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AT&T Exec Calls Netflix "Arrogant" For Expecting Net Neutrality

jayp00001 (267507) writes "'As we all know, there is no free lunch, and there’s also no cost-free delivery of streaming movies. Someone has to pay that cost. Mr. Hastings' arrogant proposition is that everyone else should pay but Netflix. That may be a nice deal if he can get it. But it's not how the Internet, or telecommunication for that matter, has ever worked,' writes AT&T Senior Executive Vice President of Legislative Affairs, James Cicconi. Mr. Cicconi took issue with a blog post from Netflix CEO Reed Hastings on the importance of net neutrality.

14 of 466 comments (clear)

  1. It's not arrogant, it's correct. by BronsCon · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Your customers pay you, as their provider, Netflix pays their provider, and it's between you and their provider to determine who, if anyone, pays who, based on the flow of traffic.

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    APK quotes people (including myself) without context and should not be trusted. Just thought you should know.
    1. Re:It's not arrogant, it's correct. by Qwerpafw · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Put another way:

      * Netflix pays for their bandwidth
      * Customers pay for their bandwidth

      And yet, AT&T wants more money because they think they have the right to charge Netflix more to pass through their tollbooth.

      People aren't paying for "Internet except for Netflix" and Netflix isn't paying their bandwidth costs for "Internet except for consumers."

      AT&T, and other providers, should have no right to put up walls. If there are issues of peering, those should be working out at the peering level, and not at the application/service or individual business level.

      The news about Apple being willing to pay for AppleTV to have a "special line" to consumers is particularly worrisome and strikes the core of the problems with anti-net neutrality positions: they create unfair markets with barriers to competition. Netflix may complain, but they can (and do! with Comcast) pay if they have to. Apple can afford to pay the gatekeepers as well.

      But some new startup (Aereo, for example) or small business? They can't and won't be able to pay those gatekeeper tolls to reach consumers. And they'll be prevented from competing or disrupting.

      Big business will thrive in an anti-net neutrality world. Honestly, it might even help Netflix in the long run as barriers to any competing service will be high. But it's anticompetitive and small businesses and startups alike will be prevented from innovating, and maybe even be driven out of the market by an inability to pay these tolls.

    2. Re:It's not arrogant, it's correct. by ZombieBraintrust · · Score: 5, Insightful

      No it is like phone calls. The person who initiates the call pays. They pay because they are the one who is creating congestion. Netflix is not generating any traffic. AT&T customers generate the traffic when they open thier browsers and start downloading movies. It is not Netflix desision that AT&T charges all its customers the same thing. Netflix should not be punished because AT&T promises high speed connections with unlimited access. That is AT&T's fault.

    3. Re:It's not arrogant, it's correct. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      a movie that needs to be streamed a million times takes up much more capacity and energy

      No it doesn't. 10 GB of traffic uses up exactly the same capacity each time it's streamed regardless of whether it's a movie or cat pictures.

      If you charge more for heavy trucks you have to charge all trucks.
      You can't just charge wall-mart trucks double because you don't like them.

    4. Re:It's not arrogant, it's correct. by Burdell · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Netflix pays for their bandwidth

      Well, but they don't always, at least not as much as anybody else. Several times in recent years, Netflix has switched bandwidth providers to "wanna-be tier 1" networks; that is, networks that are not as well-connected as they'd like to be because they don't really meet anybody's requirements for settlement-free peering. These providers see Netflix as leverage against their bigger competitors and appear to have sold Netflix bandwidth at well market prices in order to strong-arm competitors to provide new network interconnects.

      Large networks don't just peer with anybody. There are costs involved in each additional turn-up, both for hardware ports and for the management side. They also don't just peer at a single or few locations (since that can allow outsider actors to cause drastic changes in internal network bandwidth utilization); they require other large networks to peer in a bunch of different places. Some of the smaller networks can't afford to do that, and want to dump large traffic hogs like Netflix at already congested peering points, and then complain that the big guys didn't bend over backwards to help them.

      I've worked for small to very-small ISPs for over 18 years, and I definately don't hold Netflix blameless in this. They do things they know will impact their customers and then blame the other networks for all problems (and they aren't the only one, just one of the biggest in recent years).

    5. Re:It's not arrogant, it's correct. by Monoman · · Score: 5, Insightful

      AT&T can't meet their customer's demand so they are charging the other end (Netflix) for being too popular. Yeah that sounds about right.

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    6. Re:It's not arrogant, it's correct. by nine-times · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Or more to the point: You can't just charge Walmart trucks because you own Target, and you want to use your ownership of the road as leverage against your competitors.

      That's the real issue.

    7. Re:It's not arrogant, it's correct. by GameMaster · · Score: 5, Insightful

      AT&T can't meet their customer's demands while making the dramatically increased profits that they desire. There, fixed that for him.

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  2. WE pay by btpier · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Doesn't my monthly ISP bill pay for that delivery already?

  3. Well, *someone* here sound arrogant, anyway... by pla · · Score: 5, Insightful

    there is no free lunch, and there’s also no cost-free delivery of streaming movies. Someone has to pay that cost.

    So the $80 a month I pay my ISP goes to what exactly? Oh, riiight... All those rural infrastructure improvements you've fought tooth and nail against. Got it.

    Guess what, Jimmy? Without the likes of Netflix, we have no use for your "internet" that goes nowhere. Perhaps you could go read up on this idea on your Compuserve account.

  4. Classify 'em as Common Carriers under Title II by QuietLagoon · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Cogent: Reclassify ISPs As Common Carriers Under Title II

    In a bit of a clever public relations dance, Cogent has issued a press release stating that while the company refuses to pay companies like AT&T, Verizon and Comcast new peering tolls, they will pay the costs incurred by those companies to ensure there's adequate capacity at interconnection points. Cogent has been at the heart of more than a few debates over settlement-free peering, usually when the levels of traffic exchanged aren't equal. ...

  5. Here we go... by MrSome · · Score: 5, Insightful

    His comment shows exactly where these ISPs want to take the internet.

    It's not about paying for an internet connection so you can get what you want... no no.

    They want you to pay for an internet connection to get what they want to give you.

  6. More Corporate Greedmeisters by sdinfoserv · · Score: 5, Insightful

    As an American, I really get tired of billionaires arguing with millionaires about money.... All that happens is I get screwed.
    - the US has fallen from 16th in 2012 to 31st in 2014 for broadband speed...
    - pro sports tickets are almost unaffordable to the average person
    - US healthcare is the most expensive per capita in the developed world and is ranked 33 for infant mortality

    We need to get of this 'we;re great, capitalism solves everything' fox news mantra and look at what's actually happening.
    Otherwise, at some point, there's going to be just 2 jobs left in the US. The guy who owns everything and they guy who cleans his toilet.

  7. Re:but it *is* a net neutrality issue by laird · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They're not asking Netflix to pay anything for transit that Netflix is buying through Cogent - they paid Cogent for that bandwidth.

    AT&T is an ISP, who delivers bandwidth to customers. ISPs do peering arrangements with other ISPs because they exchange data with each other roughly equally, and it make more sense to exchange bi-directional traffic for free than to waste time and money billing each other for charges that would roughly cancel each other out.

    Netflix is asking for a peering arrangement with AT&T. Netflix isn't an ISP, they are a content provider. Content providers pay their ISPs for transit to push data into the internet for delivery to consumers. And in particular, Netflix doesn't exchange balanced traffic with AT&T - they push a lot of traffic into AT&T's network, and don't receive any traffic, so it's a completely one-sided traffic flow. And that you pay for.

    It's not an issue of Net Neutrality. Any content provider who wants bandwidth from an ISP pays for it. And there's no indication that AT&T is differentiating between Netflix' traffic and anyone else's, which is what Net Neutrality is about. If anything, Netflix is demanding preferential treatment over other content providers (who pay for bandwidth, and don't have peering arrangements), and they're trying to use their market power to push AT&T into giving them preferential treatment. Which is exactly the OPPOSITE of Net Neutrality.

    Netflix isn't stupid - they know all this quite well. So Netflix wanting to peer with AT&T and talking about Net Neutrality is a bunch of BS hand-waving trying to trick non-technical people into complaining about AT&T, generating some faked-up bad PR to pressure AT&T to sell bandwidth to Netflix cheaper.