PSA: Comcast Doesn't Really Support Net Neutrality (slate.com) 144
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Slate: Anyone who has ever paid a bill to or waited for customer service from Comcast knows why it is one of America's most detested companies, its recent efforts to improve its image notwithstanding. While Comcast says its customers will "enjoy strong net neutrality protections," it hasn't explicitly said it won't offer paid prioritization, which is how the company would most likely monetize its new ability to legally muck with internet traffic. In other words, Comcast might not choke or slow service to any website, but it could speed access to destinations that pay for the priority service. The company's promises should sound familiar. As Jon Brodkin pointed out in Ars Technica on Monday, back when the FCC was crafting the network neutrality rules in 2014, Comcast said it had no plans to enact paid prioritization, either. "We don't prioritize Internet traffic or have paid fast lanes, and have no plans to do so," a Comcast executive wrote in a blog post that year.
But Comcast's line has changed in an important way. In a comment to the FCC from earlier this year, the company said it is time for the FCC to adopt a "more flexible" approach to paid prioritization, and noted in a blog post at the time that the FCC should consider net neutrality principles that prevent "no anticompetitive paid prioritization." In other words, not necessarily all paid prioritization. The inclusion of "anti-competitive" could signal that the company does in fact hope to offer fast-lane service, but at the same price for all. And it might be a price that say, Fox News and the New York Times can afford, but one that smaller outlets can't. That Comcast's language is changing is one reason to distrust its promises regarding net neutrality, but its track record is an even bigger one. The company has been caught red-handed lying about its traffic discrimination in the past. In 2007, for example, when Comcast was found intermittently blocking users' ability to use BitTorrent, the company made numerous false claims about its network interference before finally admitting its bad behavior and halting the disruptions.
But Comcast's line has changed in an important way. In a comment to the FCC from earlier this year, the company said it is time for the FCC to adopt a "more flexible" approach to paid prioritization, and noted in a blog post at the time that the FCC should consider net neutrality principles that prevent "no anticompetitive paid prioritization." In other words, not necessarily all paid prioritization. The inclusion of "anti-competitive" could signal that the company does in fact hope to offer fast-lane service, but at the same price for all. And it might be a price that say, Fox News and the New York Times can afford, but one that smaller outlets can't. That Comcast's language is changing is one reason to distrust its promises regarding net neutrality, but its track record is an even bigger one. The company has been caught red-handed lying about its traffic discrimination in the past. In 2007, for example, when Comcast was found intermittently blocking users' ability to use BitTorrent, the company made numerous false claims about its network interference before finally admitting its bad behavior and halting the disruptions.
I'd pay extra to not compete with Netflix bingers (Score:2)
So what. I also pay more for a 1 gig connection. Once I bother to get some 10gig cards I'll get 10gig internet
Re: (Score:2)
Re:I'd pay extra to not compete with Netflix binge (Score:4, Insightful)
Everything you said can and does happen under current "net neutrality" regulation. Yeah, I wish there were laws that prohibited ISPs from oversubscribing a neighborhood -- I hate that my available bandwidth takes a nose dive every night at 6 when all the neighbors start Netflixing.
Re: (Score:2)
And Google/Netflix/whoever paid their ISP for an insane amount of bandwidth as well. Why should they have to pay Comcast?
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Netflix in particular has driven the need to massively increase bandwidth across the whole internet. The rest of the internet is subsidizing their business, in effect. That's not exactly fair, either.
That entire arguments hings on the idea that it is somehow fair to oversell bandwidth.
Since selling things you can't deliver is fraudulent to begin with it doesn't hold.
Re: (Score:3)
Power and water are not sold like that. I don't pay a flat rate for an advertised 30A power supply to my house on the assumption that my average will be 300mA and that I'll burst to 30A, I pay for the amount that I consume. The same for water.
This typically isn't done for network connections, because the cost of providing the service is not proportional to how much you use, it's proportional to the peak load on the network. At off-peak times, there's no extra cost if you allow someone to saturate thei
Re: (Score:2)
Do providers still sell unlimited plans any more? Here [xfinity.com] is Comcast page for getting internet. Notice it says "An XFINITY Internet Data Usage Plan may apply," and nowhere mentions unlimited.
The GGPP says "That entire arguments hings on the idea that it is somehow fair to oversell bandwidth. Since selling things you can't deliver is fraudulent to begin with it doesn't hold." But they are delivering it. How many people are being sold unlimited internet and are being charged more for going over an imaginary limi
Re: (Score:3)
How is this Netflix's problem? It's Comcast's problem if their users are requesting more data than they can handle. Why should Netflix pay anything? In fact, if Comcast wasn't already an incumbent near monopoly, they would be having to pay someone else for a pipe big enough to download all the data their users wanted. Just because they happen to be considered a tier one peer on the internet shouldn't allow them to pull so much data without paying for it. They're just lucky they got grandfathered into a
Re: (Score:2)
The internet has never worked that way.
The actual problem is Netflix's ISP(s). They have an obligation to exchange equal amounts of traffic with Comcast or pay for the excess coming from their network towards Comcast's. THIS is how the internet has always worked.
I find it amazing that you think Netflix should get free internet. Are there any other large companies that should get free internet access?
Re: (Score:2)
I find it amazing that you think Netflix should get free internet.
You might be reading a reply that I didn't see, because I didn't see anyone claim that Netflix should get free internet. You better believe that the Netflix data centers are hooked up to multiple backbones and that Netflix is paying quite a bit for all of that infrastructure. They're already paying for bandwidth, so why should they be made to pay twice? They're already paying to send their data out, you also want them to pay to get their data the rest of the way to individual customers, where they have t
Re: (Score:1)
I wasn't replying to you. I was replying to the person saying this " Why should Netflix pay anything?"
Moreover, Netflix can hook into all the backbones they want. The issue is when the traffic from one backbone provider to another network far exceeds the traffic FROM that network, and it's a settlement free link.
Try to realize that providers also have to pay each other - either with equal traffic exchange (settlement free peering) or money (paid peering).
The idea that an ISP should have unlimited bandwidt
Re: (Score:2)
When they said why should Netflix pay anything, that would be why should they pay anything other than their own connectivity. Obviously they pay a tremendous amount of money right now for infrastructure, if you're assuming that someone is arguing that Netflix should stop paying for their multiple data centers and multiple backbone connections then I think you're missing the point.
The idea that an ISP should have unlimited bandwidth into another ISP's network effectively makes that first ISP a reseller of the second.
OK. That also has nothing to do with Netflix though. Netflix isn't an ISP. What you're talking about is between the different
Re: (Score:1)
The problem arises when Netflix's ISP (Cogent) won't pay for the added bandwidth they want from Comcast. The links congest and Netflix plays the victim before finally buying transit directly on Comcast's network or, even dumber, paying Comcast to add capacity to the CogentComcast connection.
Why didn't Netflix complain to their ISPs (Level 3 and Cogent) about their lack of bandwidth to Comcast? It was their responsibility to get Netflix what they paid for.
Re: (Score:2)
If Comcast's network doesn't have the bandwidth to handle Netflix then that sucks for Comcast's customers, but that's not really Netflix's problem. Comcast just needs to tell their customers that they won't be able to use Netflix, or Netflix can show a warning to Comcast IPs that their ISP sucks, and then their customers can go to another ISP if they want to watch Netflix. If Comcast does have the bandwidth, but they just don't want to give it away for free without extorting Netflix even though their own
Re: (Score:1)
If Cogent's network doesn't have the bandwidth, that sucks for their customer Netflix.
I fail to see why you think Comcast should give Netflix (or Cogent) bandwidth for free. Are there other companies that should get free bandwidth? I'd love to be able to do this. I get free access to the network that you all pay for AND I get to charge you for my services. Sounds like a win.
Re: (Score:2)
If Cogent's network doesn't have the bandwidth then Netflix needs another ISP, end of story. But we both know there's a difference between a network having the bandwidth and the carrier wanting to extract as much money from as many people as possible even though their network is not at capacity.
I fail to see why you think Comcast should give Netflix (or Cogent) bandwidth for free.
I fail to see why you think that's my position.
Re: (Score:2)
Fuck off you no-class low-standards constantly-lying multiple-personality delusional racist shitbag. You're not worth the time it took to type this.
Re: (Score:2)
Why do they have to pay your provider also?
Oh, they won't. Netflix will raise your bill. You'll be paying your ISP 2x to receive the same data.
Re: (Score:2)
I'm not saying Netflix should get free internet. I'm saying they should get paid by Comcast! Along with Google and Facebook, and all of the other content providers on the internet.
You are wrong about the internet. Peering was traditionally a non-counted flow. If it was unbalanced then no one really cared. Customers have always paid for incoming bandwidth. The failure of obligation here is with Comcast - they are failing to provide content for Netflix (or rather Netflix's ISP). They are no longer a pe
Re: (Score:1)
I'm not saying Netflix should get free internet. I'm saying they should get paid by Comcast! Along with Google and Facebook, and all of the other content providers on the internet.
Yes, everyone's ISP bill should go sky high because some people want to use Google, Facebook, and/or Netflix.
Good god.
You are wrong about the internet. Peering was traditionally a non-counted flow. If it was unbalanced then no one really cared. Customers have always paid for incoming bandwidth. The failure of obligation here is wi
Re: (Score:3)
Netflix in particular has driven the need to massively increase bandwidth across the whole internet. The rest of the internet is subsidizing their business, in effect. That's not exactly fair, either.
Considering the fact that people pay for the bandwidth they use to view Netflix content and Netflix pays for their bandwidth to the internet backbone it's hardly what you'd call "unfair". All we're really talking about here is the same problem that caused ISPs to throttle torrents back in the day, them overselling their bandwidth and then having people actually use way more of that bandwith than they had anticipated.
Thus all it really boils down to is business miscalculations made by managers at ISPs...
Re: (Score:1)
I'm astounded by how myopic so many people are on this issue.
Apparently if Netflix pays their ISP, then it ends there. Their ISP should have unlimited bandwidth towards another ISP.
Gee, what are the long term consequences of that?
Every network pays the networks they connect to. Some do it with money, others with mutually beneficial, and equal, traffic exchange.
Netflix pays/paid Cogent (and later Level3) who had settlement free interconnections with Comcast. The traffic FROM Cogent's network far exceeded
Re: (Score:2)
I'm astounded by how myopic so many people are on this issue.
So expecting ISP's to actually be able to deliver what they've already sold to people is somehow being myopic?
If they can't deliver what they've sold people they either need to be honest with people about not being able to actually deliver what they promised or make the investments necessary so that they can deliver what they've already sold to their customers. It's that simple. The deal between Netflix's ISP and Comcast isn't any different. If what's actually going on isn't what they agreed upon then th
Re: (Score:2)
Netflix in particular has driven the need to massively increase bandwidth across the whole internet. The rest of the internet is subsidizing their business, in effect. That's not exactly fair, either.
Uh, no. Netflix pays it's ISPs to send data to users. Users pay their ISP to receive data - from Netflix, and other places. Anything else is double dipping.
The result of this isn't a transfer of profits from Netflix to Comcast. Oh no. Netflix will raises prices. This is just a way of Comcast double-charging YOU the consumer. You pay your bill, and also pay to receive certain other services. In case you felt the $179 a month you are paying Comcast is unfair to them.
Re: (Score:1)
Netflix's ISP pays my ISP and/or vice versa to interconnect. They usually just forgo monetary payment and agree to exchange equal amounts of data.
Others, usually smaller regional ISPs will pay money and have a specific connection level and SLA they are entitled to.
The problem is when Netflix's ISP doesn't want to pay my (or your) ISP for connectivity or they have a settlement free link they are congesting in one direction.
My ISP is not obligated to give another ISP (or user) unlimited bandwidth for free.
Not how it works. (Score:2)
If you pay for a one gig connection then you should get a one gig connection. How and why are you sharing your one gig connection with Netflix bingers? This isn't about how much an end user is paying for Internet service. As you said, you can already pay more for faster Internet. This is about ISPs offering you a service "Internet connection at X speed" and then not delivering that because they do not deliver the entire Internet at the same speed. The are selling you something more like a cable package, whe
Re: (Score:1)
The alternative to that is to let the #1s stay #1s leaving #2s further behind. Take Google for example. Net Neutrality increases Google's profits. If a Google competitor wants to purchase premium transmission service to the consumer, then Google is forced to do so too to compete. By having to also purchase premium access Google is worse off than if no one was offered the premium service in the first place -- which is what NN dictates. By eating away Google's profits, lack of NN slows Google down.
I'd rather
Re: (Score:2)
Funny, what I described is how it works in most of the rest of the world. We don't have a shared bandwidth model, unless we are talking cable, and then yeah, your bandwidth is shared by everyone on your cable segment. But if I buy a 1GB fiber connection to the Internet, then that 1GB is not shared. And the ISP should have enough capacity that they can guarantee that bandwidth across their network. Yes, I know ISPs oversell their capacity by a certain percent but that is because not everyone will be sucking
Re: (Score:1)
If you are on residential fiber, like fios/google fiber, you can absolutely bet that the upstream aggregation points are oversubscribed. You and 100 other houses could easily be aggregated on a switch with two to eight 10gb uplinks.
If you are on a business MetroE ring, you are quite likely oversubscribed.
In fact, unless you have a direct connection to your ISP's core, you are on an oversubscribed node, it's just a matter of degree.
Re: (Score:2)
No one is denying that residential is oversubscribed, what exactly is your point though?
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Across my ISP's network, obviously they don't control traffic on the wider Internet and have no say in how much bandwidth content providers purchase. But if I buy X speed from them, I expect X speed in and out on a fairly regular basis. A little bit of slow down here and there is okay, I know ISPs sell more bandwidth to endpoints than they have in connections to tier 3 backbone providers.
Re: (Score:1)
Sounds like you want a business internet connection. Be prepared to pay $2000+/mo for that 1 gig connection.
Re: (Score:2)
You're getting ripped off big time. Like, by a factor of 10.
Re: (Score:1)
Really? Business class 1gb internet for $200?
Where is this at?
Re: (Score:2)
If you think that "business class" is some sort of value-add, I think I know why you're getting ripped off. Internet service should always be reliable regardless of where it's going.
Also, Phoenix.
It's not exactly 200, it would have been more correct to say an order of magnitude. It's less than 400 though.
Re: (Score:1)
You seem to think that your opinion on how things 'should' be matters to anyone else.
Maybe I should have clarified and said Dedicated Internet Access (which is what OP will need if they want 1gb all the time regardless of other users).
DIA/Business class internet offerings from major providers have much better SLAs, better/actual bandwidth guarantees, ability to run BGP and advertise allocated netblocks, etc.
Re: (Score:2)
I'm a network administrator for the State of New Mexico and have been since the days of leased T1 lines. I know more about business class connections than you seem to.
Re: (Score:1)
Yeah, it really shows. Please tell us more how residential and business internet connections are not subject to different SLAs, oversubscription to the core, etc.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
ISPs should automatically make caching servers available for services like Netflix, or rack space, if that makes sense. (Advertisements should be designed to be one of the first things cached.
They do, it's just that Netflix didn't want to pay for that either. Every other content generator either pays for transit or uses a CDN that does the same. I don't see why Netflix or another company should get free access to an ISPs network.
Re: (Score:3)
Again, an ISP a service you're paying for connectivity. As a business, monitor your backbone and if you need to replace your switch faster with more/redundant switches, decrease switch planned replacement periods and if that makes you unprofitable, increase monthly rates. But that's not what they're doing. They want to carve up the internet and sell your personal data.
T
Re: (Score:3)
Killing Net Neutrality will allow the communications cabal (AT&T/Comcast/Verizon) to say-"Oh! You want netflix, now you have to buy an -entertainment bundle- to visit that site". Or the "sports bundle" if you want to watch ESPN stream. They really want to turn the internet into "packages" like they've done with cable TV. The difference here is that ESPN & HBO on the cable side license their content and charge s
Re: (Score:2)
You kind-of just made his point for him. goodjob.
Re: (Score:3)
What kind of moron thought they did? (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
It's in the exact same section where the founding fathers directed the FCC to classify telephone service as a common carrier because they determined that it was a fundamental necessity to modern life and that the government would be failing the people if they didn't make protections to ensure that everyone has the necessities. It's in that section.
If you can't find that section, it's right by the section that dictates that cable companies and ISPs should operate in a de-facto monopoly where there is no real
Re:Obama era executive action entitlement gone wro (Score:5, Informative)
You realize that in a market with hugely, bigly asymmetrical power, letting 'the market' decide is just another way of saying "let the megacorps run roughshod over their customers" right?
Because that is precisely what will happen. Comcast knows that for a large number of their customers they have no viable alternative. And they *WILL* act accordingly. The same is true for every other ISP. There's a bit of competition with the cellular service providers; but if they all take a page from the "being an evil dickbag company" handbook -- competition won't matter in the least.
there are only two things that keep companies honest:
1. regulators with actual testicles and teeth
2. competition.
Comcast has never had one of those, and is on the precipice of doing away with the other.
Remember this is Comcast (Score:4)
So yes, they are lying. What did you expect?
Re: (Score:2)
My experience with Comcast included the following:
I had 8 techs come out sequentially on one call, each exclaiming 'what the hell was going on here?!?' before completely changing the entire direction/type of repair. Each said it was fixed but someone else would be out to finish up. They took 6 months and for 2.5yr now there are still temporary metal covers on several holes in the street outside they made.
Re: (Score:2)
What's the diff? It sounds the same. So not good. (Score:1)
Choking network traffic means some traffic being favored, faster over the others.
Offering a priority lane means some traffic being favored, faster over the others.
What's the difference? It sounds the same to me, and I find that disturbing.
It sounds like Comcast is saying they will throttle traffic but they will give it a positive name so that it doesn't sound bad.
I suppose that is the difference. One sounds bad. One sounds good. But they amount to the same thing being done.
What happens if they slow done eve
Re: (Score:2)
The typical way to do all of that is through QoS settings.
A "fast lane" and "slow lane" does not mean data flows at different rates through the routers or the network. It means that when many streams of data are coming through and the router must decide which one is processed first, it will give priority to one over the other. QoS settings also go under the name "traffic shaping",
The difference is subtle, but enough that marketers, PR folk, and political statements leverage it.
Thus they can say that the
No shit (Score:3, Insightful)
"Comcast Doesn't Really Support Net Neutrality"
No shit...what was your first clue, Captain Obvious?
This is a given, but not a big deal (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I wonder if I'm close enough to the US Border to use their satellite-based services. (about 40km).
Re: (Score:2)
There's a difference between being physically able to use a service and being allowed to use a service, unfortunately...
Re: This is a given, but not a big deal (Score:2)
Other Breaking News... (Score:2)
- The Sun to Rise in the East.
- Bears Found to Defecate in the Woods.
- Pope Makes Surprise Announcement "I am a practicing Catholic."
Internet will be like cable tv soon (Score:2)
Once the dust settles, and the ISPs have the keys to the kingdom, then they will see what bad bargain they have wrou
Bandwidth is finite. (Score:2)
Comcast might not choke or slow service to any website, but it could speed access to destinations that pay for the priority service.
Unless they're running their network through the TARDIS, bandwidth is finite, so prioritizing some traffic de-prioritizes (or slows) other traffic. Can't really have it both ways at the same time.
Re: (Score:1)
Unless they're running their network through the TARDIS, bandwidth is finite, so prioritizing some traffic de-prioritizes (or slows) other traffic. Can't really have it both ways at the same time.
Same applies for electricity: wires will only carry a certain amount of current. I would still not want the electricity company to turn off my lights whenever my neighbor wants to cook. If there isn't enough capacity, Comcast needs to extend the networks to deal with the capacities they sell to end users rather than "prioritize traffic". But with net neutrality gone, they have much more to profit from by making people pay for bandwidth musical chairs instead of investing into broadband.
Re: (Score:2)
It might be better to think of it as being more like a pipe than a wire: Not only is there a limited amount that can go through, some things can really clog up the line.
What I actually would like here is if I could pick how my bandwidth got prioritized--I want to be able to happily stream something to watch after I've started a massive update downloading. If I'm on a small pipe, that's not something I get now; the thing that started first comes through first unless the program I'm using lets me manually ca
Bottom Comment (Score:2)
It strikes me as odd that Comcast would even bother sending its paid trolls to Slashdot, but apparently they do.
Positive Fast Lanes (Score:2)
I wonder if ISPs could do something positive with paid prioritization. For example, mom has a 5Mb/sec connection for email and Facebook, but now she wants HD Netflix. Instead of having to upgrade to a higher tier of internet speed, she can keep her 5Mb because Netflix has paid the ISP for a 'speed boost' up to 25Mb/sec, for all customers no matter how slow their connection. That is, Netflix data comes in at 25Mb but everything else comes in at 5Mb. Could be useful for 4k/8k/VR streaming, where people wouldn
Re: (Score:2)
I wonder if ISPs could do something positive with paid prioritization.
Here's what it does: allows them to monetize an existing resource without any additional investment. The Holy Grail for all corporations.
Netflix (Score:1)
We already have this (Score:2)
This. Is. SLASHDOT! (Score:1)
Seriously, it should be a trollfarm test - do you post in favor on eliminating net neutrality? If yes, you are Comcast/Russian paid troll and I claim my $5!
The Comcast formula for increased profits (Score:2)
.
Re: (Score:2)
You realise your conduct on slashdot makes your product look like it was developed by someone unhinged, right? Probably not, as you keep doing it. "Buy my software! Fund my delusions! I might even call you a cocksucker!"
Re: (Score:3)
You realise your conduct on slashdot makes your product look like it was developed by someone unhinged, right?
You realize that he literally is completely unhinged, right? It's not that his product looks like it was developed by someone unhinged, it actually was. Have you ever seen a single developer put "++" in their version number? He likes to make his stuff look more impressive than it actually is (this is a text sorting program that makes HTTP requests and writes to a file).
Just wait, he'll be along in no time to post a completely unhinged reply to this. AI is going to become self-aware long before APK ever
Re: (Score:2)
OK, APK. Your program has 1 moving part and you're on version 10 now. Congratulations. I see you bumped up to a new major version and dropped all the service release hand waving after I criticized your ridiculous naming scheme. You still can't quit that "++" nonsense though, got to keep that character count up somehow.
Re: (Score:2)
APK, you are a loser lying racist spamming shitbag and I have no time for you or your racist lying bullshit. Find someone who doesn't know who you are to spread your lies and bullshit.