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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.

520 comments

  1. If Comcast were Exxon by DulcetTone · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They'd be receiving money from Sears when I drove my car to the mall.

    Why do people accept this?

    --
    tone
    1. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Hognoxious · · Score: 5, Funny

      I don't see an alternative other than regulation. And regulation reduces profits, so it's communism.

      George Washington gave his life to fight against communism in 1776. If you don't believe in profits, you're literally pissing on GW's grave, you bastard!

      Just pay up, and if you don't like it then move to North Korea.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    2. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by x0ra · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Regulation leads to regulatory capture, which leads not to communism, but to oligarchy. There has been no real implementation of "communism" anytime, anywhere.

    3. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by FuzzNugget · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Because internet, that's why. A person is smart, people are fucking retards (or something like that)

      Somehow, wiring and routing equipment complicate simple principles like preventing monopolies from engaging in extortion.

    4. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 1

      there are 8 bits to a byte and a spare byte in an IP packet is nothing, these days.

      we should assign bit numbers to the ISPs. we could call them 'evil bits'. I think its a brand new idea! you could make policy routing decisions based on that.

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    5. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Simple Answer: Government Granted Monopolies.

      People accept it because they have no other choice, in many cases. When laws exist prohibiting even cooperative ISP's forming to provide competition, you're kind of up shit creek, unless you want to go with much slower 56k/dsl/satellite service...

      As for why they put up with the laws, well, there's this two party system we have...and corporations pay both parties...rarely is there much choice on matters such as this at the ballot box.

    6. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by beelsebob · · Score: 4, Informative

      Because the finance of the internet is based on a sender pays model. Peering agreements only work when you actually have (roughly) equal traffic with another ISP. In this case, the ISP serving netflix has significantly higher data sent from it than Comcast's network, so they need to start paying comcast to transport that data.

      This by the way, is at the same time, why bandwidth caps and metering on a home connection is bullshit –because what you're paying is paying only for the data you send, the data you receive is already payed for by the sender.

    7. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because internet, that's why. A person is smart, people are fucking retards (or something like that)

      Somehow, wiring and routing equipment complicate simple principles like preventing monopolies from engaging in extortion.

      *looks at rest of economy* Nah, no internet exceptionalism here, pretty sure we're doing a plenty good job of failing to properly regulate everyone else, too.

    8. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I tried to XOR "communism" and "capitalism" to see if they were binary opposites. This is the result " M". Weird they are exclusively different.

    9. Re: If Comcast were Exxon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Really? George Washington was fighting communism??? Never knew that the British were communists...

    10. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Yes, I'm certain that Comcast would be much fairer to their paying customers if we drowned "Daddy government" in the bathtub.

    11. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Zynder · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Some people actually believe everything you wrote.

    12. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by evilviper · · Score: 1, Interesting

      If Comcast were Exxon They'd be receiving money from Sears when I drove my car to the mall.

      In this case, Sears intentionally blocked off their parking lots, forcing customers to drive over and park on long stretches of Exxon's roads... And Sears' solution to this is to ALLOW Exxon to host a free Sears kiosk in all their gas stations...

      The analogy is straining... but that's about right.

      Why do people accept this?

      Because Netflix's ISP (Cogent) is a douche bag of the highest order, who ALWAYS claims to be the innocent party in peering disputes, while they're almost always massively in-the-wrong, behaving unconscionably, and refusing to either admit to or remedy the problem they're causing.

      Without in-depth details about the exact details of the Netflix disputes between Cogent and Comcast, Verizon, and others, I'm going to assume Cogent are acting like pricks, as usual, and give the other ISPs every benefit of the doubt.

      --
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    13. Re: If Comcast were Exxon by geoskd · · Score: 1

      Woosh

      --
      I wish I had a good sig, but all the good ones are copyrighted
    14. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 5, Interesting

      That is not true. There have been several implementations of communism. They have all been relatively small scale. As far as I am aware, the only ones which were at all successful were religious communities (See Hutterites). The thing to notice about all of the implementations of communism is that they were purely voluntary (that is, those who did not wish to take part in communism were free to leave the group).

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    15. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by x0ra · · Score: 1

      Hutterites are not such a particularly "free" communities, more alike to a religious sect... http://lethbridgeherald.com/ne...

    16. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by thaylin · · Score: 1

      That does not matter if 100% of the traffic is at the request of thier customers. You would have a point if netflix was requesting huge amounts of traffic to comcast, as comcast does to netflix, but it does not, as netflix just hosts content.

      --
      When you cant win, ad hominem.
    17. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Grishnakh · · Score: 2

      If there were no "daddy government", there wouldn't be a ComCast. Corporations exist because of government-made laws; in an anarchy, there are no corporations.

      The problem is that our government is totally corrrupt and inept. What we need is a different government, which enacts and enforces proper regulation, like every decent industrialized country in the world.

    18. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They'd be receiving money from Sears when I drove my car to the mall.

      Why do people accept this?

      Because this is not about Netflix data. This is an argument about peering arrangements between Netflix's primary provider (Cogent) and Cogent's peering relationships with other providers (such as Verizon). Netflix COULD choose to start peering with multiple providers and different internet exchange points, but up until now they have not because they would have to pay for more bandwidth. So your Netflix traffic has to contend with ALL the other internet traffic on the links between Cogent and Verizon. (or Comcast in this case). Cogent and Verizon (or Comcast) don't pay each other for peering, and the surge in Netflix traffic has caused this relationship to become unbalanced, which is why they are all yelling about money.
      So what Netflix has done in this case is cut out the middleman entirely, and are paying for a DIRECT (i.e. NON-Internet) link to Comcast.
      The only thing which marks this deal as being different from the norm is that Comcast is charging Netflix for this "service". Most large companies who setup such relationship (like Google) work out a deal so that each provider pays for their own edge equipment/resources, and often split the cost of the actual transport circuit.

      This is a completely different issue than the idea of an ISP like Comcast actually reserving bandwidth across their core just for Netflix traffic, and then charging customers for access to 'high priority' services.

    19. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Grishnakh · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No, proper regulation avoids regulatory capture by enacting laws which forbid it. Other countries don't have a problem enacting and enforcing proper regulation while avoiding regulatory capture. It's just the US (along, probably, with various other corrupt third-world regimes) that has this problem.

    20. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because the finance of the internet is based on a sender pays model. Peering agreements only work when you actually have (roughly) equal traffic with another ISP. In this case, the ISP serving netflix has significantly higher data sent from it than Comcast's network, so they need to start paying comcast to transport that data.

      This by the way, is at the same time, why bandwidth caps and metering on a home connection is bullshit –because what you're paying is paying only for the data you send, the data you receive is already payed for by the sender.

      Bullshit yes, but not for that reason. What you're paying for is the equipment, maintenance, etc. to provide you a connection from your house to the edge of your ISP's network. Peering relationships are about data being sent between the edge equipment at each ISP.

    21. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My understanding is that this is not a peer agreement but a co-location agreement. Comcast wants to be paid to have servers on it's network which it already is paid by companies using them for hosting. These caching servers will probably save netflix money in the long run because they reduce the traffic their paying Cogent for, who then sends it on to Comcast. Am guessing the other high speed ISPs will respond by offering similar deals. Netflix was hoping to not have to pay to have these server in place but that doesn't really seam fair.

      As long as the server space is somewhat reasonably priced* and is available to anyone at the same price the effect on neutrality is actually positive. Why because otherwise how will it be decided who gets Near User Servers for free and who doesn't?? And by making it profitable for cable companies, it will encourage them to make more space available to content providers on their networks and reduce backbone traffic causing the internet to be faster without installing more and bigger tubes. Youtube and Netflix are half the traffic on the fucking internet. Positive for the internet. After all content providers already pay to be on the internet why shouldn't they pay to be closer on the internet to their end users. Netflix already puts server all over cogents network.

      * Actually pricing could be pretty unreasonable as long as it's a better deal then paying a backbone to send the traffix to ISPs, companies will buy use it.

      Stock prediction. Assuming more ISPs sign similar deals with netflix. I see netflix stocks going even higher. They should be paying less to get movies into paying customers hands. Cogent should go down because Netflix makes up a lot of their traffic. This is somewhat positive for Cable Companies on the near term but defiantly positive in the long run. I'd have to ask what their expected income on this is but at least they won't have to spend money on accepting more traffic for cogent however that might be offset by having to build more server space and possible beef up their internal networks for the Caching Servers.

    22. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by bhspencer · · Score: 1

      Possible solution: Modify the netflix player to acknowledge every packet it receives with a response packet of equal size sent to the netflix servers. Now the comcast network would be sending as much to netflix as netflix send to it and their would be balance in the force.

    23. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 2

      The Hutterites are very distinctly a religious sect. It is their religious beliefs which allow communism to work in their communities. I have never heard of a communist community that was not religious in nature which lasted more than a generation (and even most of the religious ones quickly failed).

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    24. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by green1 · · Score: 1

      And your average home connection, which is quite asymmetrical, would suddenly drop from being able to stream multiple HD streams at once, to not even being able to stream a single SD stream without issues.

    25. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by MickyTheIdiot · · Score: 1

      This is absolute bullshit... at least it is now.

      Corporations would not wink out of existence now if the government went away. They wouldn't care that they don't have any government charter... they would simply continue.

      I've had people make this argument at me when I have claimed in the past, but we are heading toward corporate anarchy in the us. Basically a state were there are no laws (or no enforced laws) and corporations are free to do whatever they wan't, "legal" corporate charter depending on government or not.

    26. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      +1 depressing

    27. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Immerman · · Score: 5, Informative

      Now that is a horrible, horrible metaphor.

      Almost from day one the internet was based on a user-pays model. ISPs A and B both have a lot of customers who want stuff from users on the other ISP. Data flows back and forth, and periodically the ISP who requested the most data paid the ISP who supplied that data, based on how many more bytes flowed A->B than B->A. It provided incentive for ISPs to seek out content-providers as customers, or to be better content providers themselves (remember, it was mostly universities to start). As the number of ISPs increased they often decided to decided to save bookkeeping headaches and enter into "nobody pays" peering agreements with other ISPs with whom they had roughly symmetric data flows, but consumer pays remained the norm in any asymmetric exchange.

      Fast forward, and some ISPs are now trying to change the rules - rather than paying for the data their users consume and passing that cost on to the users, as has been done since day one, they now want to double-dip and charge the content providers as well, for the exact same data transfer they are already charging their users for I have already paid my ISP for a certain level of internet access, why should I be put up with them intentionally degrading my access to some services?

      l As for the "kiosks" I'm assuming you're referring to the caching systems Netflix has offered. And again your metaphor is horrible. Under normal rules Comcast would be paying Netflix's ISP for every byte of data transferred, but Netflix offered them an optimized caching system so that instead of having to upgrade their systems to handle the load their customers demanded, as well as paying for the data itself, instead they could simply pay to transfer a single instance make all the free copies they wanted, saving them a bundle.

      >Without in-depth details about the exact details of the Netflix disputes between Cogent and Comcast, Verizon, and others, I'm going to assume Cogent are acting like pricks, as usual, and give the other ISPs every benefit of the doubt.

      Fair enough. But if it's a battle between ISPs, why are they dragging Netflix into it? Threaten to blacklist or throttle Cogent, and let Netflix either put a fire to their ass to shape up so other ISPs will continue doing business with them, or find another ISP who aren't pricks to begin with.

      --
      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
    28. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please, this isnt about Cogent. Comcast refuses to build the bandwidth necessary to serve their customers the content they are requesting at peak levels. And all your spamming aside (how many posts did you write?), Comcast is still double dipping. Many ISPs have taken Netflix up on their offer to drop a free Netflix CDN/co-lo box on their network. (Look up RCN, for example). Comcast could (almost) completely cut cogent out of the picture by hosting Netflix CDN boxes. But they don't They want the principle to be about them being allowed to set up a toll. The amount of money they would make charging cogent or netflix is tiny. They just want to lay down the ground work.

      This kind of foot dragging for peak traffic is also happening with and Verizon and Level 3 while streaming YouTube. (No cogent involved).

      Get your head out of your ass.

    29. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by x0ra · · Score: 1

      Indoctrination and sex-based segregation is no communism.

    30. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 2

      Regulation leads to regulatory capture, which leads not to communism, but to oligarchy. There has been no real implementation of "communism" anytime, anywhere.

      Both of those are true. BUT... there is improper regulation and proper regulation.

      In countries where backbone is (by government regulation) required to be shared (and NOT for free), it has actually led to greater competition and lower prices than in the United States.

      Regulation may be a necessary evil. But incompetent or misguided regulation (as we have now in the U.S.) is just plain evil.

    31. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by DuckDodgers · · Score: 1

      Lack of regulation leads to robber barons who bribe, extort, and blackmail lawmakers into doing what they want, which is just another path to regulatory capture. There has been no large scale successful implementation of libertarianism anywhere for this reason.

    32. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Grishnakh · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Oh please; the only reason corporations exist is because the government allows them to exist by legal charter, and because they pay their employees money, which again is created and distributed by the government. With no government, paper money has no value, and corporations have nothing to pay employees. The root of it all is money, and that's a creation of the government. If the government went away, everything would fall apart because of that simple fact; people would have to move to some other form of currency, and corporations would mostly cease to exist unless they control something that can be used as currency (and even here, how would they maintain control of it, without any kind of laws or police to make sure employees don't just seize it for themselves, or murder the executives?).

      We're not headed toward "corporate anarchy", we're headed toward (if we aren't already there) corporatist fascism, where the government works for the interests of the corporations rather than the people. Basically, it's something like medieval feudalism, except instead of dukes and lords, we have corporate CEOs, and each corporation is a fiefdom, and all the employees are serfs who have very few rights. The government isn't going anywhere (and in fact, is growing in power) because it's necessary for the existence of the corporations: it creates the money they need to operate, and it maintains the military and police forces needed to protect the corporations from anyone who would threaten them.

    33. Re: If Comcast were Exxon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's the sound your mom makes when she uncrosses her legs

    34. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by ifiwereasculptor · · Score: 2

      Corporations exist because of government-made laws; in an anarchy, there are no corporations.

      False. The only difference is they are then called gangs.

    35. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by alostpacket · · Score: 2

      ISPs are not peers though, they are endpoints. The "equal data" argument only works between two backbone/transit providers. ISPs are requesting that data be sent to them. they don't get to request the data be sent to them and request that they also be paid to receive it.

      Also what makes you think you only pay for upload? That makes no sense. Though I agree in that bandwidth caps are bad -- though mostly because they are generally misleading advertising.

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    36. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by swillden · · Score: 1

      Some people actually believe everything you wrote.

      For any ridiculous idea you care to name you can find some people who believe it. That doesn't change the fact that the GP is making strawman arguments.

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    37. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You do have regulations in the us, they are perfectly in place to preserve profits against what some might call social capital(other call externalities) as can be seen in the TPP.

    38. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by leonardluen · · Score: 4, Insightful

      and what makes you think the corporations wouldn't employ their own militia in the absence of that govt protection?

      heck even now many large corporations already employ their own security personnel.

    39. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by KingMotley · · Score: 1

      With no government, paper money has no value, and corporations have nothing to pay employees.

      The only difference would be that minimum wage would be 1/64 of a goat per hour. Or perhaps we'd all be paid in bitcoins because last I checked, that wasn't government regulated and seems to be doing fairly well.

    40. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      No True Scotsman

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    41. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Lumpy · · Score: 1

      "Why do people accept this?"

      Because Americans in general are really really stupid.

      Before Cable TV, we had community TV, neighborhoods would put up a large TV antenna and spread it to all homes via coax for a low monthly upkeep fee. Comcast was one of those companies that lobbied governments to make such a thing illegal. If you were to get a neighborhood association to pay for internet for the whole area, they would come in and sue you to hell and back for unfair competition, and get the local government to back them.

      MOST americans will support Comcast in this because they are so stupid they dont understand anything outside their little bubble. disclaimer: I am an american, yes a bulk of us... a good 70% are complete morons.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    42. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Lumpy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's called a kickback, the legal term is "franchise fees".

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    43. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Lumpy · · Score: 1

      Bullshit. I had helped build a community run Wireless internet system back 10 years ago, we had 10mbps to each home which is more than enough to broadcast a single HD stream and a couple of SD streams at the same time.

      If community non profit built on garbage and low end used gear can do it, then the fucktards at comcast,charter,TW,etc can do it.

      --
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    44. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Why would any militia members work for the corporation? The only reason private security works for corporations is because they're being paid. No government = no money to pay people. I suppose they might go back to using gold and silver, but I have a hard time seeing that.

      Also, why would anyone continue working for the suits at the corporations, rather than just killing them and taking what they want? Because the mercenaries would stop them? What keeps the mercenaries from just killing the bosses and taking all the gold for themselves? In an anarchy, the people who have the power are the people who are best armed, and are most willing to use violence. You think some 70-year-old suit is going to be able to maintain control?

    45. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by colinrichardday · · Score: 1

      in an anarchy, there are no corporations

      There probably wouldn't be an internet, either.

    46. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Bullshit. I had helped build a community run Wireless internet system back 10 years ago, we had 10mbps to each home which is more than enough to broadcast a single HD stream and a couple of SD streams at the same time.

      Wow. You really believe what you're saying.

      Please don't engineer anything near me ever.

    47. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 2

      I believe you!

      --
      #DeleteChrome
    48. Re: If Comcast were Exxon by Ronin+Developer · · Score: 1

      Uh....I have been around 50 years and I remember each home having an antenna on its roof or rabbit ear antennas on top of their TV. They used 75 ohm wire...not coax. Coax for tv came with cable.

      What I do remember is cable coming and people connecting to the decoder box and sharing it. The cable companies added encryption to stop he widespread sharing of their connection.

      If you recall people connecting to a central aerial antenna, you must have lived in the stix or in are seriously economically depressed area as all it took was too wires attached to the screws on the back of your tv.

    49. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Finance of the internet isn't always based on a sender pays model though. How many ISPs get paid by the upstream carriers? None that I've ever seen.

      It seems more appropriate to describe internet financing as "smaller pays". End users pay ISPs. ISPs pay carriers. Content providers pay carriers (where the carriers can convince the content provider to). Carriers pay... each other? Shareholders? Zurichian Gnomes?

    50. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by leonardluen · · Score: 1

      so, what keeps the military from killing the president and other govt leaders now?

      corporations are practically governments themselves. they have similar authority structures. i would imagine the corporation would print its own banknotes, or would trade in some item that has intrinsic value. in the past many places printed their own banknotes and they were accepted in various other places for trade. and they would likely accept them in the company owned stores.

      people would work for the militia because they would indeed be paid and the force of the militia would provide backing for the companies own banknotes, similar to how you seem to think the govt somehow magically provides value to their currency.

      yes indeed i think a 70 year old suit is going to maintain control. money buys loyalty and i guarantee the business men are smart and would be paying their militia well. what makes you think they wouldn't be able to find something of value to continue paying them? they are big and already control a lot of resources. those resources can be converted into something to pay the employees and keep them loyal. they would just hire a few more employees to maintain security.

      in the power vacuum if the government suddenly disappeared, large corporations are the best suited to take their place as they already have the internal control and authority structures setup.

    51. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Mitsoid · · Score: 1

      Basically this. And Oligarchy's..

      I'm house hunting, and it's very hard to find a place that has 2 ISP options. So it's either:

      1) Fiber-optic, 50Mbps/sec service for $90/month, offered by 2-3 different providers
      or
      2) Thicknet Coax shared cable connection with a theoretical allotment of 30-50Mbps but probably a realistic Friday night@7pm limitation of1Mbps connection. No other providers operate in the area. Costs twice as much as fiber.

    52. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by evilviper · · Score: 1

      Almost from day one the internet was based on a user-pays model. ISPs A and B both have a lot of customers who want stuff from users on the other ISP. Data flows back and forth

      It was never just "user-pays". The provider has always had to pay as well. I don't know where you got that from. In fact, things were symmetric in the early days, so "user-pays" wouldn't even make sense.

      charge the content providers as well, for the exact same data transfer they are already charging their users for

      It's not as simple as "data transfer" where peering agreements are involved. The fees you pay aren't there to allow Cogent to dump tons of data on one link of your ISP, forcing them to carry it on their backbone across the country to the end user there, rather than upgrading their own backbone to handle the traffic properly. If you want your ISP to just tolerate all the bad behavior of misbehaving peers, you'll quickly find your fees astronomical, as your ISP gets horribly taken advantage of, and ends up acting as a backbone for others.

      Netflix offered them an optimized caching system so that instead of having to upgrade their systems to handle the load their customers demanded, as well as paying for the data itself, instead they could simply pay to transfer a single instance make all the free copies they wanted, saving them a bundle.

      All other CDNs pay substantial amounts of money for what Netflix is telling ISPs they should be given for "free". Netflix calling it "free" is pure double-speak. They're the ones trying to get free space, electricity, and tons of bandwidth for their upstart CDN.

      But if it's a battle between ISPs, why are they dragging Netflix into it?

      They aren't. See the previous article:

      http://recode.net/2014/02/11/n...

      Threaten to blacklist or throttle Cogent

      That's exactly what they're doing. As Cogent dumps more traffic on them, they're just not upgrading the peering points, so Cogent customers see congestion and slowdowns going to/from other ISPs. Netflix is just the biggest customer, the one end users will notice, and Cogent and others like to spin it as a net-neutrality / conflict of interest type story to spin-up outrage, since that's cheaper than actually dealing with the issue, some others don't understand and misrepresent the issue, while some are intentionally promulgating the myth to serve their own purposes. Which are you?

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    53. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by swillden · · Score: 1

      Very clever :-)

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    54. Re: If Comcast were Exxon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wouldn't waste your time talking sense to that dude... He seems a little thick.

    55. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by gregor-e · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I pay Comcast for 17 mbps of downstream internet. There is nothing in my contract that constrains where I request this data from. The fact that so many of Comcast's customers all choose to fill their paid-for internet pipes with bits from Netflix means that Comcast has agreed to provide adequate infrastructure to satisfy the bandwidth requirements its customers have paid for. If Comcast is unable to provide the bandwidth they have sold to their customers, they are guilty of selling something they don't actually possess. I believe there is a word for this.

    56. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Immerman · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's user pays in the same sense as a grocery store is customer pays. In both cases the business pays for it's "imports", and then passes the costs on to their customers.

      Cogent isn't dumping data onto Comcasts network, Comcast's customers are *requesting* that data - that data is part of why they're paying Comcast in the first place.

      Again, if the issue is Cogent then Netflix should be left out of it. Once the precedent is established do you really think Comcast would *stop* charging Netflix if Cogent were to get their act together? Let the ISPs duke it out however they like, but leave the endpoints out of it. If Netflix doesn't like the result they can change ISPs - I hear Comcast's backbone can handle the traffic.

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      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
    57. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by InvalidError · · Score: 2

      Even if the first mile market was fully open, infrastructure is almost always a natural monopoly: the fewer infrastructure providers of a given type there are, the higher the existing providers' network attach rates are and the lower total network maintenance costs per home passed become. That's why even the most "competitive" markets all around the world only have 1-3 wired communication infrastructure providers.

      The very high building costs make it impractical for extra players to enter the market, fight to gain an increasingly small chunk of the market and hold on to it long enough to recover the initial costs: if it costs 2G$ to wire a market of 1M potential subscribers, that's 2k$/sub if you had 100% take-up rate but if that market already has two established players, you are going to have a hard time reaching 33% market share and that knocks your expected build cost up to 6k$/sub.

      Having only one hypothetical company investing 2G$ to offer services to 100% of the subscribers is a lot more cost-efficient than three companies investing an aggregate total of 6G$ to serve only ~33% of the public each.

    58. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by green1 · · Score: 1

      If they were willing to change their networks to accommodate things then the proposed solution wouldn't be needed in the first place.

    59. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by The+Grim+Reefer · · Score: 1

      If Comcast is unable to provide the bandwidth they have sold to their customers, they are guilty of selling something they don't actually possess. I believe there is a word for this.

      Profit?

    60. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Camael · · Score: 4, Insightful

      There's so much spin and misinformation in above post.

      It's not as simple as "data transfer" where peering agreements are involved. The fees you pay aren't there to allow Cogent to dump tons of data on one link of your ISP, forcing them to carry it on their backbone across the country to the end user there, rather than upgrading their own backbone to handle the traffic properly.

      No, the fees you pay are for your ISP to provide a service, i.e. the transmission and delivery of digital content you choose over their network. And if you request Netflix to stream movies to you, your ISP by golly is contractually obliged to deliver that data to you . When Netflix/Cogent sends that data which you requested to your ISP, calling that transmission "dumping" is clearly 1. untrue and 2. BS.

      That's exactly what they're doing. As Cogent dumps more traffic on them, they're just not upgrading the peering points, so Cogent customers see congestion and slowdowns going to/from other ISPs.

      Not only Cogent customers. The customers of that ISP will also notice the slowdown . Take Verizon for instance. When/if Verizon refuses to upgrade peering points, all of Verizon's paying customers who use Netflix will be affected. So, what do you call failing to deliver a paid for service to your own customers?

      Stop taking the ISP's side and look at the average consumer's point of view for once.

    61. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by evilviper · · Score: 0

      There's so much spin and misinformation in above post.

      On the contrary, you just have no understanding of the subject.

      When Netflix/Cogent sends that data which you requested to your ISP, calling that transmission "dumping" is clearly 1. untrue and 2. BS.

      "Dumping" doesn't refer to data transfer. It specifically refers to transferring it to the nearest peering point where the peer's backbone has to carry it across the country to the end-user, rather than transferring the data over your own backbone to the peering point closest to the customer.

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    62. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by FuzzNugget · · Score: 1

      Fair enough. My point on general retardedness stands.

    63. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by evilviper · · Score: 0

      Cogent isn't dumping data onto Comcasts network, Comcast's customers are *requesting* that data - that data is part of why they're paying Comcast in the first place.

      "Dumping" doesn't refer to data transfer. It specifically refers to transferring it to the nearest peering point where the peer's backbone has to carry it across the country to the end-user, rather than transferring the data over your own backbone to the peering point closest to the customer.

      Netflix should be left out of it.

      And what makes you say they weren't?

      If Netflix doesn't like the result they can change ISPs

      Sounds like they did.

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    64. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by F.Ultra · · Score: 1

      It does matter since that is how ISPs have set up the pricing model, that it's completely illogical is besides the point.

    65. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by rtb61 · · Score: 1

      Reality is a sound moral sane society should focus on 'COSTS' for the majority not 'PROFITS' for the minority. The psychopathic viewpoint is how much proft can be extorted out of broadband, the sane viewpoint is how cost efficient it can be for the majority so as to benefit the whole of society. They will not target downloaders they will target uploaders, basically unlimited download but with severe caps on uploading and major costs to increase upload capacity, this silencing the majority and gaining control of broadband.

      They of course need monopolies to force all the cost on uploaders but their intent is to force bills of tens even hundreds of thousands of dollars on uploaders. It will be cheaper to personally deliver content than to use broadband to achieve the same. Of course psychopathic mentality means not all will pay the same rate, put up a message they don't like and expect you rates to skyrocket. Insatiable greed means of course they will still target downloaders but uploaders are the first target as their wish is to turn the internet into a 24/7/365 compulsory propaganda machine.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    66. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's exactly what they did before they had government protection. Look up the Homestead Strike.

    67. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The thing to notice about all of the implementations of communism is that they were purely voluntary (that is, those who did not wish to take part in communism were free to leave the group).

      Just out of curiosity, would that happen to be because you are defining "communist" to include "you can leave voluntarily"?

    68. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope, without government there would be no way for them to *be* corporations. They would either cease to exist or revert to a form of organisation that isn't dependant on a government. Most large organisations would probably continue, but they wouldn't be corporations anymore.

    69. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Altrag · · Score: 1

      And lack of regulation tends to lead to monopolization. Pick your poison.

      At least in those kind of massive-barrier-to-entry fields like national telecom.

    70. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by gclef · · Score: 1

      It's not quite that simple. The GP post is correct that Cogent has a horrible reputation in the industry. Here's a synopsis of the most common Cogent dispute:

      1) User in New York on ISP A requests data from Server in San Francisco on Cogent.
      2) ISP A and Cogent interconnect in San Francisco and New York.
      3) ISP A wants Cogent to carry the traffic to New York and drop it onto the ISP's network as close a possible to the customer (cold-potato routing), Cogent wants it off their network as soon as possible so they drop it onto the ISP A San Francisco interconnect (hot potato routing).

      The question boils down to: which one of them is going to have to build a bigger national backbone to handle the extra traffic from the user in New York? Neither one wants to, and wants to force the other one to do it.

      As to why ISPs are not blacklisting Cogent: they are. That's what all these bandwidth problems with Netflix are about: ISPs are playing chicken with Cogent, trying to force Cogent's customers to bully them into upgrading their network. ISPs aren't limiting Netflix: they're refusing to upgrade interconnects with Cogent until Cogent starts using cold-potato routing.

      In this case, one of Cogent's customers blinked before Cogent did, and side-stepped the problem.

    71. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 2

      No, proper regulation avoids regulatory capture by enacting laws which forbid it. Other countries don't have a problem enacting and enforcing proper regulation while avoiding regulatory capture. It's just the US (along, probably, with various other corrupt third-world regimes) that has this problem.

      That is an interesting view of regulatory capture, which basically states companies use regulations to limit competition and maintain higher pricing. If you look at Europe for example, companies were and no doubt still are quite good at it. Airlines for years enjoyed monopoly pricing and even now are trying to stop low cost carriers from invading lucrative routes via regulations. Laws enforcing minimum selling prices results in consumers paying higher prices since more efficinnt companies cannot charge less than a tiny mom and pop. Telecom providers have been able to charge roaming fees despite the cost of carrying such calls is small. France is looking to stop Amazon by regulating what the must charge for books in order to protect existing bookstores. If, as you claim, regulatory capture defines a country as third world and corrupt the EU would fit that description quite nicely.

      --
      I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
    72. Re: If Comcast were Exxon by Lumpy · · Score: 1

      " Coax for tv came with cable." You may have been around, but you did not pay attention.
      Coax has been around for a very long time, 60+ years in fact. If you did not live in a suburbia then you never saw the single 60 foot tower with the antennas that were then fed to many of the homes. My dad used to sell and install these.

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v...

      For a nice example for you old timer.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    73. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Says the guy that cant set the clock in his car.

    74. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by realityimpaired · · Score: 1

      Bullshit. I had helped build a community run Wireless internet system back 10 years ago, we had 10mbps to each home which is more than enough to broadcast a single HD stream and a couple of SD streams at the same time.

      Really? Because 1080p h.264 *can* be that low if you compress the hell out of it, but we've found at the company I work for that anything less than about 4.5-5mbit for the video (and another 1mbit for the audio) is basically unwatchable on a big screen TV, due to compression artifacts. We actually encode HD at a higher bit rate than that for our own IPTV offering, and SD comes in about 4.5mbit with the audio included.

      And that's using h.264, which didn't exist 10 years ago. You were able to get an HD stream + a couple of SD streams on a 10mbit connection? Must've looked like shit....

    75. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because the finance of the internet is based on a sender pays model. Peering agreements only work when you actually have (roughly) equal traffic with another ISP. In this case, the ISP serving netflix has significantly higher data sent from it than Comcast's network, so they need to start paying comcast to transport that data.

      This by the way, is at the same time, why bandwidth caps and metering on a home connection is bullshit –because what you're paying is paying only for the data you send, the data you receive is already payed for by the sender.

      Actually, the Internet is based on everybody pays. Netflix pays to hook into the infrastructure, customers pay to do likewise. Allegedly, the sum total of the payments is enough to cover the costs of running all the points in between. Not just Comcast's part of the net, but ALL parts of the net.

      It really isn't fair to dump it all on Netflix just because Netflix makes higher data demands unless Netflix ends up dumping the costs back on the consumer. Otherwise it's just discriminating against a single supplier.

      The bigger issue is that since we have been able to run Netflix just fine so far under existing infrastructure, what are these extra payments to middlemen actually going for? Is there anticipated growth enough to justify raising rates or is someone merely getting greedy?

    76. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Drakantus · · Score: 1

      >No government = no money to pay people

      False. Evidence: bitcoin. Alternative evidence: gold, silver, platinum, or any other commodity of high value.

      --
      I love going down to the elementary school, watching all the kids jump and shout, but they dont know I'm using blanks.
    77. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Other countries don't have a problem enacting and enforcing proper regulation while avoiding regulatory capture.

      Wow. Took me two seconds to find this article:

      http://www.tni.org/article/corporate-capture-heart-europe

      And I have no doubt that I would find lots more if I looked deeper.

    78. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Corporations don't have bitcoins, or gold or silver. They just have some bank account that says in a computer database that they have "dollars". So if the government disappeared tomorrow, they'd be broke, except for the places that really do have those things, or control some other valuable resource. The jewelry corporations (and local stores and such) would be very wealthy, the oil companies would probably be very wealthy (valuable and useful commodity), but someplace like Oracle? They'll be broke.

    79. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by wvmarle · · Score: 1

      They'd still have to provide something in return to those militias. Some kind of reward for their services. Currently, that reward is money - without money or something equivalent no militia is willing to put their life on the line for someone else's business.

    80. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by leonardluen · · Score: 1

      yes indeed they would pay their militia. Corporations are large and control a lot of resources i am sure they could find something of value to use to pay their militia.

    81. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by jimbolauski · · Score: 1

      Your analogy is bad, the fuel powers you to get there, the roads get you there. It would be like the government charging sears a percentage of all the sales sears made because their customers use the government roads.

      --
      Knowledge = Power
      P= W/t
      t=Money
      Money = Work/Knowledge so the less you know the more you make
    82. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by leonardluen · · Score: 1

      oracle still has a useful product that people want. (not sure why) but because of this they might survive. people would be willing to trade other resources to them for their product. which requires specialized skill and knowledge to produces, and this creates value.

      a company like Apple on the other hand is potentially screwed. simply because they hold so much money in the bank all of which would be useless now, so they would lose nearly all their value. the only value they would have is whatever products they currently have in a warehouse, and their manufacturing abilities, which much of that they purchase from other people and don't do in-house. however they would have some intellectual value in their developers.

      i don't agree with all you are saying but some of the tech companies would possibly be screwed.

      Intel might survive as they still own most of their foundries and their product takes a lot of specialized skill and knowledge to produce.

    83. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      It seems to me the software companies would mostly be screwed, because anyone would be able to just copy their product for free. No government = no copyright enforcement. The only defense they'd have is the need for customers to pay for support services.

    84. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Wycliffe · · Score: 1

      With no government, paper money has no value, and corporations have nothing to pay employees. The root of it all is money, and that's a creation of the government. If the government went away, everything would fall apart because of that simple fact; people would have to move to some other form of currency, and corporations would mostly cease to exist unless they control something that can be used as currency.

      I actually agree with most of what you say except for this part. Money is a creation of the government only because the government
      has laws and a military saying it is so. Without the government, corporations can easily create their own currency. Without a government
      a "walmart gift card" would probably be worth more than government issued money. Same with a "taco bell certificate", etc... You don't
      need a government to create money, a store of wealth, or an incentive for people to work.

    85. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by madhatter256 · · Score: 1

      In mobbish term it is called "protection money".

      It'd be a shame if something bad were to happen to all of this streaming data...

      --
      Previewing comments are for sissies!
    86. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In this case, Sears intentionally blocked off their parking lots

      Except that in the original analogy, Sears == Netflix. In order for your revision to work, Netflix needs to be blocking something. What is Netflix blocking? And no, "other traffic" does not count. To go back to the original analogy, it isn't Sears that is blocking the mall parking lot, it is the customers. Sears is so fucking popular, that everyone wants to shop there. But the mall infrastructure cannot handle everyone who wants to park there.

      forcing customers to drive over and park on long stretches of Exxon's roads...

      Exxon did not sell me access to their roads, Exxon sold me gasoline to use as I please on their roads. And no one is parking on Exxon's roads, it's just really shitty traffic because everyone wants to go to Sears.

    87. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 1

      > With no government, paper money has no value,

      Uh, you DO realize that the medium is irrelevant, right?

      It doesn't matter what token you use: coins, paper, or bits.

      Money, at its highest level, is nothing more then an exchange of energy. (The second level is a compact way to conveniently exchange time, skill, and/or labor.)

      Otherwise, good post!

      --
      The best thing about America?: Capitalism
      The worst thing about America? Capitalism
      "

    88. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      The problem here is that corporate-created money might not be worth anything; it's really not much different than the barter system. If some guy has some bread that I want, and I have a chicken to trade, and he doesn't want a chicken, then we're kinda stuck and I have to waste a lot of time trading my chicken to some third party (or worse, 4th and 5th parties) for something the bread-owner wants.

      If Walmart wants to buy bread from BreadCo, what are they going to pay for it with? Walmart gift cards? What if BreadCo doesn't want any such cards, and needs something they can trade with farmers for grain? With more niche industries, it gets even more pronounced. Suppose I'm a small company that sells some custom electronic part, and some other smallish company wants to buy it for some internal project. That company makes wheel bearings. What are they going to give me for my part? Some bearings? I don't want or need any bearings, theirs don't even fit any of my vehicles. Maybe they could offer me Walmart, Target, Amazon, Best Buy, and Google Play giftcards. So you end up with tons of different currencies and lots of disagreements about how much anything is worth in any particular currencies, and people having to constantly exchange currencies for other currencies (many people might refuse the Best Buy cards because they think they're worthless since BB overcharges for everything; many would also refuse Taco Bell certificates because their food is shit). This isn't a recipe for a stable economy, it's a mess. Moreover, you can forget about any kind of automation in the economy, not to mention all e-commerce. How do you exchange these currencies online? What if the vendor doesn't take your currency? Bitcoin (or one of its many competitors) might get around this, but the cryptocurrencies have shown their own problems too, namely extreme instability.

    89. Re: if Comcast were Exxon by BondGamer · · Score: 1

      The correct analogy would be if Comcast were Exxon, they would be the gas station who has run out of gas because Exxon hired a trucking company that couldn't supply enough trucks to keep all the gas stations full.

    90. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I actually think this would be a better situation than what we have today; after all, when the armies of Wal-Mart and Techron are laying siege to city hall, it's much harder to hide than when the lobbyists for those same corporations are giving the local council "donations".

      Both of them are the same net effect (putting pressure on making decisions that are good for the corporations), but one requires a much more deliberate stance to ignore or consider "fair".

    91. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by AutodidactLabrat · · Score: 1

      Glad there was one decent Orc in the crowd!

    92. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by AutodidactLabrat · · Score: 1

      That is an interesting view of regulatory capture, which basically states companies use regulations to limit competition and maintain higher pricing....If, as you claim, regulatory capture defines a country as third world and corrupt the EU would fit that description quite nicely.

      Regulatory capture is not restricting 'cream-skimming' low costs, it is restricting "Gristle abandonment". The USPS, for example, is a burden only because the cheap interCity routes were gobbled up by Fed-Ex and later UPS. Now remote mail is entirely borne by USPS without the offset of low cost intracity and intercity delivery. Regulatory capture is when Nuclear Power Plant owners write Nuclear Waste Disposal rules, for instance and yes, the U.S. is worse at public participation than most of the European states.

    93. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by swalve · · Score: 1

      It's more like paying a toll to cross a bridge. I pay in one direction, Netflix pays in the other direction.

      Who knows? Maybe it is cheaper to pay Comcast directly for access than it is to pay the various telcos.

    94. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 1

      That is an interesting view of regulatory capture, which basically states companies use regulations to limit competition and maintain higher pricing....If, as you claim, regulatory capture defines a country as third world and corrupt the EU would fit that description quite nicely.

      Regulatory capture is not restricting 'cream-skimming' low costs, it is restricting "Gristle abandonment". The USPS, for example, is a burden only because the cheap interCity routes were gobbled up by Fed-Ex and later UPS. Now remote mail is entirely borne by USPS without the offset of low cost intracity and intercity delivery. Regulatory capture is when Nuclear Power Plant owners write Nuclear Waste Disposal rules, for instance and yes, the U.S. is worse at public participation than most of the European states.

      Regulatory capture is not about public participation but rather how companies use regulations to their benefit and how regualtory agencies come to work to the benefit of the regulated; generally to limit competition and sustain higher profits. I would argue the Europeans take a backseat to no one in this regard; although the US is good at it as well.

      --
      I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
    95. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by delta65 · · Score: 1

      They'd be receiving money from Sears when I drove my car to the mall.

      Why do people accept this?

      i agree....it stinks. get ready to pay more for your netflix subscription

    96. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by AutodidactLabrat · · Score: 1

      Regulatory capture is about PREVENTING public participation so, yes, you are correct up to the point where you ignore that regulatory capture is more about divesting costs onto the public than it is about increasing control over what remains (though they do that too).
      This is where the U.S. "revolving door" fails we, the People, most spectacularly.
      Thus the Europeans are doing a FAR better job at forcing profit centers to pay the costs they leave 'stranded' than does America.
      Certainly this does not mean that people like Micro$ do not use government to profit, but it does mean that '.docx' was forced to go public rather than have the EU shut down all sales of Micro$ 'patent seizing' of the marketplace.
      So, you got it part right, but missed the essential

    97. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Heaven help us if you're an economics professor.

    98. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by DedTV · · Score: 1

      Why wouldn't people accept it? I happily paid an extra $5 a month back in the 90s to get access to local Quake, Unreal and other game servers that were run on my ISP's network. Taking money from Netflix to host their service is no different than what ISPs did with gaming services back in the dial up days of the internet. But since Netflix charges their customers it makes more sense to have them pay the ISP and decide for themselves how, or if they pass the costs on to their customers.

      I don't see what people are upset about. If Comcast was actively throttling Netflix traffic after it got to their network unless Netflix paid them, then it'd be something to rage over. But as that doesn't appear to be the case, the only people who have any reason to be upset are the investors and employees of current CDNs and transit networks since ISPs can now compete with them.

    99. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      Oh no, there have been many implementations of communism which were not voluntary. They all failed catastrophically.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    100. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by evilviper · · Score: 1

      The fact that so many of Comcast's customers all choose to fill their paid-for internet pipes with bits from Netflix means that Comcast has agreed to provide adequate infrastructure to satisfy the bandwidth requirements its customers have paid for.

      Just wait until Netflix decides they don't like paying for internet access anymore, and tells Comcast that THEY have to run free pipes to their door, or else their customers don't get Netflix anymore. After all, YOU paid Comcast to get Netflix, so, in your imaginary world, Comcast has to do ANYTHING Netflix wants, no matter how badly they act.

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    101. Re: If Comcast were Exxon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      governments print money but they don't give it value. The value is produced by the individual who trades skill or service for it because he knows he can use it to in turn barter it with another individual.

    102. Re: If Comcast were Exxon by MaxCasey · · Score: 1

      governments print money but they don't give it value. The value is produced by the individual who trades skill or service for it because he knows he can use it to in turn barter it with another individual.

    103. Re: If Comcast were Exxon by MaxCasey · · Score: 1

      Actually bub, the Federal Reserve, a private bank creates money. The government can come and go, but the bankers remain the same.

    104. Re: If Comcast were Exxon by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      No, the value is given by the aggregate activities of the nation. The value of a nation's currency is a perception of that nation's economic strength and stability.

    105. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by smellotron · · Score: 1

      You think some 70-year-old suit is going to be able to maintain control?

      If he murders people left and right and scares the fuck out of everyone else, then yeah I would stay off of his lawn.

    106. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by smellotron · · Score: 1

      If Walmart wants to buy bread from BreadCo, what are they going to pay for it with? Walmart gift cards? ... This isn't a recipe for a stable economy, it's a mess.

      I'm not sure what your point is with all of this. Your argument seems to be "if the US government disappears overnight, things fall apart." But that's not very constructive, because it's based on an extremely thin premise: immediate devaluation of USD to 0; no massive worldwide selloff, just *poof* it's gone. Furthermore, you don't seem to be able to see past the initial messy period. Sure, there will be a large barter economy. But that's not new, people have survived with barter economies in the past! So, something will appear to fill the USD void, and stability will slowly return. Because if it didn't, then we wouldn't be talking about this today. We would be trading goats and ball bearings, and murdering 70-year-old men in suits.

    107. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 1

      Regulatory capture is about PREVENTING public participation so, yes, you are correct up to the point where you ignore that regulatory capture is more about divesting costs onto the public than it is about increasing control over what remains (though they do that too).l

      Regulatory capture is about increasing profits by using the regulator to create conditions favorable to the regulated over other potential entrants into the market. after all, profits are the sole reason a for - profit (and some non-profit) corporations exist. While limiting public participation could be a method to do this it is not the goal of regulatory capture. Perhaps the best way they do this is in acting barriers to entry for new entrants. Ultimately, regulators create a less competitive market that allows incumbents to generate greater profits.

      That is not to say all regulatory actions benefit the regulated. As for making .docx public, what practical effect has it had? Sure, some municipalities went over to Linux but for every Munich there is another that tried and went back to MS. MS, by virtue of its locking, already has strong barriers to entry that will not be breached until there is a profound shift in the way people view computing; once we move from a desktop centric model to a cloud model there will be opportunities to weaken MS' hold on the market as the OS and desktop tools become less important for compatibility. That, however is not from less regulatory capture but rather creative destruction. Of course, MS may figure out a way to locking the new model as well, but I think that is less likely given the lesser importance of the OS and desktop tools. Of course, we may simply swap MS for Google...

      --
      I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
    108. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by Agent0013 · · Score: 1

      If there were 10 competing Netflix-like companies that combined to have the same traffic throughput, would Comcast's network be able to handle it any better? They would be just as overloaded if the traffic their customers were demanding came from multiple locations as it does when most of it comes from one.

      --

      -- ssoorrrryy,, dduupplleexx sswwiittcchh oonn.. -Quote found on actual fortune cookie.
    109. Re: If Comcast were Exxon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think there's a difference of opinion because of location and geography. You obviously lived somewhere that had a terrain that could block signals, while this disbelieving "old-timer" probably lived somewhere nice and flat.

      Cool video, by the way. It's a shame there isn't cooperation like that in America anymore. "hey...if we did this togeth-" will get furrowed brows from social circles because that's commie talk.

    110. Re:If Comcast were Exxon by AutodidactLabrat · · Score: 1

      Practical effect? Nothing less than the adoption in Europe of the highly successful open source suites. In the end, regulation can be done honestly (witness the effect of honest regulation in the Seldane conspiracy) by honest administrations. You won't get that in an admin with 32 men conspiring to committ felonies on the public payroll. You will get it in those with zero felonies committed by employees of the WH who are on the public payroll at the time. In the end, some people have no use for integrity but as stock in trade.

  2. Oh shit by Enry · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Well there goes the Internet

    1. Re:Oh shit by paiute · · Score: 1

      Here Lies the Free and Open Internet
      1969-2014
      RIP, Old friend - It was fun.

      --
      If Slashdot were chemistry it would look like this:Cadaverine
    2. Re:Oh shit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is this appropriate: http://youtu.be/OJ2uPX7mIo8

    3. Re:Oh shit by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 4, Insightful

      All too true.

      The net we knew is truly dying. It goes beyond the death of Net Neutrality and the resulting birth of Net Extortion exemplified by this deal. More and more we see people moving away from rich client browsers and other programs into simpler, disconnected, atomic apps, connecting to restricted, walled garden, internet services. Such services can more easily transition into a pay per-view web, whereas free-visit-traffic websites with no method of charging/locking-in users will find the going difficult. Many are already consciously damaging the usability of their own websites in an attempt to transition them toward a restricted "app"-like format-- the new Slashdot Beta being a prime example.

      The internet could be moving towards an earlier proposed vision of it, from the 1980s, when it was proposed that people be nickel and dimed for each additional service they required. Every new service would require -- not a website-- but a new client program, which could naturally be regulated and charged on an individual basis. Somehow,, this outdated model the past is slowly becoming the future of our Internet.

      This didn't have to happen. No technological development lead us to this point. This outcome was decided most firmly in the realm of the Law, by the Court system, and with not one pip of say-so from the programming or engineering community which actually runs and maintains the web.

      If the internet genie is put back in the box, it will be the result of entirely socially/legally constructed forces.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    4. Re:Oh shit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      "No technological development lead us to this point."

      LED. LED. LED. LED. LED. LED. LED. LED.

      What the FUCK part of "The past tense of LEAD is LED" is so goddamned hard to understand?

    5. Re:Oh shit by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Yep, we're quickly going back to the days of Compu$erve.

      This outcome was decided most firmly in the realm of the Law, by the Court system, and with not one pip of say-so from the programming or engineering community which actually runs and maintains the web.

      The programming and engineering communities have no power whatsoever in this society, at least in the US. In the US at least, the lawyers have all the power.

    6. Re:Oh shit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not necessarily...if Netflix is smart, they'll flex their muscle by passing the cost on to Comcast customers. Much like they did when they started sending out BluRays, they should prompt Netflix users to enable Comcast streaming for an additional monthly cost and make it abundantly clear that customers don't have to pay the fee if they use providers other than Comcast. They can even give the proper Comcast support number for people to call and complain or representative contact info to write in support of net neutrality.

      With this one move, Netflix could both enable reliable streaming for their customers as well as educating customers on the importance of neutral networks.

    7. Re:Oh shit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most internet users said this when AOL starting giving its users Internet access.

    8. Re: Oh shit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Given how many are lying libertarians who deny climate change I say good riddance to bad rubbish. You people have no business commenting on anything and while agree with mabt political points on this site I won't shed a tear when your hiding place is taken FIRST even if we're all fucked vecause of liars.

    9. Re:Oh shit by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      I think that would have been possible before everybody including your grandma was on the Internet. One of the great resources we have in this battle is the mob. Geek culture has become mainstream culture with everybody walking around with an internet-connected computer in their pockets, spending their meal times staring at the screen and their evenings browsing the web, playing games, and watching streaming services. Once the masses see their pretty devices become less useful and their services more encumbered, they will start complaining. This is how we beat SOPA, and we can beat the next atrocity, too.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    10. Re:Oh shit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Welp,

      oh Danny boy we knew ye well. Burry the bastard and lets birth the cantenna net.

      CANT anyone?

  3. Not long by mbone · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I wonder how soon until ISP's 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.

    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.

    1. Re:Not long by x0ra · · Score: 0

      Bandwidth is neither unlimited or free. It's rather fun to see people who wand to have those with high income pay more tax, but not having big bandwidth consumer pay more for the pipe access. I, for one, would be happy to subscribe to a cheaper basic service I don't mind to have youtube (or youporn) in 144p if at the end that saves me money.

    2. Re:Not long by GreyWolf3000 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      But you're supposing that you're paying for consumption. That's a very reasonable ideal.

      Netflix is paying for content, which is one step towards turning them into any other "content provider," which is exactly where telcos want them to be. They want to be in between us and Netflix so that Netflix will scratch their beak.

      The end game is not you or I paying for tiers of "bandwidth," it's getting us to pay for tiers of "content" -- we should resist this rather forcefully.

      --
      Slashdot: Where people pretend to be twice as smart as they really are by behaving like children.
    3. Re:Not long by thaylin · · Score: 2

      Its rather funny to see people who think this kinda thing will save them money. At the end of the day it will cost you more money. Less competition, more double dipping.

      --
      When you cant win, ad hominem.
    4. Re:Not long by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

      Your basic service pay will be carved up among a bunch of web sites you may not even want.

      Comcast built roads to attach to other roads. Now not only do they charge you, but they charge the store you go to, or else a package shipped "might get broken, ya know?"

      --
      (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
    5. Re:Not long by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      x0ra, this isn't what this post is about at all. Maybe read before commenting?

      The concern isn't that people who use more bandwidth might have to pay more, it's that a lack of net neutrality means that your ISP can decide that some parts of the web will not be accessible to you unless you pay a premium. It won't be long before things the ISPs don't like won't be accessible through them at all, in fact, which will obviously have an effect on the kinds of reporting and information people will have access to.

    6. Re:Not long by x0ra · · Score: 1

      Less competition, more double dipping is only due to regulatory capture, ie. the very same regulation that YOU want. I want no regulation. I want a system where a player like Iliad (owner of French ISP "Free") can come into the market and re-distribute the cards. The fun point is that the French government recently threatened to intervene because cell/internet access was about to become too cheap for the customer and was threatening the interest of historical bloated telcos...

    7. Re:Not long by thaylin · · Score: 3, Insightful

      No regulation and this will just get worse. It has been shown time and time again. This is a market that requires hudge investment, and have huge monopolies already in place. Without major government intervention, at least paying for the infrastructure, there is no way many will come into the market. Even Google needed help in the areas it has come into.

      --
      When you cant win, ad hominem.
    8. Re:Not long by weave · · Score: 1

      Not true. If you're willing to reduce your usage from a few hundred gigs a month to just 5 gigs a month, you can save $5 in some markets.

      http://customer.comcast.com/he...

      If you go over that pathetic amount, you end up paying $1 a gig. /snark

      I wonder if anyone actually thinks this is a good deal.

    9. Re:Not long by x0ra · · Score: 0

      AFAIK, Comcast is only throttling down Netflix, not fully blocking it. So the real issue, is more that you are not able to live stream a 4k feed, not that "nytimes.com" is not accessible _at_all_. You are waiving the flag of freedom of information (toward which private company have no obligation to) where the real problem is that you are slightly disturbed because you cannot watch SNL feed.

      I am more worried about Government over-power/over-control on telcos than anything else.

    10. Re:Not long by thaylin · · Score: 2

      Government under power and deregulation is what caused this. My assumption at this point is that you are a tea partier who sees no government control as the only good control, well I am here to tell you that is incorrect.

      --
      When you cant win, ad hominem.
    11. Re:Not long by x0ra · · Score: 1

      The US is originally a federation of States, not a centralized country. The Federal government has no business in telcos.

    12. Re:Not long by thaylin · · Score: 1

      Does not matter what it was originally, once the Constitution was signed it became a centralized country. Even still your point A has not bearing on point B, especially since telcos cross state lines making them the responsibility of the federal government. Also point is that the federal government created the internet, so you would think that its use within the US would be under their purview

      --
      When you cant win, ad hominem.
    13. Re:Not long by Bengie · · Score: 1

      Bandwidth is the cheapest part of being an ISP(decent sized). You're talking about reducing the cost of something that makes up less than 10% of your bill

    14. Re:Not long by whoever57 · · Score: 4, Informative
      --
      The real "Libtards" are the Libertarians!
    15. Re:Not long by x0ra · · Score: 1

      By your reasoning Karl Benz's inheritors should still have oversight power on the automobile...

    16. Re:Not long by thaylin · · Score: 1

      That is a giant logical leap that is not grounded in reality... The internet was paid for by us through the government, and is used by us.

      --
      When you cant win, ad hominem.
    17. Re:Not long by vux984 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Bandwidth is neither unlimited or free.

      I fully understand this. That is why i am paying my ISP a premium for 100Mb access.

      It's rather fun to see people who wand to have those with high income pay more tax, but not having big bandwidth consumer pay more for the pipe access.

      What are you on about? I do pay more for 100mbit bandwidth than my brother pays for 10mbit. I am not complaining about this, nobody is.

      I, for one, would be happy to subscribe to a cheaper basic service I don't mind to have youtube (or youporn) in 144p if at the end that saves me money.

      Be my guest, pay the ISP less for less speed. Lots of people do that.

      What does that have to do with the ISP deciding to charge netflix to provide me the high speed access to the content that I am paying them to provide me high speed access to?

      This is the equivalent of me going into a restaurant with a bottle of wine. (The wine is netflix, the restaurant is my ISP.)

      Now, the rules here are that I can do this, I can bring in my own bottle of wine, but have to pay a corking fee for them to serve it to me in the restaurant. I am fine with this. So I've paid for the wine (netflix), and I've paid for the corking (ISP). So that's all there is too it.

      Suddenly the restaurant phones the liquor store and demands money from THEM to serve me the wine. The wine that I've already paid for myself, and which I've already paid the restaurant to serve me.

      WTF

      I am the ISPs customer. I am already paying the ISP a lot of money to transmit data over their network to me, from any source on the internet at high speed. Why on EARTH should netflix have to pay them as well for what I am already paying them for?

    18. Re:Not long by x0ra · · Score: 1

      You paid nothing for the Internet, your parents did. You are merely free-riding past investments.

    19. Re:Not long by thaylin · · Score: 0

      First of all you dont know how old I am, so your statement is very wild assumptions. I have paid taxes to help setup the internet to where it is now, I am not free-riding past investments of my parents. Also they just recently received a massive amount of money to upgrade and bring internet to the outskirts, that is money that I paid, not just my parents....

      --
      When you cant win, ad hominem.
    20. Re:Not long by DuckDodgers · · Score: 1

      That would be a fine argument if internet service providers were not natural monopolies. I live in a Philadelphia suburb in which my internet choices are Comcast, dialup, and wireless 3G service (no 4G towers near me). So if I want decent connection speed, I have only one choice.

      Now if I could choose between multiple different providers for high speed internet, then sure - let them set their own prices for bandwidth, and competition will drive the internet service providers to keep offering higher bandwidth at lower prices in a bid for customers. But that's not what most of the country has, so if the laws don't force net neutrality, we get screwed and we have no alternative.

    21. Re:Not long by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The issue is, they are already paying for pipe access.

      Netflix pays for the bandwidth exiting their servers.

      Comcast customers pay for the bandwith they pull from the servers.

      Why should Netflix pay Comcast more for services it's already paying for?
      Comcast should then charge customers more for using more bandwidth. (Unlimited internet is untenable)

      As I see it,
      Netflix $$$ Cogent --- Comcast $$$ Customer.
      Comcast wants to Netflix to pay for the link between Cogent and Comcast.
      Which, it really shouldn't be doing.
      Netflix is already paying Up/Downstream charges to get the information onto the internet.
      Comcast should be charging more (or preferably, take less profit) to get a better owrking arrangement with their uplink providers. Or improve infrastrcture.

    22. Re:Not long by meglon · · Score: 1

      ...and then we got the Constitution because that "federation of states, not a centralized country" was completely dysfunctional. Why in the hell is it that the people don't have a clue about history always want to base incredibly fucking stupid arguments on their complete fucking intentional stupidity?

      --
      Fascism: An authoritarian and nationalistic right-wing system of government and social organization. See also: NAZI's
    23. Re:Not long by KingMotley · · Score: 1

      If I wanted to limit my usage to 5 gigs a month, I could save $78 a month by dropping comcast completely, and just using my cellular provider.

    24. Re:Not long by log0n · · Score: 1

      Once built, bandwidth is unlimited and free. The problem comes down to human nature and everyone wanting to make their buck off it.

    25. Re:Not long by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 1

      Even Google needed help in the areas it has come into.

      Google apparently didn't get monetary help. Maybe they should have. They had a good idea. Too late. Too slow. The Internet is broken and tomorrow morning, the lawyers from Comcast will be on their doorstep with a bill for YouTube. At their current rate of deployment, they're a century away from escaping that bill, if they ever can. YouTube will be inexplicably slow for Comcast's captive audience until they pay up. And they won't be able to prove it, and even if they could, Comcast's captive audience will still blame YouTube, not Comcast.

    26. Re:Not long by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 2

      When it acquired NBC Universal in 2011, Comcast agreed to "net neutrality" conditions that prevent it from prioritizing its online content over a competitor such as Netflix. Comcast is expected to offer similar restrictions in its proposed merger with Time Warner Cable.

      Were there any penalties for failing to uphold that agreement? No? It was a gentleman's agreement? And they're no gentlemen.

      Who's going to lift a finger to penalize them? No one. The members of the FCC want to pass back through that revolving door into a nice cushy position when their commission terms are up.

    27. Re:Not long by Walter+White · · Score: 1

      AFAIK I have Comcast and Netflix. Most of the time when I watch Netflix it wavers between 280SD and 480SD. On a good day I get 720HD. On a bad day - which is all too frequent - I get 240SD. Anything from 280SD and below looks like crap on a modern HDTV.

      And yet, at the same time I can run a bandwidth test which shows I get great bandwidth (speedtest.net, local test server.)

      I suppose the bottleneck could be beyond the portion of the network between my home and the local speedtest.net server. Or Comcast is throttling Netflix. Either way, Comcast has a vested interest in not solving the problem.

    28. Re:Not long by rk · · Score: 2

      You've never managed a network, have you?

    29. Re:Not long by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One could argue that throttling Netflix is not the same thing as prioritizing internal Comcast content.

    30. Re:Not long by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're fucking retarded.

    31. Re:Not long by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Everyone knows those restrictions are never enforced.

    32. Re:Not long by lordofthechia · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I think the better analogy is the post office.

      You pay shipping to receive packages (to the post office). You also pay for the content of those packages (to whoever you bought the item(s) from).

      Now more and more people start ordering stuff from Amazon. The local post office realizes that their mail trucks are filling up and they're unable to pick up all the packages they need. Some of the packages get left behind, some get crammed into the truck (and end up damaged), some make it through.

        They also notice that a third of all packages have Amazon logos.

      Does the post office:

      A) Use the extra money it has been receiving from postage fees to upgrade it's fleet, buy more trucks, hire more drivers, etc.

      B) Pick up on Amazon's generous offer to have some items already stocked, packaged, and automatically labeled next to the Post office so that commonly ordered items can be transferred locally instead of going through the USPS's now heavily taxed fleet?

      C) Extort money from Amazon in exchange for their customers receiving their packages in a timely and undamaged fashion (which their customers are already paying for).

      Now you can say the main difference is that the post office is charging per package vs selling a service to its customers where they can receive a certain amount of mail (say in pounds) per day. Either way though a service is being promised, paid for, but not fully delivered.

      And now to add self interest:

      What if you got an ad flyer from your local post office with "Now you can order movies and books from the USPS!" while at the same time movies and books that you are paying shipping to receive from Amazon are getting delayed, crushed, or lost.

      --
      Georgia Tech, the leader in Chia(tm) technology.
    33. Re:Not long by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      YES! I would vote this up but I am too lazy to create an acct to get mod points. Seriously the wine analogy is the best example I have read yet of the situation.

    34. Re:Not long by NoImNotNineVolt · · Score: 1

      Now, the rules here are that I can do this, I can bring in my own bottle of wine, but have to pay a corking fee for them to serve it to me in the restaurant. I am fine with this.

      First they came...

      May I suggest that your previous acceptance of double-dipping is what has encouraged, you guessed it, more double dipping!

      I, personally, can't stand corking fees. I've already paid for my bottle of wine. I'm already paying to eat at the restaurant. I have my own corkscrew, for fuck's sake. Just what, exactly, am I paying for when I hand over cash for a corking fee? Greed. Nothing more than greed. The restaurant knows you want your wine. You've already paid for it, after all. And now they can hold your wine for ransom, because they've got you by the balls. Does it cost them anything extra if you bring your own wine? Maybe in the same sense that downloading an mp3 costs Sony some imaginary money.

      But you are fine with this, despite there being no rational explanation for any of it. And so the perception is that people don't mind when they have to pay for something twice, as long as they're not paying the same person twice. I am not fine with this.

      --
      Chuuch. Preach. Tabernacle.
    35. Re:Not long by vux984 · · Score: 1

      But you are fine with this, despite there being no rational explanation for any of it

      Yes, I am fine with it. Because I really don't expect a restaurant to outside food and drink at all. And the corking fee is a reasonable compromise.

      You get to drink the wine you want; and usually for less than it would have cost you to buy the wine you didn't want, and they still make money.

      Is it greed? Sure, in part, yes. But where would you draw the line? Should I be able to walk into a restaurant with my extended family, sit down taking up half the seats in the place, and then pull out a picnic basket? Of course not.

    36. Re:Not long by NoImNotNineVolt · · Score: 1

      It's a restaurant, not a winery.

      Much like I expect to be able to bring my own book to a coffee shop, or my own coffee to a bookstore, or my own food to a winery, I expect to be able to bring my own wine to a restaurant.

      Of course, many restaurants have decided that it's very lucrative to get a liquor license and start selling absurdly overpriced wine on-premises, netting huge margins. Allowing people to bring their own wine (well, really the same wine that they're selling, but purchased elsewhere at a reasonable price) would enable competition, which is precisely what they're trying to avoid.

      So they want to be liquor stores, but they don't want to compete with liquor store. Awesome. Granted, the line does have to be drawn somewhere, otherwise people would just bring their own food, right? Wouldn't you?

      I mean, I sure as shit wouldn't. Because what the fuck would the point of that be? I mean, I guess if I really hated the proprietor of the restaurant and was just looking for ways to fuck with them out of spite. Do you really see this as a potential problem? If you do, and you indeed require a line to be drawn, then I'd say that's where the line ought to fall. If a restaurant is an establishment that primarily serves food, then no outside food. If a bar is an establishment that primarily serves alcohol, then no outside alcohol. If an establishment primarily serves both food and alcohol, then that will be reflected by their competitive pricing. If your restaurant charges $80 for a bottle that is normally $30, it's evident that your primary function is to serve food, but holding alcohol hostage is how you make your money.

      Greed. Plain and simple. I can think of countless ways to prevent your hypothetical picnic-in-a-restaurant scenario that don't arbitrarily enrich the restaurant. Of course, that's precisely why you don't see any of those ways enacted in practice. Greed. The problem isn't that people would picnic without these kinds of rules. The problem is that profits would fall. The whole picnic basket thing is merely some shitty justification that falsely shifts the topic of conversation from greed to some kind of "but think of the poor job creator" story.

      --
      Chuuch. Preach. Tabernacle.
    37. Re:Not long by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cripes, man, this is Slashdot! Where are the cars in your analogy!?

    38. Re:Not long by vux984 · · Score: 1

      It's a restaurant,

      Right. A restaurant, an establishment to serve meals. A meal, of course, is comprised of food and drinks.

      not a winery.

      A winery is a farm that grows grapes, and ferments them into wine. Why would I go to a winery for a glass of wine? What if I -gasp- want a glass of wine WITH food?

      Of course, many restaurants have decided that it's very lucrative to get a liquor license and start selling absurdly overpriced wine on-premises, netting huge margins.

      You do realize mcdonalds charges ~1250% on Coca Cola too right? It costs them ~16 cents for a large coke (and half of that is the paper cup). Why does 250% on a bottle of wine offend you?

      The fries are marked up several hundred percent as well; and for what? They open a bag of fries (which are just potatoes) and put them in a deep frier for 3 minutes, and then salt them. Done.

      Yet paying triple for them to open a bottle of wine? That is worthy of a rant?

    39. Re:Not long by vux984 · · Score: 1

      -sigh- </em>

    40. Re:Not long by NoImNotNineVolt · · Score: 1

      :)

      That's why I don't get Coke at McDonalds. Bottle of water, please.

      Either way I'm getting gouged, but at least with the water bottle my rapist is several degrees removed.

      Many wineries sell their wares on-site, in addition to providing tastings. You go there to drink wine. And they let you bring your own food instead of insisting that you buy their $100/lb cheese and $5 crackers. Because drinking wine usually involves eating food, unless you're a professional :P

      What next, baseball games with $10 beers or raves with $10 water bottles?

      ... oh.

      And that's why I'm ranting. Because so many entrepreneurs have discovered that you can assrape a captive market.

      --
      Chuuch. Preach. Tabernacle.
    41. Re:Not long by vux984 · · Score: 1

      That's why I don't get Coke at McDonalds. Bottle of water, please.

      Paying for tap water at bottled water prices is a bigger scam than soft drinks. But at least its healthier. CocaCola gets your money either way.

      Many wineries sell their wares on-site, in addition to providing tastings.

      Yeah, sorry, a winery isn't a place to "go to eat", even if you can bring food. Several of my favorite wines are from Portugal, Argentina, and South Africa... so going to the local wineries isn't exactly a solution.

      And that's why I'm ranting. Because so many entrepreneurs have discovered that you can assrape a captive market.

      I agree its a "rip off"; but you know going in what the deal is. You factor it in as part of the price of the event. And if the rave were legally prevented from charging $10 for water, they'd raise the 'cover' charge instead. They aren't going to simply "make less money".

      If the market wouldn't "bear it" then some restaurants wouldn't charge large fees, and the wine would be reasonable. There's no artificial factor forcing prices to those levels, so that's genuinely the hand of the free market. There's lots of real competition between restaurants... its not Comcast.

    42. Re:Not long by NoImNotNineVolt · · Score: 1

      Yeah, sorry, a winery isn't a place to "go to eat", even if you can bring food.

      And a restaurant isn't a place to "go to drink", even if you can bring alcohol. That's my point. A restaurant charging a corking fee makes about as much sense as a winery charging a "opening your box of crackers" fee. The only difference is that we've already become accustomed to one, but the other would still draw customers' ire as a blatant, unjustifiable money grab.

      If the market wouldn't "bear it" then some restaurants wouldn't charge large fees, and the wine would be reasonable.

      See, this is where the "free market" rhetoric throws me for a loop. On the one hand, you've got competition putting downward pressure on prices, a hard lower bound with price equal to cost (in the case of corking fees, $0). On the other hand, you've got greed putting upward pressure on prices, with no real upper bound beyond "what the market will bear". I thought one of these invisible hands was supposed to bring about optimally low prices for everyone, but here we are looking at corking fees well in excess of any "cost" associated with letting people drink their own wine. It seems that either competition is lacking (which is clearly false, at least in the restaurant industry), free market economics is wrong (...), or we can agree that a corking fee is just greed at its finest. There's no justification for it beyond that. And indeed, with a captive market (like people eating at a restaurant), greed goes a long way, as a captive market will bear quite a bit.

      --
      Chuuch. Preach. Tabernacle.
    43. Re:Not long by bingoUV · · Score: 1

      A restaurant charging a corking fee makes about as much sense as a winery charging a "opening your box of crackers" fee

      Ok, both are legal. I don't see a problem.

      Practically, dynamics are different. Restaurants typically operate in orders of magnitude more expensive real-estate than wineries. So people picnicking in restaurants is orders of magnitude more expensive for restaurants than for wineries.

      BUT, it is legal to operate a restaurant in the middle of nowhere. I doubt customers(if any) would be charged for bringing in their own food/wine/water/furniture there. It is also legal to operate a winery in million-dollar-per-square meter real-estate. I doubt customers(if any) would be allowed to breathe without charges in such wineries.

      --
      Bingo Dictionary - Pragmatist, n. A myopic idealist.
    44. Re:Not long by NoImNotNineVolt · · Score: 1

      You know what else is legal? Me fucking your wife. Morality and legality are two different issues. Please don't conflate them. I never suggested that corking fees are (or ought to be) illegal.

      Anyway, I think we can both agree that it's entirely reasonable for both a restaurant and a winery to only allow paying customers to lounge about the premises. That's not my point. My point is that charging customers for things unrelated to their primary business is absurd and immoral. A restaurant can legally charge a corking fee, sure. They can also legally charge customers for silverware or napkins. They can also legally charge customers based on their height.

      The real estate argument doesn't do it for me. It's not like restaurants that charge corking fees will charge you if you're just hanging out and pretending to drink an imaginary bottle of wine, which would take up just as much of their real estate as if the bottle were real.

      Greed is legal, yes. The question is, why do you think it's moral?

      --
      Chuuch. Preach. Tabernacle.
    45. Re:Not long by bingoUV · · Score: 1

      Morality and legality are two different issues

      Primarily my statement was invitation for you (and 300 million other citizens of the US) to change the rules of the game - it being legal and your argument of it being better. Secondarily, this is why my reply didn't end there, I proceeded with arguments why there is no moral issue either. You hadn't made your stand completely clear whether you have a moral or a legal problem with this.

      Anyway, I think we can both agree that it's entirely reasonable for both a restaurant and a winery to only allow paying customers to lounge about the premises.

      Not complete. "Paying" is not enough - paying enough in most circumstances such that the business model is profitable and acceptable for the culture they are operating in; is what is necessary.

      The real estate argument doesn't do it for me. It's not like restaurants that charge corking fees will charge you if you're just hanging out and pretending to drink an imaginary bottle of wine, which would take up just as much of their real estate as if the bottle were real.

      Banks incur real costs if lots of people pretend to want to take a loan and endlessly inquire about it. Super markets would incur loss of business if people start meditating in large groups for long periods of time. Restaurants would not like if people start hanging out and pretending to drink an imaginary bottle of wine. Guess what? You are not the first to think about these things.

      To cover unforeseen circumstances - most restaurants and super-markets reserve rights of admission, bank executives can refuse to answer your loan queries. Start talking when large number of people start doing these and these will be explicitly prohibited from rules of businesses of banks supermarkets and restaurants. Till then it is few explicit rules and a right to tell customers to fuck off. Having to read a 20 million word constitution of each place of business would kill a HUGE majority of GOOD economic activity, don't you think?

      Greed is legal, yes. The question is, why do you think it's moral?

      Restaurants do not have anything resembling a monopoly in most markets, they are far from an essential service for most people, regulatory and economic barriers to entry are negligible. The "problems" with greed in restaurants is easily fixable by you starting a non-greedy restaurants. If most people flock to yours, there you are. If most don't, most don't consider the particular variety of "greed" immoral, and hence society in general doesn't deem it immoral. QED.

      The argument 'start a business of your own' doesn't hold in monopoly cases, essential services and barriers to entry; for obvious reasons. But that is not the case here.

      --
      Bingo Dictionary - Pragmatist, n. A myopic idealist.
    46. Re:Not long by NoImNotNineVolt · · Score: 1

      Well said.

      --
      Chuuch. Preach. Tabernacle.
  4. Internet access should be a socialized service by mozumder · · Score: 5, Insightful

    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.

    1. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by Boronx · · Score: 2, Informative

      I don't understand why we don't just restrict companies to do the thing they're supposed to do. You're a cable company? Ok, you're allowed to sell cable connections into people's homes. You want to say what traffic flows on your cable? Sorry, not in your charter.

      Are you a movie company that wants to put in cable that carries only your movies? Sorry, not in your charter.

      Of course this means that a company couldn't really own another company.

    2. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by tranquilidad · · Score: 0

      Yep, just what I desire - internet service as efficient as the Postal service.

      Before anyone goes off on how I can send a letter all the way across the country for whatever the 1st class rate is today really consider how inefficient their operation runs. I go out of my way to use private entities in lieu of the US Postal service.

      There is nothing preventing government services from being properly internet enabled today. The problem with government services is, wait for it, the government.

      The government has done more to prevent me from getting the internet service I desire than they've done to enable high quality, high speed service.

      Why does internet service have greater penetration in poor neighborhoods than telephone service (which is subsidized for those neighborhoods)? Could it be that individuals are better equipped to determine what services are best for them.

      Yep, if you want the government to provide basic services then that's just what you'll get, BASIC services.

    3. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by mrchaotica · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Vertical integration (i.e., both manufacturing the product and delivering it) is not necessarily a problem. Vertical integration where any part is a monopoly or oliopoly, however, is against the public interest and should not be allowed.

      --

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

    4. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by Wonko+the+Sane · · Score: 0

      I don't understand why we don't just restrict companies to do the thing they're supposed to do.

      I don't understand why people can publicly advocate fascism and expect to not be called out on it.

      Who is "we" and what makes them so special such that it's legitmate for them to give orders to other people?

    5. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by dnaumov · · Score: 1

      There's no reason for private companies to profit off the basic requirements of a functioning society

      So there should be no private energy companies? No private guards / security companies? No private education and no private health care? What a crock of shit.

    6. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by ColdWetDog · · Score: 0

      So, you want the US Postal Service to control the Internet?

      Send in the Clowns!

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    7. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by Boronx · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "We" is the people of the United State of America. What makes us special is that we've granted to ourselves the power to govern the country. There is no question that we ought to govern the country, the only question is how. You'd give unrestricted rights to businesses to do what they want. Id restrict businesses from acting in ways detrimental to their customers or to the economy as a whole. This means forcing competitors to compete and not collude, and forcing businesses to avoid conflicts of interest.

      Prison companies shouldn't be able to lobby for tougher criminal laws.

      Giant agribusinesses shouldn't get together to set grain prices.

      Big finance shouldn't be able to recommend buying a security while they short the security.

      A company that controls Aluminum transport shouldn't be able to place financial bets that the price of Aluminum will go up.

      These are all happening right now, and if we let this continue and grow we'll turn into a corrupt third world hell hole.

    8. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by otc-lame · · Score: 1

      Communications is so critical that the US Constitution writes in the Postal service as part of it.

      and interestingly 225 years later we are still arguing about the very same implementation details For example:

      Col: Mason was for limiting the power to the single case of Canals. He was afraid of monopolies of every sort, which he did not think were by any means already implied by the Constitution as supposed by Mr. Wilson.

      Sounds like exactly what happened when we began to "grant charters of incorporation where the interest of the U.S. might require" anyway...

    9. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So there should be no private energy companies?

      Of course not. How could anyone be so stupid as to think that there should be private energy companies?

    10. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by visualight · · Score: 1

      Over-generalized definitions:

      Socialism: Government is more powerful than, and can control big business. Small businesses thrive on a genuinely level playing field.

      Facism: Big business is more powerful than, and can control goverment (the effect being that big business and government have merged). Small business stay small or get eaten.

      Capitalism: The monopoly game where one guy ends up with everything.

      But,

      *All 'ism's' are merely vehicles for propaganda as soon as your brush stroke becomes less than a mile wide.

      --
      Samsung took back my unlocked bootloader because Google wants me to rent movies. They're both evil.
    11. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by visualight · · Score: 4, Insightful

      " I go out of my way to use private entities in lieu of the US Postal service."

      Ass. The problem with government services is, wait for it, PEOPLE LIKE YOU, who warp reality to fit your propaganda derived ideology, and then sabotage things so that some fat cat can seek rent. A lot of really well run operations suck -because- they were privatized. The military commissary is one I remember well.

      You are ignorant of the reality of why these private entities are able to thrive. It's *BECAUSE* they don't have to deliver every letter to every house and apartment in the country. They get to just do the high margin stuff.

      And they absolutely know this, which is why they are meeting and discussing what they need to do to support the U.S. Postal service. 'Big bags of money' is a real option for them, because without the post office, *they* can't survive.

      --
      Samsung took back my unlocked bootloader because Google wants me to rent movies. They're both evil.
    12. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by tranquilidad · · Score: 1

      Brilliant, I wish I had seen it before.

      Let's socialize all these public services, get rid of the private "high margin stuff" and reduce our choice down to 1 sucky provider answerable to no one.

      Then we'll all be equal at the lowest-common denominator.

    13. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by Wonko+the+Sane · · Score: 1

      "We" is the people of the United State of America. What makes us special is that we've granted to ourselves the power to govern the country.

      You've disingenuopusly defined "people of the United State of America" as being "everyone who agrees with me."

      There is no question that we ought to govern the country, the only question is how.

      Just saying that doesn't make it true.

      Maybe you mean "I don't want anyone to questions whether or not we should govern, because the outcome of that debate may not turn out in my favor."

      You'd give unrestricted rights to businesses to do what they want. Id restrict businesses from acting in ways detrimental to their customers or to the economy as a whole.

      You've granted unlimited power to self-appointed rulers who presume to know the unknowable while pretending to rule "for the benefit of society as a whole."

      Even worse, it's not even original in its deception. Just the same old tired trumped-up justifications for power that tyrants and their apoligists have been using for centuries. You could at least try to come up with something new for a change.

    14. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by marcosdumay · · Score: 1

      There's no reason for private companies to profit off the basic requirements of a functioning society.

      There's also no reason for they not. Lots and lots of people profit on food consumption, and that didn't lead to any disaster. The telecom problems have other roots, we'd better focus on those.

    15. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't understand why people don't know what fascism is.

    16. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by Bengie · · Score: 1

      There's no reason for private companies to profit off the basic requirements of a functioning society

      So there should be no private energy companies? No private guards / security companies? No private education and no private health care? What a crock of shit.

      Yes, lets have mercenaries instead of police and judges. Sounds great.

    17. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by Solandri · · Score: 1

      Actually either approach would work. We could treat Internet access as a utility, with pricing being regulated by a government body. Or we could open it up to competition and allow any ISP to compete for your business (so that an ISP slowing down Netflix would be shooting themselves in the foot). The latter is the way most of the rest of world does it.

      Instead what we have is some bastardized combination of the worst of both worlds. We have the government granting service monopolies instead of looking out for the best interest of the customers. And we have the companies operating under the self-interest which drives capitalism, but unhindered by competition which is what normally lowers prices and forces improvements.

    18. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by anagama · · Score: 1

      Umm ... preventing a cozy relationship between corps and govt is fascism?

      Exactly where did you go to school? People should know because you're education is staggeringly inadequate.

      Just so you know, a regulation forbidding ISPs from being content providers is 180 degrees from fascism. The system we have now, where there's a revolving door between Comcast and the regulatory bodies, where laws are enacted to prevent competition (laws that Comcast purchases) -- that's what fascism looks like. When you can't really see the difference between the govt and the corps (oh, and some blind nationalism in the general populace (no deficit there in America)) -- that's fascism.

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    19. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by turbidostato · · Score: 1

      I don't think that word means what you think it means.

    20. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      I don't think you know what fascism is. Fascism is government control of the economy while still allowing private ownership (as long as those private owners do what the government tells them to). The primary difference between fascism and communism is cosmetic (oh and communists usually kill more of their own people than fascists).

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    21. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by turbidostato · · Score: 1

      "Fascism is government control of the economy while still allowing private ownership"

      Sorry, that's not fascism. That's plain old rule of law.

      In order to go from there to fascism you also need totalitarism, statism, autarky. utranationalism, militarism and, then, full entrenchment of corporations and state.

      And no, "control of the national economy" is not the same as full planning of the means of production in accord to a national plan.

    22. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      No, plain old rule of law is where the same rules apply to everyone and has nothing to do with what type of economic system you use (although I have never seen a country where the government controls the economy which had rule of law). When the government begins managing the economy, rule of law begins to break down. Interestingly enough, the reverse tends to happen as well, as the government stops interfering in the economic decisions of its citizens, rule of law starts to appear in countries which previously had no experience with it.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    23. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by Boronx · · Score: 1

      > You've disingenuously defined "people of the United State of America" as being "everyone who agrees with me."

      Really? Where? I'm part of that people and I've got a modicum of that power, and what I'm telling you is how I use my tiny little piece of it.

      Either you have power or you don't. If you don't then you have to struggle to get it if you want it. If you do have power, then you must decide how to use it. I think those with power have the moral responsibility to use the power for the betterment of the people over whom they have power. You are right in that correctly judging what's best is really an impossible task, but that doesn't alleviate the powerful from the responsibility of making those judgements anyway.

    24. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by turbidostato · · Score: 1

      "No, plain old rule of law is where the same rules apply to everyone and has nothing to do with what type of economic system you use"

      And therefore all and any economic system gets under the rule of the law -and thus controlled by it, as it happens with any other public affair.

    25. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by fnj · · Score: 1

      Distributism. Look it up.

    26. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by swillden · · Score: 1

      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.

      Yeah, because government-run farms have been so successful, historically. Well, if by "successful" you mean "starved millions".

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    27. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by log0n · · Score: 1

      A couple things..

      1) Your Fascism is bungled with Capitalism. Fascism has fuckall to do with big business controlling government. There is no big business under fascism.
      2) Socialism and Fascism are the same thing, one is left wing, the other is right wing. In either case, government controls both (Soc: regulate, Fas: nationalize).
      3) Capitalism is the monopoly game where one big business ends up with everything and can control government.

    28. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So there should be no private energy companies? No private guards / security companies? No private education and no private health care? What a crock of shit.

      Private energy companies? Probably not. Especially after what Enron did to my state a decade ago. Don't like a democratically elected government? Mark power up 400% until the people throw them out. Voting's overrated anyway!
      Private guards / security companies? For private land, sure.
      Private health care? Only as "cadillac" services to augment a public health care system. Same as private education -- after all, you still pay tax that funds public school even if you're sending your kid to private school.

      That's the breaks, dude. Price of civilization and all that. Of course, in non-full-of-shit land that people who never learned to play well with others (or have never experienced someone not playing nice with them and therefore thing that we can all just get along) pretend doesn't exist, utilities are heavily regulated thereby become a de facto public service, private security augments public police and military forces, public school was put in place to address the issue that only the rich could educate their children, and we're the last Western nation to not have public health care -- and in nations that have it, there's usually a private system on top of it to handle the non-basic/elective health needs. Believe it or not, people wealthy enough to enjoy such options oddly don't find their options all that limited under public systems.

      We now return you to our scheduled False Equivalence Special, brought to you by libertarianism -- because screw the entirety of recorded human history, we'll make it work this time. We swear!

    29. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Comparing a "privatized" public service to a company that started as and continues to operate as a private company is like comparing apples to oranges.

      Also, you are ASSuming that Fedex, UPS, et. al., couldn't survive or thrive without the USPS. You don't know that. Nobody knows that. You're also basing your assumption on the fact that the USPS has been a monopoly for centuries and tomorrow it just disappears. That's a little different from the USPS existing for centuries but not as a monopoly.

      Oh and let's not forget how the USPS is losing billions of dollars out the ass every year and the only reason it's able to exist is government loans.

    30. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by TubeSteak · · Score: 1

      You are ignorant of the reality of why these private entities are able to thrive. It's *BECAUSE* they don't have to deliver every letter to every house and apartment in the country. They get to just do the high margin stuff.

      The joke is on tranquilidad (1994300) .
      All those private parcel services use the USPS when they need to get a package out to the middle of nowhere.
      Without the USPS providing universal service, you couldn't send mail to large swaths of the country... unless you hired a courier.

      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    31. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yep, just what I desire - internet service as efficient as the Postal service.

      Before anyone goes off on how I can send a letter all the way across the country for whatever the 1st class rate is today really consider how inefficient their operation runs. I go out of my way to use private entities in lieu of the US Postal service.

      There is nothing preventing government services from being properly internet enabled today. The problem with government services is, wait for it, the government.

      The government has done more to prevent me from getting the internet service I desire than they've done to enable high quality, high speed service.

      Why does internet service have greater penetration in poor neighborhoods than telephone service (which is subsidized for those neighborhoods)? Could it be that individuals are better equipped to determine what services are best for them.

      Yep, if you want the government to provide basic services then that's just what you'll get, BASIC services.

      You do know that the USPS is one of the only government departments that is completely self-funded (or would be if it were not for ridiculous pension requirements). It even pays its workers well. Contrast that with UPS or Fedex, they cost, and wont deliver everywhere and pay their workers peanuts. Heck, if it were not for the USPS, Fedex and UPS would be free to charge even more.

      As for internet services in the USA, from what I understand of it, it is a lack of regulation on the federal level that allows the local governments (councils and state govs) to give monopolies to the cable/telephone companies which prevent you from getting a better service.

      Do you have proof that internet services have a greater penetration in poor neighbourhoods? Could it be that cable companies ran cable everwhere back when cable was the only choice of entertainment which gives them the opportunity to provide everyone with internet (how much more is it to get internet + cable then it is to get plain cable?). If it were not for the cable companies, would these poor neighbourhoods have more penetration of telephone to provide internet access (eg, for adsl and the like)?

      Finally, what is wrong with the government providing basic basic services? If you want better then you can pay for it. The basic service helps to keep the prices low too for the premium services (if the premium services attempt to charge too much then people will just ditch them for the basic services).

      For what it is worth, the government in the USA is crippled by infighting and corporate influence (and from the "government is bad" crowd). Fix the corporate influence and the infighting and you maybe able to actually get a regulatory framework which provides equal opportunities for big and small players to compete and provides protection for consumers (like most other "Western" countries)...

    32. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's no reason for private companies to profit off the basic requirements of a functioning society

      So there should be no private energy companies? No private guards / security companies? No private education and no private health care? What a crock of shit.

      Private companies should not be the sole providers of the basic requirements of a functioning society.

      From your examples:
      - Private guard/security companies provide a "premium" service over the "free" police service (in theory anyhow)
      - Private educational facilities provide a "premium" service over the public schooling system
      - Private healthcare (should) provide a "premium" service over the basic healthcare although it could be argued that something as essential as healthcare should be either government run or run as a non-profit only.

      Essential services that require large investments in infrastructure need to either be run by government, non-profits or by heavily (and properly) regulated private companies. Services like sewerage, water, electricity, phone, etc require too much in the way of investment (and the issues in having 3-4 different companies providing duplicate infrastructure to people) to operate properly in a completely unregulated free market. These issues can be somewhat lessened by having the infrastructure held by a independent neutral third party whose only aim is to provide, maintain and upgrade the infrastructure with no incentives to make a profit.

      Power generators are a bit of a outlier regarding privatization. For the most part they are extremely polluting and/or damaging to the environment and generally socialise that aspect of their operations. Even with regulations they spew out tons of pollutants with little regard with the ongoing costs of those pollutants.

    33. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What do you mean, "turn into"?

    34. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by Anarchduke · · Score: 1

      The US Post Office inefficient? Would you like to define efficient? Because by my definition, a company that can accurately route 500 million pieces of mail each and every day is pretty fucking awesome.

      --
      who prays for Satan? Who in 18 centuries has had the humanity to pray for the 1 sinner that needed it most? ~Mark Twain
    35. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by Anarchduke · · Score: 1

      The US Postal Service accurately routes and delivers over 500 million mailpieces each and every day. We could do worse than the post office.

      --
      who prays for Satan? Who in 18 centuries has had the humanity to pray for the 1 sinner that needed it most? ~Mark Twain
    36. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Brilliant, I wish I had seen it before.

      Let's socialize all these public services, get rid of the private "high margin stuff" and reduce our choice down to 1 sucky provider answerable to no one.

      Then we'll all be equal at the lowest-common denominator.

      Sounds basically like the Comcast merger, excepting the socializing part.

      Come to think of it, doesn't "socialism" imply that at least in theory, there is some one to answer to? Even if it's just the unwashed mob?

    37. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hey cow smegma face! how's that froth taste?

      you think your hyper distorted claim that the usps is what's saving us all from mail delivery doom, allowing private companies to thrive is going to be swallowed hook like and sinker, like your mom swallows? ...i think not.

    38. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by Altrag · · Score: 1

      Because there's no possible way that both a public and a private entity could exist at the same time.

      I wonder which reality I'm living in today, the one where UPS exists or the one where USPS exists?

      Just to address your "1 sucky provider answerable to no one" scenario though.. I've generally found in my life that in situations where, for whatever reason, only one provider exists, publicly run entities are almost universally better at service the public interest than private entities.

      Damned near any example you can find of a natural monopoly being privatized ends up with higher costs and lower service for their customers -- sure the stock price goes up which is great for shareholders and the C*O's who talked their way into the job usually get a nice cushy salary, but it sucks balls for basically everyone else.

      Maybe you've had a better experience somewhere along the line?

      Public entities are answerable to their government overseers and (in theory at least) therefore answerable to voters. Private companies are answerable only to their shareholders and to fuck with the rest of the world. Generally speaking, the set of "shareholders of company X" is going to be closer to "no one" than the set of "all voters in the jurisdiction."

    39. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No.

      The USPS does a very poor job of delivering "high margin" items, they deliver said large items to the post office and leave a key in your mailbox. Why should we have to drive to the post office when the mail carrier was just at our house?

      It's the poor quality of service that the USPS provided that created a market for private entities. This doesn't change the fact that said private entities have no interest in taking over the responsibilities of the USPS; those responsibilities are important for legal and advertising entities, neither of which would like to pay for the high costs of said services.

    40. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As you allude, the USPS and the private carriers form a symbiotic system. The USPS pays FedEx and UPS to airfreight mail, and two of the USPS's biggest customers are FedEx and UPS---they pay the USPS to do the "last mile" delivery on many types of small packages. (See: "UPS Mail Innovations" and "FedEx SmartPost".)

      In other words, if the Post Office didn't exist, the private carriers would have to invent it.

    41. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 1

      Before anyone goes off on how I can send a letter all the way across the country for whatever the 1st class rate is today really consider how inefficient their operation runs. I go out of my way to use private entities in lieu of the US Postal service.

      How are they inefficient?

      Maybe before you go off about how they are inefficient, you should consider what that word means and how you think they are inefficient.

      I would posit it's super inefficient to not use the USPS, and instead pay FedEx/UPS 10x the rate for the same service.

      --
      Your ad here. Ask me how!
    42. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 1

      Lots and lots of people profit on food consumption, and that didn't lead to any disaster.

      Yes, it did. Hell, it was so bad that we had to involve the government to prevent farmers from being unable to make a living.

      --
      Your ad here. Ask me how!
    43. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you go that route, you need to go get your career chip implanted.

      ya gotta do what ya gotta do

    44. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by tranquilidad · · Score: 1

      The last time I had to mail something via the post office (about 6 months ago):

      - I had to wait in line 20 minutes
      - The shipping information was filled out on multi-part NCR paper
      - The sheets of paper were peeled apart, each one stamped and filed in a separate bin
      - I was given a sheet of paper as my receipt
      - The tracking options were minimal, at best

      The last time I shipped via UPS:

      - I filled out the shipping information online
      - I printed a mailing label and affixed it to my box
      - I dropped it off at a UPS store after waiting about 30 seconds
      - I was given a sheet of paper as a drop-off receipt
      - I could track the package

      A shipping organization that still collects shipping information in triplicate, separately stamps each of the copies, files them in separate bins for later processing and can't provide adequate tracking information is, in my opinion, inefficient.

    45. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 1

      A shipping organization that still collects shipping information in triplicate, separately stamps each of the copies, files them in separate bins for later processing and can't provide adequate tracking information is, in my opinion, inefficient.

      First off, it may in fact be efficient. I mean, the marginal cost per package is higher, but it could be that ways of fixing it wouldn't pay back for N years. Waiting until the next update cycle may be efficient. But I won't make that case.

      You were bad at using the USPS. You can, at USPS.gov:

      - Fill out the shipping information online.

      - Print the mailing label and affix it to your box

      - Have some guy who was going to come to your door pick up the package Finally, a difference, 30 seconds savings

      I'm not sure about the drop-off receipt or the tracking.

      But, yeah, waiting in line at the post office tends to be pretty slow. But its pretty slow when I have to wait in line at the UPS store or the FedEx store as well. So, I think all three are pretty slow if you need help, and are pretty fast to drop off. (I've dropped off packages at USPS in seconds as well.)

      But yeah, the USPS has wanted to upgrade for a while from forms in triplicate. There are some issues with the accounting methods they have to use, the way that their surpluses are confiscated and they cannot deficit spend. Which means that they have no way of making a large capital investment. That falls squarely on the shoulders of Congressmen who passed laws making it impossible for them to pay one time costs for long-term efficiencies, solely so they could bemoan the horribly inefficient post office.

      --
      Your ad here. Ask me how!
    46. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 1

      Also, you are ASSuming that Fedex, UPS, et. al., couldn't survive or thrive without the USPS. You don't know that. Nobody knows that. Y

      Of course Fedex and UPS would survive without the USPS. You just wouldn't be able to (afford to) ship a package to a rural area... and some of the less populous suburbs.

      let's not forget how the USPS is losing billions of dollars out the ass every year and the only reason it's able to exist is government loans.

      Let's not forget that those "billions of dollars of losses" disappear if they use any commonly accepted accounting system. They have a uniquely dysfunctional accounting system forced on them by legislators who want to bemoan the losses.

      --
      Your ad here. Ask me how!
    47. Re:Internet access should be a socialized service by tranquilidad · · Score: 1

      I ship items that have to be taken to the shipper and are not eligible for pickup. I often visit UPS hubs and USPS. UPS hubs almost never have more than 1 or 2 people waiting to ship. USPS is almost always at the other end of the spectrum. I hate going to a UPS hub because it's a 45 minute drive for me. I hate going to USPS because it's such a long wait and a hassle.

      Skipping efficiency for a moment and commenting on your concept of "update cycle," I'm still amazed that an organization that basically visited every address in the nation on an almost everyday basis completely missed out on the opportunity that made FedEx and UPS what they are today. UPS, in the name of efficiency, had their package car drivers recording GPS coordinates for the addresses they visited and ended up in the map-data business.

  5. Could someone answer this? by Nyall · · Score: 3, Interesting

    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
    1. Re:Could someone answer this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      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?

      Comcast's binding arbitration, no class action allowed clause in their service agreement.

      IANAL, but I did consult one about suing Comcast for their billing shenanigans

    2. Re:Could someone answer this? by khasim · · Score: 3, Informative

      Two reasons.

      1. Comcast advertises "up to" X bandwidth. But does not guarantee any specific speed.

      2. Comcast can show that you can get "up to" X bandwidth on the local segment. Just not across peering points.

      This is another reason that the Time Warner/Comcast merge cannot be allowed to happen.

    3. Re:Could someone answer this? by locutus2k · · Score: 2

      Comcast (and indeed other ISPs) doesn't guarantee speed. They are very clear to point that out in the teeny tiny fine print. They only real guarantee you get is a bill. Since there are no SLAs on home service, just be glad you get a connection at all. The "free" market says they have to make a reasonable effort to keep connections up and running, else they would lose customers. With Comcast 'growing' like they are, they have less incentive to keep the systems running.

    4. Re:Could someone answer this? by The+Cat · · Score: 1

      Comcast's binding arbitration, no class action allowed clause in their service agreement.

      Illegal

    5. Re:Could someone answer this? by cdecoro · · Score: 2

      Comcast's binding arbitration, no class action allowed clause in their service agreement.

      Illegal

      Nope.

    6. Re:Could someone answer this? by The+Cat · · Score: 1

      that the Federal Arbitration Act of 1925 preempts state laws that prohibit contracts from disallowing class-wide arbitration

      I may not be a lawyer, but I'm pretty sure the Seventh Amendment trumps the Supreme Court.

      So does Congress.

      And the states

      And the People

    7. Re:Could someone answer this? by Wonko+the+Sane · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I may not be a lawyer, but I'm pretty sure the Seventh Amendment trumps the Supreme Court

      Nope.

      The US Constitution is a very old piece of paper sitting in a museum.

      The Supreme Court is a group of people.

      A piece of paper is an inanimate object - it can't do anything.

    8. Re:Could someone answer this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      2. Comcast can show that you can get "up to" X bandwidth on the local segment. Just not across peering points.

      I would consequently argue that local segment speeds don't qualify as "internet" access, but rather "intranet". If I'm making a claim they're not providing the advertised service, you can bet I'm subpeonaing their peering agreements as well as any documentation relating to QoS policies regarding sites like speedtest.net.

    9. Re:Could someone answer this? by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 3, Informative

      fwiw, I have comcast and its been really fast. 50meg/sec download in real honest terms. hard to believe but its true.

      even with a vpn and 'watching' (yeah...) movies from europe to the US, I still get 6MB/sec (yes, megabytes) over my VPN, over comcast. this is when I term my connection in a nice safe euro country.

      what I hate about comcast is that they don't offer honest pricing. it starts low then climbs and you have to disconnect their service for 6mos before being allowed to renegotiate another 'special'.

      still, after being stuck with dsl for over 10 yrs (at t1 speeds or less; usually much less) the 50meg 'blast' pkg is actually quite real and reliable in my area (bay area). I don't have issues with their connection; just their business practices.

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    10. Re:Could someone answer this? by The+Cat · · Score: 1

      The Supreme Court is a group of people.

      Who derive all their power from the old piece of paper sitting in a museum.

      You'd be funny if you weren't quite so tragic.

    11. Re:Could someone answer this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      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?

      1. Your TOS says that they are going to provide you UP TO xxxMegs, there's no service guarantee.
      2. Even if you're a business paying for a dedicated bandwidth "Internet" connection, they only guarantee bandwidth to the edge of their network.

      Your only chance is to hit them with some kind of misleading/false advertising lawsuit.

      To be completely blunt and honest about all of this, ultimately these companies only get away with this because consumers are, generally speaking, idiots. If ISP A sells internet at 10megs for $40 and always delivers the full 10 megs, and ISP B sells internet at 100megs for $40 but only delivers 8meg on average, consumers will STILL flock to ISP B for services because of the Marketing. In addition, ISP A will have far higher operating cost in order to provide that level during peak use times.
      It's just like how you can sell someone a product for $10 and people will all run to the competition who advertises FREE * (*with $20 "fee") for the same thing.

    12. Re:Could someone answer this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's why you don't fall for the speed though...

      Comcast isn't honest about the speed in any way shape or form. They pull all sorts of shananigans to get you thinking your connection is faster than DSL. Reality is the second you try to use it during prime time you don't get anywhere near what is advertised for certain types of content and in many cases even during off hours depending on the competition (if there is any anyway).

      I live just outside of a decent size town (far from a city though) and get a good 10mbps consistently with DSL. It doesn't matter if I'm downloading a torrent or connecting to a server in Germany (across the pond).

      My price doesn't jump 100 fold every six months either and I pay a fraction what Comcast cable would cost.

      I've got money and paying $100 USD for internet access doesn't phase me (I pay about $50). Paying for Comcast internet access though does. It's just wrong at so many levels. .. not to mention all the other stunts they pull like advertising to users they have to upgrade to 'digital cable' and then 3 months later after pulling teeth to get the boxes installed, new wiring run, etc increasing your $17 month charge to $60 month charge... then they expect you to drive 40 miles to return the boxes you didn't want in the first place... phh ohh and arguing over raised rates (since they rent digital boxes, but then claim its $3 / box over 3 boxes, but refuse to acknowledge that your paying more when you have six TVs and thus need six boxes!!! I didn't pay for any boxes before digital!!!!)

    13. Re:Could someone answer this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      HAHAHA

      You forgot to add they then turn around after the boxes are returned a few months after that requiring you to get them again!!!!

    14. Re:Could someone answer this? by Wonko+the+Sane · · Score: 2

      Who derive all their power from the old piece of paper sitting in a museum. You'd be funny if you weren't quite so tragic.

      What's tragic is that in the 21st century we still live in a world where people believe in fantasy.

      That fact that you can say that some people derive power from a piece of paper in apparent seriousness is the tragedy.

      I don't want to live on a planet where people believe in magic paper.

    15. Re:Could someone answer this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who we believe derive all their power from a piece of paper sitting in a museum, but who actually derive it from our belief.

      The Constitution is what we let that group of people say it is.

      (captcha: unfair)

    16. Re:Could someone answer this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1: You're an idiot.

      2. If you actually believe the stupidity you're spewing here, then you must be in favor of slavery, since the Supreme Court, both with Dred Scott and Ableman v Booth supported slavery. Those are the final word from the Supreme Court on the subject. It the 13th Amendment to that "very old piece of paper sitting in a museum" that abolished slavery.

      3. You're an idiot.

    17. Re:Could someone answer this? by Wonko+the+Sane · · Score: 1

      My condolences for your Tourette Syndrome. That looks like a particularlly nasty case.

    18. Re:Could someone answer this? by fnj · · Score: 1

      That old piece of paper circumscribes the governing law of the land. The Supreme Court absolutely is bound by it. In fact their authority comes from it and it is their solemn duty to interpret it and use it to throw out improper legislation.

      Even if that weren't the case, I hold this particular old piece of paper penned by brilliant great men in much higher esteem than nine cynical bought and paid-for buffoons sitting in black robes shitting on the Republic.

      Actually the Magna Carta is a lot older than the US Constitution, yet it is still considered one of the greatest constitutional documents of all time, and forms part of the uncodified constitution of that strange and wondeful society across the pond. Three important clauses are still statutorally in effect. The mechanisms in place for altering the US Constitution are much more formal and procedural, and every single word in the US Cinstitution that has not been formally amended is still the supreme authority.

      To all those who would cavalierly tear up the Constitution, beware the wrath of patriots.

    19. Re:Could someone answer this? by The+Cat · · Score: 1

      I don't want to live on a planet where people believe in magic paper.

      Good. The exits are clearly marked. Door. Ass. All that shit.

    20. Re:Could someone answer this? by Wonko+the+Sane · · Score: 1

      That old piece of paper circumscribes the governing law of the land. The Supreme Court absolutely is bound by it. In fact their authority comes from it and it is their solemn duty to interpret it and use it to throw out improper legislation.

      You understand that words mean things, right?

      When you say that Supreme Court is "absolutely bound" by something, that's a testible hypothesis, no less so than if I said a brick is absolutely bound by gravity. If a brick could just decide to hover in midair then that would falsify my claim that it was bound by gravity.

      Likewise, if you claim that a piece of paper binds people, and those people can be observed to do whatever they want regardless of what is written on said paper, and the paper responds to this violation by doing absolutely nothing at all since it is, in fact, just a piece of paper, then by what possible universe could you say that piece of paper is binding them?

      To all those who would cavalierly tear up the Constitution, beware the wrath of patriots.

      That would be hilarious if it wasn't so pathetically sad.

    21. Re:Could someone answer this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Supreme Court has the power of Constitutional review. That means they have the final word on Constitutional interpretation. If they say the First Amendment means that the government can set up an official church and fund it with taxpayer dollars while outlawing criticism of such a plan, then that's what the First Amendment means as far as the legal system is concerned.

    22. Re:Could someone answer this? by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 1

      boxes? we don't need no stinkin' boxes!

      you must be talking about that quaint old thing the old guys used to call 'tv'. I have not bought tv service for the last 2 places I lived in and have no plans to ever buy it again.

      I can't find much on tv that is worth the time, the commercials are soul-crushing and the cost is better applied to other living expenses.

      internet is a must-have; but tv has long since been left by the wayside. I guess you must have kids, though; that's the #1 reason people still have not cut the (tv) cable.

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    23. Re:Could someone answer this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not the paper itself that grants them their power, but the agreement behind it. If the physical paper the constitution is written on were destroyed, the constitution itself would still be in effect.

      That you can't seem to see the difference seems tragic to me.

    24. Re:Could someone answer this? by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 1

      > A piece of hemp paper is an inanimate object - it can't do anything.

      FTFY.

      It is a Token or symbol that the power to govern was given by the will of the people.

      People create Governments, not the other way around.

      The Bill of Rights shouldn't even be needed in the first place, witness the Tenth Amendment

      The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.

      Governments exist solely to serve the people but almost every one has been brainwashed into thinking that they need a license (permissions) instead of claiming their natural rights. That document spelled out certain un-a-lienable rights; rights that could not have a lien placed on them; Ergo, licenses are a constitutional perversion, as are many other abuses of power. The general problem with America is apathy, that is, not enough people give a fuck -- they would rather watch their (un)reality shows, their sports, their faux news, etc., then fix a broken First-Past-The-Goal-Post political system treat one of the fundamental problems:

      Greed corrupts everything it comes in contact with.

      Politics, Health, Agriculture, Science, Religion, etc. have all placed profits before people.

      --
      The greatest thing with America: Capitalism
      The worst thing with America: Capitalism

    25. Re:Could someone answer this? by Wonko+the+Sane · · Score: 1

      It's not the paper itself that grants them their power, but the agreement behind it. If the physical paper the constitution is written on were destroyed, the constitution itself would still be in effect.

      Now we're getting somewhere.

      If the Supreme Court gets their power from an agreement, who are the parties involved in that agreement?

      Spoiler alert: your answer is invalid if it posits that dead people are the source of the power (dead people can't do anything because they are dead), or if it includes people who, if they were all hit by a bus tomorrow, would not reduce the Supreme Court's capacity to enforce their rulings.

    26. Re:Could someone answer this? by Wonko+the+Sane · · Score: 1

      It is a Token or symbol that the power to govern was given by the will of the people.

      People create Governments, not the other way around.

      I admit that your religion has a pretty creation myth, but it's got as much to do with reality as a tree stump carving depicting that the sun rises because a giant space coyote eats the sun at night and vomits it up in the morning.

      If it was truly the case that governments are formed by "the people", instead of being violently and deceptively imposed by a ruling class onto their subjects, don't you think it's a bit odd that George Washington had to raise an army signifigantly larger than the one used to expell the British in order to neutralize popular resistance to that government's actions?

    27. Re:Could someone answer this? by KingSkippus · · Score: 1

      Good. The exits are clearly marked. Door. Ass. All that shit.

      Actually, you're the one who should be going if you don't understand the basic concept that the Supreme Court's job is to interpret how the laws are applied and what they mean, not just in the historical context in which they're written, but in the context of our ever-changing modern society; that laws are meaningless on paper, that only how they're enforced and upheld lends them any power. It's people like you who don't understand that simple concept--in spite of the founding fathers making it explicitly clear that they understood the need for what they were doing to continually be expanded upon and interpreted as times change--that are responsible for a large number of the problems in this country today.

      You're the modern-day equivalent of a flat-earther. So yeah, good riddance to you. Or else good luck when you get arrested and try the "my rights are only subject to MY interpretation and I don't recognize this court's authority!" defense.

    28. Re:Could someone answer this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It comes from the will of the majority. It's the one place where we allow the majority to impose its will, because we agree that it's a good idea.

      If the majority of people agreed that the constitution was a bad idea, the process exists to abolish it.

      Apropos captcha: preamble

    29. Re:Could someone answer this? by The+Cat · · Score: 1

      The more of this bullshit you shovel, the less sense you make.

      According to the text of the Constitution, it is the Supreme Law of the Land: superior to all rulings, precedents, laws and executive actions from any branch of government. Article VI is not subject to context. It's the law. Period.

      You are simply opposed to the Constitution, because you view the Supreme Court as a simple expression of autocracy and not one co-equal branch of a limited government.

      The only problem in this country is a government that ignores the law. That and people who start sentences with the word "actually."

    30. Re:Could someone answer this? by The+Cat · · Score: 1

      If the Supreme Court gets their power from an agreement, who are the parties involved in that agreement?

      The states.

      By the way, only a towering asshole would argue that anyone invoking the Constitution is appealing to a piece of magic paper.

      Enjoy your dumbass literalist handjob.

    31. Re:Could someone answer this? by Wonko+the+Sane · · Score: 1

      It comes from the will of the majority.

      Ok, how do I know this "will of the majority exists?" Can I measure it? Can I talk to the will of the majority to ask what it wants, or do I have to rely on priests^H^H^H^H^H^H^H politicians to interpret it for me and tell me what it is?

    32. Re:Could someone answer this? by Wonko+the+Sane · · Score: 1

      What's really tragic is that you call me an asshole for telling you that Santa Claus isn't real, Jesus isn't watching you masturbate from heaven, and the Constitution is just a moldy old piece of paper instead of being mad at all the liars and charlatans in the world who infect children with dangerous mythology in the first place.

    33. Re:Could someone answer this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You realize that the Supreme Court is responsible for *interpreting* that 7th Amendment... right?

    34. Re:Could someone answer this? by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 1

      People with power always want to stop other people from gaining their own power. History is choke full of examples, so no I'm not the least bit surprised.

      A good ruler / government empowers people, not treats them as slaves, or worse, a source of income that the modern world has degenerated into.

    35. Re:Could someone answer this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes. You can propose to repeal the constitution. If a majority of people agree, then an amendment to do that will eventually make its way through the ratification process. Under the constitution, there are a limited number of things the federal and state governments can do to stop it. This is fundamentally what makes our constitution different from tyranny.

      Maybe you should go back to high school and not skip your civics class this time?

    36. Re:Could someone answer this? by Wonko+the+Sane · · Score: 1

      And this is why I don't like talking with religious people.

    37. Re:Could someone answer this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      religion [ri-lij-uhn]
      noun
      1. a set of beliefs concerning the cause, nature, and purpose of the universe, especially when considered as the creation of a superhuman agency or agencies, usually involving devotional and ritual observances, and often containing a moral code governing the conduct of human affairs.
      2. a specific fundamental set of beliefs and practices generally agreed upon by a number of persons or sects: the Christian religion; the Buddhist religion.
      3. the body of persons adhering to a particular set of beliefs and practices: a world council of religions.
      4. the life or state of a monk, nun, etc.: to enter religion.
      5. the practice of religious beliefs; ritual observance of faith.

      Please explain how the rational legal basis for self-governance in a democratic society constitutes a religion, and what you would suggest instead. I've quoted the definition of religion for you for reference.

    38. Re:Could someone answer this? by painandgreed · · Score: 1

      I may not be a lawyer, but I'm pretty sure the Seventh Amendment trumps the Supreme Court

      Nope.

      The US Constitution is a very old piece of paper sitting in a museum.

      The Supreme Court is a group of people.

      A piece of paper is an inanimate object - it can't do anything.

      Better to say that the US Constitution means what The Supreme Court says it means. The idea that everybody is working on the same set of rules is what keeps the three branches of government and the millions of people they represent working together.

    39. Re:Could someone answer this? by The+Cat · · Score: 0

      Oh so this is some kind of fundamentalist atheist straw man? Figures.

  6. Try raising your rates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Please. Give us all a reason to punish you again.

  7. How soon until... by consumer_whore · · Score: 1

    "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.

    1. Re:How soon until... by anagama · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Regulatory burden? WTF? The only regs Comcast and its ilk adhere to are those that they purchase.

      Here's what real regulation would look like -- no ISP may be a content provider of any type, nor can a parent company own both an ISP and a content provider/producer/etc. You can own one or the other, but not both.

      The ONLY reason Comcast has a hardon for Netflix is because it is a content provider and Netflix threatens their model.

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    2. Re:How soon until... by Boronx · · Score: 2

      Not enough upvotes.

      As Lloyd Blankfein said to congress when they asked him if shorting the very securities you were recommending to your clients was a conflict of interest,

      "When it comes to making a profit, there is no conflict of interest."

    3. Re:How soon until... by jythie · · Score: 1

      In many people's minds, the government is preventing competition via regulation. They forget that anyone is allowed to start an ISP or even telco any time they want, they just do not get magical access to all that public land for running new lines nor are they entitled to all the free road work that would be required.

  8. But Netflix doesn't own the infrastructure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Does this mean that Comcast users will have better access in general to Amazon Web Services?

  9. Such news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The people said.

  10. Common Carriers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    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.

  11. Long-term loss by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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.

    1. Re:Long-term loss by x0ra · · Score: 1, Insightful

      How does streaming 4k HD video fit in the open nature of the internet ? Netflix is merely entertainment, you don't need it to live, even less to survive. Why should Netflix free-ride over ISP investments ?

    2. Re:Long-term loss by Rougement · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "Why should Netflix free-ride over ISP investments ?" They're not, I'm paying my ISP for internet access. Which sites and services I choose to access is none of their business. Netflix has set a dangerous precedent here.

    3. Re:Long-term loss by Qzukk · · Score: 2

      How does moving 15Mbps of data across the internet fit in the open nature of the internet?

      That's how it fits in the open internet.

      Only in the Comcast(tm)-brand Comcastic(tm) Processed Internet Spread does it matter what's in those 15Mbps.

      Why should Netflix free-ride

      Since you think netflix is getting a free ride, you should have no problem agreeing to pay their bandwidth bill for them, after all it's free! Or are you knowingly lying?

      Oh well, the argument is moot. Once AT&T, TWC, and all the other ISPs smell the blood in the water and come for their pound of flesh, Netflix will be done. As a bonus, facebook will probably be next. Followed by Amazon, Google, and everything else that was useful on the internet. Eventually they'll get down to slashdot and each ISP will demand a few million dollars to stop "free riding" on their ISP and we'll be forever free of the scourge of beta.

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    4. Re:Long-term loss by thaylin · · Score: 2

      How does netflix have a free ride? The pay for every bit of bandwidth they use, and I pay for ever bit I use watching them. Now explain to me where, when 2 parties are already paying for the sum of the bandwidth, is there a free ride.

      --
      When you cant win, ad hominem.
    5. Re:Long-term loss by x0ra · · Score: 0

      Bandwidth and latency are neither free or infinite. Your argument is the same as saying that if you pay for a bridge with your taxes, you should be able to drive a fully loaded hauling truck (type Caterpillar 797F) on it. But guess what ? The bridge has not been designed to handle that load, it has been designed for lighter load (car, 40' truck, etc.).

    6. Re:Long-term loss by umdesch4 · · Score: 1

      But weren't the real investments actually taxpayer dollars many years ago when the basic infrastructure of the internet was built? I don't know about in the US, but in Canada, that's what happened. Public pays for building infrastructure, private companies get it handed to them on a silver platter. Companies make huge profits, don't re-invest a dime into maintaining or improving it. Quality diminishes over time, companies get more and more nefarious as their monopoly power increases. The question I have is, why should ISPs free-ride over taxpayer funded investments?

    7. Re:Long-term loss by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      but it is their business because sites and services are not bandwidth neutral. ISPs pay for their pipes to the world per gigabyte, so it makes a lot of difference if you read plaintext slashdot or watch movies in doubleplusgood HD.

    8. Re:Long-term loss by Rougement · · Score: 4, Informative

      Awful analogy. I give my ISP money every month, in return I get bandwidth with which I should be able to do whatever I please. If the ISP is struggling to deliver the advertised bandwidth then that's their problem.

    9. Re:Long-term loss by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Everyone should just ignore this poster. The way x0ra is lying, distorting, and just making shit up all over the thread makes it pretty clear that he or she has some serious investment in the death of net neutrality.

    10. Re:Long-term loss by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In this case, the bridge was supposed to be upgraded so you could drive that vehicle you described over it, but your local government instead decided to call those tax monies "profit" and pat themselves on the back for fleecing the sheeple.

      They make record profits every year. They increase prices on services every year. They promise more capacity but the "shareholders" tell them to stop investing in infrastructure to keep profits up next quarter.

      This is them trying to do just that: fuck tomorrow for more money today. That is all. Bandwidth caps, speed caps, and now service caps....all do that can make more money with what they have instead of providing a better service. They don't have anyone to compete with. So they get away with this. Google is about as disruptive as a fart in a barroom bathroom. Sure they add to the smell, but no one really notices. Yet the big boys trot Google's little experiments out as "competition" wihtout noting that:

      - Google has as much if not more money than your traditional cable broadband company ALREADY. They can afford to take it on the nose to invest in infrastructure...or just buy it outright.

      - Google is a tech company. They can and do invest heavily in new technologies already.

      - Google is an internet content delivery company. They grew up on the other side of the internet from the ISPs. They had to learn how to optimize the net from the inside out.

      - And lastly....Google's experimental broadband is available to less then 100,000 people right now. That's not even close to 1% of Americans. That's like Snapple calling a little girl's front yard lemonade stand "competition."

      People are sick of being screwed by corporations and the politicians they have bought. We do want broadband, free and unfettered. We don't want to pay through the nose for it, because we've been paying through the nose this whole time for shitty customer service, lousy prices, caps, rate hikes, and packages of channels we do not want. We cannot vote with our wallets without cutting our own throats because yes, we do want fast internet and there is no one else to turn to for it in 95% of the marketplace.

      So yes, we want our government to do something. OUR government, the one WE voted into power. The one that is supposed to serve US, not the damned corporations. We want them to be regulated, to be beholden to our government, to have checks on them and requirements and service levels. Monopolies SUCK, they are a bad idea, the free market has proven this time and again throughout history....or we'd never have had regulation in the first place!

    11. Re:Long-term loss by bn-7bc · · Score: 0

      one question: is the cat 797F rosd legal in the first place? if it is not why shold bridges be designed to suport. it?

    12. Re:Long-term loss by x0ra · · Score: 0

      What is your problem with profit ? Or maybe are you just jealous not to have your share "for free". Telcos are private, for-profit, businesses, as long as they keep customer sufficiently happy, there is no need to upgrade. What you want is merely for the government to use the compulsory nature of the law to constraint another entity to serve you. Said differently, YOU are the initiator of violence, though, you don't want to get your hands dirty...

    13. Re:Long-term loss by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The bandwidth might not be infinite, but the latency certainly can be.

    14. Re:Long-term loss by x0ra · · Score: 0

      I wish I had. Selfishness and greed are GOOD.

    15. Re:Long-term loss by Rougement · · Score: 1

      Ah, so not a paid shill, just an asshole. Got it.

    16. Re:Long-term loss by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You keep fucking repeating yourselves in post after post and it doesn't make you less full of total dog shit. You are a fucking dipshit sheep or a parasitic shill. Doesn't matter which, the end result is you trying to get us to accept a massive diseased cock in our assholes. No thanks fuckface.

    17. Re:Long-term loss by davecb · · Score: 1

      Paying the godfather for "protection" is often necessary, but one doesn't often announce it publicly, or sign a contract that can be produce in court later (;-))

      --
      davecb@spamcop.net
    18. Re:Long-term loss by x0ra · · Score: 1

      What should you have to worry about legality, you paid for the roads through your taxes. Or maybe someone had the insight to think that some use of public road were not acceptable, and thus deemed "illegal". The same way Comcast network was not built to transport Netflix traffic, which, if it was carried who result into unfairness toward other users. There is a nice quote from James Q Wilson, the second part is very relevant here: "Without Liberty, Law loses its nature and its name, and becomes oppression. Without Law, Liberty also loses its nature and its name, and becomes licentiousness". All in all, the problem with libertarianism is that too much people think they can abuse the system. Law is merely here to remind them that every behavior has boundaries.

    19. Re:Long-term loss by x0ra · · Score: 0

      I am glad to see you resort no name calling. Very... unfortunate behavior of yours.

    20. Re:Long-term loss by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is a contract negotiation. They negotiated with their ISP for bandwidth with no limitations. They expect to get bandwidth with no limitations.

      Now the ISP is reneging on this contract. They turn around on netflix and tell them "We won't honour our contract with the poster, unless you *also* give us money".

      This is all kinds of wrong.

    21. Re:Long-term loss by green1 · · Score: 1

      Which is why you already pay more for a 100mbps connection than you do for a 10mbps connection than you do for a 1mbps connection. If all you do is read plaintext slashdot, you only need the 1mbps connection to do just fine, if you stream HD movies you'll need probably the 10mbps connection, if you want multiple 4KHD streams pay for the 100mbps connection.
      Sure the ISPs pay their own upstream costs in terms of what bandwidth they need, but you pay them in a very similar way.

      What SHOULD be happening is that the ISPs should be crawling to Netflix hat in hand begging for a local cache to save them on upstream bandwidth, not trying to extort extra money for something they've already been paid for!

    22. Re:Long-term loss by thaylin · · Score: 1

      Well thinking Selfishness and greed are good traits is one of the definitions of being an asshole, so he is correct.

      --
      When you cant win, ad hominem.
    23. Re:Long-term loss by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 1

      The bridge has not been designed to handle that load, it has been designed for lighter load (car, 40' truck, etc.).

      But the bridge owner specifically sold me an all-you-can-drive plan where I pay a fixed amount every month and I get unlimited right to drive anything I want on that bridge as many times as I want. If you can't deliver unlimited bandwidth, don't sell it.

      --
      sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
    24. Re:Long-term loss by tepples · · Score: 1

      What is your problem with profit ? Or maybe are you just jealous not to have your share "for free". Telcos are private, for-profit, businesses, as long as they keep customer sufficiently happy, there is no need to upgrade.

      My problem with profit comes when the city or state government forbids customers who aren't happy with the for-profit telco's service from starting their own co-op to provide a competing service.

    25. Re:Long-term loss by x0ra · · Score: 1

      I very much doubt all contractual details have been made public.

    26. Re:Long-term loss by x0ra · · Score: 0

      Not being selfish and greedy just mean your are insane and have strictly no sense of value for your own life.

    27. Re:Long-term loss by thaylin · · Score: 1

      Citation please? I dont think those words mean what you think they do.

      --
      When you cant win, ad hominem.
    28. Re:Long-term loss by R4D4R · · Score: 1

      This is completely and utterly wrong. TCP/IP was specifically designed to scale and does so nicely.

    29. Re:Long-term loss by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Firstly, these are NOT telcos. They are ISPs. Different breed of cat. See, if it goes over copper, and is telephone service only, then it is a Telco, and those are regulated already. Open networks, access req1uirements for the disabled, for rural areas, and a whole host of other things.

      If it goes over copper wire or fiber, over the airwaves, or a fucking string...AND its digital...AND it gives you access to the internet....then it is an ISP. And has no regulations whatsoever. They do not have to lease linespace to competitors to force an open market where they have to compete on service, pricing, etc.

      I do not want "Free" anything. I do believe in getting what I paid for. The problem is, these ISPs feel free to change what I am paying for and I get zero say in the matter cause there is no one for me to leave them for. I cannot just pick another of 5-9 cable providers to bring me TV, phone and internet of the same quality. They have a monopoly here, and our politicians want us to believe they do not.

      Regulation is what you do when your biggest industries decide not to play "fair", when they decide to collude to keep the barrier to entry in their market so high no one else can enter, they use their market to negatively influence other markets. When Bell was broken up in the US, they did not jsut cut it into 8 companies and call it done. They went beyond that to make sure each of those markets had competition, so the consumers could get a fair chance at good deals and good services, so consumers had choice.

      Consumers currently have no choice in an increasingly connected world. It is far beyond the time when ISPs need to be regulated and real competition introduced into the market.

    30. Re:Long-term loss by grcumb · · Score: 1

      Bandwidth and latency are neither free or infinite.

      Nobody said it was. The issue here is that Comcast subscribers are not getting what they paid for, unless NetFlix pays again for the bandwidth. This is bandwidth for which NetFlix has already paid, and for which Comcast has already been paid by its customers.

      Your argument is the same as saying that if you pay for a bridge with your taxes, you should be able to drive a fully loaded hauling truck (type Caterpillar 797F) on it. But guess what ? The bridge has not been designed to handle that load, it has been designed for lighter load (car, 40' truck, etc.).

      You're dead wrong on this count. Comcast is arguing (speciously) that traffic to and from a particular destination doesn't deserve the same service as traffic to and from other destinations - unless the destination pays an additional toll. The fact that this is a popular destination is only relevant inasmuch as this increases Comcast's ability to extort payment for something which has already been paid for.

      This is straight-up anti-competitive behaviour. If the US telecommunications regulatory environment made any sense at all, Comcast would be slapped down hard for doing this.

      --
      Crumb's Corollary: Never bring a knife to a bun fight.
    31. Re:Long-term loss by petermgreen · · Score: 1

      No sane ISP would agree to provide a guarantee to provide every packet you send to arbitary destinations since it would be impractical for them to provide that service. At best they will provide a gaurantee that it will reach the edge routers of their network without encountering congestion. At worst they will provide no guarantees at all as to what happens once it leaves your link to them and enters the core of their network.

      --
      note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
    32. Re:Long-term loss by x0ra · · Score: 1

      You are paying for a maximum, best effort, bandwidth, not for a guaranteed one. Re-read your contract.

    33. Re:Long-term loss by x0ra · · Score: 1

      This is called regulatory capture, ie. too much regulation.

    34. Re:Long-term loss by x0ra · · Score: 1

      my own words, in my quest to objectivism.

    35. Re:Long-term loss by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      If I order the parts for a 797 so I can assemble it in my front yard, they shouldn't be charging Caterpillar for the privilege of delivering me my mining truck parts when I paid for the bridge so that I could get truck parts delivered.

      Especially they shouldn't be charging Caterpillar and not charging Komatsu for the same thing.

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    36. Re:Long-term loss by F.Ultra · · Score: 1

      Because in his view the ISPs should be paid for the bandwidth more than once (what a wonderful model...), sounds like a corporate troll to me.

    37. Re:Long-term loss by thaylin · · Score: 1

      I hope you die. Selfishness and greed are what is destroying this country.

      --
      When you cant win, ad hominem.
    38. Re:Long-term loss by s0nicfreak · · Score: 1

      Then let me pay for a guaranteed one!

      Even though it is ridiculous that other first-world countries pay $20 for 150mbps and I pay $72 for 25mbps from Comcast, I would pay more to actually guarantee I could use that 25mbps.

    39. Re:Long-term loss by jythie · · Score: 1

      Netflix pays its upstream provider. That provider pays Comcast, but Comcast and other backbones have gotten good at negotiating between each other, so Comcast can not squeeze Netflix's ISP much more. But Netflix HAS been paying for its load on Comcast's network the entire time. There is no 'free ride' here, everyone has been getting paid already. But Comcast's interest is not just in getting paid, it is in protecting its unrelated media offerings. Netflix is cutting into its cable TV profits so they are trying to make up for THAT loss, not increased network usage.

    40. Re:Long-term loss by jythie · · Score: 1

      Customers are not forbidden from starting their own ISP. However they do not get free roadwork nor access to the untold miles of public land. Bringing in a new set of lines is a massive and expensive undertaking that has significant impact on the entire region including not only power and traffic disruption but requires tearing up right of way land, which means going onto citizen's property and ripping it up. So yeah, local governments have a pretty significant incentive to not go through that whole process anytime someone asks.

    41. Re:Long-term loss by jythie · · Score: 1

      Yeah, people tend to underestimate just how much public money goes into internet infrastructure even when companies make it look like they are only spending their own money to lay cable.... people also tend to forget that all those cables are being put on land that the telco does not own and would have no right to if the public did not hand it over.

    42. Re:Long-term loss by PortHaven · · Score: 1

      The issue is, that WE understand that our bandwidth cannot be guaranteed at ALL TIMES. We understand, that weather, network problems, etc, etc, etc, etc, etc. Can impede bandwidth.

      As such, we allow, and accept a reasonable indemification against a 100% uptime and guaranteed speed deliveries. The problem is, that that allowance has and is being abused to justify providing a less than agreed to performance. More so, that the performance is deterministic based upon content.

      In otherwords, if I go to Speedtest.net, Comcast will allow me to have 100% or MORE of my purchased 50mbps bandwidth. But....if I go to Netflix, bittorrent, or any site that may compete with their alternative business offerings. My bandwidth is reduced significantly.

      And that is FRAUDULENT AND CRIMINAL and we are fully justified in being pissed off as hell.

    43. Re:Long-term loss by x0ra · · Score: 1

      Selfishness and greed are the very reason this country exist in the first place.

    44. Re:Long-term loss by Rakarra · · Score: 1

      Well thinking Selfishness and greed are good traits is one of the definitions of being an asshole, so he is correct.

      They're also traits of an Ayn Rand - worshipping Objectivist.

  12. netflix, I hardly knew ye by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    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.

    1. Re:netflix, I hardly knew ye by x0ra · · Score: 0

      I support you, pal'.

      Though, it would seem that /. is populated by a bunch of content-glutton free-rider. I should not pay for them if I don't want/need the same as they do.

  13. Extortion through lack of net neutrality by carlhaagen · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is how it starts.

    1. Re:Extortion through lack of net neutrality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, it started when the AOLers showed up in '93 and started making mass scale uninformed decisions, tolerating things that wouldn't have been tolerated before that, and governments suddenly needing to control it since now almost all the population is using it for so many things. It's been a road that leads to locked down and controlled TV 2.0 ever since then.

      The only good path from here is to start over, build a new one, with strong guarantees of end to end encryption and anonymity built in to the basic substrate of the thing. All protocols are onion routed, endpoints known to the nodes in the middle, and so on. It has to be made corporation+government resistant, or the whole promise of free and open human communication, happening without censorship, oversight, monitoring, or control, will be in jeopardy.

    2. Re:Extortion through lack of net neutrality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      endpoints known to the nodes in the middle

      I meant, UNknown to nodes in the middle.

    3. Re:Extortion through lack of net neutrality by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      My pitchfork is ready. Anybody got torches?

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    4. Re:Extortion through lack of net neutrality by Bob+the+Super+Hamste · · Score: 1

      Will oxy-acetylene work?

      --
      Time to offend someone
  14. Does this work two ways? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    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.

    1. Re:Does this work two ways? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What a shame Netflix took a step back

      What a shame Netflix didn't fight back by enlisting their subscribers; Netflix has 40 million subscribers now. Why should Netflix hesitate to explain to their subscribers that their ISP is the cause of poor streaming because they refuse to peer with the Netflix network?

      Millions of pissed off Netflix subscribers pounding on Comcast's door would fix this.

      This deal is a cop-out. If the precedent holds then Comcast will own Netflix eventually. Netflix has signed its fate over to Comcast.

    2. Re:Does this work two ways? by Jason+Levine · · Score: 2

      Sadly, the reason is this: Netflix has competition. Comcast (for the most part) doesn't.

      If Netflix is slow and they blame Comcast, some portion of their subscribers won't believe them and will switch to Amazon Prime, iTunes, or some other video service.
      If Netflix is slow and the subscribers see that the blame lies with Comcast, they can protest, but for the most part can't get high speed Internet from any other company.

      Comcast knows they have this power over people and won't hesitate to use it.

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    3. Re:Does this work two ways? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What a shame Netflix didn't fight back by enlisting their subscribers

      It's not too late for that. Simply detect when the subscriber is coming from Comcast and start charging an extra $1/mo to cover Comcast's extortion fee and include an explanation of why they're being charged an extra dollar. Netflix passes on the cost to customers and Comcast gets a ton of angry support calls.

      But the cynic in me says that Netflix is happy to set this precedent. By agreeing on a price that they can tolerate, it means that any upstart competitor will have to pay it too adding yet another barrier to entry in the streaming content business.

    4. Re:Does this work two ways? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All those clicks on Comcast search results probably cost Google a lot of money. It's not fair for Comcast to just expect Google to foot the bill for all those people clicking on Comcast links.

    5. Re:Does this work two ways? by JoelKatz · · Score: 1

      Google and Facebook produce large amounts of outbound bandwidth from a small number of endpoints. Comcast handles large amounts of inbound traffic to a large number of endpoints. The traffic benefits both parties equally, but it is inherent in both Google's and Facebook's business models that their traffic will cost them less than the costs it imposes on the destination networks. Thus it makes sense for Comcast to charge them to balance things out. This argument doesn't work in reverse.

    6. Re:Does this work two ways? by JoelKatz · · Score: 1

      > Why should Netflix hesitate to explain to their subscribers that their ISP is the cause of poor streaming because they refuse to peer with the Netflix network?

      They were happy to peer with Netflix, Netflix just didn't want to pay for it. They tried to get Cogent to bully Comcast and that failed. So Netflix agreed to peer with Comcast directly. Settlement-based peering for traffic imbalances has been the norm for more than a decade. Netflix and Cogent just tried to strongarm Comcast and failed.

    7. Re:Does this work two ways? by bingoUV · · Score: 1

      Google and Facebook provide (artificial) intelligence, storage, processing. Comcast doesn't, it is just a conduit. Thus it makes sense for Google and Facebook to charge Comcast. This argument doesn't work in reverse.

      --
      Bingo Dictionary - Pragmatist, n. A myopic idealist.
  15. fuuuuuuck comcast by Junior+J.+Junior+III · · Score: 1

    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!
  16. If netflix is providing content by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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?

    1. Re:If netflix is providing content by 0123456 · · Score: 1

      If netflix is providing content to comcast users, then why is netflix paying comcast?

      Because, as I understand it, Netflix is on a different ISP, and traffic from that ISP into Comcast is overwhelminging in the Neftlix to Comcast direction, so the usual peering arrangements based on similar levels of traffic in both directions make no financial sense.

    2. Re:If netflix is providing content by thaylin · · Score: 2

      Then comcast should get out of the market. If it does not want me to use my internet how they claim I can use my internet then they should not be provideing me internet.

      --
      When you cant win, ad hominem.
    3. Re:If netflix is providing content by davecb · · Score: 1

      When that happens, one side is making a windfall profit, and the other side "negotiate" wit them until they get a deal they can live with. To date, negotiation has tended to start with screaming arguments and run up to service cutoffs, but no-one's stabbed anyone yet (;-))

      --
      davecb@spamcop.net
    4. Re:If netflix is providing content by dryeo · · Score: 1

      No, they should just have honest advertising. "We promise the fastest all text internet" or "100MBs, as long as it's text" or even "Fastest internet, just don't stream content" and of course they should be clear about this when you sign up instead of making promises that they plan to break.

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    5. Re:If netflix is providing content by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you had competition in the USA for ISPs, what would happen is that Comcast would look at their traffic, realise that Netflix is a huge consumer of bandwidth and then setup what would basically amount to caching for the video streams. This would reduce the burden on their peering points and provide them with a "value added" opportunity to entice subscribers to use Comcast. Heck, with the caching they could make netflix unmetered to add even more value to their offerings...

      Here in Australia where we actually have competition in the ISP market, many ISPs offer unmetered services (for plans which have a data limit) for such things as Netflix, Youtube, Facebook, Steam, etc...

  17. Let me get this straight by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    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??

    1. Re:Let me get this straight by x0ra · · Score: 0, Troll

      You pay for a general internet access, not a specific, resource consuming, service.This is basic peering agreement where Netflix is sending more traffic to Comcast than Comcast is sending to Netflix. Bandwidth is not free. As such, either you want Netflix to free-ride over Comcast investment, or you agree for the asymmetry to be compensated to Comcast.

    2. Re:Let me get this straight by the_skywise · · Score: 1

      No no no... See you're competing with bandwidth for torrenters and pirate scammers who are downloading their movies for free which slows down your streaming so Netflix is paying to give you better service... which will be passed on to you as part of your support to legally enjoy and supports the arts communities.

      So y'see, in the end it's actually better for you to pirate the movies for "free" with the Comcast service which will hurt Comcast in the end because they won't get their Two Dollars.

      err...

      Wait that still makes Comcast the winner... uhhh...

      Huh..

    3. Re:Let me get this straight by Wonko+the+Sane · · Score: 0

      Your explaination is reasonable and reveals the headline, and 99% of the comments on this article, as being inaccurate and misguided.

      I predict it will be ignored because the audience is more interested reasons to scream at each other and push agendas instead of facts.

    4. Re:Let me get this straight by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yup. But keep in mind that Netflix is also (now) a Comcast customer. They need access to the tubes to send the content, same as you need it to receive it.

    5. Re:Let me get this straight by thaylin · · Score: 1

      Then they should not be offering x amount of bandwidth to users if they cannot handle that capacity. Netflix does not "send" traffic to comcast, comcasts customers "pull" that traffic. If anything Netflix should be charging comcast. Based on your logic every entertainment provider should be paying every ISP, because no ISP sends traffic to the entertainment provider.

      --
      When you cant win, ad hominem.
    6. Re:Let me get this straight by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Bandwidth is not free. As such, either you want Netflix to free-ride over Comcast investment, or you agree for the asymmetry to be compensated to Comcast.

      Comcast isn't free-riding over anyone. Netflix paid for their outbound bandwidth, and Comcast's customers are paying for the inbound. Everyone's getting paid, but Comcast wants to double-dip. In 2005 Ed Whitacre (then CEO of SBC) said of popular service providers:

      "Now what they would like to do is use my pipes free, but I ain't going to let them do that because we have spent this capital and we have to have a return on it. So there's going to have to be some mechanism for these people who use these pipes to pay for the portion they're using. Why should they be allowed to use my pipes?"

      There was a serious uproar about that, with people rightfully claiming that Ed had no leg to stand on since SBC's customers were already paying for their inbound bandwidth. Exactly what is different now that makes this argument more legitimate?

    7. Re:Let me get this straight by wiredlogic · · Score: 1

      Comcast isn't a peering middleman. They are an ISP serving whatever IP packets their paying customers request. They already get paid to connect their customers to the greater internet. It doesn't matter where Comcast's incoming traffic comes from so long as they provide the service they agreed to in the contract they have with their paying customers. It doesn't matter that a large portion of their inbound traffic comes from one source. If the same volume came from 1000 sources they'd still be obligated to deliver those packets as contracted. That's what IP is all about.

      --
      I am becoming gerund, destroyer of verbs.
    8. Re:Let me get this straight by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not really. If anything, the dispute should be between Cogent and Comcast directly, and either can choose to charge their subscribers more. Besides, Comcast is pulling the bandwidth from Cogent's tube, so who should really be charging who?

    9. Re:Let me get this straight by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > You pay for a general internet access, not a specific, resource consuming, service.This is basic peering agreement where Netflix is sending more traffic to Comcast than Comcast is sending to Netflix.

      Nope. Comcast is an ISP, and as such it is expected to receive more traffic, from everyone. Be it Netflix, Youtube, Facebook, Google, Amazon, etc.. That's why I am paying Comcast.

      > Bandwidth is not free. As such, either you want Netflix to free-ride over Comcast investment, or you agree for the asymmetry to be compensated to Comcast.

      No it is not. That's why I am already paying $50 per month for it.

    10. Re:Let me get this straight by DaHat · · Score: 1

      Then they should not be offering x amount of bandwidth to users if they cannot handle that capacity.

      I take it then you want banks to keep on hand sufficient cash in case all customers decide to have a run on the bank (a knowable #)... and that road ways should be constructed so wide that they can accommodate at speed every single car that can possibly drive down it at a given time (ie nearly infinitely wide).

      No... what Comcast is doing is perfectly reasonable, they offer a an upper limit for how much bandwidth you can get and do their best within reason to accommodate that... and when certain peering links become overwhelmed.

      If we go down your road... can you imagine the width of a pipe that Comcast would require to any specific peer? Say you've got a million customers in a given area... each with a 15 megabit connection... under your system you'd need a 15 peta-bit pipe to Netflix... just in case everyone happened to want to watch House of Cards on several TVs in the house at the exact same time.

    11. Re:Let me get this straight by x0ra · · Score: 1

      Netflix pays Cogent, Cogent pays Comcast, at the end Cogent is just a proxy in a dispute between Netflix and Comcast. Nothing really change to the debate we are having here.

    12. Re:Let me get this straight by thaylin · · Score: 1

      I expect that the roads are capable of handling the traffic they claim to be capable of handling, and not charge a bordering state because I chose to go to that state to buy something. In addition you are assuming that netflix uses 15mb per second, and that ever single person is using netflix at the same time, a goss over simplification.

      --
      When you cant win, ad hominem.
    13. Re:Let me get this straight by green1 · · Score: 2

      I have no problem with my ISP "overselling" as long as it doesn't impact the end users. They know that if they have 10,000 customers with 100mbps connections, that doesn't mean they need to be able to provide 1tbps of bandwidth, but just because they used to be able to get away with only having a total of 1gbps and they now need 10gbps to handle the same load is just a cost of doing business. (numbers made up on the spot, and probably not accurate, but the principle still applies) They should be thankful that they don't actually need to provide the 1tbps that would actually be required if people were filling the pipes they sold them.

      I would say the ISP has three choices.
      1) Admit they can't provide the bandwidth they're selling, and stop selling that level of bandwidth.
      2) Realize they can't provide the bandwidth they're selling, and upgrade the network until they can handle the average spikes in said load.
      3) Beg netflix to give them a local cache to save them on having to do either 1 or 2
      What they should not be doing is getting paid twice for the same bandwidth.

    14. Re:Let me get this straight by green1 · · Score: 1

      They should actually be grateful it all comes from one source, it's an incredible opportunity for them to buy local caching from netflix to save on bandwidth. if the same volume came from 1000 sources they'd actually have to upgrade their outgoing links which could prove to be much more expensive.

      Or they could act like every other abusive monopoly and try to double dip and get paid twice for the same service... which of course is the option they chose...

    15. Re:Let me get this straight by petermgreen · · Score: 1

      Not really. If anything, the dispute should be between Cogent and Comcast directly, and either can choose to charge their subscribers more.

      Or they can choose to leave the link(s) in a shitty congested state. Comcast like's this situation, shitty netflix (and any other internet video providers who happen to be behind cogent) means less competition for their cable TV products*. Cogent don't care much, their buisness is selling cheap connections not high quality ones.

      Netflix can choose to respond to this by accepting the shitty congested link, by finding a different upstream provider with a less congested link to comcast (and likely also a higher price) or by cutting out the middleman and making their own deal with comcast. It seems they have chosen the latter.

      * Which brings us to the real problem, too much vertical integration meaning the interests of ISPs don't align with the interests of their customers.

      --
      note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
    16. Re:Let me get this straight by kheldan · · Score: 1

      Yes. This.
      Netflix pays for their connectivity. Comcast also pays for their connectivity. I am of course speaking of connetivity to the backbone. Us users of the Internet, we pay for our connectivity to the entire network. Comcast is big and thinks that they can get paid coming and going. Netflix screwed up, they're now essentially paying Danegeld to Comcast.

      A clear message needs to be sent to Comcast that this isn't OK.

      --
      Are YOU using the TOOL, or is the TOOL using YOU? Think about it!
    17. Re:Let me get this straight by log0n · · Score: 1

      I'm tired of this 'bandwidth isn't free' point being thrown around. Once the infrastructure is there, it is a fixed cost, essentially free. Traffic to point A is the same as traffic to point B, or no traffic at all. The only reason for different pricing is human nature.

      The simplest (indirect) analogy I can think of.. once I have the infrastructure (in this case, cable boxes per TV) I'll pay the same monthly price for my TV bill if I have 10 TVs in my house running channels 24/7 vs a single TV viewing 2 hours 5 days a week. I don't get charged more for more simultaneous TV channels, conversely, I don't get a discount if I happen to leave the TV off the entire month. The signal already exists. It's a fixed cost.

    18. Re:Let me get this straight by silas_moeckel · · Score: 2

      It's worst than that Netflix is more than happy to supply the gear to put a big hunk of there network close to there clients. Comcast gets fast access to what there customers want that's local to their pops. Comcast is unabashedly says we have the eyeballs and you will pay to access them, they also pay us to access you. Comcast's control of the last mile needs to go away. A passive (or pure optical) last mile is needed. One open to all comers at the same price. Ultimately owned by the people that live there and administrated by the municipality. We need 2 cables coming into our houses power and optical fiber. I single strad can serve multiple providers with dirt cheap CDMA gear. Push the smarts back out to the edge It's ok to have a muni net that might link schools, government, local business, and residents with some lifeline internet access. Coupled with dozens of ISP's some using overlay style networks some on there own gear. Given that a company like netflix could piggyback on one or more of those ISP's and/or go direct to the muni net. Protocols will be needed to select the correct one maybe use multiple paths in parallel. Muninets that are fast and responsive to issues can be an attraction to others to migrate to that community.

      --
      No sir I dont like it.
    19. Re:Let me get this straight by bhcompy · · Score: 1

      Why is this modded Troll? This is completely accurate and has nothing to do with Net Neutrality. Netflix wants to be closer to Comcast because Comcast and Cogent have a shitty connection, so Netflix is paying Comcast to add specific connections for them. It's like paying for a Tier 1 colo instead of a Tier 3 colo. Come on people, this is Slashdot

    20. Re:Let me get this straight by bhcompy · · Score: 1

      No, because Cogent has other services that are affected, like League of Legends, who are making their own deals to route around the saturated routes. This is a dispute between Comcast and Cogent.

    21. Re:Let me get this straight by dryeo · · Score: 1

      Well Comcast should just sell different services. $50 and no netflix or $100 and netflix. Or whatever numbers make sense.

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    22. Re:Let me get this straight by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 1

      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??

      At least you're getting what you pay for. I'm going to be paying $2 for Netflix to pay Comcast, and my ISP is neither Comcast nor Time-Warner Cable. Zero benefit for me

      --
      Your ad here. Ask me how!
  18. Is this quite the same? by PhrostyMcByte · · Score: 5, Informative

    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.

    1. Re:Is this quite the same? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's Cogent who screwed up.

    2. Re:Is this quite the same? by thaylin · · Score: 0

      That is no where near true, and shows you did not read the article. They are paying to stop the traffic jam comcast is providing. No netflix server will be hosted on Comcasts network, but comcast will allow peering to them.

      --
      When you cant win, ad hominem.
    3. Re:Is this quite the same? by TubeSteak · · Score: 4, Informative

      That is no where near true, and shows you did not read the article.

      I think you read the article, but didn't understand what was in front of you.

      1. Netflix pays Cogent to be its ISP.
      2. Cogent is a Tier 1 ISP, this means that they don't pay for transit or peering bandwidth.
      3. Netflix traffic keeps increasing in leaps and bounds.
      4. This is a problem for Cogent's peers, because they are receiving more (Netflix) traffic from Cogent than they are sending.
      5. Because of 4, Comcast/Verizon/AT&T/TimeWarner have refused to increase peering bandwidth with Cogent unless they get paid for it.
      6. Because of 5, all data through those peering points are subject to lag and dropped packets.

      The degradation isn't selective, which is why the GP is correct that it isn't a Net Neutrality issue.

      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    4. Re:Is this quite the same? by thaylin · · Score: 0
      no, I read it and understood it.. The problem with your argument is that all of the netflx traffic coming from cogent is at the request of the ISPs customers. It is not like Comcast is hosting a site and netflix is requesting massive amounts of traffic off that site. I pay my internet bill to not only be able to send, but also receive data...

      Do they degrade TWC traffic? How about ATT? How is it not selective? They are degrading one service provider because of netflix, that is the very definition of selective

      --
      When you cant win, ad hominem.
    5. Re:Is this quite the same? by Solandri · · Score: 1

      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.

      It is the same thing. You're just being confused because of where the zero level lies. The net effect is the same.

      In a competitive environment, Netflix has to do nothing to get Comcast to host their servers on Comcast's local network. Comcast would be tripping over themselves to host the servers so their customers would not flee to a competitor which offered better Netflix service. Heck, Comcast would be paying Netflix to provide them with a local copy of their streamed videos.

      So in both cases, the net effect is that Comcast makes more money than it should, Netflix pays more money than it should.

    6. Re:Is this quite the same? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Netflix offer to provide the servers to anyone large enough was brilliant.

      The idea sounds good for both groups on first review.
      1) The provider no longer pays for transit traffic to get to the content.
      2) Netflix no longer pays their transit provider for each copy they send to my users.

      Two problems...
      1) Netflix sends higher def streams from the internal server. (*)
      2) The transit connection is rarely anywhere near the most expensive part of a large network.
      *) As there is little cost to Netflix, they have little incentive to limit the traffic. For example while they are paying for transit they do not offer the top tier of streaming.

      In most cases I would have recommended against hosting the servers because it would have cost the ISP more at the edge than it saved in the core. YMMV.

    7. Re:Is this quite the same? by 100_Monkeys_Typing · · Score: 1

      " Comcast would be tripping over themselves to host the servers so their customers would not flee to a competitor" - Except there isn't anyone to flee too.... Comcast is the only option that I have for accessing high speed internet.

    8. Re:Is this quite the same? by TubeSteak · · Score: 2

      They are degrading one service provider because of netflix, that is the very definition of selective

      They are not degrading one service provider.
      They are just not increasing the bandwidth available to one service provider, which is not what people mean when they talk about Net Neutrality and "selective"
      If Comcast/Verizon/AT&T/TWC picked out Netflix traffic and throttled it, that would be the type of "selective" action we're discussing.

      The problem isn't Netflix specifically, it's that the free peering agreements between Cogent and [everyone else] depend on equal amounts of traffic being exchanged.
      The only reason Netflix is involved is because they are the ones directly responsible for the significant imbalances in traffic flowing through the peering points.

      There are other posts showing previous occasions where Cogent got into fights over peering.
      If it'll help you understand the situation better, just imagine that Netflix never existed and that Cogent still had an imbalance in the traffic going through their peering points.

      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    9. Re:Is this quite the same? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      4. This is a problem for Cogent's peers, because they are receiving more (Netflix) traffic from Cogent than they are sending.

      That's not actually a problem. It's profitable for Cogent's peers to make it a problem, but in reality it is not. Note that we're not talking about transit traffic.

    10. Re:Is this quite the same? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem is in #5, Comcast/Verizon/AT&T/TimeWarner are already being paid by their subscribers to provide them the bandwidth for the content they have requested (eg, Netflix in this case). I could understand if Comcast/etc subscribers were not the end point of the streams or if the content was unsolicited but that is not the case.

      If this is allowed to stand then expect things to get worse. Next largest user of bandwidth is facebook so expect Comcast and the likes to give them a shakedown too...

    11. Re:Is this quite the same? by thaylin · · Score: 1

      That is, again, not true. They depend on giving access to content that the customers want. Netflix does not send traffic to comcast, it is pulled by comcasts customers. If it was not for comcasts customers netflix would not be causing the imbalance... So who is at fault, comcast...

      --
      When you cant win, ad hominem.
    12. Re: Is this quite the same? by sh3p · · Score: 1

      Comcast is refusing to host any CDN servers and instead insisting on a peering agreement.

    13. Re: Re:Is this quite the same? by sh3p · · Score: 1

      One important point is missing, however: why are Comcast/Verizon/AT&T/TimeWarner refusing to host CDN servers for Netflix? That would solve all the peering/traffic issues.

    14. Re:Is this quite the same? by Nethemas+the+Great · · Score: 1

      for continued smooth access to Comcast's network customers

      Sounds like extortion and for that matter a bald faced lie. When the hell did I ever get "smooth" access to Netflix over Crapcast's network?

      --
      Two of my imaginary friends reproduced once ... with negative results.
    15. Re:Is this quite the same? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Easy to fix this.

      Netflix develops a app where everything streamed to a customer gets returned back to Netflix. Traffic going out equals traffic coming in.

      You now say that peoples upload speed isn't the same as download speed. So, you don't have to send the bits back by the time that the movie ends. In the next day or so should be fine.

      Everyone is happy.

      captcha: fascism

  19. Okay fine. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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.

  20. Monopoly by koan · · Score: 0

            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."
  21. But Rush Limbaugh . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    . . . told me that Net Neutrality means the government is controlling my Internet!

    How can this not be true?

  22. Re:You get what you pay for by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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.

  23. Might be a shrewd maneuver... by the_skywise · · Score: 1

    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...)

    1. Re:Might be a shrewd maneuver... by TheSync · · Score: 1

      Lest Comcast become the 21st century version of Standard Oil.

      I hope so, because in 1865, kerosene cost fifty-eight cents a gallon; by 1880 it was just 9 cents a gallon.

      But somehow I doubt that Comcast TWC NBCU will be able to reduce cable prices as much as Standard Oil reduced kerosene prices. After all, Standard Oil did not depend on local government monopoly franchises to achieve their monopoly, but instead only depended on the market.

      [Read Vindicating Capitalism: The Real History of the Standard Oil Company]

    2. Re:Might be a shrewd maneuver... by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 2

      That's how they destroyed their competition and established a monopoly - predatory pricing. Generally SO engaged in differential pricing - high where there was no competition and low where there was competition. This practice is currently illegal. See Jones, Eliot. The Trust Problem in the United States (1922).

      SO also used their market power to engage in other corrupt business practices including forcing rail companies to grant rates not available to other companies.

    3. Re:Might be a shrewd maneuver... by TheSync · · Score: 1

      That's how they destroyed their competition and established a monopoly - predatory pricing.

      Yes, they destroyed their competition by dramatically and permanently reducing prices to the consumer. Standard Oil revolutionized the technology of kerosene production and made their supply chain highly efficient. This made a lot of their competitors mad, which is why they got such bad press. But it made lighting incredibly cheap for consumers.

      The problem is that there has never been an example of "predatory pricing" where the prices to the consumers go back up to the consumer. It is a nice idea, but practically it never happens.

  24. Brilliant Move by The+Cat · · Score: 2

    Now Netflix has incontrovertible proof Comcast has been throttling their service.

    1. Re:Brilliant Move by matthewv789 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      No, not at all, and I'm fairly sure Comcast has not been.

      Previously, Netflix had to go through a middleman to get to Comcast (Cogent, as well as Level 3 and others). They already had to pay those middlemen, and the connections they were getting to Comcast were increasingly congested, probably due to transit providers not wanting to pay for peering even if they were sending a lot more traffic in one direction than the other, and thus the other end not wanting to invest in additional infrastructure to handle that increased one-way traffic. This is typical, has been the standard practice for the life of the Internet, and has nothing to do with "Comcast vs Netflix" or "net neutrality" etc. Peering agreements are supposed to assume roughly equal traffic in both directions from both parties, otherwise the one causing the imbalance in traffic is expected to pay.

      Now, Netflix are paying Comcast directly to cut out the middleman and get better, less-congested, direct connections. This means they don't have to pay the other transit providers for the traffic they'll now be sending directly to Comcast, AND it seems their payments to Comcast will be less than what they were paying Cogent et al for the same bandwidth.

      So for Netflix, this is win-win: they can cut their bandwidth bill AND get better performance and less congestion streaming movies to Comcast customers. What's the problem?

      Net neutrality is a real concern, but this particular case is not an example of it.

    2. Re:Brilliant Move by The+Cat · · Score: 1

      No, not at all, and I'm fairly sure Comcast has not been.

      Unfortunately your theory doesn't match the facts.

      Here's the progression:

      1. Netflix is slow on Comcast
      2. Neflix pay$$$$$$ Comcast to speed up their traffic
      3. Netflix is faster on Comcast

      Now this could be an elaborate post hoc ergo propter hoc, except that Comcast accepted payment specifically to speed up traffic.

      Therefore, proof.

  25. Google will save us from the big corporations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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.

  26. Ctrl-C Ctrl-V by Dachannien · · Score: 1

    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.

  27. My 802.11n routers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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

  28. Your fucking government by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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.

  29. Comcast usually triple dips why is this a surprise by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

    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.

  30. Robber Barons by Boronx · · Score: 1

    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.

    1. Re:Robber Barons by TheSync · · Score: 1

      Any boat traveling the river had to pay or face the cannons of the castle.

      Only the Holy Roman Emperor could authorise the collection of tolls along the Rhine - which is just like local governments granting monopoly cable franchises.

      [Technically only those requiring tolls outside the authority of the Holy Roman Emperor were known as robber barons (German: Raubritter).]

    2. Re:Robber Barons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wikipedia: "when there was no Emperor, the number of tolling stations exploded in the absence of imperial authority." So quite fitting analogy - no net neutrality equals more robber barons..

    3. Re:Robber Barons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's sad is that despite having such a good analogy Boronx spins himself in a circle and concludes the government is the problem.

  31. Wait till it''s regualted and becomes to big to fa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And Comcast will merge with the Government.

  32. Let the market/customer decide is BOTH way by x0ra · · Score: 1

    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

    1. Re:Let the market/customer decide is BOTH way by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

      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.

      What are you talking about? The cost or speed of your internet connection has nothing to do with what's going on here. You pay for a connection to The Internet. You don't pay for a connection which gets you to Google quickly, but then only gets you to Netflix slowly or not at all. You pay for the carrier to get your packets to and from any destination on the Network as quickly as it is able to do so.

      Unless your on Comcast of course.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    2. Re:Let the market/customer decide is BOTH way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can watch Youtube over a 5Mbps because nobody listened to people like you until the network was capable of carrying video. The "content gluttony" is the reason why you have the luxury of considering a 5Mbps link "good enough". That kind of bandwidth wouldn't be available today had people listened to the battle cries against "content gluttony" in the 90s. Back then, the web was the big bandwidth hog, because it had pictures.

    3. Re:Let the market/customer decide is BOTH way by x0ra · · Score: 1

      My point exactly, I pay for more than I need and this is terribly unfair. See my above hauling truck example. What you call "Internet access" is truly bandwidth and latency. I do not need to be able to stream Netflix 1080p all day long, as such, why should I pay for a pipe capable of doing so ?

    4. Re:Let the market/customer decide is BOTH way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jesus fucking Christ, stop posting. You do not understand what the issue is. This has nothing to do with bandwidth, you fucking idiot. It is about ISPs being able to treat different types of traffic differently, which leads with absolute certainty to censorship of anything they don't like.

    5. Re:Let the market/customer decide is BOTH way by x0ra · · Score: 1

      Youtube at 5Mbps would actually be quite a luxury, but very few would understand this nowadays.

    6. Re:Let the market/customer decide is BOTH way by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      Most people have the option of using dialup, wireless, DSL, or one of several tiers of Cable for their internet connection.

      Not sure what you are talking about.

    7. Re:Let the market/customer decide is BOTH way by x0ra · · Score: 1

      I WANT my ISP to treat different traffic differently if at the end of the day, I can get cheaper access. Is it so difficult to understand ? The consumer pays for what he consumes, which is what "fairness" is.

    8. Re:Let the market/customer decide is BOTH way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not sure what you're talking about. I just measured the inbound rate for a random 10 minutes long Youtube video. It completely downloaded at more than 6MB/s (50Mbps) in less than 25 seconds, saturating the contracted bandwidth.

    9. Re:Let the market/customer decide is BOTH way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      if at the end of the day, I can get cheaper access

      Well, you can't. Internet is cheaper in countries with better internet infrastructure. Making it slower makes it more expensive because you lose the economies of scale. Allowing ISPs to extort money from content providers even though the users already pay for bandwidth and content providers already pay for bandwidth will not make your internet cheaper. Now get the fuck out, shill.

    10. Re:Let the market/customer decide is BOTH way by thaylin · · Score: 1

      Is it so difficult to understand you will not get cheaper access? No matter what, you will pay more. Eventually it will be to the point that if it is not on comcasts network you will have to pay extra fees for it.

      --
      When you cant win, ad hominem.
    11. Re:Let the market/customer decide is BOTH way by alen · · Score: 1

      and at this point comcast lets anyone install a CDN on their network if you pay the fees for the traffic
      some companies like netflix are leeches and want to dump a lot of traffic onto others' networks without any sort of agreement or negotiation and expect them to upgrade their networks just so netflix can make all the profits

    12. Re:Let the market/customer decide is BOTH way by x0ra · · Score: 1

      Obviously not. I could get a $17/month per-month dial up if I chose to, or switch to the $60 cable subscription to a $35 one if I chose to, and bump the 300GB limit I got to unlimited for $5 more.... Oh, yeah, we have data cap here in Canada, certainly something you are not used to, in the country of infinite resources. So, technically, I can already choose whatever suit me the most.

    13. Re:Let the market/customer decide is BOTH way by F.Ultra · · Score: 1

      How would that help. If you don't use Youtube then you won't get traffic from Youtube so whatever they do won't affect you. That whatever ISP you use don't sell a connection under 25MBps (if that really is the case) has nothing to do with net neutrality, even with the change that you propose you would still be forced to pay the for your 25MBps connection and with the same price.

    14. Re:Let the market/customer decide is BOTH way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You actually believe that you will get cheaper access! HA! HA! HA! HA! HA! HA! That's a good one. You libertarians/repubtards really are fucking stupid! You better have some KY jelly because the free market is about to rape you up the ass.

    15. Re:Let the market/customer decide is BOTH way by thaylin · · Score: 1

      We have caps as well.

      --
      When you cant win, ad hominem.
    16. Re:Let the market/customer decide is BOTH way by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

      My point exactly, I pay for more than I need and this is terribly unfair. See my above hauling truck example. What you call "Internet access" is truly bandwidth and latency. I do not need to be able to stream Netflix 1080p all day long, as such, why should I pay for a pipe capable of doing so ?

      You are confusing the the speed at which data is downloaded, with the ability to download all data at the same speed.

      Absolutely you can pay for a slower connection -- and all traffic will be slower for you. You can pay for a faster connection -- and all traffic will be faster for you.

      But if you pay for a connection, regardless of its speed, your ISP should send packets to you -- from anywhere -- as fast as your connection allows. There are no balkanised internet subscription packages -- yet. You pay for a 10m/bps connection, you should be able to connect to your email and Netflix both at that speed. Your ISP should not be selectively slowing or denying you access to certain traffic destinations.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    17. Re:Let the market/customer decide is BOTH way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      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

      If you are unable to obtain a basic connection then it is a failure of the market. It has nothing to do with net neutrality or any sort of free-riding. Here in Australia I can get a basic ADSL2+ with 2.5gb on peak and off peak for $40 a month with home phone included (due to the history here in Australia, most last-mile connections are owned by Telstra who charges a wholesale price of around $32.50 a month just to have the phone line connected) which makes the ADSL2+ connection a basic cost of $8 per month ($0.002/mb for the whole plan). Unfortunately, for the most part, you cannot get a ADSL connection without having a copper phone line connected and paid for so the cost of that basic plan without the phone line is still $40 a month (for headless). If you look around you maybe able to find even cheaper plans on ADSL1 or even dial up.

  33. Re:Comcast usually triple dips why is this a surpr by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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.

  34. The internet is turning into cable TV by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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.

    1. Re:The internet is turning into cable TV by x0ra · · Score: 1

      Guess what ? The "Internet" is more and more used for entertainment, it is normal that those who wants entertainment pay for what they want, instead of free-riding on the back of those who don't want it.

    2. Re:The internet is turning into cable TV by thaylin · · Score: 1

      You're right, good thing we already had those who want entertainment paying for it before this....

      --
      When you cant win, ad hominem.
    3. Re:The internet is turning into cable TV by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And this is reflected in my cost for 12 Mbps internet service, which is substantially more than that for people in other countries who get 5-10 times the bandwidth. Please explain why should Comcast have their costs subsidized by a third party, when said costs are being directly incurred by their own customer base? It's not like Netflix/Cogent is just dumping unsolicited traffic onto Comcast's network. Each and every packet Netflix sends is being placed onto Comcast's network in direct response to a request from a Comcast customer, not to mention that Netflix's services (as well as those of Google/YouTube and others) are at least in part responsible for Comcast having that many customers requesting packets.

      Netflix pays Cogent for their outbound bandwidth. Comcast's customers pay Comcast for the inbound bandwidth. Both directions of both circuits are being completely paid for by the proper people. Comcast is just butthurt because more people are finding Netflix's content to be a cheaper alternative to their own.

    4. Re:The internet is turning into cable TV by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

      The "Internet" is more and more used for entertainment, it is normal that those who wants entertainment pay for what they want, instead of free-riding on the back of those who don't want it.

      They did pay for it. They paid for their ISP to ship that data to them. No-one was free riding on anything here, Netflix included.

      Netflix paid THEIR ISP1 to send their data out. Customers pay THEIR ISP2 to ship the data in. Now ISP2 wants Netflix to pay them in addition to ISP1. Why shouldn't ISP1 charge the customers of ISP2 for all the data it has to ship out to them? Oh that's right, that would be too difficult. So let's just extort the largest target instead then.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
  35. Re:Comcast usually triple dips why is this a surpr by TheSync · · Score: 1

    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.

  36. Thank you Netflix for the long play by V-similitude · · Score: 2

    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.

    1. Re:Thank you Netflix for the long play by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 1

      This is a play by Netflix to demonstrate to the FCC just how dangerous the Comcast/TWC merger would be.

      This is Netflix making the long play to make damn sure no other upstart service arises to displace them or otherwise cut into their market share. They are the $22 billion pound gorilla now and they want to stay that way. They are saying to the FCC, "Net neutrality is unnecessary. The market can take care of it." It's a goddamn lie, but that's how the FCC will view it (with the aid of position papers from the usual suspects).

      In short, Netflix broke the Internet, and they're perfectly happy to have done so, because it will now be permanently broken in their favor.

  37. There's a pretty good reason by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    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
    1. Re:There's a pretty good reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I appreciate you making the argument for replacing regulated private monopolies with public services where we can vote the bastards out if service sucks. Saved me the trouble. Thanks!

  38. Easy solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Get a gun and shoot all the Comcast executives in the head. Everyone wins.

  39. Cogent is 100% to blame... by evilviper · · Score: 4, Interesting

    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
    1. Re:Cogent is 100% to blame... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How many press releases and articles about PR did you just link to? Are you that naive?

      Did you even read Verizon's complaint that they think the traffic should be the same despite that its VZ's customers requesting the data?

      Did you just google "cogent bad"?

    2. Re:Cogent is 100% to blame... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How dare they offer to deliver - for free - the data that Comcast's customers want directly to Comcast's network boundary? Any sane ISP would reject this silliness.

    3. Re:Cogent is 100% to blame... by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      Is Cogent their sole provider? I thought they had a significant portion being served by AWS (which was odd, I thought, because AWS seems to occasionally "go down" when Amazon Prime does not and nobody calls them on it)

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    4. Re:Cogent is 100% to blame... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I'll agree that Cogent is a bottom-of-the-barrel provider, but they're about the only folks that charge less than a buck per 1Mbps on big commits that I've seen. Netflix's bandwidth demands are *enormous*, and given that they've been squeezed so hard by the content providers, I can't really blame them for trying to economize on their bandwidth.

  40. Beta sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    This slashdot-beta is ugly as hell. How do I get rid of this crap?

  41. Internet Tier Packages by Daetrin · · Score: 3, Funny

    "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
  42. This is why... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... 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.

    1. Re:This is why... by x0ra · · Score: 1

      You don't need cable... I have been watching streamed feed without a cable connection for years...

    2. Re:This is why... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not for long.

    3. Re:This is why... by x0ra · · Score: 1

      I will not mind.

  43. But Daily kos told me . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Daily kos said Net neutrality is about first amendment freedoms of expression and making sure corps can't stifle speech.

    1. Re: But Daily kos told me . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But then a man with no tv told me that both sides are doing what they always do and exploiting any current "meme" to keep their followers in line.

      I think he also said something about "fucking morons...they don't even care about the best solution, just have to counter a message and dig in. Their audiences are a fucking waste"

      And then the homeless man [doesnt own a tv either] who had overhead this took off screaming at the top of his lungs "WAKE UP SHEEPLE!"

  44. History lessons by holophrastic · · Score: 1

    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.

    1. Re:History lessons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      unfortunate result of not having advertisers cover your costs

  45. Maybe Netflix is too big for peering agreements by rundgong · · Score: 4, Interesting

    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.

    1. Re:Maybe Netflix is too big for peering agreements by alostpacket · · Score: 1

      1) it's the ISP's users requesting 30% of the internet traffic, not Netflix. The ISPs aren't peering at all, they are the termination point. They aren't providing a service to Netflix, or to anyone else on the internet for that matter, except their customers.
      2) It's the ISPs responsibility to provide enough network infrastructure to their customers. They don't get to hold hostage their users as a product to be bought by Netflix or other content providers.
      3) Netflix offers Open Connect CDN

      ISPs can directly connect their networks to Open Connect for free. ISPs can do this either by free peering with us at common Internet exchanges, or can save even more transit costs by putting our free storage appliances in or near their network.

      https://signup.netflix.com/ope...

      I think there is a fundamental misunderstanding of how peering arrangements are supposed to work that is being exploited by the PR departments of ISPs.

      --
      PocketPermissions Android Permission Guide
    2. Re:Maybe Netflix is too big for peering agreements by F.Ultra · · Score: 1

      AFAIK Netflix kind of already does that by handing out those free Netflix proxy servers to ISPs so that they can serve Netflix to their customers without having to peer with Comgest.

    3. Re:Maybe Netflix is too big for peering agreements by F.Ultra · · Score: 1

      s/Comgest/Cogent

    4. Re:Maybe Netflix is too big for peering agreements by MobyDisk · · Score: 1

      Is it possible that the solution is that Netflix basically are forced to have multiple ISPs and connect directly to many networks?

      Yes. The article indirectly confirms it:

      Netflix has historically routed its streaming content to broadband providers through a number of Internet middlemen

      Netflix probably has servers all over the world, so they would have many many ISPs. Those ISPs may have peering agreements, but Netflix still pays either way.

    5. Re:Maybe Netflix is too big for peering agreements by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I also believe it would be a positive decision from a network design standpoint for Netflix to have direct fiber links with all of the major players' backbones. Then they all get a piece of the action and they shouldn't be complaining so much, and in return their customers get reliable smooth HD videos.

      I also think the FCC should declare the infrastructure portion of the ISP -- the wires/fibers, switches, routers -- to be common carriers and managed fairly, and the content provider services to be managed separately with no special treatment for the content provider side of the company.

    6. Re:Maybe Netflix is too big for peering agreements by JoelKatz · · Score: 1

      "The ISPs aren't peering at all, they are the termination point."

      Huh? Peering is how traffic is exchanged between termination points. Traffic from Netflix to Comcast customers can reach Comcast's network three ways:

      1) Netflix can peer with Comcast.

      2) Netflix can be a transit customer of a network that peers with Comcast.

      3) Netflix can be a transit customer of Comcast.

      1 is what they agreed to now. 2 is what they had before using Cogent's peering with Comcast. 3 is unreasonable given the business nature of Comcast and Netflix.

  46. stop paying them... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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!!!

  47. Greed and corruption have just ended the internet. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wait till you connection is 200 bucks a month just like it for premium TV.

  48. Better business deal for Netflix by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    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.

  49. Legal extortion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The only difference between extortion and a "business transaction" is the number of politicians and buearocrats you have on your payroll.

  50. Cancel Netflix Membership by ad454 · · Score: 1

    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.

    1. Re:Cancel Netflix Membership by matthewv789 · · Score: 1

      You'd be making a mistake then, because Netflix's total bandwidth bill just went DOWN with this arrangement. They were always paying for the traffic to Comcast (as they pay for traffic to everyone), only now they are paying Comcast less for a direct (and better-performing) connection to their network than they were previously paying Cogent, Level 3, et al for more indirect (and increasingly congested and poor-performing), connections to Comcast's network.

    2. Re:Cancel Netflix Membership by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess you know something no one else does:

      FTA: "The deal's financial impact on Netflix isn't clear. The company has been paying middlemen to carry its traffic and it isn't known whether the Comcast deal, and any forthcoming agreements with other broadband providers, will raise its overall Internet carriage costs."

    3. Re:Cancel Netflix Membership by ad454 · · Score: 1

      I am upset with the timing and principle of this action, which the news outlets are promoting as a death-nail in net neutrality.

      I have visited China enough to know what it is like not to have net neutrality. It is a shame that the country which created the Internet will likely follow the same path.

      Here is hoping that government regulators either allow real competition for consumer Internet service, and also list ISP as common carriers. Unfortunately, this is unlikely to happen, since there isn't any pool of consumer money available to bribe politicians more than they are being bribed with now by the current provider monopolies (like Comcast, AT&T, etc.).

  51. Stop supporting the monopolies by Karmashock · · Score: 2

    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.
    1. Re:Stop supporting the monopolies by x0ra · · Score: 1

      It would seem that people around wants even more regulation, not less :-(

    2. Re:Stop supporting the monopolies by thaylin · · Score: 1

      Less regulation will not help this matter. When MS was a monopoly did no regulation help stop them from their ways?

      --
      When you cant win, ad hominem.
    3. Re:Stop supporting the monopolies by x0ra · · Score: 1

      MS is still a monopoly with about 90% of the OS market share. As most people having been, and are still being, educated with Windows, regulations are not going to change much about that... So... I'm not sure what your point is... Now, maybe regulation is needed in the super-computer market to allow a "sane" competition, Linux is *way* too powerful in this market, cf. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U..., unless of course you intend to prove G. Orwell being right in saying that some monopoly are more acceptable than other, the same way some animals were more rightful than others...

    4. Re:Stop supporting the monopolies by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      What you don't seem to get is that these monopolies are a PRODUCT of regulation. The government regulation CREATES these monopolies.

      Remove SOME of the regulations and we might get some actual competition.

      See if Comcast can pull this crap with 5 other companies breathing down their neck.

      --
      I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
  52. Netflix is so so, but once the price get's above.. by Charcharodon · · Score: 1
    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

    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.

  53. I love the Free world, but manipulation of any sor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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.

  54. Re:Netflix is so so, but once the price get's abov by x0ra · · Score: 1

    And the ISP will laugh at you because cash will be flowing in his pocket, and you will be back to the XXth century.

  55. Private interests work when they have to compete by Mystiq · · Score: 1

    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.)

  56. Re:Netflix is so so, but once the price get's abov by dysmal · · Score: 0

    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.

  57. So Comcast bills should go down by GezusK · · Score: 1

    Since Netflix is paying for the bandwidth being used by their customers, that should mean Comcast customers see a reduction in their bills.

  58. South Korea would be more accurate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They have a better network there at a lower price.

  59. Protection by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I always thought that "protection" rackets were a crime.

  60. Tempest in a teapot by matthewv789 · · Score: 4, Informative

    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.

    1. Re:Tempest in a teapot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is not a win-win for everyone- It is a win for Comcast, and Comcast only. Comcast subscribers pay Comcast for their Internet service to download Netflix and Netflix (and soon to be other companies) are paying Comcast to upload it. Comcast is getting paid twice for the same transfer of data.

    2. Re: Tempest in a teapot by sh3p · · Score: 1

      Except that Netflix would have preferred to provide Comcast with a CDN server rather than peer with them, and Comcast refused. I wonder why?

  61. Re:Netflix is so so, but once the price get's abov by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 1

    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.

  62. more customers then many countries have phones by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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.
    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 ... pony up cash but the popular number has to too ...

    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 : ]

  63. If Netflix was Amazon and UPS owned the roads by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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...

  64. Could this lead to US loosing control of internet? by detain · · Score: 1

    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/
  65. You are a cynic and a child by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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.

  66. You are a dumbass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Incorrect use of the fallacy. Go back to Reddit, you contrarian dolt.

    1. Re: You are a dumbass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Go back to digg.

  67. The idiot Lumpy thinks he created something by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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.

  68. Possible lessons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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?

  69. Dangerously co-locating servers by MobyDisk · · Score: 1

    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.

  70. Comcast's Net Neutrality Agreement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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.

  71. Try 512. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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.

  72. comcast by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Comcast. I hate this fucking company so much it makes me sick. They don't need more money from anyone. They need to die.

  73. Neither have you. Or you've never been paid. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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

  74. Nextflix "plus shipping and handling?" by davidwr · · Score: 1

    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.
  75. Since both I and Netflix am paying by PortHaven · · Score: 1

    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...

  76. Corporatocracy by nbritton · · Score: 1

    and what makes you think the corporations wouldn't employ their own militia in the absence of that govt protection?

    Umm, Robocop?

  77. City should lay conduit and let telco pull PHY by tepples · · Score: 1

    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.

  78. Can't Believe Comments Here Are As Bad As Reddit by BondGamer · · Score: 1

    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.

  79. Regulation has a cost associated with it too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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.

    1. Re:Regulation has a cost associated with it too by Nethemas+the+Great · · Score: 1

      Ok, how about this. Select a handful of countries with nice pipes and emulate what they did to get to where they are.

      --
      Two of my imaginary friends reproduced once ... with negative results.
  80. This equation is all wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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.

  81. Thus Fucking Pussies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    These bitches cry at the thought of Comcast deciding to squeeze their balls so the capitulate like the bitches they are.

  82. and I thought the Comcast TWC merger was bad by Wansu · · Score: 1

    Just when I didn't think it could get much worse, it did.

    --
    Wansu, th' chinese sailor
  83. This is good news by TonyXL · · Score: 1

    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.

  84. Brave "New" World? by AutodidactLabrat · · Score: 1

    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)

  85. Misreading the story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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.

  86. USPS by phorm · · Score: 1

    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.

  87. Secret deal? Let me guess... by OurDailyFred · · Score: 1

    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
  88. Already true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "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

  89. I wish by fluffythdestroy · · Score: 1

    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
  90. Five Weeks by organgtool · · Score: 1

    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.

    1. Re:Five Weeks by cboslin · · Score: 1

      Excellent observation!

      I want FTTH so bad, to have symmetrical bandwidth, the same upstream as downstream (10Mb/10Mb, 100Mb/100Mb, 1Gb/1Gb) and never bothered by the Cable Company poor scarcity myth laden throttling business models, now there is a thought worthy of every freedom loving American. Especially those that want to encourage small business economic activities and jobs.

      For those lucky enough to be looking, here are almost 25 communities that have symmetrical FTTH!

      The solution is to not to use the Cable company's last mile segments...in other words, don't purchase a house that does not have either DSL or FTTH.

      Why DSL, glad you asked, the lower bandwidth of DSL (2Mb/756Kb) is way superior to a throttled (300Kb/40Kb) cable internet connection. That 300Kb/40Kb was what my dd-WRT firmware enabled router showed that the cable provider was allowing me to have. I was paying for 20Mb/2Mb, even paid $10 extra for additional burst bandwidth, you guessed it, they still throttled at 300Kb/40Kb or lower. I fully understand from first hand experience why most of us hate cable internet providers.

  91. That's fine... by PortHaven · · Score: 1

    But if they don't deliver the speed. My bill should be dropped down to the corresponding lower rate.

  92. BS by PortHaven · · Score: 1

    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.

  93. WRONG by PortHaven · · Score: 1

    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.

  94. Best effort... by PortHaven · · Score: 1

    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

  95. My problem with profit... by PortHaven · · Score: 1

    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.

  96. your 7th point by globaljustin · · Score: 1

    Nice work TubeSteak...you nailed it up until this:

    The degradation isn't selective, which is why the GP is correct that it isn't a Net Neutrality issue.

    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
  97. Bang on by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thx

  98. Here's an interesting concept. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The USPS is constitutionally required (much to the "free market" GOP's chagrin) What if it branched out into providing common carrier internet service?

  99. Lumpy why wont you reply here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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.

  100. that post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is actually a joke or for real. I am pretty sure many ppl beleives all that BS.