Canadian Regulator CRTC Saves Independent ISPs 87
fmenard123 writes "The Canadian telecommunications regulator, the CRTC, has affirmed in a decision released on March 3rd 2008 that DSL wholesale and Cable Modem wholesale will continue (PDF) until such time as a meaningful competitive source of supply of wholesale facilities develops. Aside from preserving the status-quo, the CRTC has also determined that unaggregated ADSL access (DSL wholesale for competitors who self-supply their facilities into telephone company central offices) is an essential service given the lack of unbundling for sub-loops. The CRTC ordered phone companies to re-price unaggregated DSL wholesale at forward-looking costs plus a mark-up of no more than 15%, opening the door for a significant reduction in the rates ISPs pay to the telephone companies for access to DSL wholesale. This decision has interesting implications for the US, in which the FCC was not able to overcome the legal attacks against its Computer II regulatory framework. Perhaps ISPs in the US need to look north to try to make their case again."
The CRTC, doing good? A first (Score:1)
Re:Simsubbing annoys the hell out of me (Score:4, Informative)
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Seeing ads of products I can't buy, or services for local areas would be pretty useless for both advertisers and viewers.
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It's not like we aren't used to seeing U.S. advertising. Anything that isn't being simulcast on a Canadian network shows ads from the U.S.
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Uhhhhh, you don't understand what is happening, do you? Here is what happens: You get two cable channels. Fox and FoxLite AKA Global. You watch Fox, you get Fox, you see everything somebody in Seattle, or Buffalo, or whatever the local Fox station is, would see. Then House comes on and the cable company terminates the Fox feed for an hour and shows Global on both channels. After House, or the Simpsons, or American Idol, or whatever, is over, it switches back to the horribly confusing ads, as you say.
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Simulataneous substitution. (Score:2)
It is a controversial practice in Canada for reasons that I won't get into, but the practice is governed by strict rules on when and how a broadcaster may sim
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Enter "simsub", click "I'm Feeling Lucky".
Result: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simultaneous_substitution [wikipedia.org]
This is awesome. (Score:1, Troll)
Confused (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20080304.RCRTC04/TPStory/Business [theglobeandmail.com]
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The article is not clear enough on what would be deregulated or not. And additionally, Mirko B
Thank you, and fine print (Score:2, Informative)
There's a lot of technical stuff in there I don't understand, but I can't see how letting the market forces reign in Canada will result in anything other than the big players swallowing up the small ones. It's been happening with the cable industry here for years, and with the DSL market, too. That's what happens when the fibre-optic backbone is owned by
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Huh? (Score:1)
Also, the link isn't a
Re:Huh? (Score:5, Informative)
This has resulted in cheaper long distance rates, cheaper (and better) Internet access, better hardware, etc.
In the old days, Bell told you to like your Bakelite rotary phone, and that nothing else was economically or technically feasible... and keep paying your monthly rental, since you can't purchase a phone.
Because the telcos were forced to give access to the lines, we now own the phone lines inside our homes, and have fully electronic phones we OWN. We can have Internet access that isn't filtered by Bell, or passed through their misconfigured HTTP proxies. Oh, and the rates for everything are lower after adjustments for inflation.
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Not everything about the Bell breakup was good (Score:1, Insightful)
Those of us old enough to actually remember the Bell monopoly aren't as gung-ho about deregulation as you youngsters.
Now get off my l
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They were still overpriced, and lacked nifty features like call display, hold, and speed dial... nevermind the capacity for multiple lines and built-in answering machines and it really burned to pay rental on them every month.
Some of us who ARE old enough to remember the Bell monopoly are glad it's gone.
not so fast (Score:1)
Bell is throttling bit torrent traffic now and some encrypted traffic is getting
caught in the same "web" as well. Us Bell users have to switch to 3rd-party DSL
to avoid this throttling.
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Bell still screws you (Score:2)
Of course, the DSL company doesn't find this out until after the connection is first established, in which case t
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Don't buy a bridge - make an informed decision (Score:2, Informative)
I'd strongly recommend that you take some time and read the Broadband Reports forums [broadbandreports.com] on the various Canadian ISP's i
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Re:Huh? (Score:5, Informative)
Maybe in your part of Canada, but not west of Ontario.
MTS/Allstream owns the last mile copper in Manitoba
Sasktel owns the last mile copper in Saskatchewan
Telus owns the last mile copper in Alberta and BC
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For instance, Sasktel is regulated by the provincial PUB (public utilities board) not the CRTC.
In the case of this decision, that makes a big difference.
Now I can finally be rid of Bell Sympatico DSL!! (Score:1)
Now, we will finally have a larger selection of ISPs to choose from, with much more competitive prices!
Re:Now I can finally be rid of Bell Sympatico DSL! (Score:1)
Re:Now I can finally be rid of Bell Sympatico DSL! (Score:2)
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It began in the last couple of months, so ignore threads older than say November 2007 or so.
http://www.dslreports.com/forum/r19634497-Non-P2P-SSL-Protocols-now-being-throttled [dslreports.com]
http://www.dslreports.com/forum/r19856107-ThrottlingShaping-Supposedly-Non-Existant-On-Bells-Network [dslreports.com]
http://www.dslreports.com/forum/r19691840-Traffic-shaping-timeline-graph [dslreports.com]
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http://network.nationalpost.com/np/blogs/fpposted/archive/2007/11/05/bell-sympatico-admits-to-blocking-bandwidth-traffic.aspx [nationalpost.com]
I know I'm being throttled because at one time, I would routinely get 200KB/s on torrents (I have a 5MB DSL line). Then suddenly, in the November 2007 timeframe, I was at 30KB/s during the daytime. I have experimented and found that right after midnight, it will increase to about 50KB/s, then to a higher speed at the top of the next hour (200 KB/s). But clearly, many custome
Re:Check out TekSavvy (Score:5, Informative)
No, I don't work for them or receive anything for this.
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I switched to them when Rogers started throttling all encrypted traffic (to throttle bittorrent believe it or not) and I've never looked back. They have great customer service and you aren't going to get better upload speeds (despite what Bell/Rogers advertise). If you go for their premium service rather than the unlimited you also get much lower latency. They take Bell to task whenever something needs to happen, e.g. something is wrong with your line, and are che
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I'll also recommend TekSavvy. Their service is cheap, fast, and good. You can also get a static IP for a couple of dollars per month, and they don't block or filter anything, to my knowledge. I've just moved into a new subdivision that doesn't have DSL support yet, so I'm stuck with Rogers (*spit*), but I'll be switching back to TekSavvy ASAP. Speaking of which, I called in early January to see if my area was supported. The woman said "Not according to our records, but I'll talk to my Bell rep to see i
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Re:Now I can finally be rid of Bell Sympatico DSL! (Score:4, Insightful)
If the CRTC really wanted to level the playing field, they would prevent the wholesalers like Bell Sympatico from selling directly to the consumer market. Then we'd see real competition and growth in the ISP industry.
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Re:Now I can finally be rid of Bell Sympatico DSL! (Score:1)
I found my replacement for Bell there, 3Web (or CIA, same company) Cable (rogers reseller), 5Megs, 34$/m taxes incl...
Hope that helps!
Wholesale Cable? (Score:4, Informative)
Now, if the CRTC really wanted to impress me, they would force Rogers to open their lines for cable internet. As it stands right now, AFAIK, we only have truly open wholesale for DSL access, and for those of us that can't get it at a reliable quality, it kinda sucks because our only real choice is the cable monopoly in the area, in this case Rogers.
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The hard part with Rogers is customer service - they suck at it. Once you can convince them to come connect you, as long as you're self-sufficient after that point, you likely won't have any issues. Well, until you want to disconnect of course.
Rogers could easily be the best ISP ever, if on
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I see no need to run a local mail server, nor host a VPN. It is residential service, and I have residential expectations. I VoIP without difficulty, I download a TON (part of my work as a web monkey). The P2P choking would be the biggest nuisance, but it doesn't affect me since I do all my torrenting remotely on a cheep cheep server with a fat fat pipe. Why fuss with crap upload bandwidth when I can do it all ten times faster in Europe and FTP the stuff down at line speed ?
Besides, if you
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Here in Windsor, Ontario we have Cogeco for Cable and then Sympatico (Bell) for DSL. You CAN go with smaller ISPs for DSL but the lines are still owned by Bell. I was doing that for a while and the service was extremely crummy. MNSI told me that the phone lines in my area were old and problematic and that they had notified Bell to come check them out. Bell never did. I ended up switching back to Cable but there's only one choice: Cogeco. Which I believe is
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The only real answer is to seperate out the running of the bits that are a natural monopoly from the rest of the service and then heavilly regulate the bits that are a natural monopoly. E.g. your problem would have been solvable if there was a independent complains body you or your ISP could turn to who
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There's more then just 3web available but considering how small a market canada is period compared to the US, I'm surprised that there's usually 4-5 companies in most large cities at times providing dsl and cable service. DSL is much easier to get because you can get a dry loop for nothing due to deregulation. Bell was the only monopoly for 50+ years.
The only way that will happen in the end is if the CRTC and other providers come to an agreement over th
Broadband Proliferation and Penetration (Score:2)
It encourages tech growth, it helps job creation
Yes, what IS good for the economy can also be good for the people. It might also appear to be bad for the RIAA, or MPAA... but we all know they're still rolling in cash
Can somebody please translate... (Score:1)
For example: How does one buy DSL wholesale? Do you buy it at Sam's Club or Costco?
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If you start a company that wants to resell the Interweb you call up Bell and they'll sell you X number of DSL lines. I believe last time I checked they sold a DSL line for 24$ (according to the ISP I worked for) so the profit for the 3rd party is next to nothing usually.
I'm sure there is a minimum amount you need to buy, I have no idea what that is.
This is incredibly simplistic but hopefully it gives
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Not where I am (Score:2)
"Locked out" WTF is that?! Of course calling Bell they gave me the run around I guess they don't need the 15-17$ a month they'd
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I agree with you. Australia had a single telecom company for years before the government allowed competition. The Telco being government owned (Australia Telecom) naturally owned all the copper. to allow competition the government forced the telco lease there lines and fixing the price at which they can be leased. Aust. telecom has since been privatised (and is now called Telstra) but the government still forces Telstra to lease use o
competition? (Score:2)
I mean...with my business class Comcast cable internet, I get nearly 128kbps upload speeds. That should be enough for anyone.
CANARIE has a better idea: customer owned fiber (Score:2)
Of course, customer owned fiber networks aren't the only way. Having a neutral third party own and manage the dark fiber between colocation points and end-users (and likely the fiber uplinks too) would work. It'd be a nice bit of business for the power companies, for example. Let competing service providers plug their electronics into the fiber. Customer wants to switch providers? No problem, make the change at the colo and plug in a different box at his home.
Some cities, including the People's
All this is meaningless to me! (Score:1)
Last mile of copper? HA!
The last 4 miles of copper is mostly buried underground on a rotting wire.
The last HALF-MILE is above ground (if you can call it that) ever since a large tree brought down the hydro wires and the bell wire two years ago.
Within 2 hours the Hydro-Quebec guy came by, took a look and said the truck would be by in the morning to fix it. They did exactly that.
The Bell min-wage outsourcing company? They came by 3 days later, after I had gone o