FCC Chair: It's Ok For ISPs To Discriminate Traffic 365
sl4shd0rk writes "Remember when the ex-cable lobbyist Tom Wheeler was appointed to the FCC chair back in May of 2013? Turns out he's currently gunning for Internet Service Providers to be able to 'favor some traffic over other traffic.' It would set a dangerous precedent, considering the Open Internet Order in 2010 forbade such action if it fell under unreasonable discrimination. The bendy interpretation of the 2010 order is apparently aimed somewhat at Netflix, as Wheeler stated: 'Netflix might say, "I'll pay in order to make sure that my subscriber might receive the best possible transmission of this movie."'"
What Internet? (Score:5, Insightful)
All I see is a bunch of telecom fiefdoms expanding their influence. It was nice having an internet for a while, but TCP/IP was never built to enforce network neutrality, and you can't stop technology from breaking old protocols and extracting value from communication before that value can be delivered to the real intended recipient.
Deep Packet Inspection is Piracy. Return the favor.
Re:What Internet? (Score:5, Insightful)
There are technological countermeasures that can be investigated. Encryption, obstucated protocols, decentralisation. Ideally some day truely decentralised mesh networking (I personally think CAN is key to making that workable), but that depends not just upon improving technology but also having a dense enough population of activist-enthusiasts.
Re:What Internet? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:What Internet? (Score:5, Insightful)
The oft repeated lie. The content creator creates traffic, 'LIE'. The end users creates the traffic by requesting the delivering of content, 'TRUTH'. So what they are saying is the end user should pay for band width and traffic and after they are charged for it, ISP, should be able to cripple the supply so they can charge someone else for it again.
What is it all really about. The current Telecom incumbents all want to become digital publishers, so their intent is to put competitors out of business including those who self publish by either throttling their delivery services to the customers to the point of making them unusable or by over pricing them to make them non-competitive.
Oh look it's yet another Uncle Tom Obama the choom gang coward corporate appointee, who would have believed it.
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or are you saying without the content that traffic would somehow magically exist.
I don't know if it is "magic", but we did a pretty good job of routing around the lack of content with p2p. We'll fill up the pipes one way or another - they might want to reflect on what a wonderful thing Netflix has done: getting people to actually pay for content again.
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Re:What Internet? (Score:5, Insightful)
"This has been a cat and mouse game for a long time now... and the cat is starting to be the one winning."
Gaming the political system is not "winning". It's cheating. There is a very big difference.
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Where are these official rules that determine what's allowed and what's cheating?
Re:What Internet? (Score:4, Insightful)
"Where are these official rules that determine what's allowed and what's cheating?"
An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations, by Dr. Adam Smith, 1776
"Lobbying" and "monopoly" are not "capitalism". Even Smith recognized that a capitalist economy must have a reasonable body of antitrust laws to keep everybody "playing within the rules".
Haven't you got it by now ?? (Score:2)
An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations, by Dr. Adam Smith, 1776
"Lobbying" and "monopoly" are not "capitalism". Even Smith recognized that a capitalist economy must have a reasonable body of antitrust laws to keep everybody "playing within the rules".
Adam Smith believed in "an invisible hand", ie, the marketplace, that has the ability to regain sanity after a period of insanity, through the force of the combined participation of each and every participant (whether it be consumer / banker / manufacturer / miner / farmer).
On the other hand, Washington D.C. (no matter it be Democrats or Republicans) believes in their own version of "invisible hand".
The invisible hand those politiscums believe in is "BIG BROTHERHOOD", or in other words, an entity which OVER
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THE WHOLE POINT HERE was that monopoly, fascism, socialism, and "crony capitalism" are NOT capitalism. Government control of markets is NOT capitalism. This is NOT the stuff Adam Smith was talking about.
If you want to talk about "capitalism", then all of this stuff is breaking the rules. It is contrary to the system that made this country great. And -- just in case you hadn't noticed -- the more they have done it, the less "great" this country has become.
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Of course, businesses will install the Bluecoat certificate locally on all PCs within the building so no such error will surface, and ISPs could sneak their own version into their AOL style install discs.
Or your latest firefox/chrome/etc http download.
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That's what the SHA1 checksum is f... wait a minute.
OTOH... (Score:2)
The solution may be to allow a source to pay for a better QoS classification (since that's where the marking is done), but also force ISPs to be charge all comers equally. That means separating existing companies which provide both content and transport into separate legal entities. Alternately, they remain combined but are not allowed to provide QoS treatment to the
Re:OTOH... (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes, but that works to the ISP/Cable/Phone companies' advantage. Driving up the price of Netflix reduces the competition force.
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Deep Packet Inspection is Piracy. Return the favor.
Return the favour? ISPs aren't known for producing copyrighted music/movies/games/books...
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Most ISP belong to Big Media corps, at least they do here in Canada.
News to me (Score:5, Informative)
Re:News to me (Score:4, Informative)
Re:News to me (Score:5, Informative)
Re:News to me (Score:5, Interesting)
Cable companies are goverment enforced monopolies in most of the country....
In my community the local government is trying to get Verizon FIOS to lay cable and provide service to challenge Charter, but Verizon is not interested.
Cable companies like to claim their monopolies are "enforced" by government, but really cable companies are perfectly happy with having the map carved up into highly profitable monopoly fiefdoms.
But that IS a government enforced monopoly (Score:5, Interesting)
Your local government has picked Charter to be the local monopolist. The solution isn't to get Verizon to lay lines, it's to allow alternative cable providers to operate. If it comes down to it, require Charter to sell access to their lines. If Charter throws a fit, see how they like running cable without government granted right-of-ways.
Re:News to me (Score:4, Funny)
I'd love to have satellite! For me, I have to send my TCP/IP packets via a carrier pigeon and have to pay to feed those pigeons and clean up after them!
Satellite! Pfft! I dream of having satellite!
(Sorry...I was just thinking of Four Yorkshiremen. [youtube.com])
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If you actually have a real choice, then great for you, most of us don't.
In my neck of the woods, it's either one cable company ($89.95 for 25 meg at the moment) or craptastic 1-3 meg Verizon DSL for whatever they charge.
Even when I lived 10 miles from DC, the only choice was still Cox or DSL. Verizon never did deign to bring FIOS out, despite a neverending barrage of ads and mailers.
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When will we learn? (Score:3)
The revolving door of DC squirts another lobbyist/shill into a position of public power and we're left holding the bag.
But there again, most shee..rrr...Americans will only complain if something keeps them from watching the latest Idol.
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So let's say we didn't let the FCC have any authority over the Internet. What then? ISPs would just ignore net neutrality.
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GP may be the type that looks at this all as "inevitable" and will just keep lobbing criticisms of policies while never stating what an alterative would be...that happens alot around these parts.
The problem is that there are monopolies and they collude against you, right? Well why are there monopolies? Its because your local government grants them. The solution then is to get involved in your local government, not grant powers to the federal government which will erect barriers to entry on top of what your local government has already erected.
This is one of the problems with the current generation. They think the solution to everything is the federal gover
well... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:well... (Score:5, Insightful)
LOL, as if the exactly two providers (one cable, one DSL) in each market wouldn't "coincidentally" adopt exactly the same anticompetitive policies!
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Nope, the monopoly franchises have already been doled out. The only new entrants allowed by law are crappy wireless ones.
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Ah, the imaginary "third competitor" capitalized at the necessary tens of billions of dollars (to set up a meaningful competitive network) that does not already have highly profitable monopoly turf to defend in an unspoken "gentleman's agreement" with other cable providers. Who would that be, now?
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Google.
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Why would you be OK with it? It cannot and will not provide any benefit to you, but it will drive up costs. You can only be at a disadvantage. In the example provided in the summary, Netflix would pay ISPs to provide "better" service. To offset that cost, Netflix is now going to cost you extra. If your ISP is providing a crappy service, that needs to be taken up with your ISP. No bribes need to be involved in this.
Now, this is before it becomes accepted and abused, even. If this is allowed, then what do you
Re:well... (Score:5, Insightful)
No. It only ever creates a new equilibrium where your ISP's profits are higher.
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That's only true in a monopoly or oligopoly. In a competitive market, the ISP would be forced to return the money to its customers if it wants to compete with other ISPs.
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expect to pay the same rate, but get less for your money.
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Consider this hypothetical: Foo and
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Oligopoly [wikipedia.org] not just a fun word to say.
Yes indeed. Locally they are monopolies. Nationwide it is an oligopoly, and all cable providers pitch in to maintain it. Owning a money machine beats having to compete. That requires innovation and efficiency, and cuts profit margins. Corporate America hates that.
They're already paying (Score:5, Insightful)
Netflix already pays for their connections to the internet. Consumers already pay in kind for their connections. The middlemen are already making money hand over fist. They would just like to avoid playing in a free market so they can make even more money.
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s/would/will
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I am reinforcing the previous statement with my firm belief that it describes the future.
They will get their way. We will pay for it.
It might take 1, 2 or 3 administrations, but the power of money says that the big corps will kill net neutrality and abuse their duo/monopolies to kill all competition as they see fit, allowing the occasional little guy to pay them for the privilege of letting them point out that his existence proves that it's still a "market".
The difference with the soviets is that the profit
Those were the good old days! (Score:2)
Netflix should encourage every customer to call Comcast tech support. which ought to cost the company more money than it's worth. But it would still result in Netflix going out of business, Amazon shutting down their video on demand services, and Comcast finally being the only option available. We can go back to cable company monopolies like in the good old days!
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every customer to call Comcast tech support
Who will lie to them and tell them it's not Comcast's fault. See also: Sandvine.
Re:They're already paying (Score:4, Insightful)
So what? I pay my ISP for 20Mbits/s so that I can watch Netflix.
This is good for Netflix, the ISP and the consumer. The bandwidth is paid for on both ends.
The alternative is cable or dish, which is way more expensive.
The "percentage of traffic" argument is meaningless when most of that Netflix traffic is cached on Netflix provided boxes at the ISP. The last mile wires are not shared. The incremental cost to use them vs. not use them is 0. The incremental cost for the ethernet in the plant is also 0.
If it wasn't Netflix, it would be someone else. Or spread across multiple someone elses. The streaming is pulled by the viewers and the viewers are going to stream.
Re:They're already paying (Score:5, Insightful)
No, Netflix is paying a service provider for every bit of bandwith they use. If this isn't enough, their service provider should raise their fees.
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Do you really think Netflix is paying for the proportion of the internet that it uses?
Netflix pays for their end of the connection, and the users pay for the other end.
Now the ISPs (and you, apparently) want Netflix to pay for both ends of the connection while also collecting from the users.
Very simply, netflix's business strategy is to shift the cost of business to other users [...] This effectively limits the potential for competitors to develop
Wouldn't a lower cost of entry encourage competition?
pursuing more efficient means of production (more efficient transmission algorithms).
You can only compress video so much.
And none of the ISPs will let you use multicast. [wikipedia.org]
So instead, netflix will put local streaming servers [netflix.com] at ISPs to reduce their overhead.
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Re: They're already paying (Score:5, Insightful)
I have every confidence that Netflix is paying for all the bandwidth they're using, as are Netflix's subscribers. If there's congestion In-between then it's the backbone providers to upgrade, and build that into their cost structure.
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Re:They're already paying (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:They're already paying (Score:4, Insightful)
Meaning the ISPs are too cowardly to actually charge the *users* of said bandwidth, i.e., their customers. They would rather try to foist that charge off on another party with whom they have no business relationship and to whom are not providing any service, and have that other party deal with the bad PR. That's bullshit - Netflix is already paying for the bandwidth they use and has already spent a lot of money attempting to mitigate everyone's costs (via colo'd cache boxes), and if the ISP is not happy with the amount of bandwidth their customers are using, they need to charge *them* more, not Netflix. In the process they can also explain to their customers how oversubscription works, and that the new charges are a result of their own poorly-thought-out business model. Bonus points if they include information about how much they're already subsidized by the government in the form of rights-of-way, municipal franchise agreements, etc.
Given that half of all internet traffic comes from Netflix and YouTube, it's going to be a hoot when they start obtaining metrics proving their traffic is being throttled by the ISP, and providing said proof to customers that complain about the resulting sub-par video experience, and it will be trivial for them to do so. The ISPs may find their bargaining position isn't as strong as they thought if customers start cancelling or downgrading their cable/DSL subscriptions as a result.
Even trying to make it sound good? (Score:2)
Wheeler: "Say a hospital doesn't want children to die unnecessarily because they couldn't get information, maybe their ISP will charge them highway robbery to prevent your son or daughter from dying. Oh, my secretary is shaking her head at that, okay, maybe a bad example. Porn? If you don't p
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He is deliberately muddling net neutrality with QoS. They are not the same thing. It is to the benefit of the telcos that he does this. They can try to kill net neutrality by arguing that QoS is fine (which it is), rather than arguing that blocking based on traffic type is fine (which it isn't).
Startups? Go abroad (Score:2)
Between the patent wars and the ISPs soon racketing you if you want to reach customers, the US is quickly becoming a very hostile place for tech and internet startups. The big guys will buy the few who somehow make it.
Innovation, being risky, won't be favored by the remaining huge consortiums living off virtual monopolies, so any progress will have to come from abroad.
Devil's Advocate (Score:2)
Is it OK for streaming communication (YouTube, Netflix) or online gaming (StarCraft 2, FPS) to take precedence over email?
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Sure, but it's not OK for Email provider A to take precedence over provider B.
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Right. But it isn't QoS which is the problem. It is the ISP blocking based on vendor or traffic type or device. So they block your video provider in preference to their own. Or they block your choice of device in preference to their own set top box.
The other side of the coin (Score:2)
'Netflix might say, "I'll pay in order to make sure that my subscriber might receive the best possible transmission of this movie."
Verizon might also say, "We're not going to allow Netflix traffic to a subscriber in excess of 1mbit/sec, PERIOD."
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Verizon will just point out that HD (or 4k) Pay per view is a lot more reliable when they do it.
It doesn't take many "inadverterent" breaks in a movie to make people believe Netflix is garbage. Hey, look, the internet is fine, ok? Just see how good your speedtest numbers are.
Let's not just give in (Score:4, Informative)
Who know's? It might not fall on deaf ears.
Re:Let's not just give in (Score:5, Funny)
They have a special printer that prints out those petitions on toilet paper.
--
BMO
As I say whenever this topic comes up... (Score:5, Interesting)
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If I am Netflix, Google/YouTube, Amazon, etc. and an ISP comes to me asking for money for preferential treatment, I would just say: "Pay me $1/subscriber, or I will block your users from my site--you know, just like how you pay ESPN for their content..." I find it hard to believe these sites need ISPs more than ISPs need these sites.
That is precisely what will happen next. Of course, only the big players will have the guns to show down the ISPs; presto -- the big players will get best QoS and the indies wil
Re:As I say whenever this topic comes up... (Score:5, Interesting)
The BBC's iPlayer in the UK has threatened any ISP who tries this with being put on a name and shame list.
http://www.ispreview.co.uk/story/2010/11/18/bbc-system-to-name-and-shame-uk-isps-that-throttle-iplayer-broadband-traffic.html [ispreview.co.uk]
How long before this happens in the USA forcing the ISPs to back pedal and pretend nothing happened?
Hopey Changey (Score:5, Informative)
"I am in this race to tell the corporate lobbyists that their days of setting the agenda in Washington are over. I have done more than any other candidate in this race to take on lobbyists â" and won. They have not funded my campaign, they will not run my White House, and they will not drown out the voices of the American people when I am president."
-- Barack Obama, Speech in Des Moines, IA
November 10, 2007
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Every once in a while a post comes along that needs attached to the story instead of the comment section. Editors, this is just such a post.
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Im sure once he was seated in the oval office he was politely told "This is how the game works Mr. President." and promptly shut the fuck up.
What the hell? (Score:5, Insightful)
Wheeler: "Netflix might say, "I'll pay in order to make sure that my subscriber might receive the best possible transmission of this movie."
Huh, that's funny. I though I ALREADY PAID the ISP to get the best possible transmission.
Oh, I'm sorry, you wanted to buy access to ALL of the Internet? You only bought basic Internet. That simply doesn't include Netflix. But it includes Youtube now that Google ponied up some cash. You need to pay the premium rate to get Netflixs. Plus an extra surcharge for Wikipedia because they said something nasty about us once.
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>Huh, that's funny. I though I ALREADY PAID the ISP to get the best possible transmission.
You *want* video streams to have priority over non-realtime traffic across the ISP network and your last-mile though, don't you? It's generally a good thing.
How this gets worked out, and who, if anyone, makes money from doing so is another issue.
Is prioritizing one kind of traffic logically the same as de-prioritizing all other traffic?
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Oh, I'm sorry, you wanted to buy access to ALL of the Internet? You only bought basic Internet.
. . . not unlike Cable's approach to selling channel packages.
The Almighty Monopoly (Score:4, Insightful)
Information please (Score:2)
Can someone tell me how the cost of an Internet connection breaks down. As I see it there are 3 components:
I do realise that my breakdown is somewhat simplistic; net neutrality is all about the cost of (3) compared to the cost of (1)+(2). If (3) really is much greater than there might be an argument for not streaming lots of data (eg video) round the globe. If (3) is not the lion's
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That's the problem: for residential ISPs #3 is a huge cost. Since they forbid users from running servers, almost all traffic is from the rest of the world (where the servers are) to their users. That means a big imbalance of traffic at their connections to the backbones, more traffic inbound to the ISP than outbound from it. Since payment and rates are based on balance of traffic, the ISPs end up paying a lot. The ISPs aren't in a good negotiating position. Individually they're each an overwhelming chunk of
Must be wrong date (Score:2)
No way, no how! Such a thing could only have happened during a RethugliKKKan Presidency. You must've gotten the date wrong.
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A bit trollish, yes?
Progressives are under no illusion about the Democrats in general and Obama in particular being corporatist sell-outs. The complete lack of prosecutions of Wall Street by the Obama Administration says all that needs to be said to make that case.
Winning our democracy, our economy, our society back from corporate control is a daunting project, not even begun yet. I know some elements of the Tea Party agree, but are they willing to make common cause on this?
Figures this guy is a cable shill (Score:5, Insightful)
The internet already provides the viable infrastructure for on-demand video delivery, as demonstrated by the litany of devices that support Netflix playback.
The Great Recession already saw many people belt-tighten by canceling their cable TV. Subscriber numbers are in slow decline. Netflix, YouTube and Hulu are just a few content deals away from completely destroying the value proposition of cable TV for remaining subscribers. Cable companies believe their only hope of keeping that revenue from disappearing is to make sure their internet service isn't viable for video delivery. Net neutrality means they can't manage their network traffic and make netflix et al unusable for their subscribers.
Cue the new FCC chief.
Wheeler just using what he learned on K Street (Score:3)
I like my connection to discriminate (Score:4, Interesting)
While I tend to agree with most people posting and I'm generally in favor of net neutrality, I also like playing devil's advocate, looking at both sides.
My SSH connection uses about 0.001 Mbps. Latency on SSH is really annoying, because it means each time you type on key you have to wait for that letter or number to show up on the screen. So for SSH you use very, very little bandwidth, but it needs to be low latency.
Netflix is opposite - it uses up 1,000 times more bandwidth, and latency doesn't matter at all (though jitter does). During peak hours, when the ISP is 1 Mbps short of perfect performance in a certain area, does it make more sense to annoy the shit out of 500 customers using SSH and other interactive low bandwidth applications, or should the one customer's Netflix packets get queued, which he won't even notice. (The Netflix movie will just begin one second later).
Given the very real choice of annoying 500 customers who aren't asking for much bandwidth vs. an imperceptible difference in one customer's movie, I think the choice is obvious. Better to not annoy any customers by giving the interactive packets priority.
That's what I'd want my ISP to do even if both connections are mine. I'd much rather have an unnoticeable 1% quality reduction in the YouTube video I'm watching than have lost or slow packets in my SSH. I WANT my ISP to discriminate between low priority, high bandwidth sites (video) versus high priority interactive.
It might also be useful to get real and talk about what this actually means in practice. YouTube and Netflix are HALF of the traffic load. Without those two, the existing infrastructure would deliver everything else TWICE as fast. Philosophical discussions are interesting, but at the end of the day, would you rather get stuff done much, much faster and allow the cat video to buffer for 1.5 seconds?
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"YouTube and Netflix are HALF of the traffic load"
playing the advocate... if i only watch youtube or netflix... its ok for your latency of ssh to be 1.5 seconds and not mine.
really the monopolies need to upgrade the BW infrastructure but they won't
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Hey wow, someone else here actually "gets it"!
Re:I like my connection to discriminate (Score:4, Informative)
The fix for that is peering and QOS, not double billing. Double billing is just a money grab.
Shit makes me want to shoot some me of fuckers. (Score:2)
"I'll pay in order to make sure that my subscriber might receive the best possible transmission of this movie."
Why? They're already paying for the bandwidth from their massive content network.
And their clients are ALREADY paying their ISPs for "best effort" delivery.
It's the ISP's customers who are requesting the traffic in their first place. If these providers don't want to deliver best effort, their clients can (ideally) move to services that WILL.
But nooo! That'd mean that these fucking bloodsucking middlemen would have to compete solely on price and performance. Can't have that! We'll just hold everyone hos
Netflix Partners (Score:2)
Netflix is already turning this around by offering some ISPs higher quality streams for establishing partnerships.
http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2425696,00.asp [pcmag.com]
"U.S. ISPs that have signed on for Open Connect include Cablevision, Frontier, Clearwire, and Google Fiber. British Telecom, TDC, GVT, Telus, Bell Canada, Virgin, Telmex, and more have also signed up overseas. Those who sign up have the option to stream Netflix content in Super HD or 3D." Other ISPs like Verizon Communications and Time Warner Ca
Let's make it a trade (Score:5, Interesting)
You know what, sure, let's let ISPs discriminate traffic. Let's let them outright block any site that doesn't pay them enough. But in exchange, they lose their safe harbor protection.
So anyone who launches a DoS or other "attack" over that ISP? They're partially liable. After all, they could have slowed or stopped that attack.
Anyone pirates anything? Liable. If they're blocking sites for their own purpose, they can obviously block illegal downloads as well, right?
Somebody posts a threat on Facebook? Cyber-bullying? LIABLE. Fraud? LIABLE.
Basically, if it's illegal and done through an Internet connection provided by that ISP, that ISP is a co-defendant in any civil or criminal suit.
Of course, the only way for an ISP to operate in such a legal environment would be to block everything by default, and only whitelist acceptable sites. Which of course cannot include anything with user-generated content - no Facebook, no Wikipedia, no Ebay. Of the 23 sites in my bookmarks bar, the only one that probably wouldn't get blocked is Wolfram Alpha.
So sure! Let ISPs start filtering traffic - as long as they take responsibility for anything that they allow through.
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Isn't this exactly the fear? (Score:4, Insightful)
'Netflix might say, "I'll pay in order to make sure that my subscriber might receive the best possible transmission of this movie."'"
Isn't that exactly what net neutrality people are worried about? Because it's hardly a big jump from that to "pay us or your subscriber will get the worst possible transmission of a movie".
My position has always been "I am the ISP's customer. I am not the thing they sell to Netflix." If it's more expensive for the ISP to deliver me video than emails, that should be a negotiation between my ISP and me. It shouldn't be a negotiation betwen my ISP and Netflix, that I end up paying for anyway. Or even worse, that negotiation goes bad, and Netflix just sucks for me with no way for me to improve it... and my ISP tells me "but Hulu works fine... you should just switch to Hulu... trust us."
But there is no fast lane (Score:3, Informative)
Re: Great... (Score:2)
If this was expanded properly we can get the law overturned..
Just tell teabaggers that they have to pay extra to watch Rush Limbaugh and fox news over the internet as their cable company and rush haven't come to an agreement in how much rush and fox have to pay.
Everyone uses Netflix. Tell people they now have to pay three times for access to fox mews and see how long this lasts
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caches installed at Comcast locations would be a great idea, and honestly big ISPs ought to pay Netflix for hosting such things because it reduces the amount of traffic that comcast must switch outside of their network (which is part of their costs). The "pay" might be a discount for co-location that helps cover the rack space and electricity, but seems like a useful idea.
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I think it's fair. If Netflix (or any other content provider) doesn't like it - they are free to create their own network and do as they wish.
Only if the incumbent ISP will get there wires and fiber out of my paid for public right of way first. Then it would be fair. I am sure Comcast would work really well with all of that coax and fiber rolled up in their own repair yard. At that point Netflix could then go about buying up right of way for a new network.
Exactly. The incumbent ISP has the benefit of privileges granted by the pubic.
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Maybe you should call Time Warner's help line. By the time you get to talk to someone, your download will be done. They're very helpful that way.
(sorry, couldn't resist. :-)
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15TW = 15,000 Nuclear Reactors. (Approx. one accident a month.)
Just a comment about your curious sig: what does it mean?
World electrical production averages 2.3TW, 1/7 of the strange number you cite.
Your accident rate is apparently one per 1250 reactor-years. Given that "accident" is undefined your rate could be anything at all, counting worker injury incidents I am sure the rate is far higher than you propose.
If you mean a major accident with serious consequences, the current rate for the 436 power reactors currently in operation appears to be about 12 times less freq