity upgrades" are obviously needed if you're having problems with "the bandwidth-hogging activities of a few."

    Shut up, cut your salaries for a couple quarters, and invest in the goddamn infrastructure.

    --
    "The fight for freedom has only just begun." - Geert Wilders
    1. Re:Needless capacity upgrades? by msobkow · · Score: 4, Informative

      The United States has been falling behind on the capacity game for a long time now, so it only makes sense that the ISPs and telcos there are crying the blues about the need for upgrades. Had they been upgrading all the way along as other countries have, they wouldn't have the capacity shortfall that they do now.

      I deal with SaskTel as my ISP. We actually get the full use of the provisioned bandwidth as promised, with no filtering, traffic shaping, or other artificial impediments. The downside? My internet connection costs $45/month instead of $22 for the basic "DSL Lite" subscription.

      --
      I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
    2. Re:Needless capacity upgrades? by urcreepyneighbor · · Score: 4, Informative

      The downside? My internet connection costs $45/month instead of $22 for the basic "DSL Lite" subscription. Downside?! That's less than Comcast!
      --
      "The fight for freedom has only just begun." - Geert Wilders
  3. Yep by mikkelm · · Score: 4, Funny

    I've gotta go with AT&T on this one. Allowing people to use their connections without restrictions would create a need for needless capacity upgrades.

    1. Re:Yep by Belial6 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The same could be said about all those jerks that want graphics sent across their internet connections. Really what needs to be done is to get us back to only sending green screen updates. All that wasteful html traffic has just caused needless upgrades. If you need to consume more than a what a 1200 baud modem can offer, perhaps what you need is a dedicated line. Not a consumer internet connection.

      Look, it was no secret as to what Comcast was jumping into when they decided to get into the internet business. In fact it seems pretty obvious that they were quite clear on the fact that bandwidth would keep increasing to the point that people would just get their video directly from the source, instead of paying them to be a gatekeeper middleman. What they were hoping for was that they could use their monopoly power to stifle the internet so that their monopoly would not crumble in face of actual competition. So far they have been successful. Now that people are starting to cry foul, they are trying to pretend that they are the victims.

      It always amazes me how many people will defend someone who is clearly trying to screw them.

    2. Re:Yep by ChaosDiscord · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "I think this problem is indeed about the few people trying to max out their "unlimited" connections, and the rest of us paying for it."

      If they don't want people to think the connection is unlimited, maybe they should tell people about it up front. If they think that killing P2P connections during peak usage is a good idea for most people, maybe they should boldly tell their customers about this great feature instead of lying about it until confronted with evidence. They have shown themselves to be unworthy of trust. They deserve no sympathy.

    3. Re:Yep by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Wow. So much bullshit - so little time.

      That's ridiculous. About 10 years ago you could as an average person get at best a dial-up connection that might (theoretically) be able to download at up to 56kbps (actually 53). If you wanted a little better you could pay for ISDN. If you wanted better than that you could pay for a T1.

      Ok, that much is true. I had ISDN 10 years ago, and it was not real cheap. I paid $30/month, but with limited connection time (I don't remember my limit, but I never went over). Whenever I connected, though, I used the maximum bandwidth available. Why wouldn't I? I was charged by the minute.

      I know for a fact they were making a profit. Same old copper lines that had been in the ground since 1962, and I had to pay $100 for the connection!

      Today you can get a cable modem or DSL for not much more than you'd have paid for dial-up and probably less if you had a second phone line dedicated to your internet access. Technology advanced. The providers improved their infrastructure. Costs came down.

      No - this is bullshit. More bandwidth, sure. But it's more expensive, too, and we paid for it in myriad ways (check out the $200 Billion Ripoff for example). I could get dial up for $10 a month (yea, plus phone line). Now I pay like $55/month, and it would be $15 more if I also didn't buy their "cable TV" service.

      The sad fact is that what we have now is more or less what we can collectively afford. It's easy to point to more socialized states and say that a handful of them have faster internet connections. What you seem to fail to consider is that those faster connections were paid for. Most likely it costs the average person in one of those states a lot more for their internet connection, they just don't see it as a separate internet bill. If they do get an internet bill it's not really reflecting the true cost of providing the service.

      This is speculative and complete bullshit. Just because other countries don't have schizophrenic policies ("it's a phone - no it's a data service - no it falls under this other rule") and corporations writing the laws so they favor their own monopolistic pricing doesn't mean they are subsidizing the costs. Those countries are just more *efficient*. The US is falling behind in data communication infrastructure - and it's not just anecdotal evidence that demonstrates it - it's a troubling trend.

      Comcast alone makes about $1.2 Billion dollars in profit a year. Billion with a "B". Not revenue - *PROFIT*. I think they're doing just fine - maybe they should invest in a little more infrastructure instead of bitching about having to keep up with demand.

      I'm no socialist - but Internet infrastructure needs to be either regulated or state supported. It's too critical to be left to these corporations that just want to slow everybody down!! If there was real competition, it might work to motivate these guys to make their customers happy. But there's not, so it doesn't.

      If you can live with forcing everyone to pay several times what they're paying now for internet access we can do this too. But don't sit there and spout that we could do better without pointing out that it does actually cost more to do so. I personally find that my cable modem is fast enough and I don't want to pay more than I do per month. I especially don't want to have the money effectively hidden in a bunch of federal budget documents.

      As if... Look - this is critical infrastructure we are talking about. Everybody says that when they talk about "security measures" to make sure anybody that tries to cut a trunk line will get put under the ground for the rest of their lives. But we have these clowns running it that think it's okay to just put the brakes on innovation and new business models and growth of the economy so they can squeeze more profit out of the infrastructure that really needs constant upgrades.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    4. Re:Yep by ScrewMaster · · Score: 2, Interesting

      But it's more expensive, too, and we paid for it in myriad ways (check out the $200 Billion Ripoff for example)

      I tend to agree with you, but that 200 xtra-large was pretty much all you had to mention. They have the funds, or did (I'd very much like to know where they went, that's a metric fuckton of money), they just don't want to spend them on us. Of course, that's pretty much what you get with the likes of Brian "You can squeeze blood from a stone!" Robertson and Edward J. "Those are my pipes!" Whitacre. Humanoid leeches, that's what they are.

      Obviously, throwing vast quantities of taxpayer dollars at big societal problems doesn't work with people like this running the show (just look at the education system in the U.S., it's in equally sad shape, and for much the same reason.) I'm not really sure where we go from here: it's hard to legislate ethics. In the past, the Feds tightly regulated telecommunications in order to assure quality of service, etc. The problem is, the Feds can no longer be trusted to make good decisions in that regard, any more the telecom providers themselves can.

      It's a bad situation, all the way around. I don't see any way out, frankly, other than the government passing some laws to encourage municipal broadband or otherwise get competition moving again. The odds of a corrupt Congress or FCC ever doing that are remote.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
  4. Why Did They Wait Until The Last Day? by Wandering+Wombat · · Score: 4, Funny

    That's what they get for throttling their own connections...

    --
    I like to place meaningful quotes in my sig, so people will know that I know what meaningful quotes are.
    1. Re:Why Did They Wait Until The Last Day? by Wandering+Wombat · · Score: 4, Informative

      Because they didn't want the public & think tanks to submit comments ripping apart or contesting their arguments.


      But... but...

      (parties can still reply to comments through the 28th).
      --
      I like to place meaningful quotes in my sig, so people will know that I know what meaningful quotes are.
    2. Re:Why Did They Wait Until The Last Day? by Alsee · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Filing on the last day is still quite effective for limiting the reporting and analysis and reply possibility to ten days, as opposed to a month and ten days.

      The longer you leave bullshit sitting on the kitchen table, the more chance for someone to notice the stench and loudly blame the guilty party for having the gall to bring it to the breakfast table.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  5. Western countries' telecoms seem crotchety by CRCulver · · Score: 4, Interesting

    In my experience in Eastern Europe, customers that heavily use bandwidth are the average customer. I know hardly a single household that doesn't massively download music and films. Nonetheless, the local ISPs can keep monthly fees down to what is even by local standards cheap, and people are increasingly getting fiber to their door. Funny how the U.S., that beacon of technological progress, is being outdone by some former Communist states.

    1. Re:Western countries' telecoms seem crotchety by grumpygrodyguy · · Score: 4, Informative

      In my experience in Eastern Europe, customers that heavily use bandwidth are the average customer. I know hardly a single household that doesn't massively download music and films. Nonetheless, the local ISPs can keep monthly fees down to what is even by local standards cheap, and people are increasingly getting fiber to their door. Funny how the U.S., that beacon of technological progress, is being outdone by some former Communist states.

      You're right, and it's not funny, it's sad.

      The US is falling more and more behind, while the telecoms have the gall to say things like:

      "The Internet marketplace remains fundamentally healthy, and the purported 'cure' could only make it sick," AT&T's filing declared. "At best, the network-management restrictions proposed by Free Press and others would inflict wasteful costs on broadband providers in the form of expensive and needless capacity upgrades".

      This is what happens when 'free market' monopolies are allowed to continue unchecked by a corrupt FCC.

      The money goes straight into shareholder's pockets, and almost nothing goes back into the network.

      --
      The government has a defect: it's potentially democratic. Corporations have no defect: they're pure tyrannies. -Chomsky
    2. Re:Western countries' telecoms seem crotchety by ardin,mcallister · · Score: 2, Funny

      I think if I met the decision makers at Comcast, I'd probably throttle them... so i guess that would work in the USA too

      --
      "Some men just want to watch the world burn..."
    3. Re:Western countries' telecoms seem crotchety by esocid · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm pretty sure subsidies aren't included in the free market model. That's what makes this a "free market." It isn't decided by competition. The FCC is another nail in the coffin in that "free market."

      --
      Absolute power corrupts absolutely. indymedia
    4. Re:Western countries' telecoms seem crotchety by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 2, Interesting

      In fact, the problems in California were caused (primarily) by strict, government-induced price controls -- not exactly a free-market practice.

      Which is why the price of electricity spiked as it crossed the California border from Oregon, even though Oregon had all it could use? Face it, that tired excuse has never been true. The price controls were ridiculously high.

      There is no free market in the U.S. -- there is only a greater or lesser degree of regulation.

      Yeah. But that's a GoodThing(tm).

      --
      Your ad here. Ask me how!
  6. i've said it before and i'll say it again... by lucky130 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If you can't provide the speeds you advertise, then don't advertise them.

  7. Lies, lies, lies. by Jaysyn · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Tagged: LiesAndLiars

    Seriously, if they were *just* throttling the connection, there wouldn't be a problem. They were basically "disconnecting" the file transfer. This is analogous to a telephone operator listening to your phone conversation & cutting you off if she doesn't like what you're talking about.

    --
    There is a war going on for your mind.
    1. Re:Lies, lies, lies. by NMagic · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Yes, you may have 2-3 options where you live for an isp. What if 2 of them do the same thing Comcast does, and the other is obscenely expensive? Most people don't even have 3 options. The point is, if Comcast is allowed this, what's to stop other isps? There's only more money to make, with less infrastructure costs. If this is allowed, then all telcos will follow suit, and we'll continue to fall behind other countries.

  8. Can't stop the signal, Mal by Duncan+Blackthorne · · Score: 4, Insightful

    IMHO broadband providers either have their heads in the sand, or they're just trying to delay the inevitable. In surveys I've read the United States is far from being the world leader in broadband internet connectivity in speed, price, availability, or even customer service -- and I think they all know that as well as anyone else does, too. P2P isn't going away anytime soon; as we speak developers are working on ways to rewrite the bittorrent protocol to get around the DDoS attacks that companies like Comcast are using to hamstring it's users. Beyond that, the reality is that we live in a country where more and more people are using the Internet for surfing, gaming, telephone, email, downloading (completely legal, paid-for) movies, and in some cases for live-streaming content; bandwidth demands aren't going to ever go down, they're only ever going to go up, and they (ISPs) damn well know that too. Perhaps this is just their first volleys in a war they want to start, with their preferred end-result being tiered pricing based on monthly bandwidth usage, but again I say they must have their heads in the sand because nobody is going to sit still for that, either.

  9. I don't think that word means what you think it... by Nemilar · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I don't think that word means what you think it means. "Needless" means unnecessary. Obviously, with more and more information going through the tubes, we NEED bigger tubes!

    People aren't going to stop transfering data over the internet just because the telecoms say so. The trend is towards larger files, faster downloads, and more data. We NEED more bandwidth. Just because you don't want to be bothered with upgrades, doesn't make the upgrades unnecessary.

    --
    Nemilar http://www.techthrob.com - Visit Me!
  10. Expensive and Needless? by wiggles · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So capacity upgrades are 'expensive and needless', eh? Is that why we're among the worst in the developed world for broadband speed and penetration? I don't know about anyone else, but I heard, "If our customers would only stop using our services, we wouldn't have to throttle them!"

    Maybe if they advertised lower peak speeds and limited their customers to those speeds and charged a premium for higher speeds, we wouldn't have this problem.

    1. Re:Expensive and Needless? by esocid · · Score: 3, Funny

      So capacity upgrades are 'expensive and needless', eh? Is that why we're among the worst in the developed world for broadband speed and penetration? I don't know about anyone else, but I heard, "If our customers would only stop using our services, we wouldn't have to throttle them!"
      Sorry, all I heard was penetration.
      --
      Absolute power corrupts absolutely. indymedia
  11. Watershed Moment by Stanistani · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The FCC faces this choice:

    Take a step towards unrestricted bandwidth, build a new economy based on the innovative development of new business models using this bandwidth as a utility.

    Or

    Allow the telecommunications oligopoly to produce a network ghetto, stove-piped and metered, and watch the US economy stagnate, and fall behind the rest of the developed world.

    1. Re:Watershed Moment by Smidge204 · · Score: 5, Funny

      watch the US economy stagnate, and fall behind the rest of the developed world

      This has already happened =( Hey! No spoilers... I'm still waiting for the download to finish!
      =Smidge=
    2. Re:Watershed Moment by cheater512 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      They are the ones advertising the connection as unlimited. Not our fault that we have a dictionary.

    3. Re:Watershed Moment by dkf · · Score: 2, Insightful

      When I pay for a service that claims 'unlimited' internet access, I'd say I've payed quite enough. Don't give me shit because *gasp* Comcast doesn't (or can't) give me what I payed for. To me, it seems like one of the roots of the problem is that Comcast et al are using false advertising. If there are caps, they should say so up front, before you pay anything. If they're blocking some services, they should say so up front, before you pay anything.

      The other problem is that the FCC seem to be a terrible regulator. A bigger display of craven grovelling in the general direction of those that are supposed to be regulated I've not seen since, well, ... Hmm, I can't think of anything right now that's not contemporaneous. Help me out here!
      --
      "Little does he know, but there is no 'I' in 'Idiot'!"
    4. Re:Watershed Moment by syzler · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Or put in a less inflammatory way, how preventing or slowing some P2P operations or otherwise using some QoS methods is going to cause any disastrous effect. Part of the problem I have in seeing it is I don't see the importance of the people having very high speed broadband.

      As the Internet becomes the delivery agent for more entertainment venues and other uses that have yet to be foreseen, implementing QoS becomes more questionable. Let's say a similar device to the AppleTV is created and released by a competitor to Apple. Let us also assume that Comcast is permitted to enforce QoS for various services. Comcast could then give preferential treatment for QoS to one content provider over another which puts Comcast in the position to either extort one or both companies or lock competitors out of the market (for Comcast subscribers).

      By allowing ISPs to implement QoS to limit some types of use, we are allowing ISPs to dictate how data services are used. Depending on how draconian they are about QoS, this could reduce innovation for data services which will then cause this part of the economy to stagnate.

      Right now we are mostly talking about movies, however in the future (maybe as little as 3-4 years) we may be talking about something a little more dear to you personally. Allowing them to do this to something you don't care about will set a precedence that will make it easier for them to do the same to something you hold dear later.

      Here are a few example uses that I see today that could be impacted:

      • Buying/Downloading Software Over the Internet (Omni Group, Parallels, GNU, BSDs, Linux Distros)
      • Telecommuting for office workers
      • VoIP and Video Communications
      • Home/Business Security Systems

      Rights and privileges lost are not easily obtained again.

    5. Re:Watershed Moment by mrchaotica · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The "root" of the problem is that the Internet is a shared resource and ISPs oversell their bandwidth to make money. The system isn't setup for users to utilize it full blast 24 hours a day. That is just the way it is.

      No, the root of the problem is that telcos were given taxpayer subsidies to improve the infrastructure, failed to do it, and aren't being forced to make good on their promise. And on top of that, the right-of-way monopolies they got as part of the deal are the only bits of regulation that are actually being enforced. They're getting all the benefits (from their perspective) of regulation (the locking-out of meaningful competition) without suffering any of the costs (requirement to serve the public interest), and we're getting the shaft! That's the fucking root of the problem!

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

  12. Duh by the4thdimension · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Seemed like this was inevitable. Kind of strange that they chose to wait till the last day. They have an obviously vested interest in supporting this motion. As noted, its cheaper for them to limit P2P traffic unwatched than to face the glaringly obvious issue of bandwidth. If they had taken the government up on a plan to upgrade the nations network infrastructure, this wouldn't even be an issue. We need some tech-nuts in the government to keep this kind of thing alive and stop letting companies clinch their fists around end-users. Internet should be regulated like any other utility(gas, water, electric).

    1. Re:Duh by t33jster · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It's not strange that they'd wait until the last minute to file their opinion. It gives the least amount of time possible for responses. Hurried and frantic responses from the masses sound quite similar to a hissy fit. If you don't believe me, keep reading the comments. The FCC has already been called corrupt. They're at least investigating the issue. If it turns out that the ruling is "nothing to see here, move along," then we can start complaining about it.

      The fact that the industry claims that the broadband market is "healthy" either indicates "not dead yet" = "healthy" or they're basing this on standards from 5-10 years ago.

      The problem we face is finding a viable solution. 'Net Nutrality' may or may not be the answer. Regulation seems to make sense, but with all of the utility deregulation in the past 10 years, it won't be easy to hang regulations on a utility that's not even legally considered a utility yet.

      That's it - we have 9 days to come up with a solution that ends with fiber to our doors and can't be outright rejected by ISPs. Get started, legalGeeks.

      --
      Take off every 'sig' for great justice.
  13. If I wanted AT&T's opinion... by jesdynf · · Score: 5, Funny

    I'd solicit it through illegal means and shield them with retroactive immunity.

    --
    Yahoo! Pipes are awesome. How awesome? http://pipes.yahoo.com/jesdynf/slashdot
  14. Unlimited comments by KillerCow · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The FCC should have stated that it would have accepted unlimited comments on the matter.

    After the comment period ended, they should have announced that certain comments were rejected because they were too long (beyond an arbitrary amount determined after the comment period) or contained too much legalese, since they didn't want to have make the other commenters "subsidize the [resource]-hogging activities of a few."

  15. Translation by Wildclaw · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Translations:

    marketplace remains fundamentally healthy, the non market driven place where the minimal competition allows us to dicate all the terms, remains a good place for us to squeeze money.

    and the purported 'cure' could only make it sick, the suggested changes would make it more difficult for us to squeeze money out of our customers.

    "At best, the network-management restrictions proposed by Free Press and others would inflict wasteful costs on broadband providers in the form of expensive and needless capacity upgrades The suggested changes would force us to spend money on upgrades, that we could avoid spending by capping everyone so much that they become unneeded.

    ordinary broadband consumers customers who hardly use the broadband they paid for.

    the bandwidth-hogging activities of a few. the activities that we advertise our services for, but that we don't want our customers to use.
  16. Comments on the matter by GodCandy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I would have joined in earlier but I was mitigating the tons of spam and other crap that filters through our company e-mail server daily.

    I don't agree with bandwidth shaping by isp's. I feel that I am paying them my hard earned money for my 10/1 connection and I should be able to receive that bandwidth when I want/need it. However having worked for a web hosting company I do realize how much bandwidth cost and how difficult it can be to get the proper peering where and when you need it. I can see why ISP's are filtering at this time (but still can't agree). I think that torrents and other peer to peer software has its use. Sometimes this use is illegal however who is the ISP to judge. I personally use a server at a hosting provider with a 100mb connection and unlimited bandwidth to download my torrent files (all legal linux distros and such of course). This keeps me from saturating my home ISP's bandwidth for days while I download a few gigs of data.

    I think that there is a big grey area that we are going to have to come to an agreement. I think that the end users who use more bandwidth should have to pay a premium and those who are more of a casual user who might actually utilize their connection 1 day a month for some software updates or to download some songs from iTunes should be allowed to do as they please. I personally always get the premium plan from the provider with the most available bandwidth knowing full well during peak hours I will not get anything close to what the claim I have. I think it's a loose loose situation and unfortunately we as consumers are going to loose financially.

  17. Its like this son... by GlobalColding · · Score: 5, Funny

    The "tubes" aren't limitless. If we dont cap their use, we will run out of Internets.

  18. A Bunch of Bull by iviagnus · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If the top 1% in the telecommunications industry weren't sucking the life (read money) out of their respective corporations, they'd have the funds to upgrade the networks when that need arises. If, as a consumer, I'm sold a 1.5Mbps/384Kbps package, I should have every right to utilize 100% or that bandwidth, 100% of the time. No exceptions. If the telecommunications industry can't deliver on that, they shouldn't be running a corporation. Businesses should be 100% liable for honesty and deliver 100% of advertized services. If I walked into any store in these United States, saw a package containing 50 items for $29.95, and after taking my money I find out the package now contains only 27 items, you can damn well bet I'm gonna be in the right to get back the difference. Every breathing soul on this planet would expect the same. Just because we're talking about electrons and not gumballs has absolutely NO bearing on what we as consumers should be getting. I would expect the other "players" to send in comments defending Comcasts practices. Each of them either already uses similar methods themselves or plans to, and they can see the writing on the wall. Here's some writing for AT&T, Verizon, and everyone other service provider that is "with" Comcast . . . "Eat my Dick Mother-Fuckers!"

  19. Another car ananolgy by esocid · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Time-Warner Cable's comment all but condemns P2P applications as "designed to consume all available bandwidth and, if left unchecked, will prevent consumers from continuing to access the wealth of content available over the Internet."
    So their solution is to hinder or completely block a technology or protocol because they aren't up with the times? So let me use another car analogy, since Comcast is fond of that one. They are saying that since everyone just got sportscars, we shouldn't pave the dirt roads but force most people to keep riding horses and allow only 30% of people to share these sportscars on the available paved roads at peak traffic hours.
    It's outrageous that they can say that with a straight face! This seems like a perfectly obvious sign that their infrastructure is in a serious need of an upgrade in order to maintain competition with the up-and-coming technologies that are being, or are already, released. This has me fuming.
    --
    Absolute power corrupts absolutely. indymedia
    1. Re:Another car ananolgy by Daniel+Wood · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Ya know, to be honest, I would have no problems with ISPs placing P2P protocols in the bulk category for QoS on their end. This would ensure that other traffic has priority and no one would really be affected that much. The problem I have with Comcast is the method they use to essentially block P2P by forging RST packets.

      Then again, I would be perfectly happy paying $100 a month for a 2/2 connection with no limitations. It would be much better than the $60/month I pay for a 5/512k with a 50GB cap($3/GB after), weekly outages, and rollercoaster pings(Gotta love having no other broadband provider available). I don't even use P2P (NNTP FTW).

    2. Re:Another car ananolgy by funaho · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Actually a better analogy would be that they're forcing all the sports cars to stay in first gear, and just to be sure they're throwing up fake stop signs every so often to slow down traffic flow.

  20. Selective throttling == CENSORSHIP by sd.fhasldff · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There's just no two ways about it. Throttling *selectively* is censorship.

    Comcast unilaterally decides that some content is good and some bad - and that should just plain be illegal.

    I know many are opposed, but I don't mind the actual *throttling* itself, if it were just protocol-neutral. I cannot accept, however, that Comcast gets to decide that I can't use the rated capacity of my line (you know, the number they tout in their PR) to download Ubuntu with a bittorrent client, while my neighbor can max out his identical connection downloading movies over HTTP or FTP.

    (And, no, the actual *content* shouldn't matter either, of course, that's just a feeble attempt at highlighting the inherent stupidity of the method).

    Requiring an ISP to have enough capacity to enable ALL its customers to max out their connections would be monumentally wasteful, no question. However...

    What Comcast, and any other ISP should do, is actually tell you what you are buying, up front, so that it's possible to make an informed purchasing decision. E.g.:

    6Mbps down, 1Mbps up. Rated bandwidth available at least 90% of the time. Minimum bandwidth of1Mbps down, 256kbps up (except in case of equipment failure).

    The ISP can then throttle users with this connection in times of peak load, but still protocol (and content) neutral!

    If they wanted to get really advanced, they could give their users the ability to use some kind of QoS feature, so that e.g. a user could choose to prioritize http and ftp over, say, bittorrent. Or to prioritize whatever port #s the user's favorite multiplayer game uses, so that using the internet connection for other stuff introduces a minimum of lag on gaming.

    In any event, there's just no justification for saying that my downloading Ubuntu or whatever should be throttled in favor of some idiot streaming porn over HTTP. (OK, maybe if it's porn... bad example... you get my drift, though)

  21. Greedy toughing ... again! by NonCow · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Just rebadge this entire story: "Big mega-corp directors, disconnected from any social reality beyond their golf club, just want to stuff their pockets with our cash for minimal service in return. Regulators who attend the same golf club will legislate it and enforce it." Oh what a surprise.
    I give you the precedent: "let them eat cake".

  22. THERE'S A SIMPLE SOLUTION - used by interstates by electrictroy · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Some interstates in high traffic areas have run into similar problems as the ISPs - namely too many cars (packets) and not enough bandwidth. Here is how the interstates are dealing with the problem:

    (a) Customers can choose to be "capped" during high-traffic times (6-9am/3-6pm) and thus be slowed down to only 10 miles per hour.

    (b) Customers can choose to enter the Express Lane and get 65 mph travel, but at a cost of approximately $5 per day.

    How does this apply to ISPs?
    Simple - amend the contracts
    (it's allowed; read the print)

    (a) Customers can choose to pay ~$40 a month, but have their speed slow to 56k after they have exceeded some cap (say 100 gigabytes).

    (b) Customers can choose to "bypass" the 56k cap by paying an extra ~$40 via a pop-up window & credit card. Just like buying an express lane on I-95.

    In other words, the more you use, the more you pay.
    If you want an Express Lane on the interstate, pay up.
    If you want an "express lane" on the internet, pay up.

    That would be fair.

    --
    The government is not your daddy. Its purpose is not to raid middle-class neighbors' wallets and give it to you.
    1. Re:THERE'S A SIMPLE SOLUTION - used by interstates by hairyfeet · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Nice thought,but here is how it is more likely to go--$40=10Gb after that $1=1Gb.Never underestimate the greed of a teleco.If they have to go capped I can promise you thaat an unlimited account will be over $100,and even then "uncapped" will equal something like 80-100Gb.They will make sure that you don't get jack for less than $100.That way they can oversell their capacity that much more,while not bothering to upgrade anything.


      This is why the USA will soon be like the USSR after the fall of the wall.Already our bridges are falling apart,our schools are falling behind,and while the rest of the world upgrades their broadband infrastructure for the 21st century our answer is "cap everything".Unfortunately this is what happens when all the power is concentrated on Wall Street,because our "bigger profits this quarter at all costs!" attitude of our big corporations simply doesn't allow one to plan for anything more than 2 quarters ahead.


      As much as I hate Big Government,I simply don't see how things vital to our ability to compete like national highways and broadband infrastructure can be left in the hands of corporations that simply refuse to build the capacity we need for the 21st century.Just as VoIP is changing our phone service,many of these new broadband technologies will change the way we work, play and do commerce.Without the capacity to innovate we will simply be left behind. As usual my 03c(inflation,you know) YMMV.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    2. Re:THERE'S A SIMPLE SOLUTION - used by interstates by hairyfeet · · Score: 2, Informative
      Hey,if the competition actually got into a nice little download VS price competition,I'd be all for it.I'd just be worried that they'd get together "for the good of the country" and set really nice high prices.Not to mention there are WAY too many of us that have the choice of Company A or dialup.I had to move just to get cable,even though it was barely a block from my house to both the cable and DSL junction box,and in the dead center of town I have the choice of cable or less than 1Mb DSL.

      You are right that perfect competition is EXACTLY what we need,but in reality a large portion of the country is living under monopolies.And if you have only one provider in the area and they jack up the price thanks to caps what will you do? Go back to dialup? I doubt many of us living in towns with less than 30K people will ever see FIOS,and many of the rural states(such as mine)haven't had any real competition at all.I am sure that places like L.A. where there are multiple companies competing for your business it would work.But I'm afraid those of us living in small town America or under monopolies would just get screwed worse.And as someone who was on Sat for 6 years,please don't even consider that garbage broadband.At $100 a month(most expensive home plan they offer) I got 380Mb every 8 hours,and it became slower than dialup after that.If I could get decent DSL or FIOS I would,but there simply isn't any to be had.And I'm sure I'm not the only one in this situation.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    3. Re:THERE'S A SIMPLE SOLUTION - used by interstates by mrchaotica · · Score: 3, Interesting

      In a competitive environment where multiple choices exist...

      Sure, but the reality is exactly the opposite of that!

      Here's reality:

      • There is exactly one cable ISP. It is the same company that provides cable TV, and has a government-mandated monopoly on cable right-of-way. Where I live, it's Comcast.
      • There is exactly one DSL ISP. It is the same company that provides phone service, and has a government-mandated monopoly on phone line right-of-way. Where I live, it's the AT&T.
      • The cable ISP and DSL ISP collude to provide about the same speed for about the same price. Around here, that's $40/month for 6Mbps download (if your wire is brand new, in pristine condition, and there's nobody else connected to the same CMTS or DSLAM).
      • Satellite Internet doesn't count as broadband (because upload is via modem).
      • Cellular Internet is too expensive and slow, and always will be by its inherent nature.
      • Verizon FiOS doesn't exist. As far as I can tell, it's just a lie perpetuated by Verizon in order to keep the government from demanding all that taxpayer money (that was supposed to be used for upgrading the infrastructure) back.

      Non-broadband options, such as satellite and dialup, are entirely irrelevant -- unless, of course, you get a warm fuzzy feeling knowing that our situation is slightly better than some rural, 4th-world Hellhole where they've only recently decided that not shitting in the drinking water was a good idea. I, for one, think we ought to hold ourselves to higher standards than that!

      Besides, not even cable and DSL count as real broadband! Real broadband, like they have in Europe and (especially) Asia, is in the tens or even hundreds of Mbps range. What we've got here is lies and excuses caused by insufficient regulation of a decidedly non-free market!

      In reality, there are two solutions:

      • Force the telco and cableco monopolies to follow through with their promises by actually regulating them.
      • Entirely deregulate the industry, including removing all exclusive right-of-way agreements, and demand repayment of the billions of taxpayer dollars the industry has received in infrastructure subsidies over the years.
      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    4. Re:THERE'S A SIMPLE SOLUTION - used by interstates by BVis · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The reason I expect there to be one flat fee regardless of how much I use is THAT WAS HOW IT WAS REPRESENTED TO ME. If Comcast said to me when I went to buy their product "Oh, and we'll cap your service if we think you're using too much, and we'll kill the traffic we don't like, blah blah" then that would be different.

      The phone and electric companies make all of these terms available up front. Would I expect to pay the same amount for electricity that the big box store down the street does? Of course not. Nor would I expect to, since that isn't how it was sold to me. Would I expect to pay the same phone bill as my neighbor who uses the phone five times as much? Not if the terms of my phone service said otherwise.

      Comcast doesn't tell its customers what the terms are, it merely reserves the right to do whatever the fuck it wants to with your traffic. They should be held accountable for their false advertising, and be required to disclose what their practices are regarding 'overuse', so their customers can make informed decisions about their usage.

      The other problem is that I am 99% sure that Comcast wouldn't lower rates for the light users, it would keep them the same and hike up rates for users they arbitrarily define as 'heavy'. And since they have no competition to speak of, they will do so.

      --
      Never underestimate the power of stupid people in large groups.
  23. Amazing by alphastar · · Score: 3, Interesting

    This whole argument strikes me with this odd thought:

    Some Peer-to-Peer protocols (i.e., BitTorrent) were developed in order to take the burden of content distribution _away_ from the "dedicated server" (do reduce demand on bandwidth) and push it more on the users engaged in retrieving.

    Comcast and ilk seem to be arguing in favor of the _exact opposite_ of this point.

  24. Time to write some letters by sneakyimp · · Score: 2, Informative

    If you think this issue is important, you should write some letters. Today, I wrote both my Senators, my House Rep, the FCC, and my cable company. Personally, I am appalled at this douchebaggery. Someone else said it best: selective throttling is censorship. It is therefore a violation of the First Amendment. Also keep in mind that some would-be ISPs are the same folks offering illegal wiretaps. Lastly, as consumers we *must* demand better. I live in Los Angeles, one of the most urbanized areas in the United States and, in my neighborhood, Time Warner is my only viable option for high speed internet access. It's just plain wrong. We must demand better.

    Find your Senate rep here:
    http://www.senate.gov/

    Find your house rep here:
    http://www.house.gov/

    You can comment on the FCC proceedings here using proceeding numbers 07-52 and 08-7
    http://gullfoss2.fcc.gov/prod/ecfs/upload_v2.cgi

    I would highly encourage use of snail mail. It has greater impact when bags of mail arrive in somebody's office.

  25. Re:Santa Clause and the Tooth Fairy by mrchaotica · · Score: 2, Interesting

    ...they simply do not have the capacity to give everybody 16 Mbps sustained. It just isn't there. And it's not going to be there any time soon.

    Alright then, let me ask you this: then what the fuck have we been subsidizing them for (with taxpayer money and exclusive right-of-way agreements) over the past few decades?! They were supposed to be building out the fucking infrastructure to prevent this very problem!

    Now, you're about to spout some whiny bullshit about "but America is rural." Fine; I'm not saying that I expect everywhere to have decent service. But you know what? I live in a fucking big city -- within the city proper, not the suburbs -- and I can't get any better access than some bumpkin in Utah! What. The. FUCK?!!

    The telcos and cablecos are simply making excuses for their embezzlement of public subsidies. And that's just simply not acceptable!

    --

    "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz