New Legislation Could Eventually Lead to ISP Throttling Ban 191
An anonymous reader writes "Comcast's response to the FCC may have triggered a new avenue of discussion on the subject of Net Neutrality. Rep. Ed Markey (D — Mass.), who chairs the House Subcommittee on Telecommunications and the Internet, introduced a bill yesterday whose end result could be the penalization of bandwidth throttling to paying customers. 'The bill, tentatively entitled the Internet Freedom Preservation Act of 2008, would not actually declare throttling illegal specifically. Instead, it would call upon the Federal Communications Commission to hold a hearing to determine whether or not throttling is a bad thing, and whether it has the right to take action to stop it.'"
What about the other end? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:What about the other end? (Score:5, Insightful)
Most likely they'll say "LOL sounds like a FTC issue to us, I don't think we have the right to do anything, take your complaint to..." and then give you directions to the wrong place in true bureaucratic style.
Re:What about the other end? (Score:5, Informative)
Any limit imposed should be clearly defined, and i would gladly pay extra for a true unlimited connection. It should also be mandatory to declare any contention up front too, like "you have an 8mb link to a 800mb backbone, which has up to 200 users so you're connection could drop to 4mb during busy periods". Customers should know exactly what service they're paying for.
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Ha ha. If only. How about "you have an 8 MB link to a 1 GB backbone, which has up to 20000 users so you're connection could drop to 50 K during busy periods".
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Re:What about the other end? (Score:5, Insightful)
Personally, I find it shameful that a new law has to be passed that essentially says "you know those silly old truth in advertising laws? Well just this once, we've decided to actually enforce them once in a while".
Perhaps I'm just old school or something, but at one time, any network connection would have a committed rate, burstable (or not) and an SLA. What "broadband" provides these days is 0 bps committed rate burstable to 1-6 Mbps and practically no uptime guarantee. What they *advertise* is clearly meant to make the customer believe it's 6Mbps committed with 0 downtime.
This business of metering transfer rather than rate is for the most part a scam to make the customer think they're getting a lot more than they actually are. 1 Gigabyte of transfer sounds like a lot to people but actually translates to a rate of 3 Kbps (Yes, not even 9600 baud) and skips over discussing factors such as uplinks oversold by a factor of well more than 100 and the various dirty tricks to keep you from actually using the bandwidth you're paying for.
The ugly part is that because there has been practically no enforcement of truth in advertising, even companies that may WANT to be truthful are forced to either lie or get out of the market. If you advertise LIMITED service, even if the limits are actually higher than the secret limits of the competing "unlimited" service (and no dirty tricks to keep the customer from actually reach the limits) you will go out of business.
When ISPs say that net neutrality will bring the network down, what they really mean is that they will be forced to actually admit that they've oversold their uplink, the poor performance really IS their network, not some anonymous "out on the net" problem and they won't be able to double dip by charging two parties full price for carrying the very same packet.
Meanwhile, all of this sweeping under the rug has prevented market forces from applying downward pressure on the price of real committed bandwidth and forcing a more appropriate balance of price vs. SLA which is why we're supplying 0 SLA home broadband with expensive five nines uplinks rather than several dirt cheap three nines uplinks in spite of TCP/IP being designed to support it.
The big incumbants do NOT want the market to go that way because it would lower barriers to entry and force them to work harder for their revenue.
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Mod 2 members should be given the ability to save a mod point or two for posts like these.
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So true, and look at what these monopolistic pigs are doing with their earnings instead of improving infrastructure:
"Comcast Corp. saw its shares jum
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But throttling the speed just because they CAN is not the way to go. It's just a way to ask for upset users.
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P2P traffic has the lowest priority, but i can still max out my line during the night.
Things like VOIP have the highest priority, so it works even during busy periods...
SSH etc has a middling priority, which gets reduced if a connection is using a lot of traffic (ie bulk transfers via scp rather than an interactive shell)...
HTTP also has a middling priority, but it gets reduced for bulk transfers just the same, so the first few mb will go fast, then it sl
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If you bothered to read his post instead of spewing inane invective, you'd see that by advertising the contention rate, you'd have enough information to be able to subscribe to an ISP where you don't have to put up with "bandwidth hogs".
Funny, though, if you're not using the bandwidth, then I don't see where it hurts for someone else to be using the bandwidth, and frankly neither does the ISP, since that's how they justify over-subscription in the first place.
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Honesty in this regard would allow more competition from companies who really do offer unlimited usage, since their claims wouldn't be mu
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Wait...the post you're responding to doesn't really make a point that's relevant to TFA. TFA is about ISPs throttling bandwidth to customers, not servers throttling bandwidth to a particular endpoint. These are totally different things.
If I'm hosting a server and I throttle the number of requests I'll respond to from a particular IP, (IP range, etc), that's just part of how my app is working. If the end user is paying me for a particular service then these kinds of terms are determined by that agreement
Re:What about the other end? (Score:5, Insightful)
Personally, as the operator of a hosting provider, and as a consumer, I see both sides of the argument. As a customer, I enjoy the opportunity to use VoD, VoIP, etc... but as a provider, I understand the occasional need to apply certain limitations in order to protect the customer and the network.
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Whatever happened to "quality of service"? I see no ethical problems with detecting torrents and running them at a lower priority, for example, so that they're still perfectly usable but don't overwhelm more interactive activities like web browsing. Everyone seems to be so into imposing quotas when there seem to be more customer-friendly and provider-friendly solutions.
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There's currently nothing to restrict Comcast (used as an example, as they're the current whipping boy) from throttling, say, all media downloads, except for those originating at their own premium servers.
Or, more pointedly, there's nothing to prevent them from throttling (or QoSing into the backwater) everything from every source except those who have paid to not> be throttled, in a way reminiscent only of old-schoo
net neutrality (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:net neutrality (Score:5, Interesting)
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* I don't know what the actual names are and they all are DBA Comcast.
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Re: Acronyms (Score:4, Funny)
IANABDCWLOPLIW?
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Hardly. Draw up a bill with a fancy new name (suggesting to me there's something irrelevant that we don't want passed stuck in there as well) that will only accomplish forcing the
Nah (Score:2)
yes, listening... or bribing (Score:2)
Possibly. The question for me is... why did this come up in the middle of a wider net neutrality debate? Granted, the two are (vaguely) related -- in the way that bike theft statistics are related to the number of bikes you can fit on a road, perhaps.
However, it sounds to me like they're trying to bribe netizens into giving up long-term goals like net neutrality in exchange for getting a relatively small gripe-of-the-moment issue re
Oh for Christ's Sake! (Score:2)
say [slashdot.org]
it [slashdot.org]
again [slashdot.org]!
CERTAINLY NOT THAT EDWARD MARKEY! Jeez, I bet Chris [dubfire.net] Soghoian [wikipedia.org] thinks this is just special!
The end reult will be... (Score:2)
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Either way, I'd much rather have the option to pay for it.
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It doesn't really work that way, the cost of provide a given amount of bandwidth is fixed for the most part. Comcast is an exception, I think they purchase bandwidth from a backbone provider so the may occasionally be some peaking charges for them for going over, but for the most part if they buy 1TBs of backbone bandwidth they pay whether we use it or not. Frequently these guy engage in peering agree
Which is worse? (Score:4, Insightful)
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I think the solution here is for each community to own and run the lines, then let companies lease access to them.
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Why should I be regulated but not Comcast?
Re:Which is worse? (Score:4, Insightful)
1. Comcast will just move to a tiered plan. Expect chronic users to pay 100-200 dollars and month and people metering their usage to they dont hit the limit. Casual downloaders will pay the current price.
2. Any shaping will lead to potential lawsuits. Suddenly your VOIP wont work as well because bitorrent has the same priority as VoIP. Whoops!
3. Lots of lawsuits. Did your webhost or email provider "shape" your packets in any way?
4. QoS dies because everyone legal department decides its too much of a risk to continue to use.
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1. Comcast will just move to a tiered plan. Expect chronic users to pay 100-200 dollars and month and people metering their usage to they dont hit the limit. Casual downloaders will pay the current price.
It's better to have the option to cut back or pay more than to get cut off for "abuse" with no viable alternative.
2. Any shaping will lead to potential lawsuits. Suddenly your VOIP wont work as well because bitorrent has the same priority as VoIP. Whoops!
And then someone who is willing to provide
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Then you can do what they did, claim no limit, give no limit for a short time, then defraud your customers by adding in an undefined limit and lying about it. That's not fraud, that's good business, right? After all, if they get tired of your fraud, they can always just go somewhere else with prom
Re:Which is worse? (Score:5, Insightful)
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A natural oligopoly?
A choice between two equally-oppressive ISPs is not a choice.
No, it's because there's a phone line and a cable line going to every house
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Re:Which is worse? (Score:5, Insightful)
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I can do without cable; in fact, I am doing without it. I still have more than twice as many channels as I did when I was a kid, and I grew up in a major city and am now in a small city.
But gasoline is something I can't do without. It's now over three times what I was paying when oil men Bush and Cheney took over. Food, natural gas, water, electricity have all gone
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Hmm... (Score:2)
So they're asking a government agency whether or not it has authority over something (how said authority will be used is a separate matter, of course). Gee, I wonder what the
This is wrong. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:This is wrong. (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:This is wrong. - mod parent up (Score:2)
The answer for every little squabble is NOT to introduce new legislation. If Comcast continues to punish customers, it is the opportunity for other ISPs to step in. Let the free market punish them back.
Unless it is a case of a monopoly that has spun out of control, the free market is a better solution than government intervention.
You said it. (Score:5, Insightful)
And yes, it is a monopoly which has spun out of control. Or rather, an oligopoly.
How many ISPs do you have to choose from? Unless I go dialup, I've got exactly three. Fortunately, one of them claims to believe in net neutrality, and they're the one offering fiber, but that's extremely unusual. Unless you're prepared to move to where I live (a small town in Iowa), chances are, your only real option to "let the market decide" or to "vote with your dollars" is to decide that you don't really need this Internet thing anyway.
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Ditto. And all three are so cross pollinated with former staff from the others they might as well be the same company.
In my area, the principle provider is AT&T (formerly, Bellsouth). Late in the '90's, the cable company MediaOne was bought by Comcast, which was later bought by AT&T, then re-spun off again as Comcast. A lot of the AT&T management moved to the newly re-structured Comcast. EarthLink's curr
Re:This is wrong. (Score:5, Insightful)
Instead the telecoms said thank you and blocked competitors. Remember the amount of ISP's you could chose from back in the 90's compared to today? My point exactly.
You have 2 ISP's. DSL or cable and both throttle your traffic.
So what are you supposed to do?
Re:This is wrong. (Score:5, Insightful)
There are some problems the Government actually is capable of solving better then the market. The market in this case dictates that throttling is good for the bottom line, and ending net neutrality is even better for the bottom line.
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I'm not necessarily for government controlled (last-mile) infrastructure, but the government needs to at least mandate competition-- maybe force unbundling of competitive services for cable and DSL/FTTH and just give us the pipe, er... tu
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The ideas Adam Smith put forth in The Wealth of Nations with regards to unregulated capitalism actually work, as they built not only our country, but the wealth of the western world. Das Kapital doesn't have the same track record.
Re:This is wrong. (Score:4, Insightful)
If there was competition in the marketplace, I'd agree with you. But alas, I don't even have the option between DSL and cable, let alone FTTH. I get a choice between Charter Communications cable and dial-up (most likely long-distance), which isn't exactly a competing service.
Granted I live in a pretty small town, but that doesn't change the fact that my options are cable and no connectivity. I don't even get enough cell signal at home to have EDGE be my only source of web access, as painful as that option would be were it an option.
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Bandwidth throttling (Score:2)
The problem, in my opinion anyway, isn't bandwidth throttling per say. It's *selective* throttling of certain protocols. That's tantamount to censorship.
What they should do, providing they don't actually have enough capacity to guarantee the bandwidths they sell, is clearly specify a minimum guaranteed bandwidth (in absence of equipment failure) and a percentage of time that the rated bandwidth is typically available. E.g. "10 Mbps connection (min 2Mbps, full 10Mbps available 90% of the time)". It would b
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If you don't want the government to become involved, then you need to get federal laws changed so individuals (not just an attorney general) have the legal standing to bring anti-trust cases against companies.
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The smaller ISPs will have less coverage, and be more expensive. And many people will find themselves in areas only served by the large providers.
Depend on how much you pay (Score:3, Informative)
We have had the same ISP for years and never had any trouble, we pay for the fastest broadband available which is £40 per month. It changed hands (I will not repeat the name) and now we are throttled, but it is called an AUP. We do not download that much and many "name not mentioned" ISP customers have had exactly the same problem!
They even got found out!
My point is, they are making a public show when they are (or will) do it anyway... just with a nicer name than "throttling", Acceptable Use Policy is much nicer sounding, it really fools us Brits!
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FCC ? (Score:5, Insightful)
First, giving the FCC more discretionary authority is not a good thing to do. They are very receptive to lobbying (broadcast flag, mandatory DRM ...) and industry corruption (employees that leave directly to cushy jobs in the industry they were supposedly regulating just recently). Secondly, I'm not sure where the Federal interest is in regulating businesses -- that the internet as a whole is international?
This is really a contract issue. If their TOS promise "unlimited bandwidth" then they should provide that. If the TOS say "we connect you to the internet" they should not be able to block random ports. And sending fake packets is already a computer crime (at least, if I sent fake packets to Comcast servers I would probably be charged with attempted DOS or something). So I would support a "contact terms mean what they mean" law -- not giving the FCC more discretion to help the industry to screw the customers.
Re:FCC ? (Score:5, Insightful)
If you just say that it has to be in the contract, then Comcast will change the contract in the next billing cycle. Because they have a monopoly/duopoly, the market cannot correct it.
If the FCC does the wrong thing, Congress can overrule them. But if you leave it to Comcast to change its contract, that's exactly what it will do, and we will be screwed.
not sure where the Federal interest is (Score:3, Informative)
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I think it's pretty well established that when you're dealing with abusive monopolies, contracts mean "bend over, spread cheeks" for the average consumer. I don't think you want that made into a law.
c.
Related Stories (Score:2)
Colleges as ISPs? (Score:2, Interesting)
That's going to really suck.
File sharing eats a very large majority of bandwidth for many colleges and without some form of throttling access to resources for other purposes (e.g. college business, student research, and incoming traffic to college resources like websites and distributed computing services) would be seriously hindered.
If Comcast is h
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I'm not against making it metered, and as I understand it, neither is this bill. The bill is mostly just asking the FCC to take a look at the situation...
So tell the students: "You have x gigs of bandwi
Video on Demand competition (Score:3, Insightful)
hmm (Score:2, Informative)
So, they don't block any content? That doesn't seem consistent with their terms of service [comcast.net] (interesting parts bolded by me):
Does there need to be another law? (Score:2)
...when a politician('s kid) is affected... (Score:2)
So when a politician or the child of a politician can't get his warez, mp3z or moviez due to something Comc
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We need a new law for this? (Score:4, Insightful)
Whatever law covers that situation with my quart of milk not being a whole quart, can also quite well handle the situation where I buy 1.5Mb/second bandwidth, and then the second doesn't actually contain all 1.5Mbits, because the company doesn't actually have the infrastructure it's selling access to. ISPs already throttle, that's why they have different speed tiers for us to buy, same as milk is offered by the pint, quart, half-gallon, or gallon.
What we're really talking about here, is that the ISPs are lying about how much milk is in the jug. If our 1.5Mb pipes have to drop to 384K when everyone downloads at the same time, then we have 384K pipes, and they should be labeled and priced as such. Throttling based on content is just a way to legitimize weights-and-measures fraud.
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Bravo! That's exactly what this nonsense is. Well said.
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I have no problem with that. It's called "shared bandwidth." If you want "dedicated bandwidth" then you pay a different price (and sometimes it required buying T1s to an i
Freedom of the Press == Freedom of the Router (Score:2, Insightful)
First, the net-neutrality folks attacked the policy-map command and the whole idea if Differentiated Services (i.e., IETF DiffServe). policy-map lets you configure prioritization or other special treatment of packets. [cisco.com]
Now they're attacking the rate-limit and traffic-sh [cisco.com]
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Victims, or greedy resource hogs? Counterpoint. (Score:2)
http://people.monstersandcritics.com/bizarre/news/article_1384370.php/Louisiana_fat_people_banned_from_All_You_Can_Eat_Buffet [monstersandcritics.com]
Throttle at advertised max bandwidth, OK (Score:2, Insightful)
Last month, the Commission tasked its Wireline Competition Bureau to seek comments on allegations by P2P provider Vuze that Comcast's throttling practice -- intended to curb high-bandwidth file sharing that Comcast believes to typically be unlicensed -- is actually cutting into its legitimate business.
What Comcast does or does not believe about traffic based on generalizations is completely irre
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