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Canadian Government Rejects Net Neutrality Rules

Posted by ScuttleMonkey on Wed Feb 07, 2007 02:05 PM
from the never-ending-struggles dept.
An anonymous reader writes "The Canadian Press reports that the Canadian government appears ready to reject net neutrality legislation, instead heeding the arguments of large telecommunications companies . Michael Geist has posted transcripts of the documents which can be summarized as the government thinks that blocking or prioritizing content is acceptable, it knows that this runs counter to recommended policy, and it doesn't care because it plans to the leave the issue to the dominant telecommunications providers."
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  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday February 07 2007, @02:10PM (#17924294)
    Canada is unfortunetly under the minority rule of a conservative government that doesn't want to intervene too much in the economy etc. so it's normal that they reject net neutrality rules since they love big telco lobbying as well. This won't last too long. It's been a year since they've been in power and already the canadian population has become sick of this goverment. I predict elections this spring and with the result of a minority liberal government that will pay more attention to these netneutrality rules when time will come.

    Adi
    • Agreed. Anyone, telcos included, who thinks they've accomplished something by getting this government to agree is just blowing smoke. The Conservatives aren't going to last more than a few more months, and the polls indicate that their chances of returning are pretty low.

      Of course, the odds are that whoever wins, it will be a minority government, and the Liberals are every bit as much the ass-whores of big business as the Conservatives.
    • lol.. This isn't neccesarily any problem at all. The problem is that the argument against net tutrality can actualy be seen in a way that doesn't hurt consumers. In the process of delivering it this way, it also can make the argument for net nutrality seem rediculous. And when this happens, one has to wonder why net nutrality should be supported.

      The american FCC chairman said it best and the telco's are adopting a position simular to it. As long as the comitment to the consumer is met, there shouldn't be a
  • Eh? (Score:4, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday February 07 2007, @02:11PM (#17924314)
    It's a series of tubes, ya hoser.
  • "it knows that this runs counter to recommended policy, and it doesn't care"

    Yeah! Screw the people! It's not like we work for them anyhow.
    • by zyl0x (987342) on Wednesday February 07 2007, @02:17PM (#17924394)
      Just like when they recently voted on whether they should all get a 30% salary raise. We didn't get to vote, oh no, that wouldn't be fair.

      I wish I was allowed to vote for my own raises. All in favor of a 5000% raise? ME! Well that's settled.
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        Wasn't that the ontario provincial parliament? or did i miss the feds doing it too?
      • by Ubergrendle (531719) on Wednesday February 07 2007, @02:25PM (#17924516) Homepage Journal
        This was the Liberal party of the Ontario Provincial Parliament. They also did it just before the Christmas break, to minimise debate on the subject when people were preoccupied with the holidays.

        I am a bit disappointed in the federal government now though...the Conservatives aren't changing the policies of the previous Liberals in terms of media consolidation and copyright law. The more things change, the more they stay the same. We have more 3rd parties in Canadian politics than the US, but they serve more to offset the balance of power and have no real chance at governing (NDP, Greens, Bloc Quebecois).
        • Re:A Common Problem (Score:5, Informative)

          by David_Shultz (750615) on Wednesday February 07 2007, @05:29PM (#17926980)
          We have more 3rd parties in Canadian politics than the US, but they serve more to offset the balance of power and have no real chance at governing (NDP, Greens, Bloc Quebecois).

          Actually NDP and libs were about neck and neck during the last election (within a few percentage points). No one really noticed because the big story was the conservatives winning. The NDPs greatest obstacle is getting the Canadian population to stop believing that the NDP will never win. They have alot of support. On top of that, because of our stupid voting system, there are ALOT of would-be NDP voters who are scared of the conservative party winning, and end up voting strategically in favour of libs. It is worth noting that all of our small useless parties are left leaning. It is also worth noting that our one big right leaning party was formed by combining two smaller right leaning parties. You can thank our voting system for this stupid states of affairs where the majority of Canadians are clearly and decisively left leaning, but we are ruled by a minority conservative government. Crappy.

          I am a bit disappointed in the federal government now though..

          I am more than a bit disappointed with this government. Besides hacking away at social programs, increasing taxes for the lowest bracket ( http://www.cbc.ca/news/story/2006/01/06/taxes-tory 060122.html [www.cbc.ca] ), and refusing to speak with the media ( http://www.cbc.ca/canada/story/2006/05/24/harper05 242006.html [www.cbc.ca] ), the conservatives, who ran on a platform of "accountability", are already being investigated for illegal activities ( http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNew s/20061226/conservatives_donations_061226/20061226 ?hub=Canada [www.ctv.ca] , http://www.wernerpatels.com/musings/2007/01/conser vative_pa.html [wernerpatels.com], http://bcinto.blogspot.com/2007/01/putting-con-in- conservative.html [blogspot.com]), after only a year! Not to mention the fact that Harper is a climate change denier (until about three days ago when I suppose a pollster told him the issue was important to Canadians). Plus, I think the fact that he's spending massive amounts of money for military patrols of Northern waters is a nice touch; only Americans ever trespass there -is Harper planning to shoot them? To finish, how about some nice quotes from Canada's present leader (sadly), Steve (as Bush called him):
          • Human rights commissions, as they are evolving, are an attack on our fundamental freedoms and the basic existence of a democratic society...
          • I don't know all the facts o-n Iraq, but I think we should work closely with the Americans.
          • I've always been clear, I support the traditional definition of marriage.
          • In terms of the unemployed, of which we have over a million-and-a-half, don't feel particularly bad for many of these people. They don't feel bad about it themselves, as long as they're receiving generous social assistance and unemployment insurance.
          • "I was asked to speak about Canadian politics. It may not be true, but it's legendary that if you're like all Americans, you know almost nothing except for your own country. Which makes you probably knowledgeable about one more country than most Canadians
          I have nothing else to add except that I am saddened by the current leadership of my country .
  • by js92647 (917218) on Wednesday February 07 2007, @02:12PM (#17924320)
    are we fucked? I actually had hopes in the Canadian government but it seems all they are capable of is causing shit. And what kind of a government would leave a thing such as THE WORLD WIDE WEB in the hands of business'?
    • by Moby Cock (771358) on Wednesday February 07 2007, @02:23PM (#17924486) Homepage
      We are not fucked yet! Spread the word, we need to get Harper and his pack of hell-hounds of office.
    • by gstoddart (321705) on Wednesday February 07 2007, @03:01PM (#17924996) Homepage

      are we fucked? I actually had hopes in the Canadian government but it seems all they are capable of is causing shit. And what kind of a government would leave a thing such as THE WORLD WIDE WEB in the hands of business'?
      A government who believes everything needs to be in the hands of business, that's who.

      See, if you advocate that there are certain things the government (and only they) should be in control of, people think you're left leaning. If you advocate that the government should stand back and allow business to do as they please, and the 'guiding hand' of the economy will keep it on track, people think you lean to the right.(*)

      This government want to look like they're reducing the cost and size of government, so they're perfectly willing to feed us the lie that businesses are capable or interested in doing what is right for all of us, instead of just right for their bottom line. Basically, from my pespective, they keep trying to shove their own unpopular agenda down our throats under the pretext that, even though we all disagree with them, that they really do know the right thing to do for us.

      So, yes, if the government is going to do that, I think we're fucked.

      Cheers

      (*) Grossly simplified for purposes of discussion.
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          That's the issue here. They only own them because they were federally assisted in building them. At least half of those lines belong to the public. We damn well better have some say in them.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday February 07 2007, @02:17PM (#17924398)

    [Net neutrality] stops telecom giants from ensuring that pages of companies that pay them load faster than any others.
    No, it stops telecom giants from ensuring that pages of companies that *don't* pay them load *slower* than any others.
  • Net Neutrality? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by u-235-sentinel (594077) on Wednesday February 07 2007, @02:20PM (#17924452) Homepage Journal
    I haven't thought much about Net Neutrality until Comcast disconnected my HSI service and terminated the account because I used the internet too much. Now I'm finding people all over the country who have had similar problems including a journalist for the Deseret Spectacle [blogspot.com].

    I've found other people throughout Utah who are dealing with this problem. My search has lead me to other states with people asking the same questions I have been asking [youtube.com].

    This is just a couple of instances where Comcast has demonstrated unfair business practices. I'm wondering if Net Neutrality would curb this sort of abuse from companies. I'm ok with following the rules (don't get me wrong). But to be expected to minimize Internet usage without knowing what the rules are is pure B.S.

    Heck, I've had people on my blog accuse me of all sorts of stuff. Unfortunately, it's not even close to the truth.

    If I'm misunderstanding what Net Neutrality [wikipedia.org] is please enlighten me.

    BTW, if you are from Utah and have been disconnected by Comcast please contact me by posting on the blog. I receive all messages. I'm compiling a list and plan on passing it along to Bill Gephart. We've been working for the last few weeks to resolve this. He's already begun interviewing people I've found. Thanks!
      • Re:Net Neutrality? (Score:5, Informative)

        by tinkerghost (944862) on Wednesday February 07 2007, @04:13PM (#17925852) Homepage

        Net neutrality is the opposite of that. It dictates that all traffic must be treated equally.
        Actually it's a bit more refined than that. Net neutrality dictates that all similar traffic must be treated equally.
        • All HTTP requests have to be delivered equivalently reguardless of source or destination
        • All VOIP requests have to be ....
        • All torrent requests have to be ....
        • ....

        However, VOIP & HTTP requests can be routed with different priorities - VOIP is sensative to lag, HTTP isn't.

        The concept of traffic shaping is to provide a QoS [Quality of Service]flagged route for packets which maximizes the use of the fastest, cleanest routes for lag/packet loss sensative protocols, while relegating less sensative packets to routes which may not be as responsive. The Telco extention[perversion] of packet shaping is to convert the selection criteria from protocol needs to accounting balance. Thus some of the Canadian telcos have already started to throttle Vonage service to the point of compromising service quality - remarkably just before they roll out their own service which doesn't seem to suffer the same problems.

          • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

            Somewhere along the way to the destination, a router won't support QoS, so it really only helps when you have full control over the network in question. You can't abuse QoS because nobody supports it over the internet.
          • Re:Net Neutrality? (Score:5, Insightful)

            by Kalriath (849904) on Wednesday February 07 2007, @03:12PM (#17925126)
            Be sort of akin to triple dipping wouldn't it? Considering that CNN is also paying (an absolutely atrociously high!) amount for their bandwidth already... charging them again just so their customers can take advantage of their expensive bandwidth and pipe is ridiculous.
        • Re:Net Neutrality? (Score:5, Insightful)

          by Zenaku (821866) on Wednesday February 07 2007, @03:37PM (#17925386)
          You seem to be missing the point that charging providers for "optimal delivery" IS throttling down the bandwidth for anyone who doesn't pony up. The two ways of phrasing it are just different ways of saying the same thing. The "optimal delivery" given to those who pay isn't the result of some magic bandwidth that appears out of nowhere, it comes from prioritizing those packets over all the other packets.

          Metaphor: If the network was like a system of roads, "optimal delivery" would describe what we give to emergency vehicles with their sirens and flashing lights on -- they get through, everyone else has to pull over and stop to let them by.

          So if you haven't paid for optimal delivery, your packets are being slowed down. And the more providers who shell out for optimal delivery, the more it slows down the traffic of everyone who doesn't. And when at last EVERYONE is paying for optimal delivery, then what? We're back to where we started, except that now everyone is paying, and they can introduce super-duper-optimal-delivery, where your packets are prioritized over those from providers who merely paid for "regular-optimal" delivery.

          Fun!
          • Now you've hit on the main issue. The reason Net Neutrality is being fought is that the rich and powerful have had enough of regular people getting the same access to the eyes of the public that they have.

            I mean, if you can't have a faster Internet if you're rich and powerful, what good is being rich and powerful?

            Until now, any Joe with 'net access could conceivably create a website that would be just as capable of reaching the world as Microsoft, AT&T or a political party. This can't be allowed to go
  • easy solution (Score:5, Insightful)

    by TheSHAD0W (258774) on Wednesday February 07 2007, @02:21PM (#17924454) Homepage
    Let companies prioritize their delivery, but when they advertise performance, they're only allowed to use the lowest common denominator. Time Warner can then stream HD stuff just for their customers, but when they advertise 4 megabits down, they aren't allowed to throttle anyone below it.
    • Re:easy solution (Score:5, Insightful)

      by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF (813746) on Wednesday February 07 2007, @02:51PM (#17924866)

      Let companies prioritize their delivery, but when they advertise performance, they're only allowed to use the lowest common denominator. Time Warner can then stream HD stuff just for their customers, but when they advertise 4 megabits down, they aren't allowed to throttle anyone below it.

      Conceptually, this might make sense, but practically, it won't work. Can Time Warner guarantee that every service over the Web will be able to send them 4 mb? Look at it this way Time Warner Advertises 4mb and delivers it. AT&T, who happens to be sitting in between Time Warner and NetFlix, calls up NetFlix and says, "give us 10 million bucks or we slow down all packets from your servers that transit our network." If Netflix complies, maybe the end user will get 4mb through their network and all the way through Time Warner's as well. If Netflix does not comply and AT&T slows them all down, Netflix download at half that, but Time Warner hasn't done anything about it.

      Theoretically, this probably violates AT&T and Time Warner's peering agreement and Time Warner can complain. Realistically, however, This isn't just Netflix, AT&T and Time Warner, but a dozen different networks in between, any of which might be the one degrading service because Netflix did not pay up. How much chance is their that Time Warner will be able to influence their peer's, peer's peer's peer's peer in getting them not violate a peering agreement they have with someone six contract negotiations removed from them?

      On top of all that, even if it is Time Warner doing the extortion directly, they can advertise 4mb down, but still mess with latency or other traffic aspects that they don't advertise. Even if customers are smart enough to know what is up, in many localities they may be the only service provider and the law in that locality makes it illegal for anyone else to run lines to people's houses, even if they could afford to without the huge government subsidies given to Time Warner out of our tax dollars. Realistically speaking, I think legislation or free, government run internet access is the only way to solve this.

  • Harper's at it again (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Secret Rabbit (914973) on Wednesday February 07 2007, @02:37PM (#17924684) Journal
    I all honesty, what hasn't the Harper gov /not/ fucked up. In fact, every decision they've made, everything they've done, ONLY benefits the rich. Anyone surprised by this hasn't been paying attention.

    Also, there's absolutely nothing that can be done. They'll just "go it alone" and do whatever they want to do anyway. All that without communicating at all with the media because they want our journalists to write down the question before press conferences and our journalists refused (yes we have real journalists here).

    Hey, US people. We now have an un-government too! Now all of North America is fucked!
    • I'm definitely disturbed by this news. However, this is more a case of TELUS flexing their political muscle than Harper flexing his non-existent political muscle. Technically TELUS already violates net neutrality; there's a special gateway for routing Google (traceroute www.google.ca from the TELUS network). Not surprisingly, no one has complained yet.

      However, TELUS has a terrible tendency to overcompensate when they actually do something. Don't like certain servers sitting on residential line? Block incomi
  • by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF (813746) on Wednesday February 07 2007, @02:38PM (#17924696)

    Once again it seems that large corporations have managed to win the day because people are stupid and/or lazy. Whenever a remotely complex topic arises, they manage to confuse the issue by making claims that the topic being discussed is really something else and they're against that something else. In this way, they and politicians lobbied by them can argue against that something else, while voting against the topic at hand. People with party loyalty can simply choose to believe them, and most everyone else is confused enough by the disconnect so that the big boys get their way.

    In this instance, the issue is net neutrality. Basically, it was asserted that since much of the infrastructure was funded by the government and since many of the last-mile providers have government enforced monopolies, maybe it would be wise to ensure that companies are forbidden by law from discriminating against traffic on their network based upon who sent that traffic. For example, this would mean AT&T cannot intentionally slow down or lose VoIP packets from some company unless they treat their own VoIP traffic the same way. Let me repeat the important part here. Net neutrality is about stopping discrimination based upon who sends something, not what is being sent.

    So the big companies hire some PR firms to make up a new issue, which they can claim is what the net neutrality laws are really about, and which the average person might conceivably be against (since no one in their right mind could argue that net neutrality as described above is a bad idea). So they claim that Net Neutrality is about stopping telecos from discriminating based upon the type of traffic. They use the example of file sharing networks as "bad" traffic they want to be able to run slower. They use VoIP as traffic they want to ensure runs faster. All the while they make sure to outright lie and claim that the proposed net neutrality legislation would stop Quality of Service traffic shaping.

    Every time an expert looks into it, this is shown to be false. How many evaluations have we had now that say QoS is not restricted by proposed net neutrality legislation? And what about encryption? Widespread deployment of encrypted tunnels makes discriminating based upon the type of traffic useless anyway, and would certainly be adopted (and has been) to foil and attempt to use QoS to discriminate. So the entire argument is bull crap.

    The net result of all of this is most people who have heard of net neutrality being completely misinformed about what it is, or scratching their heads in confusion while the large network operators laugh their asses off and prepare to discriminate against competitors and start extorting money from certain Web services providers who don't have anything to do with them other than the fact that some of their traffic ends up transiting their network, providing an opportunity to waylay it like some sort of internet highwayman. Hey Canadian government, I hope you're proud of yourselves for helping to undermine the most important innovation in the last 20 years.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      Stupid or lazy? How about capitalism. Later you nail it when you mention lobby groups... Government creates policy based on commerce, not for the popular good.

      Doesn't matter, election comming, all gonna change.
  • by MobyDisk (75490) on Wednesday February 07 2007, @02:45PM (#17924774) Homepage
    The arguments made by the legislators are the same arguments we always hear, with the same misunderstandings on how this stuff works. It's like a broken record. All of the following is from a US-centric viewpoint, so please correct me for any differences that apply in Canada:

    The Internet is not regulated in Canada. There is no regulation of the relationship between Internet service providers and the providers of Internet content.
    I don't know about Canada. But in the US, this is not true - there are common carrier laws and FCC's weakened neutrality rules. Is there really nothing equivalent at all in Canada?

    First, the Internet has never been truly neutral or equitable with respect to data transmission...preferential content arrangements, filtering and blocking to control network abuse, as well as 'traffic shaping' in order to ensure an acceptable service level for all subscribers, despite the bandwidth-demanding activities of some users.
    I know of no preferential content arrangements done by any ISP. Is this happening somewhere and I don't know it? This guy implies that it is common. Traffic shaping is done on local networks by businesses, but it is currently not done by ISPs. When it is (Trying to throttle P2P, for example) it is met with outrage. And it certainly isn't necessary to ensure acceptable service. The only reason the service might not be sufficient is if the ISP advertised more bandwidth than they really have.

    ... impeding competitive market outcomes....rigid net neutrality legislation may prevent such innovation.
    Except that user's don't have choices in ISPs. There are usually only 2: the local telecom and the local cable company. That's not enough to allow market forces to kick-in. Hence the need for regulation.

    ...previous business models that attempted to limit consumer access to content (e.g., AOL, Compuserve, otherwise known as 'walled gardens'), have failed...
    This is completely different. AOL and CompuServe were not ISPs, and they didn't advertise that they were ISPs. That was pre-internet and doesn't apply. Besides, we are talking about subtyle slowing-down internet traffic, not walling it off.

    ...without differentiated treatment, there may be no incentive to pay for the actual costs, resulting in under investment.
    The usual FUD about how Google gets a free ride, which isn't true. People think it makes sense if they don't know about peering.

    I wrote a quick-and-dirty anti-FUD article [mobydisk.com] in an attempt to correct these misunderstandings. If anyone is fooled by the above arguemnts, point them there.
  • by Phrogman (80473) on Wednesday February 07 2007, @02:48PM (#17924830) Homepage
    That our government - like most Western governments - is firmly in the grasp of big business, and no longer really represents the will or interests of the people. Welcome to the "Illusion of Democracy". Government seems to consistently represent the interests of corporations over the interests of the people, at least at the Federal level.

    Unfortunately, the Conservatives got in based on support of a lot of the older demographic, mostly in reaction to the horrid Liberal Government we had for years. The only thing I can't believe is that they were willing to elect Stephen Harper. The guy seems so insincere, so slimey, I wouldn't buy a used car from him. I can't believe hes head of the country at the moment. Its a sad period for Canada.

    Time to contact your MP and protest I suppose, although I no longer have much hope that can accomplish anything. Our country seems to have the best politicians money can buy :(
  • Cost? (Score:5, Funny)

    by tomstdenis (446163) <tomstdenis AT gmail DOT com> on Wednesday February 07 2007, @02:54PM (#17924912) Homepage
    I wonder how much a canadian MP costs. Love to buy a couple. Sad to see that Canada is for sale.

    Tom
    • You lease politicians. You can never really buy them. You lease them for a few votes then return them back to their parties - just like a leased car going back to it's dealership.
  • by Nom du Keyboard (633989) on Wednesday February 07 2007, @03:12PM (#17925124)
    Remind me again what makes Canada so superior to the USA. I seem to have forgotten at the moment.
  • I'm moving! (Score:4, Funny)

    by Astin (177479) on Wednesday February 07 2007, @03:16PM (#17925168)
    That's it. First this right-wing government gets in, then Bev Oda starts pushing RIAA-like rules, and DMCA crap comes along.. and now anti-net-neutrality! I'm done. I'm moving to The USA where they don't have these prob.... oh... hrmm... Engla... no.. France? ehhh... Russia, here I come!
  • by LordofTruth (1061200) <rnanaimo@NoSpaM.gmail.com> on Wednesday February 07 2007, @03:20PM (#17925202) Homepage
    Without net neutrality Slashdot's parent company could have blocked any attempts by Digg to prosper. Microsoft could have blocked Google. YouTube wouldn't have amounted to much compared to Google Video. Net Neutrality helps great ideas become reality. We would never even know about many of the little startups that have become the great sites that they are today.
  • by oceanstream (1004835) on Wednesday February 07 2007, @05:28PM (#17926966) Homepage
    Find your MP [parl.gc.ca] and put the pressure on, please. I've already called mine (Laurie Hawn), to find his position on the debate. The rep at his office had never heard of the Net Neutrality issue. While I hope this isn't common, I wouldn't be surprised. If your MP is a Conservative, put the pressure about how damaging this will be to small businesses, startups, and our fancy new "Knowledge-based economy" idea. It may be easier to convince the Liberal or NDPs about how damaging this could be to the consumer. I urge EVERY Canadian on Slashdot to put in a courtesy call or two to their local Member of Parliament. While you're at it, contact your MLA to see if you can help pressure your provincial government as well. I'll include links:
    Alberta [electionsalberta.ab.ca]
    British Columbia [leg.bc.ca]
    Manitoba [electionsmanitoba.ca]
    New Brunswick [7700.gnb.ca]
    Newfoundland [gov.nl.ca]
    Northwest Territories [gov.nt.ca]
    Nova Scotia [gov.ns.ca]
    Nunavut Territory [assembly.nu.ca]
    Ontario [listingsca.com]
    Prince Edward Island [assembly.pe.ca]
    Quebec [gouv.qc.ca]
    Saskatchewan [legassembly.sk.ca]
    Yukon Territory [gov.yk.ca]
    • Re:Conservatives (Score:5, Insightful)

      by jfengel (409917) on Wednesday February 07 2007, @02:28PM (#17924566) Homepage Journal
      Government regulation is not incompatible with a free market. In a free-market society, government exists to enforce agreements between people. It is itself an agreement between the people to create a set of rules by which other disagreements can be resolved.

      For example, if the people say, "Dumping pollution into the rivers is bad", in a free market they get together to define "pollution" and enforce the rule. Government is only the mechanism by which that happens. The market is still entirely free.

      Of course, actual governments are composed of people who can be persuaded not to do their jobs properly. And the final results are always far more complicated than "don't pollute". That's why conservatives (confusingly also called "classic liberals" by economists) tend to prefer less government rather than more: the less there is the easier it is to see where it's going wrong. Just like in code.

      So I'm reluctant to let the government enshrine net neutrality rules before we see what the big companies actually do. It restricts the ability to innovate, not just by big companies but also by small ones. Once the big companies actually start engaging in nightmare scenarios (e.g. forcing you to use their own download services rather than a competitor's), then regulation will be in order.
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        I completely agree that shouldn't fix a problem that doesn't exist yet, and may never exist.

        I'd like to remind people that Rogers (an enormous cable internet provider in Ontario, and elsewhere) are using traffic shaping with Bit Torrent traffic. Would net neutrality fix that problem? If so, I'd say the problem is already here!
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        So I'm reluctant to let the government enshrine net neutrality rules before we see what the big companies actually do. It restricts the ability to innovate, not just by big companies but also by small ones. Once the big companies actually start engaging in nightmare scenarios (e.g. forcing you to use their own download services rather than a competitor's), then regulation will be in order.

        Sorry, but this got modded insightful?

        Let's wait until we're in the middle of the problem before we look at fixing i

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        Government regulation is not incompatible with a free market. In a free-market society, government exists to enforce agreements between people.

        First, what do you mean here by "free market"? The only consistent definition I've run across for the term essentially means a nonaggressive market society (i.e. a society where ethical/moral behavior is defined in terms of property rights, homesteading, and contractual transfer of ownership). However, since governments are defined by "legitimate" aggression -- a

    • by Brickwall (985910) on Wednesday February 07 2007, @02:36PM (#17924676)
      Yes, you don't understand the problem. The issue is not what content the ISP provides; the issue is that they will require companies to pay them in order to get preferential treatment. So Joe Blow's - who likely can't afford to pay extra - weblog that I like may take 10 minutes to load, while Kraft or Molson's sites - who will write off the extra cost as advertising or marketing expense - load in seconds.

      Put another way, companies that can afford to pay the extra fees will be high-speed, while companies that can't will be on dial-up speed. Wanna go surfing at 1200 bps again?

    • by bigmaddog (184845) on Wednesday February 07 2007, @02:41PM (#17924738)
      Yay flamebait... but I'm cold, so what the hell.

      The internet is a marketplace and the ISPs are at the doors. If you're, say, Youtube, and have a really swell stand at the market selling refrigerators, they can in theory extort money out of Youtube by not letting people in to see the refrigerators at all, or by only letting people pass through turnstiles, thereby precluidng the purchase of refrigerators.

      At the same time, they can fool people coming into the market by advertising having a really big gate that funnels down to turnstiles that you can't see from the outside. You pay to pass through the big gate and are later screwed at the turnstiles because you realize there's no way you can leave with a refrigerator. All this would be fine if the number of doors was large as market forces would dictate price and availability of access, but doors are few in any one area and it's hard to build new ones.

      In the long run, the market may die from this, but it may not, and at any rate I don't like the situation.

      How's my analogy meter?

      On the upside, if there is an upside, the days of the current Canadian government are numbered. We have what you might call a multi-party system (multi > 2) and the current party rules only on account of tentative support from other parties, and that ought to run out on one issue or another sometime this calendar year. We can only hope they don't pass any legislation regarding this (or any other) matter in the meantime.
    • The ma bell comment is worth modding up.

      The whole "net neutrality" debate is built on the assumption that the communication system will continue to be a either a monopoly or cartel with a very small number of players in the market.

      Personally, I think the best solution to the bandwidth puzzle would be to have a vibrant infrastructure with a large number of companies providing backbone services. If there are enough players in the market, the market will help minimize prices.

      With net neutrality ruling
      • by dgatwood (11270) on Wednesday February 07 2007, @04:52PM (#17926388) Journal

        And those magical hundreds of thousands of miles of fiber are going to come from where, exactly? Sorry, but the whole "let the market fix the problem" idea just won't fly with anyone who does the math.

        The reason that we don't have a vibrant infrastructure is that it costs thousands of dollars to fiber a house. At 40 cents a foot, the cost for a single fiber from New York, NY to Los Angeles, CA would be $5,199,744, and that's not counting the cost of actually laying the fiber, splicing it every so often, adding repeaters every so often, routing equipment, commercial buildings to house the gear, etc. And a backbone would have a lot more than one fiber. Conservatively, it would probably cost billions of dollars to add a single nationwide backbone in the United States that can compete with the existing regional backbones. You're proposing multiple such backbones. Find a way to squeeze $1,000 out of every man, woman, and child in the U.S., and you're probably in the ballpark.

        The alternative is leased line systems in which wire providers lease lines to pseudo-backbone providers. That's what we have now. The problem is that those wire providers are in competition with those pseudo-backbone providers, and when push comes to shove, the companies leasing the lines lose their lease. As long as the infrastructure costs as much as it does, backbone providers will always tend towards monopoly or at best oligopoly. It's the nature of that type of business, just as it is the nature of regional last-mile ISPs to tend towards monopoly, and for the same reason.

        The cost of building out the infrastructure exceeds the amount of money you'd make off of it even when amortized over decades. Thus, short of the government building out a public infrastructure, the "cartel" situation you describe is unlikely to change.

        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          In Alberta our government, showing unbelievable foresight,put in a fibre network covering the province for $193 million. [albertasupernet.ca] I now use this to connect small towns using Motorola wireless radios for the last mile. (Actually the last 15 or so miles).

          There are about 10 companies doing this so there is competition. We just happen to have the best prices and the best service.

        • You're proposing multiple such backbones. Find a way to squeeze $1,000 out of every man, woman, and child in the U.S., and you're probably in the ballpark.
          Well you had it, but then you blew it on the war [nationalpriorities.org]...
    • If you don't like what your ISP does, then move to another ISP, or start your own ISP!

      Way to completely miss the point of what net neutrality legislation does. Allow me to explain. I pay a monthly fee to Comcast to provide me with internet access. Comcast has a peering agreement with AT&T who has a peering agreement with Sprint who has a peering agreement with Telus who has a peering agreement with RBD who Netflix buys their big internet pipes from (theoretically speaking). So My business relation s