Netflix Video Speed On FiOS Doubles After Netflix-Verizon Deal
An anonymous reader writes: Verizon now joins AT&T and Time Warner Cable in the list of ISPs on which Netflix streaming has significantly improved after Netflix paid for access to their networks. Ars Technica notes that "[t]he interconnection deals give Netflix a direct connection to the edge of the Internet providers' networks, bypassing congested links, but without receiving priority treatment after entering the networks." The success of these deals, however, gives the ISPs no incentive whatsoever to fix their congested links. Toll roads have, in essence, been created for the internet.
"Verizon now joins AT&T and Time Warner Cable in the list of ISPs on which Netflix streaming has significantly improved after Netflix paid for access to their networks."
Every company in that list needs a massive boycott. People need to be creating web sites showing a list of who's creating toll roads. (read: default slow lanes)
It doesn't seem bad now, but this will destroy the internet if we allow it.
How would you feel if there were highways that only certain companies could use to distrubute their goods? Why do we allow this on the internet?
Every transit network has been guilty of this - especially Level3 (Netflix's home network): why let someone peer (or rely on peering) when you can make them a customer? And then once a customer, always a customer, never a peer. There are some different ways that Netflix could have gone about this; instead, they tried to piggyback off Level3, upending the ratios used to determine peering links.
The summary implies (by omission) that congestion for Comcast customers hasn't improved since Netflix paid off Comcast. What're they getting for their money?
Corruption is convincing someone that the selfless ideal is the same as their selfish ideal.
You cannot boycott them while they still control the last mile (the connection to your house).
In order to take that control from them, people have to be willing to vote to have their local government install/maintain/tax a local network as part of the infrastructure.
Then the local government can lease connectivity to whomever wants to offer Internet service. If Comcast is charging extra for a service you want then you can go with a different option.
As long as the throttling happens at the physical level (hardware is limiting), then it's okay, right? Now all you need to do is make sure that all of your hardware allocation (and therefore bandwidth allocation) matches the companies who are paying you to go fast. Crisis averted!
Could someone explain why all of this is an issue, when Netflix seems to be giving away their OpenConnect CDN boxes for free, so that ISPs can cache most of the Netflix traffic inside their own network?
http://www.newyorker.com/news/...
:)
http://www.digitopoly.org/2014...
Look at how the Netherlands organized it, we have the best internet in the world
Everyone in the US knows this, but the political system is broken and unable to do anything other than obey the powerfull cable companies.
Thank you, Bradley Manning, Edward Snowden and so many others, for courageously defending humanity, my freedom and more!
Why is netflix streaming movies from central servers??
Because there isn't a standardized system to sell rack space near the end user. This would beneficial for the whole internet since netflix makes up a large percentage of internet traffic.
...Is this any different from the quite common practice of buying links on multiple networks, so that you have faster connections to those networks? That thing that people have been doing for decades?
"Champagne for my real friends - and real pain for my sham friends!" http://ericblade.postalboard.com/
As a Netflix subscriber whose ISP does not charge them for peered access, it is simply Wrong that part of my subscription fee is being used to pay Comcast, Verizon, etc. when I have no business relationship with them.
Netflix should revamp their billing structure. In addition to their monthly fee, there should be a separate line item for an ISP surcharge. If your ISP does not charge Netflix, then that surcharge is $0. If your ISP does charge them, then the surcharge is how much Netflix pays them divided by the number of Netflix customers on that ISP. Let the people using those ISPs eat the costs their ISPs are adding, and make it damn obvious that the ISP is the one responsible for the surcharge. Don't hide it in Netflix's regular bill and make the rest of us pay for it.
It's called Supply Chain Management and has been happening in the manufacturing industry for decades. A car manufacturer will negotiate SLAs, minimum quality thresholds and delivery deadlines with parts suppliers, freight companies and distributors to ensure that a quality product is produced quickly and cheaply.
It was only a matter of time before Internet companies start doing the same. They either build their own networks (a la Google) or they negotiate exclusive deals with other ISPs. Fast and reliable access to their services is vital to their business and they MUST manage it. They cannot rely on the good graces of ISPs.
Why is netflix streaming movies from central servers??
The same reason why Google routes all their traffic through a single 486 PC.
They don't.
You're an idiot. Yes, netflix doesn't have one Central Server location, duh but they have central system. But they don't have what I'm advocating, what they really need is around a hundred servers at the biggest ISPs in the biggest cities for caching the most used content. It would lower total consumer bandwidth by 12% assuming a 50% cache hit rate. That would be good for the ISPs and for netflix.
Now that Verizon is getting revenue from the upstream side because they have so many customers wanting to use Netflix, I'm just sure they will reduce the monthly fees they charge their customers, seeing as their customers are now their product. ( -- for anyone getting ready to "correct" me)
But they don't have what I'm advocating, what they really need is around a hundred servers at the biggest ISPs in the biggest cities for caching the most used content.
Something like Netflix Open Connect CDN?
And it mattered not one whit to me because I don't use any bandwidth-heavy video services like Netflix in the first place. I couldn't care less about the quality of Netflix streams.
None of the services I use are bandwidth intensive. None of those websites are big enough to pay for customized or specialized hardware and links. They've always been at the mercy of the congested public net.
And getting as much of the Netflix traffic off that congested public net as possible can only improve the bandwidth availability for all those other sites.
I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
Netflix Video Speed On FiOS Doubles After Netflix-Verizon Deal
We all knew that ISPs were throttling netflix. We called them liars after they repeatedly lied to the FCC. Netflix ponies up some dough and now speeds are roughly what they should have been in the first place. Why should we be surprised now?
Buck Feta. You know what to do.
Yes, but in this case netflix and other content providers would be the ones paying for it to be installed and hosted. I maybe should have made that more clear. The ISPs aren't going to pay for netflix to use less traffic not when they can make money off the traffic. I probably should have taken the time to right this out more clearly in the first post.
The main problem is that at this point the government would need to force ISPs to provide near user hosting for content providers.
the swamp dwellers that run centurylink (aka centurytel, embarq, quest), at least in our region's markets, deliver full speed netflix around the clock with no slowdowns whatsoever ----- and no enforced data caps, either. none of the dozens of people we know with netflix on their dsl has any problems with their internet or with netflix. of course what was the old centurytel is not really integrated into the larger quest networks yet, and the markets are smaller than the big cities the too-large megacompanies enjoy (at the expense of their customers), but still it shows that it is possible to deliver internet service... uncapped internet service... at full speed, while still delivering ALL data at that speed to your customers without quotas, without caps, without throttling, and without fucking with the packets. not saying centurylink is any good... their support sucks ass... but at least you rarely need them.
It's hilarious that no-one understands how this works. This is proof positive that this has nothing to do with net-neutrality.
Netflix chose a peer that was expensive for Verizon but cheep for Netflix. ...and for those of you wondering... these interconnect prices are virtually free on the scale Verizon and Netflix are working at. This entire thing has been a tempest in a teapot. This was about who had control over the interconnects. None of them gave a crap about the pittance it currently cost. The problem was that Netflix was trying to change the status quo and gain control over part of the network.
Verizon said No... Netflix made this big stink about net neutrality.
Verizon said no, we have our own peering, hook up to that.
Why on earth would Verizon pay a 3rd party for Netflixes interconnect?!?!
Netflix then moves the interconnect to Verizon... Of course the problem is solved!
NJ Governor Chris Christie style!
Any insufficiently advanced magic is indistinguishable from technology.
This is how the net is supposed to work. lets take this point by point. I hate that i am about to defend verizon but the reaction to this story seems to ignore key facts that need consideration.
The Netflix appliance: Why should any ISP be compelled to have 3rd party gear in their DC or NOC? The price of the hardware a small portion of the TCO...There is power and cooling to consider. What about the cost of the floorspace and the opportunity cost of what that rack space/floor space could be used for. This could set a precedent to set up devices for any other content provider.
The problem was not Verizon's network, clearly, it was the inability to get their content smoothly to the edge of verizons network. This was clearly an issue where peering didnt work as intended because of the volume of traffic going one direction - the simple fix is to set up a direct link to Verizons edge, which it sounds like they did. Thats how the internet works, if the standard peer based internetwork connectivity doesnt meet the needs of your application, you connect directly, or more directly, to the other end.
It seems like people are willing to throw away one of the greatest inventions in the history of humanity all to keep their precious netflix from going up in price a few bucks a month. Sad.
Say you've got a land full of city states. Verizon-town, Comcast-town, AT&T-town, etc etc.
There is one or more superhighway running into each -town. These super-highways generally meet at an 'interconnect point' or 'peering point.' All of the towns build their own highways to the peering points, and because they all have generally the same amount of traffic trying to go back and forth, they don't really charge each other for them.
There are multiple peering points for various reasons.
Now, if I'm understanding correctly, Netflix-town (think small factory town, like) built a superhighway to a peering point that didn't happen to have a superhighway to Verizon-town. So they argued over who should build that superhighway.
In the mean time, traffic from Netflix-town to Verizon-town had to pass through other towns first, with predictable results.
Netflix has now gotten around to building a superhighway to a peering point that Verizon-town is connected to, and HOLY SHIT, suddenly they can move a ton of traffic into Verizon-town.
But Netflix doesn't take data from Verizon-town, like, say, another large ISP might, so why would Verizon-town pay to build said superhighway?
This isn't net neutrality; that would be the creation and sale of toll-roads *within* the various towns. Once Netflix-town's trucks hit Verizon-town's border, they get on the Verizon-town streets to their ultimate destination, same as everybody else. This just improves Netflix's ability to get delivery trucks to Verizon-town's borders.
Vintage computer games and RPG books available. Email me if you're interested.
I occasionally view instructional videos from youtube at the low default quality, the videos will play for roughly 10-15 seconds and then stop. I have to pause the video, wait for it to buffer and continue to do this to get through the video. I'm on a 60mb service which tests out fine, I can download over 7MB/sec but can't reliably stream 480p video from youtube.com.
Anybody else experiencing this with youtube?
Long-time FIOS user.
Would using Google's DNS or Open DNS negate any benefits from however they set things up now post-deal?
I toggle Google DNS because a couple months back, for whatever reason, my FIOS was acting up and I tracked it down to that. Used FIOS DNS and it was cruddy, switched to Google DNS and it was fine, back to FIOS it was cruddy... so I left it as Google DNS. It might have been a short-term problem for a day or so but I haven't bothered switching back.
The thing is, someone was saying that now... FIOS's DNS might redirect me to the good/fast route or internal server setup for Netflix while Google DNS (or Open DNS) might take the "unoptimized route"
Anyone know for sure?
I should clarify... by "acting up" I mean regular webpage browsing... not Netflix.
It was acting funny -- slow speeds, page not found's, etc.
So I switched it. As mentioned it was probably a short-term issue for a few hours or a day or something and I just happened to catch it at the beginning. But I didn't bother switching back.
Obviously the answer is: switch back. But my concern is if it becomes an ongoing issue... will I have to choose between Netflix and the rest of the web.
All of this would be a non-issue if the box makers and the websites would stop trying to stream 5 minutes at a time and just buffer the whole damn thing. Sure it would suck having to wait for an hour or two to get your whole movie/tv show, but then it would but it would put a big crimp in the ISP schemes as well as let people offset their bandwidth usage to non-peak hours.
Being deployed in the desert with crap bandwidth available on post, my kindle was a life saver in that regard. Everyone trying to Skype, bit torrent, etc made the connection useable at times.
I would like to file a lawsuit. I am not sure if it is worth it, but I was told that it takes a lot of running new cables and upgrading existing infrastructure to alleviate all the traffic. Is it that they were able to "upgrade" in a short time, or was it just all a ruse to allow for double dipping.
I would like to get advice from a lawyer on whether this is actually worth pursuing.
-SK
While I do boycott at times, it is something based more on principle than on results.
What really works is giving the situation the good old capitalist response by fostering competition. Create incentives for new companies, allow powerful clients to make their own networks (read Google), open the field for new technologies etc.
Legal protection against competition to preserve profit margin has to stop -- or at least be mitigated. Or keep on doing it but recognize the regime now is no longer capitalism.
Google Fiber can't get here fast enough. This lack of competition is bad for everyone.
DNS does not handle routing...at least not directly.
It's job is to take a human readable address and convert it to an ip address.
How to talk to this IP is a router's job to figure it out.
Just keep in mind that some addresses might be more popular than others....
There's the cliche statement about using free internet services (facebook, gmail, etc)- "if you're not paying for the product, you are the product" The truth behind this is that the 'free' service is funded by selling your information (behavior, clicks, etc) to third parties.
But I *am* paying for the service.
In this case, the ISPs are double-dipping. They're charging end-users for access to the internet and then charging the content providers for access to the customers. What's worse is, that in many cases, they maintain a monopoly (or duopoly). In this case, it's called a terminating monopoly. The ISPs are using their power as last mile providers to act as toll-keepers to customers. That's one of the big benefits behind mergers. Comcast wants to merge with Time Warner not out of some altruistic drive to offer "Internet Essentials" to more people (as if Time Warner But, again, they're double dipping; they want to monopolize the user base to increase its leverage with these "edge providers" You're paying them for the privilege of being a product that they turn around and sell to Netflix.
This is the updated version of the carriage fights we see in cable television.
The ISPs are playing a dangerous game. Users want access to content and moving the packets is a necessary an uninteresting detail. At some point, one of these big content providers will start demanding payment from Comcast & VZ
DNS does not handle routing...at least not directly.
It's job is to take a human readable address and convert it to an ip address.
How to talk to this IP is a router's job to figure it out.
Just keep in mind that some addresses might be more popular than others....
I understand that.
But I don't know how they setup this "fix"
Did they just put local mirrors of NetFlix content in their server farm? And have stream2775.netflix.com point to a local node instead of the "real" stream2775.netflix.com out on the Internet?
In which case, Google DNS would point to the real one on the Internet while the FIOS one points to the local node inside their server-room.
It depends, I have not looked at one of those devices myself so at best it's an educated guess...
That is one way of doing it. Likely the real way since you can bypass region restrictions of netflix using DNS servers located in the country whose content you want.
Another is doing it the way proxy servers do it. You intercept the requests before they leave your network, regardless of DNS, gateway etc. settings. If there is a local copy of the requested information, you server that, otherwise your retrieve it, make a local copy and then serve that.
If you have problems with your local internet (or cable) service provider, there is only one correct audience for your complaint. Competition is regulated LOCALLY, just like wars are handled NATIONALLY and family budgeting is a DOMESTIC issue. The FCC advises at https://www.fcc.gov/guides/cab... to direct complaints to local franchising authorities.
For example, with Comcast, they are required to plainly put this contact information on your bill. See for example this bill http://comcastbills.com/Compar... The franchise authority is on the bottom right. If you have unrequested upcharges on your bill and then the ISP fixes it, that is fine -- but you should also make a report to the LFA so they can see the pattern. You can also call the LFA first.
Talk of boycotts are not effective. Talking about Obama is not effective. Talking to your ISP is not effective. This is because you are not the customer. Your local regulatory commission is the customer. And they are not helping us because they do not understand the issues. They do not use pipe analogies and don't read slashdot. They worry about school funding, local taxes, AARP, and baking brownies. If you've read this far you already know what to do.
-- I was raised on the command line, bitch
That sounds like a lot but it is only a small percentage of what the VZ customer thinks he was sold.
These discussions of settlements for asymmetric peering highlight the underlying problem.
There is no definition of what the VZ customer is buying.
Is he buying a service where a few Mb video stream is a small percentage of the advertized BW? (Absolutely)
Is he paying for the transit of netflix packets to the VZ office near him? (Probably not)
Is he paying for the delivery of netflix packets from the VZ office near him to his home? (Probably yes)
Is VZ charging netflix for this same delivery? (Probably yes)
Should settlements for asymmetric transit peering apply in this case? (Apparently sure, if you can get away with it.)
Given rules setting up a natural monopoly, and lacking other rules to the contrary, why would you expect it to be any other way?
Here's how this works.
You pay your ISP, the last mile provider for your last mile connection.
Next, you select a datacenter that is on the network / provider you like and or support. You then setup a vps or dedicated server.
You tunnel all of your traffic through an encrypted VPN to that datacenter, and access the internet from there.
Congratulations, you are no longer having them shape and route traffic as they have no idea what information you are sending or receiving besides that it's a VPN connection. They can guess, but unless they start restricting that, which will affect corporate customers who have to vpn into work places, you'll be fine.
You have just won the internet, and selected your ISP, separately from your last mile provider.
This way you don't have to just cancel internet, can make ISP's life difficult, and if everyone does it, potentially force them to listen, maybe, a little.
If True, discover the Netflix IP Addresses through FiOS DNS, add entries to Netflix domains on your HOSTS file and keep using the Google/Open DNS for everything else.
"Verizon now joins AT&T and Time Warner Cable in the list of ISPs on which Netflix streaming has significantly improved after Netflix paid for access to their networks."
hlmftfy
""Verizon now joins AT&T and Time Warner Cable in the list of ISPs which have blackmailed Netflix into paying them to do what the FCC has already told them they had to do, which only proves why they should revert to common carrier so that they would no longer be able to extort companies into paying twice or more for the same bandwidth."
Google and OpenDNS implemented edns-client-subnet feature. This solves the CDN issues that they had earlier, most CDNs including akamai support this feature. So i see no issues using google dNS or OpenDNS with netflix.
The ISPs aren't going to pay for netflix to use less traffic not when they can make money off the traffic.
The ISPs get get Netflix Open Connect CDN free, because Netflix pays for it. Also, Netflix delivers data directly to the exchange point nearest to the customer, so that it bypasses the ISPs entire network without causing any congestion at all. Netflix pays for everything. The ISP's only sending traffic down the last mile, which it throttles.
Maybe Netflix is smarter then we think. It would be great if after Netflix enters into deals with ISPs to increase their speed (or however you want to word it) thus proving that they were being throttled (ISPs can't really deny it when paying magically makes everything better) then stops paying (or whatever they can do to bail out of their agreement) and then just lets their customers complain to the ISPs. I'm surprised Netflix hasn't just refused to pay and posted some kind of "if you are having problems streaming, call your ISP at xxx-xxx-xxxx", enough people subscribe to Netflix's service that ISPs couldn't just ignore them when they start calling. I can't get over how ISPs seem to ignore the fact that the ONLY reason people want internet access from them is to get content from OTHER sources. What good would a telephone be if the only people I could call were those at the phone company?
Netflix should have been bargaining from a position of strength. Verizon should be paying Netflix. Netflix has been known to make boneheaded decisions in the past. This is one of them.
So what if the NZ customers watching Netflix all send reverse traffic back to Netflix equal to the video stream.
(Netflix could offer a reduced cost plan for customers providing this extra, unnecessary 'balancing' traffic.)
Then the peering points would be balanced and settlement free.
According to these VZ rules, VZ be carrying more traffic for less money?
Market distortions make for strange incentives.
The internet is not some abstract infinite channel, where packets are created from nothing and move globally for free. It is a finite amount of expensive optical fiber and routing equipment with finite capacity. How is that to be used? Presumably to generate financial returns for those who paid for all that equipment. Where do the packets come from? Increasingly, from Hollywood, via services like Netflix.
Netflix video-on-demand is a horribly inefficient and intrusive way to use internet infrastructure. If you move gigabytes of high definition low latency video through a finite web, peer-to-peer, my web searches and information downloads are in competition. True net neutrality means you get as much bandwidth as I do, inbound and outbound, for the same price, which is a lot less bandwidth and lower Quality of Service than you are demanding now. At least Netflix understands that their video-on-demand model requires expensive physical equipment to implement; too bad their customer's brains have been turned into pudding by that video.
I used to offer unrestricted free wifi to my neighborhood. I liked the idea that poor schoolkids could work on their homework, travellers could consult online maps, visitors could check their email. Then the TV addicts discovered it, and filled my pipe with netflix packets. So I "violated net neutrality" and throttled the maximum bandwidth. The wifi can still be used for the beneficial uses I encourage, but video QOS sucks. As a bonus, I can worry less about a DMCA takedown. People can still move video, but they must wait a while.
Video addicts - please, please, please do boycott the internet. Feed your brain-rotting addiction with cable, DVDs, broadcast, satellite, and all the other low-cost ways that actually pay the producers and purveyors of your high-definition drivel. Your gigabyte road trains do not belong on the information highway until you pay for the extra resources to accomodate them.
Freedom of speech means Libre, not Gratis. Pay for what you take.
Keith Lofstrom server-sky.com
As a Fios user
I'm hoping to finally be able to get back to watching stutter-free my favorite non Netflix websites now that a good chunk of the crappy Verizon/Level3 interconnect has been freed up.
#winning
Fuck netflix, those little pussies.
This whole situation is why we should be paying attention to the latest Nobel Prize winner in economics. He won the award for his work in "market power and regulation -- specifically how to regulate oligopolies, when just a few firms dominate a particular market and keep prices artificially high, and for situations of asymmetric information, when regulators donâ(TM)t know everything about how firms are operating".
His work applies "general regulatory frameworks to a range of industries, from telecommunications to banking".
"Toll roads have, in essence, been created for the internet."
I know, it's great. See, state roads are filled with traffic and congestion. I would like to see more toll roads...less congestion.