Bell Canada's Misinformation About Throttling 120
rsax writes "Bell Canada's chief of regulatory affairs Mirko Bibic has been attempting to justify the throttling of the last-mile connection to independent ISPs. As is typical, Bell Canada is abusing people's confusion between issues around Network Neutrality and the last mile natural monopoly. If people continue to confuse these two related but separate issues, Bell Canada and other incumbent phone and cable companies will win this critical debate."
Small ISPs not entirely blameless... (Score:3, Interesting)
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Re:Small ISPs not entirely blameless... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Small ISPs not entirely blameless... (Score:5, Interesting)
I was hoping somebody would reply "TEKSAVVY" to the parent and am glad you did. They are easily the best ISP I've used, even if they don't reach the top speeds provided by Bell or Rogers. (no, I do not work for them or have a relative that works for them or anything, I am just a fiercely loyal customer)
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Teksavvy ROCKS!!
Their customer service and a personable approach is bar none the best I have ever seen. Their services are cheaper, more reliable and faster than Bells. What does Bell do about it ? They f**k up your traffic.
Here's what I know:
I have been on Teksavvy for many years ( an ex-Bell subscriber ) . As of few days ago, their traffic during ~4pm - ~1am has been shaped by Bell. What used to be a ~600 KBp/s now turned into a 30 KBp/s. At the same time 2 of my friends living right beside me ca
Re:Small ISPs not entirely blameless... (Score:5, Informative)
In fact Teksavvy even gives its customers a choice of which routing they would prefer, unlimited over Cogent or 100gb/month over Peer 1 (lower latency)!
http://www.teksavvy.com/en/resdsl.asp?ID=7&mID=1 [teksavvy.com]
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I have worked in Cable for the last fifteen years, and was worried about the switch to DSL, but man... I needn't have worried. If you're in the GTA (I'm actually up in Barrie, an hour away), I can't recommend them highly enough.
Re:Small ISPs not entirely blameless... (Score:4, Informative)
every lines terminate into a DSLAM.
then if the DSLAM is bell's they will either:
forward the entire L2TP(or ppp, same thing) tunnel over a dedicated line that they forced teksavvy to install and terminate it on teksavvy's equipment, at which point teksavvy can do whatever the hell they want with the traffic
or
bell terminates it on their own equipment and then sells "bandwidth" to the outside internet
both of these solutions can be thottled, and you'd still get the "choose your routing" part
there is another option for resellers, which is installing their own DSLAMs in bell's colo centers. it is expensive, and ill defined. any maintenance you might have to do is expensive as hell, bell charges you the full cost for whatever changes are to be made (including plugging in a customer's line into it).
some resellers use this type of colo, but usually they are geographically limited (you need dslams all over the place to physically serve every customer's lines)
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Bell works around these issues by using remotes, but they won't allow third party ISPs to put their own DSLAMs in them. And even if building your own remotes wasn't such a ridiculous idea,
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Also, I was glad to see them offer dry dsl (does anyone else offer that in Canada?). But what is bandrates? This is only listed for dry loop dsl. What's the difference from band a to g?
* Band Rates
Band A $7.25/mo.
Band B $9.10/mo.
Band C $10.22/mo.
Band D $10.98/mo.
Band E $15.91/mo.
Band F $16.20/
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And yes, bell offers dry dsl. And they don't even charge an additional fee. That's the only thing keeping me with bell right now. That extra $10 that I'd have to pay anywhere else is just enough to keep me.
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I guess someone paying rate g is far away from the dsl main line? 25 extra a month is pretty damn pricey.
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Bell technicians have checked out the line numerous times and never been able to find anything wrong with it. Finally yesterday I asked them to ship a replacement as it seems to be the only thing left.
Prior to this I had excellent service (strange, I know).
If this behaviour, and the throttling, continue past my move date in a month's time, I'm off to TekSavvy, absolutely. I am using one o
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Re:Small ISPs not entirely blameless... (Score:4, Informative)
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Dear Customers, As many of you may have heard of late, there have been quite a few activities through Bell that have caused some negative performance on P2P and BT traffic for us and all other DSL providers in Ontario and Québec.
TekSavvy is committed to fighting this injustice. For more details on this matter, go to: http://www.dslreports.com/forum/teksavvy [dslreports.com] for various discussions.
In trying to bring a little bit of both hum
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They pay for the link based on size between their PPPOE authentication servers and Bell's ADSL equipment. If this link fills up it's not Bell that suffers it's the ISP. (I've seen it happen)
They again for outgoing bandwidth with whatever carrier they go with.
There is no performance reason for Bell to throttle the PPPOE connections going to other ISPs. If the other ISP mismanages it's network then either they pay extra o
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There's nothing stopping me from forging my own parts from scratch and assembling a pickup truck myself, but that would not excuse Ford from delivering a Pinto when I ordered a F-150.
Just nationalize it... (Score:5, Insightful)
And for those skeptics who think they government would not be able to maintain it I would say this: If they could make our roads run in a decent way, the garbage collection in a decent way then the last mile cabling could be done in a decent way also. Ofcourse if required they could just contract the maintenance out to Bell Canada but then at least the government would be incharge.
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But teleco monopolies have jerked my chain one too many times, and the internet is widespread enough its practically an essential service just like electricity, and at the very least a government agency wouldn't be looking to pay a 7 figure salary to a board of directors so they might actually
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You obviously live in Ontario (where the electric power was privatized during the Nonsense Revolution(TM), and rates tripled since then).
You should move to Québec then where the still-nationalized power is the cheapest in the world, and where the network doesn't crumble (it's the only northeast power grid that didn't go down during the 2003 blackout)...
What?!? (Score:3, Insightful)
Where do you live? The roads I drive on are full of potholes and crumbling bridges. The excessive gasoline tax I pay (that is supposed to maintain transportation infrastructure) is siphoned off for other things. You really want the people running our roads to run our internet connections?
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Anyway, those services you describe are farmed out to contractors. The state doesn't own very many garbage trucks or asphalt plants.
(In Canada) if the gov't was your ISP, it would be "free", except your taxes would go up equivalent to the amount you are already paying
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And did you just suggest that everyone who does not like Bell start to lay its own cable? Even the economics aside, I can not do it because to government regulation and the fact that I would need right of way from everyone's house under which the
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I am saying to nationalize the cables
Last mile isn't just cables though. You've got to get up to Layer 4.
And did you just suggest that everyone who does not like Bell start to lay its own cable?
People do it all the time. Bell isn't the only action in town.
What I was proposing isn't a new idea. You get together with some people and buy a commercial feed and share it. This is how it's done in lots of places. Big business doesn't have to be the only action going.
As for running wires... On a small scale, wireless works.
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The CRTC already has rules that would require Bell Canada to provide other ISPs with last mile access, since there is no viable competitive infrastructure options available. Bell Canada must also provide that last mile at cost to the ISPs as per the CRTC regulations.
Unfortunately, these rules don't appear to cover anything with regards to bandwidth throttling. However, I'm pretty sure that a case can be made with regards to the anti-competitive factors associated with this practice. Th
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This isn't required... The CRTC already has rules that would require Bell Canada to provide other ISPs with last mile access, since there is no viable competitive infrastructure options available. Bell Canada must also provide that last mile at cost to the ISPs as per the CRTC regulations.
While Bell is keeping everyone busy with the throttling issue, they are going to court to get tariff 5410/20 overruled as they claim there is enough competition and they should be allowed to charge fair market price.
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The Canadian government should just nationalize the last mile cables and have a government agency responsible for maintaining and upgrading the lines.
Hmmm, in essence it would be nationalizing the internet. I hear Italy and Germany did great things by nationalizing newspapers some time back in the 40's. What's the worst that could happen by nationalizing the modern day equivalent?
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at the sibling post, i don't believe sasktel has had a strike since 1996.
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SaskTel is wholly owned by the Crown Investments Corporation, which is wholly owned by the Provincial Crown. It's completely nationalised.
That said, I agree that SaskTel does a reasonable job of maintaining and upgrading infrastructure, and there are cable operators that compete with their DSL service. There are even DSL wholesalers in Saskatchewan that lease the last mile from SaskTel too. Bell and Radiant immediately come to mind.
In 2006 SaskTel went out and replaced every DSLAM in the
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yeah, we've got shaw competing on cable (providing TV, internet, and VOIP phone), access using leased lines (providing IPTV, internet and VOIP phone), a dozen or so mom&pop ISPs leasing lines for just internet, along with wireless ISPs (xplorenet, and some other guys in the cities, along with sasktel's wireless (which i use myself, as i'm far out of reasonable DSL or cable range.)) and satellite for TV.
there's just a fantastic amount of c
Eventually (Score:5, Insightful)
Of course, that's what they say. Here's the thing, if those guys could figure out a way to charge people for calling me on my phone, they would. Oh, but you say they are already paying for phone coverage, well our phone network is getting over used, we need set priorities, so we are going to direct your call in 5 minutes while more important people (who paid extra) can make calls to out customers right now. Sounds stupid doesn't it. IT'S THE SAME THING THEY ARE PROPOSING.
One thing I don't get, why does something magically get confusing when the words "computer" or "internet" are used in the business discussion? Like somehow it's all of a sudden a debatable thing to talk about?
Oh, that article writer is an idiot. Net Neutrality needs to me set in stone by law, end of story. Networks are made faster by putting in more pipes, not by turning off/down some of them.
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Calling during the day time is typically more expensive than calling at night. If you want to make an important call during normal business hours, you will need to pay extra.
This also works with electricity. You pay more
Re:Eventually (Score:4, Insightful)
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that's news to me, having never had to pay to receive a call either on a landline or on a mobile....
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For far too many years to remember, I have never ever paid to receive a call, either via landline or mobile (cell).
We have always paid to make calls, any "free" minutes your package may have, are of course included in the package price.
The only time you have to pay to receive a call is when the caller reverses the charges (call collect), but even then you have the option of whether to accept the call or not.
The only other thing I can think of that may be close to what you're talking about i
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1) You accept a reverse charges call.
2) You have taken your UK mobile overseas and receive a call. Then you'll pay a (ridiculous) Roaming charge to receive the call.
Those are both perfectly reasonable (in principle, if not in the actual scale of the charges)
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Also, your sig rocks. Space Dinosaurs ftw.
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Monopolies are only monopolies because people will not sacrifice to do without. You can say Microsoft is a monopol
It's simple economics (Score:2, Interesting)
well our phone network is getting over used, we need set priorities, so we are going to direct your call in 5 minutes while more important people (who paid extra) can make calls to out customers right now. Sounds stupid doesn't it. IT'S THE SAME THING THEY ARE PROPOSING.
No, that's precisely what happened. Those who could afford a home telephone, had one installed, paid through the nose per minute and were able to connect instantly to whomever they chose. Everyone else used a payphone. What're you, fifteen or something, we've only had ubuiquitous phone coverage for about 30 years.
Areas where flat rate is the norm will inevitably see infrastructure investment stagnation, bandwidth caps, throttling etc etc. With flat rate, there's really no incentive for ISPs to invest in mo
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Metered prices is different than what these guys are doing.
People's confusion? (Score:5, Interesting)
Natural Monopoly? (Score:3, Interesting)
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You want to invest $500 per person? With no guarantees about ROI? That's 600K people who also could use a competitor's service.
It's safe to say that the barrier for entry is pretty high.
Separate the infrastructure and the service (Score:1)
The problem with Bell is that they own both the infrastructure and the service, so when they sell the service they give themselves lower infrastructure leasing rates than 3rd-party ISPs and make it impossible for them to compete. By all other accounts Bell is *worse* than all other ISPs. Their own competitive advantage, price, is gained t
Bell tactics (Score:3, Interesting)
In March my traffic with TekSavvy was throttled as well due to Bell.
There is no other Internet provider that I can use and get Unlimited Internet usage package at speeds for ADSL or Cable.
Bell as singlehandedly brought their competition to same level of crappy service that they offer. I as consumer have no alternates. There is nothing I can do other than to write to all politicians in my areas, as well as inquire with all Internet providers as to what they are doing to keep me as a customer satisfied and fight Bell.
So far, politicians seem ignorant of the issues and web services all throughout GTA are promising to fight Bell.
While in Europe and Asia people are getting fiber coming up their doorstep, North America is tightening it's belt on innovation, and technology .
We used to be innovators and leaders. What happened here?
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I got a 'thank you for your letter', but after a week have heard nothing further.
However, I still encourage you to write your MP as well. Enough letters will result in action... and even though most people are irritated that their illegal torrents are slower, the truth is that there are LEGAL torrents, and that's irrelevant anyway. Bell has a last-
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Because of this, I ended up going over monthly limit and they sent me a "friendly" reminded that I should consider buying their faster/higher allowance package and guess what, I will!! I`m glad to pay more if I can get more! This is how it should work. Comcast should take notice and so should the other ISP'
personal throttling? (Score:1)
Wait a sec... (Score:1)
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Not everybody surfxors the Interwebs for pr0n and MP3z you know....
That's just blatantly untrue. Unless you are also including people who don't have access to computers and the internet.
Re:Shocked and appalled (Score:5, Insightful)
All of this being said, I've already cancelled my Bell Sympatico residential service earlier this week, to become effective on May 14th. I had previously been a Sympatico customer with the same account for over 6 years. I am sure I am not the only person who's taking such action. Paying good money for a connection capable of 600+ KBps, yet only allows me to achieve 30KBps for torrents, is like me burning my money. Maybe another company will value my cash more than Bell seems to. We shall see, I suppose...
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Hello TekSavvy!
Re:Shocked and appalled (Score:5, Insightful)
Managed torrents (like WoW updates) would be an excellent way to distribute operating system patches and updates.
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Why are these companies so scared to just be upfront with people who want to download this much???
Because then they can't advertise their basic service plans as "UNLIMITED INTARWEBZ!!11!!1 YOU CAN'T HANDLE OUR EXTREEEMMM SPEEEEDZ!!!!!!". Not that any of that really matters to my grandma who just checks her email and the weather, and maybe gets a little crazy once in a while and emails a picture...
I blame AOL and all the overage charges people got back in the day for making people averse to subscribing to any ISP that isn't unlimited.
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1. Keep track of how much bandwidth each user uses (this is, of course, trivially simple compared to the packet examination required for shaping, and no doubt they do it already) and, at the end of the month, charge them a quantity of money proportional to the bandwidth they consumed.
2. Slow all peer-to-peer traffic to a crawl and hope for the best. When the best fails to materialize, abuse your last-mile monopoly to imp
Re:Shocked and appalled (Score:5, Interesting)
As far as I can tell, Rogers doesn't throttle anymore since I've experienced up to 10Mbps for some of my BT transfers, and they've actually offered HIGHER throughput since they stopped throttling (from 8Mbps to 10Mbps). They now put, and enforce, an advertised bandwidth cap on all their plans. My particular plan, the highest available, has 95GB of transfer. They also notify you when you reach 75% of your capacity. If their current practices are any indication, I think that "this neutrality business" is actually a very simple thing to solve. I'm getting exactly what they tell me I'm paying for, a 10Mbps line with a 95GB cap. No draconian laws or heavy oversight. The cure is simple. It's to give your customers what you tell them you will. Instead of advertising "unlimited" or "unmetered" bandwidth, offer different bandwidth caps and different throughput levels at different price ranges.
I have to applaud Rogers for doing this. They've gone about it the right way, and I am now a very, very satisfied customer.
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Re:Shocked and appalled (Score:5, Informative)
If my ISP wants to throttle my connection to a specific speed, or only of specific protocols, they can. But goddamnit they NEED to tell me this BEFORE I sign up, so I know what I'm buying.
If I purchase an "unlimited" plan at 10mb's, I expect unlimited usage of that 10 mb like because well shit thats what I'm paying for isn't it?
If my ISP does not want to invest in infrastructure to support growing traffic demands thats their business (a poor decision I think but hey I'm not a stockholder) and therefor can no longer deliver unlimited plans, they need to own up to that. If my ISP can't give me unlimited they need to advertise what they are giving me.
The GP noted he was a happy customer because there was no bullshit, he pays a certain amount and he knows exactly what hes getting.
He didn't sign up for an unlimited plan at 15 mb and find out it drops to 2 mb after the first 10 minutes, he's not getting cut off with no notice because of some sketchy rule in the ToS that lets his ISP decide hes misbehaving, certain services aren't slower than others. He's got a net connection, its got a limit (though if you need more than 95 gigs a month clearly its time to cut back on the pron), but he knows exactly what those limits are.
Sounds fairly decent to me.
Finally it should be interesting to note, since his ISP is selling him throughput, not the connection it self, that it actually provides the ISP incentive to make sure his connection is as fast as possible. A faster connection means hes more likely to go over his limit and incur an extra surcharge, in this case they WANT your BT to work well because if you go nuts on it they make more money.
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At least they're not lying to their subscribers, unlike Bell. He's making an informed decision, instead of being defrauded like everyone else.
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I, for one, am shocked and appalled that a monopoly would abuse its position. Shame on you Bell Canada!
I'm sorry, that's a lie. I just can't get too excited about this type of thing. The only users who are really inconvenienced by traffic shaping are the system abusers. All others use a paltry amount of bandwidth which is not throttled.
The tumult over this neutrality business is boring. The only way to solve this is to enact and enforce draconian laws and heavy oversight to make sure that net neutrality is maintained. The cure is more expensive than the disease.
Makes me sleepy... zedzedzed...
It's more a matter of principle. If I pay over priced rates for X-Level of service, I expect that said ISP meet their legally bound obligations and provide X-Level of service. e.g. If I'm paying for a 10Mb/1Mb then damn well better have a constant 10Mb/1Mb connection, not a 10Mb/1Mb in off hours and a 5Mb/.5Mb during the prime hours.
Re:Shocked and appalled (Score:4, Insightful)
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that is the lamest car analogy EVER
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that is the lamest car analogy EVER
Re:Shocked and appalled (Score:5, Insightful)
Huh? You've got to be joking. People streaming endless YouToob garbage take up a 'paltry' amount of bandwidth? Large scale data transfers to co-located servers? VOIP applications like Skype? Just about any streaming application takes a significant amount of bandwidth and I suspect that you are aware of this.
The ONLY - your words - users who are inconvenienced are 'system abusers' (your own perjorative)? Here you have adopted the dishonest language of the money-hungry state-supported ISP's.
First off, I fail to understand how a customer who is using their service as advertised (X amount of throughput) can 'abuse' the system. Do they send endless amounts of SYN packet requests? Beat their modems and forget to send them birthday cards? What is your definition of abuse?
I certainly don't call it abuse if I pay 2$ to cross a toll road at a max rate of speed of 55 mph. Nor would I call it abuse if the toll road company offers to allow me 'unlimited' access to the road for 20$ a month, even were I to drive tour buses packed with people down the road, 24/7. If the toll road operator complained about the excessive traffic my bus was generating, they have two options: widen the road or amend the contract. They cannot simply shoot the tires as I pass by in my bus (and everyone else driving a bus), then tell everyone they have improved road service.
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I'd certainly like to get what I pay for (Score:2)
I run a small webserver through my account with Teksavvy, which leases lines from Bell. In the last while I've noticed that my encrypted traffic (IMAPS in particular) when connecting to home has been shit during the day, but fine during the night. From various things I've read online it appears that the times for this coincide nicely with the periods when Bell likes to mess with traffic.
It's not just torrents that Bell is messing up, there is coll
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Granted, I don't think that any ISP should ever offer unlimited service, as it is impossible for them to provide. But saying that just because they don't specifically say you have a limit, doesn't mean you can do whatever you want with their network.
Actually, that's pretty much exactly what it means. If they can't provide unlimited bandwidth, then they shouldn't say they can. It's not up to the customer to guess at what they are actually capable of providing. If they want to provide me with some specific level of service or bandwidth cap, then they should put that in big bold letters on their ads instead of "UNLIMITED". Makes sense don't it? Quit trying to blame the customers for using as much bandwidth as they like when that is what they were of
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At the very most you may find traffic signs decerasing that even further.
There:)
And if my ISP says unlimited, I will demand unlimited. If a restaurant advertises "all you can eat", I'll bloody have my meal until I am satisfied or they run out of food (the former bring the most likely), and I will call the cops on them if they try to go back on their own word.
I see it like this: if you WANT to have a business, you
Re:Shocked and appalled (Score:5, Informative)
Bell has no legitimate business interest in how third parties run their network since said third parties have to pay for any resources used.
This is about Bell wanting to raise prices for it's own customers but needing to make sure theres no competition for them to jump to first.
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Granted, this only happens if I am running bittorrent. However, throttling P2P is one thing, but turning my phone service (which competes directly with Bell's offering) into an echo-y, choppy mess is a whole other ball of wax.
And, yes, I know how to set up QOS on my router to give VOIP priority over BT, but during the throttling period, this do
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Now go troll elsewhere, this bridge is too small for you.
That's the spirit! (Score:2)
Just out of curiosity, when did we decide that monopolies, and the abuse of power were to be encouraged? Did I miss a memo, or something?
All right everyone, move along, nothing to see here. Free market capitalism is SO Twentieth Century. Everybody move along ...
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Re:No, you're full of it (Score:2)
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