Netflix Blinks, Will Pay Comcast For Network Access
We've mentioned several times the tension between giant streaming sources (especially Netflix), and ISPs (especially Comcast, especially given that it may merge with Time-Warner). Now, Marketwatch reports that Netflix has agreed to pay Comcast (amount undisclosed) for continued smooth access to Comcast's network customers, "a landmark agreement that could set a precedent for Netflix's dealings with other broadband providers, people familiar with the situation said." From the article:
"In exchange for payment, Netflix will get direct access to Comcast's broadband network, the people said. The multiyear deal comes just 10 days after Comcast agreed to buy Time Warner Cable TWC -0.79% Inc., which if approved would establish Comcast as by far the dominant provider of broadband in the U.S., serving 30 million households" I wonder how soon until ISPs' tiered pricing packages will become indistinguishable from those for cable TV, with grouped together services that vary not just in throughput or quality guarantees, but in what sites you can reach at each service level, or which sports teams are subject to a local blackout order.
They'd be receiving money from Sears when I drove my car to the mall.
Why do people accept this?
tone
Well there goes the Internet
Not long. The cable guys are, in this way, just like the Bellheads. They see their real moneymaker as these blasted tiered services (never mind their historical roots in equipment limitations). Soon you will probably have to buy the Disney package to be able to get the Google package to be able to get slashdot.
What I think of the judges that thought this was a good idea is not fit for slashdot, much less polite company.
There's no reason for private companies to profit off the basic requirements of a functioning society.
Communications is so critical that the US Constitution writes in the Postal service as part of it.
Internet communications should be treated as a basic service.
Once this happens, we can restructure more government services to be properly internet enabled.
Really, private companies do not serve the interests of the public. They never have. They never will.
Private companies are great at the luxuries of life, not the basics.
I'm sure netflix has employees whose home internet is provided by Comcast. What would prevent them, or any other customer, from starting up a class action lawsuit (mandatory arbitration maybe) that Comcast isn't providing advertised bandwidth?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jury_nullification
Please. Give us all a reason to punish you again.
"I wonder how soon until ISPs' tiered pricing packages will become indistinguishable from those for cable TV, with grouped together services that vary not just in throughput or quality guarantees, but in what sites you can reach at each service level, or which sports teams are subject to a local blackout order. " Pretty quick I imagine, considering how regulatory burden in the US pretty much kills all chances of competition among ISPs.
Does this mean that Comcast users will have better access in general to Amazon Web Services?
The people said.
This is why the FCC should have classified ISPs as Common Carriers a long time ago and given themselves regulatory power over this aspect of these businesses. The FCC chose NOT to give themselves power to regulate ISPs and now we (the customers) are paying the consequences.
This is just a long-term loss for internet users. Tiered services, which only seem more and more likely, are against the open nature of the internet.
You would think that considering how they have been unable to afford enough to get major content providers onboard, that this is also going to effect their bottom line enough to be the last nail in the coffin. There's no way I'm going to pay what comcast thinks is fair on top of current charges, in exchange for looking through loads of crap content, nor am I going to pay as much as a comcast charges to get good content.
I'll stick with the pirate bay, thanks.
This is how it starts.
Maybe it is time for Google, Facebook, etc.. start charging Comcast for access to their networks?
What a shame Netflix took a step back on this and what a shame Netflix didn't get any support by the giants of the internet.
I want my network neutrality back. This is the sort of thing that is going to squeeze out the smaller players, or anyone who the backbone operators and ISPs don't want to succeed. It will result in less innovation as startups who can't afford to pony up to the established powers who control the infrastructure won't be able to do business. Prepare for decades of stagnation and no progress as the big players concentrate on consolidating control and only improve things where they absolutely have to, incrementally, with no imagination.
You see? You see? Your stupid minds! Stupid! Stupid!
If netflix is providing content to comcast users, then why is netflix paying comcast? Isn't this like comcast charging espn? Maybe netflix doesn't know how much power they wield. Couldn't sites like netflix/youtube force comcast to pay them?
I am a comcast customer and I currently pay comcast $50 to provide me with internet access. I am also a Netflix customer and I pay them $8 to be able to watch movies.
Now that Netflix will have to pay Comcast I can only assume that this cost will rollover to me. So I will have to pay something like $10.
In other words I will have to pay $2 to Comcast to allow me to access Netflix through the connection which I already pay $50?
WTF??
This isn't quite the same net neutrality issue here. Netflix isn't paying to stop service degradation or increase priority of their traffic -- they're basically just switching service providers and paying Comcast to host their servers. It may even end up cheaper for Netflix.
If we are going to do it this way. I want the things. 1st is an open telecommunications market like they have in Europe. 2nd is Fiber to every home or 5G with no usage caps. 3rd is I want ala carta services. I dont whant to pay for stuff I dont want like we have to for cable and satilight tv.
First they came for the Pirates, and I did not speak out-- Because I was not a Pirate.
Then they came for our privacy, and I did not speak out-- Because I was not doing anything wrong.
Then they came for the Net Neutrality, and I did not speak out-- Because I was not aware or concerned.
Then they came for me--and there was no way left to speak for me.
"If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
. . . told me that Net Neutrality means the government is controlling my Internet!
How can this not be true?
You are paying for it. Well, maybe you're using your neighbor's WiFi without their permission, but the rest of us pay our ISP for service.
I think this would give the government decent reason to block the Time Warner merger - Lest Comcast become the 21st century version of Standard Oil.
(Or not... if Comcast has enough political leverage with the current administration and with them owning NBC...)
Now Netflix has incontrovertible proof Comcast has been throttling their service.
Titular irony intended...but seriously, at least Google understands that fast broadband for as many people as possible is in their own best interests as a company. This is why they're continuing to push forward with Google Fiber. They can afford to take a financial loss while they put competitive pressure on the telco's, and at the end of the day Comcast and the like will be forced to play Google's game or fold.
OMFG, Timothy, did you really just copy and paste that paragraph without bothering to edit it? You didn't even bother to cut out the stock quotes from the middle of it.
i know from the beginning that my routers will always have clients only downloading, rarely uploading. my internet connection (which is crazy expensive, since i'm very rural) is 12mbit down, 4mbit up), and they assume i will download more than upload. why is it so complicated to assume that netflix's providers dont already know the business model of one way traffic? comcast, time warner, verizon already know this. they sell asymmetrical services for that reason. glad to see netflix working to deliver content, but sad to see old media whining about it
The best government money can buy. 5 senators, 100 Comcast lobbyists on K-Street, and a head of the FCC who was a cable moneyman says fuck you little people - as they masturbate on piles of cash.
Comcast charges content providers to be on channel line up
Charges the customer to watch them
Overwrites the provided programming with their commercials.
If ever the was an exemplar of a gravy sucking pig comcast is it, and they are the prime exemplar of how crony capitalism is failure.
This is just the robber barons of old. The original robber barons where Knights who built castles on the bank of the Rhine river. Any boat traveling the river had to pay or face the cannons of the castle. There was a new castle around every bend of the river, so you can imagine how expensive it was to ship anything up and down the Rhine.
These same folks can be found today in the "Government" checkpoints that you'll find every few miles in certain parts of Africa, or the Thai cop who stops you and asks for a bribe to let you go. Whether or not these Robber Barons are allowed to operate is the deciding factor in whether a society is free and vibrant or is ground down by corruption.
Play Command HQ online
And Comcast will merge with the Government.
I will develop one of my previous comment.
The current one-size-fit-all billing scheme of the internet is utterly broken from my point of view. I do not have choice of the content's quality I watch. I used to watch youtube on a 5Mbps link, now, I do over a 25Mbps link, but I don't really care about watching HD videos, nor do I give a frack about 720p, 1080p video. Ever if I select youtube "I have a slow connection. Never play higher-quality video", I am always getting a better quality video than I need. The current system is utterly UNFAIR to the customer. I want to be able to have a basic access if I WANT TO. When I have no money, I WANT a cheap basic access, if I have more money and can afford better content, then I am free of doing so. The current system, or what is called "net-neutrality", is actually a bad system for customers as it forces the low-bandwidth consumer to pay for high bandwidth consumer who are free-riding on my subscription.
All in all, don't tell me about what you cares about, this is none of my business. You are free to have YOUR needs, I am free to have MINE, but don't make ME pay for your content gluttony
To be fair, they do advertise the Comcast Triple Play (aka. we f*** you over three ways). "It's Comcastic!"
Obligatory "I told you last time: tattoos are permanent. ... Sorry Roger; you Tiger now."
p.s. I wonder if anyone under 50 still uses cable or POTS "phone" service anymore.
People don't understand what to do with the internet. Everything has to be provided by some company or it's just invisible. Open protocols with multiple implementations? Fugetaboutit. P2P? Not signing up somewhere before being allowed to do anything? Things of the ancient past. When most people on the internet are consumers, of course it's turning into something more like cable TV.
I wonder if anyone under 50 still uses cable or POTS "phone" service anymore.
I'm under 50, but have a POTS line over cable provider so that when delivery people call us in our apartment we can "buzz them in" the door (would be annoying if they called to our cell phone, but it was on the other side of town or the planet, and we never know which one of us will be home to get the delivery).
Of course no manual shopping any more. It is all Amazon Prime and online grocery delivery.
This is a play by Netflix to demonstrate to the FCC just how dangerous the Comcast/TWC merger would be. Here's hoping they listen.
There's no reason for private companies to profit off the basic requirements of a functioning society.
Actually, there's a really good reason- because government mandated monopolies have ALWAYS been incredibly shittty. Shitty service, shitty customer service, shitty everything.
As SNL once said "We're the phone company. We don't care, we don't have to".
You want to totally kill what tiny competition is allowed in the ISP space by mandating everyone have to go with the cable provider they have? Well that only give Comcast and the like MORE leverage to depend deals like this from anyone you might stream video from.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
Get a gun and shoot all the Comcast executives in the head. Everyone wins.
Netflix is having all these problems because they use Cogent, the cut-rate morons of the transit world...
This has happened hundreds of times, long before they carried Netflix streaming video:
http://www.pcworld.com/article...
https://secure.dslreports.com/...
https://secure.dslreports.com/...
https://secure.dslreports.com/...
http://www.complaints.com/2008...
http://publicpolicy.verizon.co...
http://www.prnewswire.com/news...
http://www.fiercetelecom.com/s...
https://www.datacenterknowledg...
etc., etc.
Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
This slashdot-beta is ugly as hell. How do I get rid of this crap?
"with grouped together services that vary not just in throughput or quality guarantees, but in what sites you can reach at each service level"
Someone came up with a nice prediction of things to come along those lines: http://i.imgur.com/5RrWm.png
This Space Intentionally Left Blank
... I no longer make any effort to watch TV, movies, or anything, over the Internet. Nor do I have a cable subscription. Nor will I ever again.
Fuck these assholes that basically stole the internet and turned it into yet another tool of economic oppression.
Daily kos said Net neutrality is about first amendment freedoms of expression and making sure corps can't stifle speech.
1) fm radio. hardware: free. carrier: free. content: station-driven. advertizers pay radio stations. audience listens to content. summary: free to customers.
2) OTA tvision. hardware: costly. carrier: free. content: channel-driven. advertizers pay tv channels. viewers watch content. summary: one-time hardware cost to customers.
3) cable tvision. hardware: costly. carrier: on-going cost. content: network-driven. advertizers pay tv networks. viewers watch content. summary: customers never stop paying.
4) streaming tvision: hardware: tv set costly + carrier box costly. carrier: on-going cost. content: netflix-driven, on-going cost. advertizers don't exist. netflix pays carriers. summary: customers pay for hardware, carrier service, and netflix service. carriers get money from customers and from netflix.
We've come a long way.
The no cost peering agreements between the major ISPs is based on the premise that traffic flows both ways in approximately equal amounts.
Netflix is something like 30% of internet traffic and it's mostly one way. They are so big they produce more traffic than many entire ISPs.
They may be so big that no ISP can peer with Netflix's ISP without disturbing this balance.
Is it possible that the solution is that Netflix basically are forced to have multiple ISPs and connect directly to many networks?
I can see that this could lead to problems as has been mentioned elsewhere in this and many other threads, but maybe there have to be exceptions to the general rule.
Society needs to begin a social movement to overthrow Comcast and any other greedy, power-wielding monopolies that over charge for mediocre services. Bundling packages that include only 10% of your desired programming, and the other 90% is crap that you would never use only benefits Comcast, not their customers.
The problem is, as it is with many things (e.g., movie tickets, sporting events, universities, etc.), they know that most people will pay no matter the cost. Thankfully I am no longer a Comcast cable customer and use hotspots to manage my internet between devices. Maybe as more and more people opt out, downgrade, and turn to alternative cheaper service providers Comcast would eventually forced to change and create a service that is affordable and actually meets the various needs of its customers. Imagine, 10 channels for 10 bucks a month!
There has to be someone out there somewhere who has a brilliant idea or business model that can turn the tides on Comcast and create a better more affordable way to offer television, phone, and internet services!!!
Wait till you connection is 200 bucks a month just like it for premium TV.
After reading the article, the loser here does seem to be Cogent. Netflix will connect directly to Comcast, at a cheaper price than connecting through Cogent, and probably one or two other network providers. They aren't paying for their network traffic to be prioritized over other traffic on Cogent.
The only difference between extortion and a "business transaction" is the number of politicians and buearocrats you have on your payroll.
As a NetFlix streaming subscriber, I will cancel my membership Monday morning.
I don't have Comcast and refuse to pay some of my upcoming Netflix fees to undermine net anti-discrimination (otherwise know as net neutrality).
I was previously happy with and supported Netflix standing up to the Internet monopolies, but now this sets a horrible precedence.
I only hope now that other Netflix subscribers do the same, and cancel their service/subscription, to give the message to other companies that undermining the Internet has consequences.
Companies like comcast only exist because no one is allowed to compete with them. Remove the monopoly protection and let them get torn apart by competitors.
I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
At which point I will be cancelling my service and be giving a big double middle finger to which ever douche bag company that thinks they can pull that nonsense with internet service.
If we were dealing with fair, honesty corporations of integrity then I would 100 percent agree with you. Google can't come fast enough to stop this crap. The government is our friend when it comes to evil empires that oppress the common people. Our beloved president, George Washington did not attend for oppression of common citizens.
And the ISP will laugh at you because cash will be flowing in his pocket, and you will be back to the XXth century.
Can we all agree on this one at least? You don't have to socialize something if there's enough healthy competition. In fact, I would recommend against it because the social agency is under no pressure to provide anything better than basic service based on its funding. I wouldn't call the state of internet service in the US "under healthy competition." My particular area is out of the ordinary because we have Verizon, Cablevision and Time Warner Cable. Of course, let's not forget that the apartment complex I live in has a deal with Cablevision so they're the only choice I really have.
There's little competition with cell phone service. Why? The upstart cost is ridiculous because you have to put wires and towers all over the place and all the big companies bought up the little ones to have more coverage.
There's little competition with internet providers. Why? See above. Add on the fact that content delivery companies are merging with internet providers and now you have to compete with a company that has more money, more lawyers and more weight.
There's little competition with content delivery companies. Actually that's a lie but as ISPs merge with content companies and become bigger, they'll have more weight to push out content delivery startups. I can see Netflix being forced to buy up an ISP like Time Warner if the Comcast deal fails. TimeFlix Warner? (Comflixcast?)
In both the cell service and ISP cases, the trouble I see is lack of regulation and conflict of interest with the companies involved. One company should be the one to lay lines down and build towers for cell companies. AT&T should not be responsible for laying its lines down. Or else, Google could come to areas with Verizon and lease their fiber lines. Line-laying companies would be in competition with one another and want the business of the ISPs and cell companies. Also, I agree that content companies should not be able to merge with internet providers.
Split up line companies from delivery companies and you'll see costs go down because you only have to lease from a company that will have others leasing as well. Split up content companies from ISPs and you'll see Comcast playing nice with Netflix because it'll be one of many content companies its customers will demand access to -- or switch ISPs because they'll have a choice. You take out choice and you take out the only card customers have in determining what fails and what succeeds. If the company holds the cards, they only get bigger, which, as we can see, ultimately leads to regulatory capture. People are greedy and want money. I'm not against the fact that companies exist to make money but when they stop serving the public interests and only their stockholders' because they can then something has to change. If a company doesn't have to compete with anyone else for customers, then they're going to do all they can to raise prices and lower costs without losing too many customers to their non-existent competition.
Case in point: T-Mobile disrupting the cell industry, Apple disrupting the tablet industry and then Microsoft, and Google Fiber disrupting ISPs. (Time Warner increasing speeds to 300 Mbps near Google Fiber not because of Google but because customers [i]there[/i] are demanding higher speeds? Bullshit. I was talking to my ISP once for service and somehow Google Fiber came up. told the tech if they came here I would drop them so fast. He laughed.)
What are you going to do? Switch over to one of their competitors? Use your mobile provider for your internet access? I'm fucked. You're fucked. We're all collectively fucked. Most importantly, THEY (the ISP's) know it. Go ahead. Drop your internet provider. Have fun getting your news because printed news is dieing.
Since Netflix is paying for the bandwidth being used by their customers, that should mean Comcast customers see a reduction in their bills.
They have a better network there at a lower price.
I always thought that "protection" rackets were a crime.
Net neutrality is a real issue, but this is not an example of it, it's just Internet infrastructure working as it always has and as it's intended to.
Previously, Netflix did not have a direct peering arrangement with Comcast, so they paid Cogent and others for transit to Comcast.
Now, they have arranged to directly connect their network to Comcast (which was NOT the case before), and, since they are not supplying the roughly equal traffic in both directions typical of "no-pay" peering agreements, they have agreed to pay Comcast for this arrangement.
What they are paying Comcast for direct peering appears to be LESS than what they were paying Cogent et al previously for transit to Comcast... And they have a more direct, and presumably better performing, set of connections now.
This is a win-win for everyone, and has nothing to do with net neutrality. It's a simple arrangement to implement more direct and lower-cost traffic relaying.
Go ahead. Drop your internet provider. Have fun getting your news because printed news is dieing.
Fuck news. Who the fuck cares about news. Have fun getting your bank statements (my bank charges $1.25 for a paper statement). Have fun renewing your license plates. Have fun finding a dentist (my dentist is still in the Yellow Pages, but for how long?). Have fun getting a job (is it possible to get a technology job without Internet anymore?).
I'm fucked. You're fucked. We're all collectively fucked. Most importantly, THEY (the ISP's) know it.
Yes. Yes we are. The champagne was flowing and backs were being slapped all around, and the hookers were arriving by the busload, and the blow was being sucked up by the pound. We are so very very fucked. Thank you Netflix, you unmitigated shitheads. You broke the fucking Internet. Forever.
by definition comcast is not a telecom business. it is a BROADcast business. their network is mostly coax-cable. this network type
works best for single to multipoint traffic. this is reflected by the fact that all requested inbound traffic goes to all users on a segment
and the user has to decide if some of the traffic is intended for him/her (and discard the rest)...
Assume you want to call somebody (on the land line). first you have to acquire a phone line and a phone. you pay a monthly fee for this. ... pony up cash but the popular number has to too ...
then if you call someone you are billed for this call.
what is happening now is that there seems to be a very popular phone number that everybody is trying to call and your "not-a-real-telecom-company-anyways" comcast is now telling not only its own customer to phony
so assume you are netflix and people are calling you (from comcast phones) then to answer these calls you have to pay comcast even if you (netflix) are getting the phone and land-line from a completely other company.
this is what you get if you interlink broadcast networks with real telecom networks.
oh .. don't forget to seeds pls : ]
this is the easiest way to explain net neutrality. the people want access to netflix but the only way to access netflix is use the information superhighway. the information superhighway/last mile is in the hands of privately held companies. to get more access to netflix you need more roads. to pave for more roads (higher speeds) customers will have to pay for it. but what if this was the case with amazon and public roads?
people want stuff from amazon. and lots of it. in order to deliver the goods you want from amazon, they will have to ship it to you. however, amazon don't own the roads and they don't have their own delivery service. that's sourced to the delivery methods demanded by the customer, be it fedex, ups, etc. however, in an alternate reality, different public roads are owned by the different delivery companies, i.e. fedex, ups, dhl, etc. they pave and maintain these roads and in order to access it, you have to pay a (taxes). at the same time, they too charge amazon (peering fees) for acess to these roads and you pay a little bit as in the form of shipping/handling (which some goes to amazon for the boxes and some to fedex, ups, dhl)
perhaps the information superhighway isn't all that super...
It seems to me that if the US allows its DataCenters and ISPs to selectivly throttle bandwidth as they please, that the UN could easily use this to force us to give up being home to key internet infrastructure like ICANN, ARIN, etc..
http://interserver.net/
Regulation does not always lead to regulatory capture. In fact, it very seldom does so unless you have a monumentally suppressed or apathetic (or both) citizenry who celebrate their cynicism towards government and go out of their way to tell people at every opportunity.
The cure to bad government is good government, not zero government. I'd argue that what you need is a significantly smaller and more powerfull government that can actually intervene in the market to keep the markets as free as possible for the highest number of actors possible. You also need to separate the policymakers from the bureaucracy. Let one set policy and let the other implement it. Have quarantines for positions in the bureaucracy of some 2-5 years to prevent the revolving-door chair-dance.
Secondly, reinstate the labor union. The real labor union, not the cronyist corrupt mess you have now where the organizations are toothless clubs mostly focused on keeping existing. Introduce actual collective bargaining in order to have a free market with two equal parties wrt. labor. The job creators seem intent on commoditizing labor so let them trade for it in a free market. This is how you get a middle-class.
And for God's sake, money is not speech. When your politicians become less beholden to moneyed interests, you will have a claim to approach a real democracy again. What you have now is institutionalized corruption. To do this, separate policymakers from the implementors of policy as mentioned.
This is what we did in Norway, Sweden and Denmark. Small countries to be sure, but I see no reason why a similar approach can not be used in the US. Why do I think this? Because this is what you used to do when you were undisputably the most dynamic and productive country on the planet.
Incorrect use of the fallacy. Go back to Reddit, you contrarian dolt.
Any idiot can read a manual and follow directions like you Lumpy. Did you think you actually made something from scratch yourself? Things like that have been done long before an idiot like yourself did them. You created nothing original. What you are is a by rote moron believing his own bullshit that he actually knows anything of value.
Never charge once for a service when you can charge more than once.
Exortion combined with regulatory capture may be a promising business model.
Smart lawyers a puzzeling over how to make this a great opportunity for a customer class action.
The idea that this should make the TWC/Comcast merger go smoother is backwards.
This demonstrates why they need to be separate and Comcast needs to be smaller.
It's almost like somebody wants legislation for net neutrality.
Or they feel that they are somehow immune?
This does not sound like a case of Comcast "double dipping" where Comcast gets paid by the customer and by Netflix for bandwidth. And the article makes no implication that Comcast was going to do something non-neutral like slow down Netflix traffic. This looks more like Netflix is co-locating servers inside Comcast's data centers to avoid paying big bandwidth bills to tier 1 network providers.
Upon first reading this article I jumped to the conclusion that Comcast was slowing Netflix traffic and Netflix was paying them for some kind of "priority" service to get their bandwidth back up. But I don't think that is the case.
This is still a dangerous idea. What happens if Netflix decides to just stop supporting Internet streaming, and instead just streams to ISPs who they partner with? Then you will only get Netflix if you subscribe to an ISP that supports them. Sound familiar? It's basicall the Cable TV networks all over again.
Didn't Comcast agree to follow the Net Neutrality rules in the terms of their agreement with the FCC to acquire NBC Universal regardless of the hearing details in January? How is this possibly following the agreement for Net Neutrality? I hope someone does something about this. It's about time to bust up the monopoly Comcast is trying to build.
And do you know what? That's still far better resolution than you get off standard def TV. And it can be done at 2Mbit no problem.
Comcast. I hate this fucking company so much it makes me sick. They don't need more money from anyone. They need to die.
Because, you know what? People are paying their ISP for the network connection.
So it's not free, and people are already paying. So how is this double-dipping evidence of either wanting free network access or that it's not being paid for?
By the way, bandwidth costs zero marginal cost when it's not used: it costs the same to send zero bits over SONET as it does to send a full packet. And if you're not able to provide your contract, then you should renegotiate that contract or get the hell out of business. It's evident that they are not hurting today, since
a) they pay every person their wage
b) they still profit over that
c) even after paying out bonuses
Media providers may start charging "ISP shipping and handling surcharges" to cover their actual costs (plus a "small" markup of course!) to customers of ISPs who insist on charging peering fees.
The alternative is to spread this cost across all customers (like most manufacturers do now), effectively having the customers who have ISPs with free peering subsidize the costs of those who don't.
Personally, I think "last-mile connectivity" and "wireless connectivity" should be billed on a per-unit-cost basis with some minimum monthly charge to cover "paperwork." ($X/GB for data, Y cents (or tenths of a cent) per minute per "classic" cell-phone call, Z cents (or tenths or hundredths of a a cent) per "classic" text, etc.) then allow multiple service providers (e.g. back-haul TCP/IP-data-providers, "classic" phone/text providers, specialized data providers like VoIP, latency-sensitive streaming service providers, etc.) to provide services up to the "neighborhood box" or the "provider-interface box closest to the cell tower" etc.
This way, if I wanted to get VoIP from Comcast, regular internet from Time Warner, and television services from AT&T, all over my local cell tower, I could. I'd pay basic connectivity-fees to the company that ran the tower and pay service-bills to the other companies. They wouldn't pay the tower owner anything, or if they did, it would be at a regulated fee designed to cover costs, not provide a profit to the tower owner. I'm the tower-owner's customer, not the data providers.
Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
Does this mean I get to take a baseball bat to Comcast's CEO's head if I am still unable to stream Netflix in 3D?
Cause I'm !@#$% sick of this...
and what makes you think the corporations wouldn't employ their own militia in the absence of that govt protection?
Umm, Robocop?
Then perhaps the right way to avoid inefficient telecom monopolies is for the city to tear up the roads once to lay conduit next to the water mains. Then any telecom service provider can pull its copper or fiber through this conduit, as I've explained.
Netflix does now pay Comcast $99.99/month for internet access like consumers do. They have to pay for their uplinks like all major websites do. So Netflix goes to the dirt cheapest ISP which is Cognet. Why is Cognet the cheapest? Because they skimp on their connections. So while Cognet sells Netflix all the uplinks they need, Cognet does not have adequate link agreements with Comcast/Verizon/etc. A dumbed down example would be Cognet is trying to push 1GB per second through 500MB per second connections. Packets get dropped.
The whole internet is playing right into the hands of Netflix who is trying to act like a victim. They wanted to try and pay the least, so they setup this whole scheme about throttling when the one who is actually the bad guy here is Cognet for selling service they can''t provide. They are basically acting like a webhost who sticks 10,000 website on one server.
One thing to remember is that regulation usually means a burden for the the provider and those costs get passed on to us. Not saying there isn't benefit there, but you have to weigh whether or not that benefit is actually worth the cost.
But they're not riding for free. As users we pay for internet access up to a specific speed and we may download a movie from Netflix, or the latest distribution of Ubuntu. We might also sit and stream youtube videos all day long. How is it that Netflix is riding for free and those other's aren't? They've already sold that bandwidth to us, and now they're trying to sell it again on the other side. They're double dipping, and Netflix isn't going to just pay that and eat the costs. Their rates are going to go up and we are the ones who now get to pay twice. Not to mention that with this precident being set now all the provider has to do when they want more money is throttle the connection until they get what they want. This is incredibly bad, and every user involved should cancel their Netflix account along with their internet account until they realize that without customers they have no reason to exist and if they squeeze their customers their customers go away.
These bitches cry at the thought of Comcast deciding to squeeze their balls so the capitulate like the bitches they are.
Just when I didn't think it could get much worse, it did.
Wansu, th' chinese sailor
This will spur development of more broadband to people's homes as there is now a double demand for broadband. Google Fiber would then offer a better price to Netflix, and a price war would occur.
I believe this is the beginning of the end of the internet.
With the costs of maintaining the infrastructure borne entirely on the taxpayers back, IE via university and TheGreatMonopolyTelecomProvider routing and cabling, satellites and microwave links, the profits diverging into the hands of the "last mile" providers leads us inevitably back to the old Broadcast Profit mechanism, where maximum stupidity reigns supreme and no one can defy the Network conglomerates.
Wait for it, we will all be stuck with Lucy reruns forever within 10 years.
Goodbye, sweet internet, home of the ultimate library, entertainment center, teaching tool.
Oh brave new world, that hath no place for me in't (with apologies to William Shakespere)
The cost to Netflix will be negligible. They are not paying Comcast to carry their data. They are eliminating the bottleneck (Cogent), and setting up an architecture that benefits both Netflix and Comcast. There is a very good article in the Wall Street Journal on this without all the net neutrality hysteria.
When I order from the USA (to Canada), I go with USPS/Canada-Post because they're the only ones that don't bend me over with exorbitant duties, for which UPS/Fedex/Loomix sometimes charge 20% or more of the actual item cost.
Netflix will place whatever sized server is required in ISP's rack, eliminating the need for multiple streams being sent from Netflix to the ISP. Netflix pays for the server, and may also pay a negotiated space for the racks pace and power. This means the ISP does not have to pay for much of anything for carrying Neflix feeds. As well, the server is updated overnight by Netflix based upon projections of what customers will want. This may well be what those negotiations are, and Netflix may have agreed to pay rent for the server space and power or something like that so that boh sides save face, customers are happy, and the ISPs continue to keep their reputation and the evil bastards they are. Of course, apologies to all fine people who may have been born out of wedlock.
F.
If your only tool is a hammer, you'll approach every problem as if it were a nail. - Abraham Maslow
"if we let this continue and grow we'll turn into a corrupt third world hell hole"
When I look around my home town of Los Angeles, at the mess of overhead cables and shitty infrastructure - and compare that with the modern, efficient and publicly financed infrastructure you see in most of "old" Europe - I'm reminded that it already is a corrupt third world hell hole - very slightly attenuated by being just a little to the left of batshit-crazy-US-political-mainstream
Since Netflix bented and gave vasoline to Comcast, i wish Google an Facebook would do it JUST CAUSE THEY CAN. It would show that you need 2 player to play this game. That way, when its going to be ridiculous, maybe an organisation or the gov could step in and create laws about this.
PC Gaming enthousiast that gives comments, opinions and reviews on Games. I'm just having fun with games while doing let
So five weeks is how long it takes for ISPs to finish celebrating their court-ordered victory over network neutrality and then extorting content providers into higher fees under the threat of purposely degrading their own users' connections to that content provider. And just think of how much money Comcast will get the next time they extort Netflix once they own all of Time Warner's customers.
The FCC Chairman, Tom Wheeler, promised to uphold network neutrality by reclassifying ISPs as common carriers on a "case-by-case" basis if they misbehaved. Well, Mr. Wheeler, I can't think of a bigger misbehavior than this. So do what you promised or publicly admit you were simply making empty promises.
But if they don't deliver the speed. My bill should be dropped down to the corresponding lower rate.
The costs get passed anyways. Regulation can a) limit the amount charged, and b) ensure that when those costs get passed - so do some bloody benefits.
I pay Comcast for 50mbps....
I have paid for a 50mbps bridge, and cannot carry a 6mbps load I need to move Netflix....
So excuse me......Yes, Comcast are the issue.
That's right....and Comcast sure as !@#$% ain't putting in a best effort.
Second, if I can't even get enough for a 6mbps feed on my 50mbps service, I'm barely getting over 10% of my rate. That's not best effort.
So excuse me if I tell any Comcast defenders...
FUCK YOU
FUCK YOU
FUCK YOU
FUCK YOU
My problem with profit is when the profit...
- far exceeds your costs for the product you are delivering
- is protected by government granted monopolies
- is made by a company receiving millions in tax subsidies
- is made by violating regulations and paying off politicians to avoid penalties
- is made by making illegal non-compete deals with your rival Verizon, so you can both charge excessive rates.
Nice work TubeSteak...you nailed it up until this:
This isn't a Common Carriage issue.
It is definitely a Net Neutrality issue. Comcase/Verizon/ATT are trying to make artifiical scarcity targeted at one company: Netflix.
That's a net neutrality issue...Cogent's role as ISP is relevant but only in that it adds a link in the chain...it's still Comcast being a bullshit evil company that thinks it has some kind of capitialist-god granted right to a monopoly
Thank you Dave Raggett
Thx
The USPS is constitutionally required (much to the "free market" GOP's chagrin) What if it branched out into providing common carrier internet service?
Is it since downmods you applied cheating the moderation system will go away http://games.slashdot.org/comm... or is it since you're still eating your words after http://yro.slashdot.org/commen... for libeling him then you ran away like a scared little girl for opening your mouth and inserting your foot while you ate your words seasoned with the bitter taste of self-defeat. You also called apk a loser that can't program here http://slashdot.org/comments.p... well it looks like you lost on all accounts since apk's program http://start64.com/index.php?o... he can show for himself against your libelous bullshit that works well and is hosted by members of the security community (malwarebytes hpHosts) and you have nothing to show for yourself like he does. You were reduced to name calling and using anoncoward sockpuppets to support you to me and projecting your own issues in being an uber loser.
Is actually a joke or for real. I am pretty sure many ppl beleives all that BS.