Vuze Petitions FCC To Restrict Traffic Throttling 159
mrspin writes "Vuze, an online video application that uses the peer-to-peer protocol BitTorrent, has petitioned the U.S. Federal Communications Commission to restrict Internet traffic throttling by Internet Service Providers (ISPs). Vuze has been keenly aware of Comcast and the "bandwidth shaping" issue. Vuze filed its "Petition for Rulemaking" (PDF) to urge the FCC to adopt regulations limiting Internet traffic throttling, a practice by which ISPs block or slow the speed at which Internet content, including video files, can be uploaded or downloaded. As readers may remember, back in May, Slashdot discussed the issue of packet shaping and how ISPs threaten to spoil online video."
Finally (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Finally (Score:5, Interesting)
As much as Comcast sucks, it sounds like you're taking the position that the federal government should have the authority to regulate how networks work. I think that's awful, and endangers just about everyone.
Comcast should be bitchslapped (and probably at the state level) for fraud: they fail to supply what they lead prospective customers to believe they supply. And in states where there are laws against impersonation, that should be enforced as well (or else repealed).
But for feds to regulate-away throttling itself, is a nightmare. Networks need to be able to deal with congestion problems, even in cases where they are not overselling or otherwise engaged in fraud. Throttling large transfers to increase the performance of interactive stuff, is a perfectly sane (and fair) way to do it. FCC better keep out of this.
Also, remember we're talking about feds. Comcast's monopoly, AFAIK, is provided by local governments. That's who should be setting terms. Kicking it it so far up the hierarchy of government, just reduces The People's power in the decision.
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Comcast (the primary target here) is not a telco. It's trying to move into that market via VoIP, but it never received federal funds to do so; its network and equipment are privately funded and owned, and should remain so. Nationalizing t
Fair trade (Score:5, Insightful)
What the feds should NOT do:
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Fair trade, or price point exploitation? (Score:2)
If the "tubes" are full, one needs a way to prioritize traffic.
BUT, there are some exceptions and questions:
1) Why are the tubes full? Weren't telecom companies given billions of dollars SPECIFICALLYto expand coverage and upgrade capacity? Isn't it true that all of that money was taken and used by the companies, yet there was no measurable increase in coverage or speed to show where the money went?
If telecom companies are given money to upgrade
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Perhaps in an earlier paradigm, but there's really a small distinction today between "interactive stuff" and "large transfers". If by the latter you mean file sharing, a lot of the former (e.g. voip, video, etc.) is also using the same p2p technology. In fact, since a lot of p2p traffic, be it interactive or downloading stuff, is encrypted anyway, it's going to be very hard to tell whic
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Hate to use a car or "the internet is just tubes" analogy but there is a parallel with motorways, trains, and any heavily congested resource.
What if motorway companies started with a poli
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Can you point me to the fraudulent advertising? If you believe that subscribing to broadband means "maximum possible bandwith all of the time" then you are an idiot. No one pretends to offer that, and the big ol' words "up to" are in every
The network is yours. Re:Finally (Score:2)
it sounds like you're taking the position that the federal government should have the authority to regulate how networks work. I think that's awful, and endangers just about everyone.
There is nothing new about government regulation of networks. Intentionally blocking competitors on networks is already against the law and has it's roots in common carriage laws that are a hundred years old.
Overall, I'm with you and think it would be great if networks were free. Everything will be cheaper and easier wh
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They should however restrict how ISPs can screw consumers.
Its a subtle difference. They wouldnt be setting network policies directly, only indirectly.
Exactly. (Score:2)
If there's congestion, they need to move to a metered model and start charging more. Then, either people will stop using so damned much bandwidth on BitTorrent, or the ISP will be able to actually build the infrastructure to support it.
The "need" for filtering/shaping at the ISP level is a complete and utter myth.
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I pay $80 AUD/month for 512k unlimited.
Thats true unlimited with no shaping of any kind.
Also the ISP is a good one and likes giving out bandwidth liberally on its other plans.
Their backbone is top notch consequently.
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Save the Internet did this already. Re:Finally (Score:2)
People who don't know Vuse should be familiar with the members of "Save the Internet" [slashdot.org] which launched a similar pettition two weeks ago. No one but ATT wants anything but a neutral network.
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Someone with standing, ... maybe (Score:3, Interesting)
Now this company might actually have some standing to say their product is being blocked. Unfortunately, I don't think anybody has Comcast (or others) over a barrel quite yet. Comcast never agreed to deliver this content, or any other specific content. What did they agree to deliver? Probably not much, and nothing specifically. You aren't guaranteed email, web browsing, VPN or any other service. They didn't define what services they are delivering, what quantities of these services or anything else.
I think the company already looked at suing Comcast and found out there isn't anything there. The only avenue would be rulemaking or legislation. Probably not much going to happen there either.
Re:Someone with standing, ... maybe (Score:5, Interesting)
I will say this about Comcast, they're a hell of a lot better than Cox.
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Interesting. So you're saying that if some company, say, a record label, sues a person that potentially caused them loss of revenue by, for instance, posting their songs on the Internet, they would only get actual pr
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The issue isn't throttling... yet (Score:4, Insightful)
If we all complain, "Comcast is sending RST packets!" and then eventually Comcast says, "Okay, fine, no more RST packets," and then goes on to do other forms of extreme traffic shaping, then what? No, we want to nip this in the bud: no ISP, Comcast or not, should be allowed to unilaterally decide, "Hey, we don't like this traffic, so I just won't carry it." or "This is for The Good Of The People to Prevent Piracy" (or "Prevent Undermining Our Glorious President" or whatever).
Moreover, people need to know the implications of traffic shaping / net neutrality / dearth of ISP competition. I was very frustrated about how BitTorrent has been marginalized as "something that only pirates would use". The more we show the lay public the many versatile uses for a protocol like BitTorrent (or any other protocol, really), the more we get a public response.
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I was very frustrated about how BitTorrent has been marginalized as "something that only pirates would use"
I think that we're seeing torrents going the way that encryption did: where at one time it was just the realm of geeks, criminals and spies, now it's used by everyone. Explicit use is still mostly limited to those three groups, but through ssl, wireless, and most vpns, encryption is a daily event for most people.
Likewise, bittorrent was once seen as the realm of pirates, linux geeks and pornographers. While this might still be the case for explicit use, more and more we're seeing it being used by WoW,
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I've gotten off track though. Tax subsidies and benefits aren't taxpayer money though (although the two are confused often).
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Not profitable without a monopoly (Score:2)
Correct: having a monopoly is more profitable. There are other examples where agencies are government run because it would make sense to have a "monopoly" --say, having only one police force for one jurisdiction.
At the same time, explaining why a monopoly is better for the given circumstances does not remove the fact that it is indeed a monopoly, and that this imposes extra ethical obligations to the general
Who decides what a company should sell? (Score:2)
Not if it is a local monopoly.
No.
In general, the people, through their elected representatives and the laws created on behalf of the people. Specifically in this case, I would agree that if there were competition among the network providers and if some other company could say, "We will use the p
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It may not meet an RFC, but not following standards normally isn't fraud.
Not following standards is not inherently fraud, but that does not mean you cannot commit fraud by intentionally breaking standards.
It may not meet an RFC, but not following standards normally isn't fraud.
Abuse is subjective in this case. If Comcast advertises unlimited use, 24/7 at a given rate and someone tries to actually use that rate 24/7 they are not being abusive, they're trying to get their money's worth.
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Frankly, if they're advertising 1.5M, I should see 1.5M. Not 256, not 512, not 56, and not 1.4. This is false advertising. If they have bandwidth problems, they should Advertize What They Have. This reminds me a lot of the EPA Estimated Mileage fiasco where they had to retune the numbers. Tell people what they get in REALITY. I'd rather have a guarenteed 256K than a 256K masquerading as a 1.5M
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Anyone who has even a glimmer of technical knowledge (supposedly everyone on this forum) could tell you how impossible that is on a shared network.
It is not the job of the consumer to second guess the promises advertised based upon whether or not it is possible. They could, indeed, guarantee traffic levels by customer using current technology. The consumer should not have to investigate how many people are on their same local net, nor should they be disconnected for trying to actually use the service as advertised. In case you didn't notice, Comcast sells to people who are not Slashdot readers and who do not have any expertise.
*Especially using a protocol like P2P.
Please note, P2P is
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Re:Someone with standing, ... maybe (Score:4, Informative)
Isn't it precisely the FCC's role to step in and say, "By being a telecom company offering a product labeled as Internet access, you must provide the following:..."
ATT couldn't get away with saying that calls to Montgomery county aren't included in phone service, Comcast shouldn't be able to get away with saying bit torrent isn't included in internet service.
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Think about the grander scheme though. Vuze comes out discussing Comcast having, essentially, hampered the service for all users of the service. Remember, Comcast isn't throttling the bandwidth, they're shaping packets to drop connections on both ends of the pipe...Comcast customers and non-Comcast customers. If someone that participated in a service with, oh...let's say 9.3 million subscribers with each individual
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It comes down to people wanting champagne internet connectivity on a beer budget. Want 10Mbps up and down? Pay for a real internet connection.
Re:Someone with standing, ... maybe (Score:4, Insightful)
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Damn, I should have gone with Geico.
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Wrong, sorry. Geico was extremly careful to include a disclaimer in the add. Specifically the gecko stating "that's a complete dramatization of course, but you get my point" (from memory). Comcast has not disclaimed unusual limitations to what they claim is Internet access. Geico is not AS obligated as Comcast.
(Legally speaking, we have yet to see just how oblig
Authority (Score:2)
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Are you serious or trying to be funny?? The FCC is the regulatory body for basically all telecommunications; thus Federal Communications Commission. Anybody who's in the communications business in the US is the FCC's bitch. Especially cable TV, with Kevin Martin currently wearing the FCC jester's hat.
The top paragraph of this page [fcc.gov] pretty much sums it up: All your base are belong to us^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H "The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is an independent United States government agency, dire
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I'm not trying to be funny, I'm asking a question. There's clearly some difference, since the FCC can regulate content on broadcast TV and Radio, and can fine broadcasters hundreds of thousands of dollars for a nipple slip during the Super Bowl, but cable stations like HBO and Cinemax can show all the nipples they want. Not to mention the internet. So they don't have complete ability to control *everything* when it comes to communications. My question is do they hav
Tell 'Em (Score:2)
Is anyone else amused... (Score:2, Insightful)
And yes, I did RTFA and saw that they're delivering streaming media via the bittorent protocol. I say it's they're own damn fault for using a protocol which is well known for huge bandwidth use and no latency requirements to deliver media with critical latency requirements. If you don't want the ISPs messing with your video stream try not making your video stream look like a file download.
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that this company thinks that this company thinks that removing P2P throttling will help streaming video?
And yes, I did RTFA and saw that they're delivering streaming media via the bittorent protocol. I say it's they're own damn fault for using a protocol which is well known for huge bandwidth use and no latency requirements to deliver media with critical latency requirements. If you don't want the ISPs messing with your video stream try not making your video stream look like a file download.
Actually some numbers of companies managed to do such P2P sharing for streaming audiow/video years ago and they are still doing it. It didn't break down anything and in fact actualy helped ISPs since a truely popular live Radio would have to hit 3-4 very high bandwidth IPs and distributed locally.
For example Octoshape is endorsed/used by Deutsche Welle TV, EBU
http://www.octoshape.com/about/octoshape.asp [octoshape.com]
I am all for actual, pure UDP streaming with auto fallback such as Quicktime, Real but... People choose t
Who is Vuze? Well... (Score:4, Informative)
Now remove the tag that prominently displays your inability to use Google, you apes.
I Agree in Theory but Not In Practice (Score:2, Insightful)
Now, ideally, I think that the ISPs should be actively lighting up lots of new fiber between each other (peering)
Here's one (Score:2)
TFB.
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Re:I Agree in Theory but Not In Practice (Score:4, Interesting)
I know...how about they just make people pay for the bandwidth they use?
They could offer X GB/month packages, where bigger X means bigger monthly fees. They could even get fancy and say that traffic between the hours of 1am and 7am doesn't count, or counts less.
There are all sorts of ways for them to ensure they don't lose money while still giving unfettered access.
It wouldn't work (Score:2)
If Comcast said "10G/Month for $40", then Verizon could say "yeah, well, 20G/month for $40". To which Verizon would be forced to say "Okay, unlimited", and then they're back where they started except now they actually have promised unlimited.
And even if they promised 10G/Month, I'm guessing a huge part of their customers are lucky to download 1G/month. These people are the goofballs who get high speed internet
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You can pay more to increase X, but there's no fear of getting cut off or ending up with a large bandwidth bill to make people wary of buying a 'limited' or 'metered' service.
The huge bandwidth users will either have to
Re:I Agree in Theory but Not In Practice (Score:4, Interesting)
No; ISPs could throttle the bandwidth-hogging customers while remaining ignorant of protocols.
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This practice is countered by the ISP's willingness to advertize bandwidth WELL in excess of what they have. Perhaps ISPs should just use real numbers, not mythical ones some marketing genius picked out of a hat.
It's the same with airlines and overbooking. It should just be illegal to sell more than you can reas
Re:I Agree in Theory but Not In Practice (Score:4, Interesting)
The root issue here is the 'last mile' problem. A bunch of competing cable and phone providers would result a mass and tangle of wire going everywhere. A government enforced monopoly (which is what we have) is not much better, but it's more aesthetic. What we really need is a proliferation of secure wireless based services, much like how satellite TV competes with cable TV. Unfortunately, consumer grade satellite internet has horrible latency and other problems. I think the answer is some type of cellular or mesh solution. Some companies use long range wifi and other directional antenna based systems, and mesh networks are pretty awesome if you can get enough people to participate. There also needs to be enough competition among all of these services to foster innovation. So more than one wireless provider for any given service area.
Again we run up against the FCC, which allocates wireless frequency spectrums here in the US. There is a lot of artificial and real scarcity - with the most innovation happening on the unlicensed bands (2.4ghz and it's multiple 5.8 ghz).
Internet connectivity (fiber optic) as a public utility is interesting - but only if it is done on a local level. Anything bigger than that, say, statewide, is bound to become mismanaged and horrible. (just think of the DMV...)
Comcast is just trying to protect its bandwidth, but as the parent poster mentions, the way they are doing is potentially dubious.
Also, to correct a misnomer from another post, their principal purpose is not to -stream- video via torrent (although they are now experimenting with that using their internal player) but to allow downloads of very large video files that people then watch locally.
I am a Vuze / Azureus user and so far this is the only good solution I've found for hosting my legal original HD videos on the web short of running a legal torrent server myself, which wouldn't get as much exposure. Vuze has also set up a system where you can sell downloadable video content for a price if you wish, a boon to indepdendent video producers.
Some things that they have done recently have been aggrivating (re-compressing files to a semi-proprietary format) but on the whole they have the right idea. And they are the textbook example of a company that is the most hurt by bandwidth throttling if it is done to an extreme as Comcast is doing (completely denying a download session)
Unlike Comcast itself, Vuze provides an outlet for speciality video producers to get their stuff out there.
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with the most innovation happening on the unlicensed bands (2.4ghz and it's multiple 5.8 ghz).
You, sir, have an interesting definition of multiple.
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These companies are holding a monopoly and raking in the cash. If you take into account just the internet sector has something like 13 million subscribers that 650 million gross a month. Their cable TV pretty much uses the same bandwidth also. Why are they not investing their huge profit
One Thing leads to Another (Score:3, Insightful)
(2) all bandwidth is "unthrottled"
(3) all (at least US-based) ISPs have lack-of-bandwidth issues
(4a) all ISPs revoke any claim to "unlimited bandwidth" in a revised agreement notice upon which you have no say, and begin charging per-kb.
(4b) all ISPs actually perform the service upgrades for which they were already paid years ago.
Methinks that if 1 leads to 2, then it leads to 4a. 4b is there just for giggles. They'll never actually do that, of course.
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Tag system (Score:3, Insightful)
Completely off-topic, but what the deuce is going on with tags lately? To the adjectives absurdly long, meaningless, and obscure, now we can add obscene.
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http://slashdot.org/users.pl?op=edittags [slashdot.org] (must be logged in of course).
I think if enough (99%) turns them off, CmdrTaco would remove that junk "Web 2.0" feature. There are some serious offensive tags I saw especially personal attacks to not-so-loved authors. Now marking every Anti Apple story as "FUD" is something, personal attacks are much more serious things which would degrade image of Slashdot and may even create legal trouble
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In case anyone is wondering what Vuze actually is (based on the obscene tag, I guess a few are), this is a company started by the developers of Azureus, the popular Bittorent client on Sourceforge. It's basically a new version of Azureus that hides all of the "technical" bittorent junk behind a media player interface. I think they're trying to make money
How should get what bandwidth/priority (Score:4, Interesting)
P2P traffic will slow down if there is a lot of it or if there is other long running traffic, without Comcast doing anything.
The bigger issue is that our connections are a shared resource. I it fair for you to get all of the bandwidth and leave me with slower response for my web traffic just because you want to download movies. Should we all get an equal slice. The only way for the ISP to do this is traffic shape - limiting the amount of total available bandwidth available for high use protocols like P2P traffic. Ding this means that when I try to load my web page or shoot a dragon in my MMOG there is some bandwidth left to give me a decent response.
Now, you could say that all the ISPs should have enough backbone to supply each of us with full time use of the bandwidth that the ISP talks about providing. The problem is that this would cost a HUGE amount of money and your bill would up 10-50 times what you now pay (depending on your ISPs contention factor).
The so called "net neutrality" debate is mis-named. The question is who pays for the cost of infrastructure and who makes the profits?
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In the end they just need to give SLA's with a minimum guaranteed bandwidth and also additional burst capability based on network load. Sure it may be something like 256Kbps guaranteed 12Mbps burst which would really make them l
Re:How should get what bandwidth/priority (Score:5, Informative)
Nope. ISPs should, however, be required to advertise what they're actually offering rather than misleading potential customers.
Please. Comcast does not charge cost plus a markup for service. They charge what maximized profit because in many locations they have a government enforced monopoly and because their infrastructure was subsidized by our tax dollars to the tune of billions. They don't compete because no one else can get access to the last mile public right of ways needed to lay lines and because the government won't shell out billions more to establish a second player and won't require Comcast share the lines with competitors.
Net neutrality is a different issue altogether, despite propaganda trying to confuse the topic. Net neutrality is simply advocating a law that says ISPs can't treat traffic differently depending upon the source and destination of the traffic. That is to say, they can throttle all bittorrent traffic, but they can't throttle all bittorrent traffic except traffic to a service they are offering or service to a company they get paid extra by.
The entrenched telecos make the profits, because their lobbying dollars are more influential than the threat to politicians posed by the chance that voters will be informed of how new laws affect them and vote on the issue. The infrastructure has already been paid for largely by the US taxpayer. In fact, we've already paid more per person than Sweden, which has similar population density and who subsidized the entire infrastructure and have much more widespread coverage. They have faster speeds and pay a fraction of what we do. This is despite a huge misappropriation scandal there. That means in the US we pay more monthly. after having paid more in taxes, and we have a significantly inferior system. What does that tell you aside from the fact that telecos in the US are more greedy and our government is significantly more corrupt.
Finally, we have granted these big companies immunity from prosecution for breaking a huge number of laws like copyright violation, child pornography laws, libel and slander laws, etc. We grant them this protection under the guise of their being "common carriers" but many of them are not officially bound by the restrictions we place on other common carriers. Instead they have all the benefits of common carriers, but eschew the responsibility (to carry all traffic impartially without censorship or discrimination). It is clear to me that our current laws and the way these companies operate is not in the interests of the people, but only in the interests of milking as much money as possible. If we can publicize what is happening and get people to care about how far the US is falling behind other industrialized nations, maybe we can see some real improvement and move back to the top 10 internet enabled countries in the world, where we need to be if we hope to salvage our economy.
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A whole different thing that any sort of "common carrier" status.
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It has nothing whatsoever to do with common carrier. It is called DMCA Safe Harbor provisions.
The DMCA regards the distribution of tools that can be used to bypass encryption based DRM on copyrighted materials. The safe harbor provision mostly apply to online publishers hosting content, not ISPs. The DMCA does not grant ISPs the right to make and distribute copies of copyrighted works, like every time they transmit a copy of a Web page from router to router to an eventual client.
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Legally, ones that are also regular voice carriers are. Those that aren't are still granted most of the privileges under the law, but not the same legal restrictions. This is because they paid a lot of money to various political campaigns and it paid off.
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I wonder one thing. How come those ISPs aren't hurt by millions of people actually streaming/downloading flv files over HTTP, the protocol every "real" media player falls back as last resort?
ISPs have something deeper against P2P technology and its becoming household item via legal distributors such as Vuze, Bittorrent(.com) etc.
In fact, lets say one day a hit movie ships legally online exact same time as cinemas. It is r
Peering (Score:2, Insightful)
I guess what I'm saying is that this is a possibility, and a study should be done to see what the REAL effect of p2p is. If I'm connected to 10 other people in the Boston area on Comcast's network, would I REALLY b
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New Linux ISOs (Score:2, Insightful)
i hope the FCC accepts and enforces this petition...
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Pretty much, you bought a pig in a poke.
Vuse should pay for the bandwidth it uses (Score:2)
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