Comcast Hints At Plan For Paid Fast Lanes After Net Neutrality Repeal (arstechnica.com)
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: For years, Comcast has been promising that it won't violate the principles of net neutrality, regardless of whether the government imposes any net neutrality rules. That meant that Comcast wouldn't block or throttle lawful Internet traffic and that it wouldn't create fast lanes in order to collect tolls from Web companies that want priority access over the Comcast network. This was one of the ways in which Comcast argued that the Federal Communications Commission should not reclassify broadband providers as common carriers, a designation that forces ISPs to treat customers fairly in other ways. The Title II common carrier classification that makes net neutrality rules enforceable isn't necessary because ISPs won't violate net neutrality principles anyway, Comcast and other ISPs have claimed.
But with Republican Ajit Pai now in charge at the Federal Communications Commission, Comcast's stance has changed. While the company still says it won't block or throttle Internet content, it has dropped its promise about not instituting paid prioritization. Instead, Comcast now vaguely says that it won't "discriminate against lawful content" or impose "anti-competitive paid prioritization." The change in wording suggests that Comcast may offer paid fast lanes to websites or other online services, such as video streaming providers, after Pai's FCC eliminates the net neutrality rules next month.
But with Republican Ajit Pai now in charge at the Federal Communications Commission, Comcast's stance has changed. While the company still says it won't block or throttle Internet content, it has dropped its promise about not instituting paid prioritization. Instead, Comcast now vaguely says that it won't "discriminate against lawful content" or impose "anti-competitive paid prioritization." The change in wording suggests that Comcast may offer paid fast lanes to websites or other online services, such as video streaming providers, after Pai's FCC eliminates the net neutrality rules next month.
We're gonna turn into Portugal, and it's going to be a big fuckin mess.
Vonal Declosion
to grasp that concept that if there is prioritization, then de-prioritization must be occurring at the same time. "Fast Lanes" create de-facto "Slow Lanes"
Sounds like scope for a very small white-list of very large companies to me.
"Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
You didn't think they spent a ton of money on political donations and PR for nothing, did you?
What was that about Obama instituting policies that were unnecessary and unneeded?
Wasn't that one of the major arguments against NN?
notorious OpenBSD
One of my main problems with NN is the word lawful in that set of rules. We are talking about packets which are a form of speech. What is an unlawful packet? What is unlawful speech? Inciting a riot is certainly not âoefree speechâ but if some have their way, disagreeing with any part of the social justice dogma could be classified as unlawful traffic. Google and Facebook are obviously willing to play ball in that way.
Lots of companies offer faster services, fast lanes does not equate to throttled or blocked traffic. With the FTC taking over, it deals with consumer protections better than the FCC. FCC only cares about nipples on tv and frequencies.
The real issue is a monopoly of ISP's and thats not a net neutrality issue, it's an access issue. With LTE 5 and ViaSat 2 that just went up, and Viasat 3 going up in 2019, Facebook & Google offering internet access, within 5 years, Intenet access will be even more accessible and global. FCC is working on guidelines to communities to allow new community ISPs and new companies to run services to the pole. The FCC deregulating ISP's so smaller ISP's dont have the same regulations as big carriers and can now evenly compete again. The LEC issues really screwed the mom/pop ISP's that exploded DSL back before the carriers gobbled them up.
All I see is so much hyperbole and chicken little "sky is falling" without any facts to back them up. Its all "What if" scenarios, for a bill that's only been in place for 2 years and didn't fix the monopoly issue.
Looks like next election Democrat sites and ads might get de-prioritized and blocked legally to thank the republicans.
This is Comcast stirring up pro-NN political pressure.
These companies that are in favor of the rules & regulations they call NN do so because they benefit and protect their monopolies and bottom-line.
Don't forget that classifying ISPs as common-carriers places them under the requirements CALEA laws & regulations.
Strat
Progressivism (aka US 'Liberalism'): Ideas so good they need a police/surveillance-state to enforce.
The summary is biased, and the story already has 8 different versions of it in the last 3 days (i.e. Pai is the devil incarnate). Enough is enough.
Also, Just for the record, reclassifying the internet as title 2 has other implications. The FCC gets the same power over it as radio. That means anything from forced "decency filters" to "providing equal time for opposite view points" (hello fairness doctrine).
I'm 100% for the free flow of packets, but doing it via title 2 is potentially a VERY bad idea, and yet there's a hysterical reaction to all this that title 2 is the only way to save the internet (when in reality, it could be it's death knell). Tell the legislators to get off their lazy asses and make a title 3 especially for it, so the internet is not regulated by a law from 1934.
The prioritization is mostly in last mile since that is where comcast has relevance. Why is comcast relevant in the last mile? Because no one but the big ISPs are allowed to lay cable to the last mile.
The solution has and will continue to be ensuring Right of Way access to Poles and Conduits for alternative infrastructure providers.
to prove this is a shit show, examine that even Google... one of the richest and most powerful companies in the world frequently cannot lay last mile cable.
Think about that.
They have the resources.
They have the connections.
They have the ability to do the paper work and the regulations.
But they can't get access to poles and conduits to lay last mile cable.
Why?
And if they can't, what chance does a smaller company have to compete? It has NOTHING to do with net neutrality. It has everything to do with corrupt franchise license agreements that lock out everyone but the local duopoly.
People need to stop clapping like trained seals and see what is actually been going on all along. Rather than fixate on NN, focus on ACTUAL Right of Way access to poles and conduits for alternative service providers.
Do that and Comcast and say or do whatever they want. Worst case they'll make themselves poor service providers and will lose market share.
I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
Because I'm sure someone will foolishly argue against the obvious:
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2...
I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
Interestingly, back in the old days the common carrier status was what the ISPs used to argue that they shouldn't be held responsible for material like child porn, regular porn, copyrighted material, hate speech, etc. that traversed their networks. Now they want to relinquish the common carrier status. How long do you think it's going to be before some attorney or DA figures this out and goes after them?
They're already throttling OpenVPN and ssh connections globally under the pretense that all encrypted traffic constitutes unlawful use. Why have they still been allowed to get away with this while claiming they're not doing it?
The internet as we know it in the US has existed for a very long time with limited laws and regulations. Most laws and regulations simply do not work as technology finds ways around them. I understand technology has evolved to grant ISP's the ability block and throttle specific connections, but vice versa the free market approach along with technology like tunneling and encryption also work around most anything ISP's can do. This is why the internet is so great.
I would rather governments create laws to open up telephone poles, wireless spectrums and enable municipality built networks vs laws which really do not mean much and are easily circumvented. If there were more competition in the free markets companies that throttle, block or have fast lanes will lose to those companies that do not. Again free market.
Something up for which we will not stand!
PAY FOR IT.
...ISP to offer 'fast lanes', and it's all over. Everyone else will follow suit. Then the blocking and throttling of competitors services.
Ready yourselves for Intersplit.
Great fucking job. I hope those of you that voted for this got what you wanted.
The reason net neutrality needs to exist is to prevent what is essentially rent-seeking from these assholes.
So, either net-neutrality needs to be entrenched in law. Or these ISPs need to be regulated as common carriers. And, really, I can't understand how they're not common carriers except they paid off elected officials to ensure they weren't.
My fucking phone company doesn't get to charge me for the privilege of calling a certain area code, there is no defensible reason why an ISP should be able to either.
The FCC is now the most egregious example of regulatory capture, and any idiot who thinks the best people to regulate an industry are the paid shills who sought to fight regulations against that industry ... well, anybody who believes that is either lying to your face, or is utterly delusional.
Face it, America, you're a fucking oligarchy, and the Republicans pretty much only represent the corporations.
Land of the free? No, land of whatever the fuck corporations and evangelical Christians tell you that you're allowed to do.
.. and it would be immoral for them not to use and abuse them.
It's our fault that we are where we are, and we can hardly blame a company for gouging us while we sleep at the wheel.
No, not bitter at all.
A government is a body of people notably ungoverned - AC
I guess this is the new angle... Sounds great, let's drop NN when local access is all fixed up eh? not before.
America is well on its way to being a third-world nation.
Love,
Pooty Poot
Actually, the Illiberal snowflakes pictured here would do exactly that, given a chance.
In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
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People need to stop clapping like trained seals and see what is actually been going on all along. Rather than fixate on NN, focus on ACTUAL Right of Way access to poles and conduits for alternative service providers.
It's not an either/or situation. We can push for Right of Way access but that will take years to build out the infrastructure. In the mean time, we can ensure the ISPs don't mess with the existing Internet. Also I have to point out that even if there was more Right of Way, that doesn't stop any ISP from prioritizing traffic according to their own guidelines.
Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
Eh, not really. Even the government is not stupid enough to drop nukes on its own people. If they did that, there would be no country left to govern.
Um, that might have been true at one time. In Trump's America (tm) I wouldn't be too sure. And if he were to nuke a city, his Christian worshipers will cream themselves with delight--just look at what they say, and think, about the rest of us. After all, they've elected one accused pedophile to the presidency, and are doing their best to elect another to the senate, because they believe such vile people are still better than the best of the rest of us. I don't think dropping a nuke on a "libtard" city would bother them too much, if at all. Hell, they probably wouldn't even know enough to be concerned about being downwind from such an event...and even if they did, they'd be too busy celebrating our annihilation to care.
Yes, this is what our Christian "neighbors" have become.
Look at the VPN products that can escape the best China and its global contractors could do with the Great Firewall https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
What new things could a US ISP do that China did to do to control all its domestic networks? The best VPN products got around some of the most well funded and intrusive global network tracking by Communists governments.
Given a level playing field a VPN with the best staff will win and offer its users the freedom to enjoy fast networks int he USA every day.
How will a politically well connected ISP stop a VPN that can change to any attempts to detect, slow or block its encrypted products?
Call in the US federal government to track US VPN CC payments? To block CC payments to a VPN service detected been active in the USA?
To report VPN users who attempt to pay for a VPN with a US CC?
What a ISP cant win on a network they will enforce with new federal network use and CC payment regulations?
Federal color of law changes will keep the USA in the slow lane?
Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
They will not create fast lanes, they will use the exact same infrastructure to create slow lanes while charging for the non-slow ones. If you thought they didn't invest enough in infrastructure, imagine if they could extract more money for the same installed base.
Slashdot: Where the sig outsmarts the comment
Go right ahead, Comcast, kill the golden goose if that's what you really want to do. People will put up with all sorts of crap, but as soon as you start literally hamstringing the basic service they're paying for, then demanding what amounts to danegeld to put it back the way it was, there will be a revolt. I'm already prepared to ditch you and the Internet in general if it comes to that, rather than put up with this sort of bullshit.
Walled Garden Reloaded. Working in one of their callcenters 15 years ago still gives me the willies.
In a world of the blind, the one-eyed man is king--and the two-eyed man is a heretic.
The law isn't being circumvented, it's being removed by the Trump administration and the Republican party. That's kind of the point of the article you're commenting on
This is exactly what Slashdot was created for.
But you must be one of those new people
-- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
Is this the sort of mental gymnastics people go through to convince themselves that NN is bad?
So you want a free market enforced by government regulations and infrastructure built by municipalities?
And you also want a free market that lets Johnny/Jane Q get the minimal amount of resources together to create a competing "service" that totally screws over existing infrastructure?
What kind of insane cognitive dissonance is this?
A 50 megabit/s connection with dedicated bandwidth costs $10 at the backbone level. With usual oversubscription ratios (because not everybody uses the bandwidth at the same time, not even at peak time), the cost drops to less than a dollar per month. Comcast could easily afford enough bandwidth, but they want to double-dip and that's what they're going to do. Artificial scarcity will be created by not buying enough transit bandwidth, even with the prices as low as they are and still falling rapidly, and then extorting payment out of any service that doesn't want to get stuck in the saturated links on the way to their customers who are stuck with Comcast.
Unless those VPNs are placed in the slow lane because the ISP can't determine that they're entitled to use the fastlane.
The internet as a largely deregulated environment worked back when there were dozens of ISPs to choose from. Where I live, there are two choices, plus cellular and satellite, you're not realistically going to change over because once one of them does this kind of bullshit, it's highly likely the others will before too long.
The real issue here is that the wires over the last mile aren't considered to be a public utility. We have limited pole space, but for the most part, once wire is up there, there's no reason why that bandwidth can't be split between various ISPs like back when dial up connection was separated between the actual wire and what you were dialing into.
Because no one but the big ISPs are allowed to lay cable to the last mile.
Not quite. It's because the Big ISPs don't want to allow anyone else, especially municipal providers, to provide last mile access. You may see this as quibbling, but I'm trying to point out the nature of the problem more accurately, so it can be addressed.
And while there are legitimate concerns with utility access, that just means it is another valid issue being exploited.
Sadly, of course, we already went through this when it was copper. Back in the early 20th century.
How many moms like mine are out there? Do you really think *you* are the common case?
Hahah I never said I like it. See until we somehow convince our own citizens of the fact that we have the most powerful military in the world by far, they're going to keep demanding that we sink unlimited money into it to "keep up" with the rest of the world.
The idea that the rest of the world doesn't take us serious because we're too soft is also popular.
The fact is that the rest of the world is terrified of us and if we took nukes off the table we could probably conquer more of the globe than the axis power and soviet union combined. Americans are somehow the last people to believe it.
Comcast: "We only want the option to throttle and block content...we would never, ever actually do that but we want the ability to do it even though we never would. Trust us, we'd never do that but we still want to be able to do it even though we'd never really do that, even though we want the ability to do it..."
It's like when my 5-year old son said he just wanted to "hold the candy" and he assured me that he wouldn't eat it, he just wanted to hold it...
Just cruising through this digital world at 33 1/3 rpm...
The ISP will respond as China has. By watching, locating and then crippling IP traffic that *they* determine is a VPN traffic.
This will then create an arms race between new VPN protocols and ISPs. But since the ISP controls the access of the VPN to other nodes they can just look for traffic patterns that they've identified as a VPN traffic (which will became a violation of the customers terms of service) and block it or better yet flip a few random bits to make it slow or fail randomly.
When the duopoly makes VPNs a violation of the terms of service unless you pay EXTRA $$$ (Hello Business Customers! Cha Ching!) you'll have to pay EXTRA to be allowed to use a VPN. Oh you, want the VPN to be fast? That will also cost extra.
Deep packet inspection is cheap enough that when tied with contract law the loss of Network Neutrality will allow ISPs who are in Duopoly or Monopoly markets to do what ever they want to those "locked in" customers and the content providers that want access to those customers.
Facebook is billions of individual "Skinner Boxes." And if you use it you are the pigeon!
Now I'm not saying people like Ajit Pai and the CEOs of Comcast, Frontier, AT&T, etc etc should be killed, but if a few of them were found hanging from lamp posts with a "KEEP NET NEUTRALITY" sign around their necks...well, it might start to dawn on them how immensely unpopular this bullshit is.
I'm not advocating for violence, but it would be entirely understandable if it happened.
(Posting anonymously, while I still can.)
Thanks alot.
Apparently your tax cuts and Hillary emails were more important than the freedom of your countrymen.
You didn't do research at all on his party or his views. Of course he is going to put in cronys and foxes to watch the henhouse. Every Republican since Reagan hates government and supports big business and doesn't believe in regulation as freedom == communism for some reason. Now we will end up like Portugal and have to pay addons for websites and services you use in addition to your cable bill.
You all get what you voted for. For the rest of who didn't vote for him a big FU and I hope your job and life is impacted hard by this so you can see what he/his party stands for rather than good soundbites on FoxNews.
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i want to outlive you so i can shit on your grave you piece of shit. i hope your family gets cancer and dies in front of you.
Put your tin-foil hat on with me and hang on . . . . .
Now this is going to be giving the government a LOT of credit in the smarts department ( unwarranted in their entire history, but bear with me ).
What if, the removal of Net Neutrality is a litmus test to see how bad things will get once the restrictions are removed ? You know all the big players are salivating at the mere IDEA that they can do as they please once the rules are removed. I'm sure entire Business Strategies are being developed around it. It would be naive for the government not to realize this.
What if the whole thing is designed to see how the players are going to act once they believe no one is watching them any longer ?
A test, of sorts, to prove that given the opportunity, the big ISP's absolutely cannot be relied upon to self-govern because their greed knows no limits. Thus, the reason ( and need ) for regulation to begin with. They fuck this up and they'll have nothing to fall back on this time. The Second Coming of the Regulation Hammer will leave few unscathed.
You and I know that those who own the pipes are going to do everything in their power to screw over the competition in favor of their own services. This is practically a given as this was one of the big reasons for establishing NN to begin with.
What if the plan is to use all of the bad behavior we're going to see in the near future as evidence for breaking these behemoth companies up into smaller ones once again ? ( Aka: Divestiture II ) Or, at the very least, use that threat to make sure these idiots don't get too stupid with their heavy-handedness. Pretty sure they'll agree to play nice if the threat of losing their Mono / Duopoly status is at risk.
Just a fun thought :D
i.e. "Google pay us to deliver YouTube content, because erm, we found some pirated TV shows on there and [fill in lawyer talk from Ajit Pai's sucessor]".
It's a potential real money spinner for them, so how much would you pay?
Say you pay $15 for a pay per view special show, I'm guessing you'd pay $16 without blinking if you had to, I guess $25 and you'd be complaining.
So potentially Verizon's charge to the PPV website to deliver that content is potentially up to $10. The PPV show competes with others, but you have to get your internet from companies that don't really compete.
The internet as we know it in the US has existed for a very long time with limited laws and regulations. Most laws and regulations simply do not work as technology finds ways around them. I understand technology has evolved to grant ISP's the ability block and throttle specific connections, but vice versa the free market approach along with technology like tunneling and encryption also work around most anything ISP's can do. This is why the internet is so great.
With the repealing of NN, ISPs are quite capable of throttling all packets that are not in their priority paid list.
I would rather governments create laws to open up telephone poles, wireless spectrums and enable municipality built networks vs laws which really do not mean much and are easily circumvented. If there were more competition in the free markets companies that throttle, block or have fast lanes will lose to those companies that do not. Again free market.
You seem to think you live in a Communications 'free market'. If Google can't do it, startups won't be able to either. Until there is tangible benefits to your politicians, they won't bother doing anything about that - and current donations by incumbent telcos could be quite hard to beat.
User name checks out, comments confirm; prepare for a brave new world.
I wouldn't worry too much. Wireless tech will soon advance to the point where the big ISPs will no longer be necessary.
What is wrong with the Portugal arrangement? You can have a plain old data plan, but for streaming media apps you can have extra bandwidth so you can use them without worrying about running out of data... if you don't buy any of them you can stream data from any service you like with no speed reduction or other issue. All it does is give the user a bargain price for data to some destinations which is what 95% of people actually want (see: Netflix). It's not blocking anything, it's not throttling anything.
What is honestly so bad about this, when it's what so many people want?
If Net Neutrality would have blocked what is happening in Portugal then was it actually a good thing when it would block something so many people wanted...
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
Lots of people paying for extra bandwidth for specific purposes funds infrastructure that benefits all traffic, especially in off-peak times.
For example, right now everyone is on Comcast streaming Netflix, right? So that means that at common viewing times the whole system slows down - that is today, with none of the extra paid traffic stuff in play.
Now let people pay some small amount for guaranteed levels of service for Netflix. If most people in my neighborhood did that, then all of the sudden Comcast has to add equipment to provide a higher base level of service to the area at peak times. It's true my own service would stay capped to the levels I had bought it at and so would not get any faster, but it would also mean there would be far fewer dips in my own service during peak or other times because of the upgraded equipment maintaining a consistent feed to others around me.
I don't see how people can look at extra money going into a network provider over what they get today and imagine any way to see worse service. That is the real mystery to me.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
FTLOG. NN was never about paying more for faster service, or even about breaking up monopolies. It is, was, and continues to be, a safeguard against CONFLICTS OF INTEREST. Specifically, when your ISP prioritizes that portion of your traffic which benefits them financially -- be it their own content, or a web service that's paying them for priority access -- we all lose, and new web service providers will always face an uphill battle.
It is very frustrating to see how ignorant most people are about this. The big telcos have apparently done an excellent job confusing you.
Whatever the big isp's want, the end result is that everyone else isn't allowed to run the cable. So my point is literally accurate.
I see your point... but if we are to quibble it is also that there is corruption from local and state government to support the big ISPs. The bribes are there and it is very hard to extract bribe money from a large collection of companies without it getting out. It is very easy to maintain a corrupt relationship between a couple companies especially when in return for the bribes they get a monopoly which more than compensates the companies for the graft payments.
I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
NN does nothing. If anything, I want the monopolies that NN enshrines in law to do bad things to piss people off. I want the monopolies crushed.
I'm very happy to create a shit show that lasts a couple years to get a long term solution to the problem.
I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
NN ultimately is about treating the ISPs like old ma bell. I do not want that. It is either/or.
If you accept the existing NN concept, then you're conceding the monopolies get to be monopolies indefinitely.
No. I don't want NN. I want competition. I want right of way to the poles. Anything less is a farce.
I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
There is plenty of pole space to run additional wires.
And the only reason they don't lease their wires to other people or portions of their bandwidth is because they have a monopoly on the wires.
Imagine if other people were running wires. Then the big ISP would have two choices... either lease none of its wire and get ZERO from the traffic flowing over the OTHER wires... or open access to their wires simply to get SOMETHING from the traffic by attracting it back to their own network.
And if there were ever any bullshit, people would just stop using their wires.
It solves the problem.
We have plenty of space for additional wires. What does the ISP pay the city per pole? I'm sure there is a calculation on that. Whatever that rate is, open that up so that anyone else running cable pays the same rate... per pole.
If there are so many wires on the poles that there actually isn't room... which is very unlikely. But lets say that happens, you'll be getting enough money from the pole fees to pay for a more elaborate solution.
Possibly conduits. Certainly in metro areas there isn't much reason to have poles at all. And again, the pole fees collectively would make the whole thing pay for itself.
And even IF what I'm saying is wrong... and I don't think it is... but EVEN IF... try it. Why forbid the experiment if you're so certain it will fail? Let it happen.
I think it will succeed and people are afraid it will work and prove all the doom and gloom to be bullshit.
I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
NN ultimately is about treating the ISPs like old ma bell. I do not want that. It is either/or.
No, NN was about treating the ISPs like the jerks that they were. It's like a noise ordinance. Nobody really wants a noise ordinance telling you when you can and cannot play your music. That is until you get that one jerk neighbor who insists on playing his music full blast all night for weeks straight. Most rules are not in place because of the considerate people; they're in place for the jerks. Why is either/or? Are you saying that the FCC under a different director can't do both? It seems like there's no legal or technical reason they can't both.
If you accept the existing NN concept, then you're conceding the monopolies get to be monopolies indefinitely.
Logical fallacy: argument by assertion. You have to show how NN would advance monopolies; I don't.
No. I don't want NN. I want competition. I want right of way to the poles. Anything less is a farce.
No you don't want regulation. You think that is the only path to competition. It is not.
Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
"We said what? Oh right, well fuck that, we changed our mind, just pay up!"
ISP's just announced "Your traffic is not confidential, we will sell it to the government, your competition, and foreigners"; business users are going to respond by using strong encyrption that includes features like key and protocol rotation; expect pirate and illicit groups to respond in-like. I know at work I encrypt every outgoing protocol I can for one reason only; deep packet inspection seriosuly affects the reliability of the network connection. The difference between dozens of tickets a month and no tickets a month on e-mail issues is the use of SSL\TLS on the link.
Now if they try to use deep packet inspection on that, the result is they are going to end up inadvertently blocking business users. I get paid for those outages and no, I'm not willing to accept "we'll take your network link out at any time just because". You do that, the result is business users talking to their states attorney generals and suing the ISP's. An illicit video stream is the same thing as skype call over an encyrpted link to packet inspection, and you can do things like encode a .zip file in an .h323 stream. The only way to make it managable is to get the companies making products like skype to sign their packets and register with the ISP's, and that ain't happening.
The difference between the US model and Chinese model is, the Chinese model requires you to identify yourself every time you connect to the internet and they will send a state-sanctioned death-squad to your door to make you disappear. In the US, anonymous access is pretty much a constitutional right. Also, that death squad thing will never get lived down with a 1:11 ratio of people to guns.
I expect the arms race to be short lived and some epic legal battles. I also expect ISP's to have to completely re-write their customer contracts as a result as well.
Also, a 10 TB HDD can store enough movies I can watch 3-4 a night for a decade. In 10 years, you can expect 40TB Disks to be out and 10TB to be cheap. Are you telling me people won't just share data on disk? How will the government deal with that one? We do have the VHS verdict.
Publishing is a dead industry.
Most countries have forced the companies owning the last mile infrastructure to open it up on fair terms to competitors.
For example, in the UK it's BT that owns the shitty copper cable running into your house. You have to pay them rent for that, but at least you can choose which ISP you want to deliver your data. And BT can't charge that ISP more than it charges its own ISP, BT Internet.
const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
I just paid off my iPhone 7 Plus, so I'm free to wander. Is T-Mobile a better deal under the current scheme of things, or is it six of one half dozen of the other.
> While the company still says it won't block or throttle Internet content, it has dropped its promise about not instituting paid prioritization
That's an oxymoronic statement. Prioritization works by dropping other traffic as per a set of rules during periods of saturation, causing that traffic to back-off and re-transmit, letting the prioritized traffic use up to the bandwidth it's guaranteed.
They're lying.
And again, because you seem to insist on convincing everyone that you're completely retarded:
It is not a solution to have every ISP running their own lines in which they can throttle whatever traffic they like at whim. The solution is publicly owned infrastructure which the ISP has no right to throttle upon in the first place. THEN, if an ISP tries throttling, the market can work as intended and the ISP will lose market share. If they own the lines along with 100 other ISPs (imagine what the power lines will look line with 100 cables running! what an eyesore!) they are still entrenched and can ride out the bad PR while lesser ISPs without the clout fail. You've made it quite obvious that you've never studied business or physics or networking, so you should ask questions here before you make a fool of yourself.
And, as had been pointed out to you SEVERAL TIMES, the laws of physics would not allow you to hang an infinite number of wires from a pole. Even my six year old kid understands the limitations of that. I have a hard time believing a (presumptively) grown adult is having such struggles understanding basic physics, much less networking. Your "solution" would solidify the existing monopoly, as history has proven LITERALLY EVERY OTHER TIME IN THE HISTORY OF HUMANITY.
Good grief.
Stop demonizing Comcast. That's just a pseudonym used by a group of people. Any actions taken are performed by specific people. When you get your cable installed, there's an installer. That person should be demonized or lionized based on their efforts, not "Comcast". When there are changes in the way the entire group operates, that's the group leader's responsibility. That person should be demonized or lionized appropriately.
The CEO of Comcast is Brian L. Roberts.
Except it limits what services you can use. What if I create netmovies.com as a competitor to Netflix?
Then anyone can use it since they are not limiting services in any way.
If you want to get in on a bundle they are offering for extra bandwidth for YOUR service, you can pay them just like all the other content providers.
But look at the real world case of T-Mobile - your new net movies.com service can implement the reduced bandwidth feed for free, and instantly you are part of Binge-On where using your service does not count against your data cap.
You can't use duck duck go as your search engine
Again, in Portugal they are blocking NOTHING AT ALL. you can use any service; it's just that with some services in a package you get extra bandwidth.
Lastly I pay the isp for a pipe. It provides me with an average of 50Mb persecond of service 24 hours a day. I get to choose what i stream over that
That is correct, except that pretty much anywhere that is a cap on speed, not a guaranteed rate (nor can it be since you don't know what kind of network the content you are trying to reach is on).
Portuguals system says i have to pay for that
NO. It says that in addition to what you described, you can have EXTRA bandwidth for specific content you like to access all the time, or in the case of your example it would probably mean something like 100Mbs for Netflix. But all your other traffic would be what you had paid for - how is extra bad? It cannot be.
In the end under portuguals system you pay 3-4 times what you shou is be paying for the same thing.
I think you are really confused about what they are offering, read the full linked article. You can access any of the services in the bundles without buying the bundles. If you don't want the traffic from, say, Netflix to count against your data cap then you buy that bundle. But you could easily use it without the bundle if you don't watch enough to care about it using up data.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
Hear me out ...
Do you really think the vast majority of people are going to pay extra on top of their already somewhat expensive Internet plans to browse Slashdot, YouTube, Reddit, etc, FASTER? I for one, despite being in the tech field, will not. I think you're going to find a lot of people that will not. Site usage will go down, and the lawsuits and injunctions will start to pile on. If they screw with my net connection too much I will either try to route around it (proxies, port trickery, etc) or just go without.
Please.
You're citing them under title 2, citing them as a "common carrier"... and that is what gas line, power lines, etc are filed under. Effectively it treats last mile internet service as a public utility.
The problem with that is that last mile internet service is not like power, natural gas, water, etc. Yes, there is a local infrastructure that connects to your home but generally speaking it is unreasonable to have more than ONE water delivery system... ONE power delivery system etc.
What is more, these systems are generally socialized public utilities where as telecommunications are not.
It is both practical to have many providers laying cable in the same area and they are basically never owned by a quasi government agency.
In treating the duopoly in much the way that you treat interstate gas transport lines... you are presuming this similarity at a regulatory level. There is no interest in providing competition in such infrastructure because it is logistically counter productive.
This is again, not the case with telecommunications.
I want MANY choices. I want any company that lays cable in the area to know that if it provides bad service... all it takes is enough capital to lay the cable in the area with bad service... invested by practically anyone... to simply steal the market share of the area away from them.
I want pole and conduit right of way access to REASONABLE third party ISPs.
We saw recently that Louisville Kentucky was not able to get Google Fiber on its poles. Google Fiber is having a hard time getting pole Right of Way despite the city of Louisville wanting them to have it.
This is what is going on.
Competition is being stiffed at ground level.
I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
And if your socialized internet is shit what am I supposed to do then?
With my system we have choices.
With yours we not only have no choices but even if we choose nothing at all we're probably still going to be subsidizing your dumb system through tax dollars.
Your idea is even worse.
the existing system is a corporate monopoly. You want to resolve the matter with a government monopoly.
Hurray.
No. I want choices. Jumping from "lets trust a mega corporation" to "let us trust a corrupt/incompetent local government" is not helpful.
Proving your position is not helpful is that much of the current problems are the result of corruption and mismanagement by local and state governments. Your idea would empower the very agencies that have effectively created the problem to make them all powerful.
This is a failing UP scenario. If someone fucks up... you don't give them MORE power unless you are yourself a fool.
Consider NOT empowering agencies that consistently make mistakes.
I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
holy hyperbole batman... so anyone that argues for more than the duopoly is arguing for an infinity of cables...
How many brands of peanut butter are there in the grocery store?
is it an infinity of peanut butter or are you an idiot?
Don't get mad... you don't have the right. You said something stupid.
I'm not asking for infinity... what are you even saying ... there aren't even an infinity of people on the planet. I mean... what the actual fuck?
I envision somewhere between 3 and 10 providers depending on population density in any given area. Three being what I'd hope we could maintain in a rural environment and 10 being something you could probably maintain in a dense urban environment. We could well go beyond that which I would be fine with... within reason naturally. Everything I am saying should be understood to be within reason. I'm not a fanatic.
I'm foreseeing companies build out, some do well, some do poorly, different companies selling their cable to each other outright... the typical market back and forth.
The ACTUAL cost of equipment is relatively low. The relevant costs for rolling out these things and maintaining them is labor and licensing.
Labor is the problem of the ISP and from what I can see that isn't stopping anything. The LICENSING is stopping thing... call it what you will... franchise license... right of way access... whatever. The rubber stamp from the government that lets a company lay cable. I want that extended to anyone that can be shown to understand and respect the infrastructure and can pay the standard per pole rate.
If you have more people that want to run cable in an area than there is room on the pole then that is very exciting. It means that maybe we need to upgrade the pole. People would say "hey no one wants a bunch of ugly wires". Totally agree. So if we're getting that many people that want to run cable and they're all willing to pay the old per pole rate... and two carriers paying that per pole rate paid for the old poles... what does 5 times that rate pay for? Maybe a conduit? Who knows. The point is that if you have a higher traffic right of way cable corridor... then how you're stringing that cable can change based on demand. We may have a version of the high way system for cable. So poles for low traffic areas with few enough carriers that those poles are sufficient. And we might upgrade to a more robust infrastructure in cases where more cable needs to be run than can be supported by that system.
Here is where the government does a decent job. I think they do an okay job of maintaining poles and pipes. And in so far as I see them having a role in maintaining infrastructure, that is what I want them to do. I want them to provide space for other people to run wires. And I want them to lease that space out to the highest bidder. And then I want them expand the space as they run out of space so that there is always space for everyone that wants to run the cable that can afford the rate.
Keep in mind what I said there... afford the rate. There should be a standardized per foot or per pole rate for using the conduits and poles. Whatever the big ISPs pay is what the rate should be for everyone metered by use... as measured by distance and poles.
I want to put REAL pressure on these companies to provide good service or risk losing market share.
NN does not do that.
I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
You have a stupid situation in your country then. In my country I can get VDSL or Fiber from my choice of over 50 ISPs.
Think about that.
In treating the duopoly in much the way that you treat interstate gas transport lines... you are presuming this similarity at a regulatory level. There is no interest in providing competition in such infrastructure because it is logistically counter productive.
I never presumed that. Please present any evidence that you know what I think.
We saw recently that Louisville Kentucky was not able to get Google Fiber on its poles. Google Fiber is having a hard time getting pole Right of Way despite the city of Louisville wanting them to have it.
And that was Google's only problem? You again are asserting a false dichotomy: It's only this right of way that is the "only" thing preventing many other ISPs from coming into Louisville.You don't think that the existing ISPs aren't doing everything within their power in other ways to prevent Google from coming in. This is extremely simplified thinking.
Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
In the entire real world there are tiered options for almost any service. Better, faster, cheaper - pick any two.
Restaurants, health care, transportation, consumer goods, media, technology - everything has an offer for better service at a higher price. California has them on the Interstate highways, for Gd sake.
Why should that be a disaster for the Internet?
Usually, higher paid "premium" services are collecting a huge part of the profit margin, enabling the suppliers to reduce prices on lower service tiers. For air and train operators, this has worked out beautifully. Business class passengers pay almost the entire operating cost of the plane or train, so the carrier can operate and plan their lines - with the economy passengers being more or less profit. That enables them to scale back the prices for economy class to fill the plane or train up to capacity.
That pricing model is gold. Collect as much profit as you can from people willing to spend a lot more for a small improvement (= from people that have the funds to do so) and lower prices for everyone else. This gives more people access to that service and has those with the deepest pockets contributing the most towards operating it. What is not to like about that? Does anyone argue about removing business class from air travel? No, because prices for economy would increase threefold or more. Business class prices made economy prices cheap as dirt. And yes, people don't want to pay for legroom or they would have it.
A country that has 5,000 different brands and qualities and price levels offered of anything as trivial as toothpaste and mineral water is arguing that offering different levels of service for Internet is going to kill the Internet. It can't get any more irrational. Did fast lanes in California kill the Interstate Highway system around Los Angeles? No. It pays a ton for its expansion. Did 5,000 brands of toothpaste make toothpaste expensive?
I don't think latency will be that much of an issue, since I think any kind of extra ability consumers would purchase would be more related to things like 4K video content - so they wouldn't need improved latency, just more bandwidth and a higher cap for some content.
Theoretically ISP's could offer a Gamer package which sought to improve latency, but there's only so much the ISP could do to shape traffic before it reached the shitty EA servers and died anyway. So I don't think we'll see that.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley