BBC's iPlayer Chief Pushes Tiered Charging For ISPs 172
rs232 writes with a link to a story at The Register which begins: "The executive in charge of the BBC iPlayer has suggested that internet users could be charged £10 per month extra on their broadband bill for higher quality streaming." The article suggests (perhaps optimistically) that "after years of selling consumers pipes, not what they carry, [tiered, site-specific pricing] would be tough to pull off."
The bbc is joking what is next a net fee like tv (Score:2)
The bbc is joking what is next a net fee like the tv one?
Re:The bbc is joking what is next a net fee like t (Score:4, Informative)
it's more of that stupid notion that the ISPs are trying to get away with double-dipping their customers.
Are they joking, or just accepting reality? (Score:4, Insightful)
Is it just being realistic? Here in the UK, ISPs have been selling flat-rate "up to 8MB" broadband for some time now, but glossing over the very high contention ratios they've been using (and getting away with so far, because the average user doesn't currently want anything like 8MB/s of data transfer).
With the rise of streaming, real-time media — and the BBC's iPlayer has been a great success story over here — the assumption that a large group of users only ever sends a few e-mails and shops at Amazon is becoming less valid. While quite a few people have visited YouTube and the like and watched a five minute clip of something, that's a long way from a service that offers full-length, full-quality downloads of major programs and advertises this fact prominently on several major TV stations.
Unfortunately, the reality is that the ISPs don't have the bandwidth they've sold if everyone wants to use it, any more than the banks had the money they were selling. Some sort of change in pricing is inevitable. One way or another, those who have been doing very well out of the current flat-rate deals are going to be the ones who lose out, because they are getting things disproportionately cheap right now.
Personally, I don't like the filtering by source/destination idea. It sounds like something that will attack the openness that has made the Internet such a success. I'd rather go back to some sort of metred use policy, perhaps with tiered flat rate bundles for a bit of predictability for low/average users (so that up to x MB/month is a standard rate, up to y MB/month is another standard rate, and after that it's metred or something). This model seems to work fairly well for the mobile phone industry, and the pricing is transparent and sustainable.
But whether it's done by bandwidth, web sites visited, protocols used, or what postcode you live in, anyone who has been happily streaming tens of gigabytes per month of downloads on their flat rate plan and thinks an extra 10 pounds a month is excessive is just deluding themselves. The bandwidth simply isn't there to support everyone doing that, and when commodities are scarce, prices go up.
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"This model seems to work fairly well for the mobile phone industry, and the pricing is transparent and sustainable."
and we've seen what they charge for text messages. i don't trust that.
"The bandwidth simply isn't there to support everyone doing that, and when commodities are scarce, prices go up."
and referring to bandwidth as a commodity seems a little like fallacious thinking.
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and we've seen what they charge for text messages. i don't trust that.
Text messages are an odd case in several ways. Their pricing is on the high side, but then their pricing for calls is on the low side, and in neither case do they really make that much money out of their customers: it's the high-end, premium services like mobile Internet browsing and picture messaging where they make the big money these days.
In any case, this isn't really the same idea as what I was suggesting. Distinguishing by service like this would be more akin to letting people browse web sites cheaply
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On the contrary, it is the very essence of a commodity in the economic sense of the term: one ISPs bandwidth is as good as another (at least for now) but there is only so much available.
And this is my fault why?
They should have been building out their infrastructures since 1996, but they have not...and we have been paying additional fees and taxes here in the US for the build out that has NOT occurred.
Until the current ISPs and telcos provide fiber in the end mile as they have in Japan since 2000 and before (100 MB up and 100MB down stream) I really do NOT want to hear their excuses.
Oh yes, it costs less than $.50 per MB to provide those fiber connections up and down in Japan, so do
ISP regulation like banks? (Score:2)
Unfortunately, the reality is that the ISPs don't have the bandwidth they've sold if everyone wants to use it, any more than the banks had the money they were selling. Some sort of change in pricing is inevitable. One way or another, those who have been doing very well out of the current flat-rate deals are going to be the ones who lose out, because they are getting things disproportionately cheap right now.
You are making an assumption that fraud has occurred. If, like a properly run bank, if depositors'
I already pay my tv licence (Score:5, Insightful)
I've used iPlayer like 3 times in my life. I shouldn't have to pay anything extra for it and certainly not £10 per month for something I rarely use. It'd be more cost effective to buy the content in DVD format.
If the BBC can't afford to do something with the licence fee then don't do it.
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It could be the last 12 digits of your credit card number. :D
Credit card numbers (Score:5, Informative)
I sincerely hope you were joking:
All VISA cards start with 4.
All Mastercards start with 51, 52, 53, 54, or 55.
Don't believe me? Take a look in your wallet. :)
Thus, iCONICA, if you just shared the last 12 digits of your Mastercard, you now have cut down the search space of your password to 500 numbers. Moreover, credit card digits have to conform to a checksum (double every other digit + add them all up, must be 0 mod 10.) Thus, I'd estimate we could guess your card within 10 unique numbers, around 100 if VISA. There are ways of getting around the "security digits" and expiration date...
Short story is, don't share your credit card number. Even as a joke.
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Of course he could have a Discover card. :)
(Disclaimer: I agree with your post.)
Re:Credit card numbers (Score:5, Informative)
Not only that, but the remainder of the digits in the first group of 4 digits are used to identify the issuing bank. While it's not actually a bulletproof method, knowing where someone is can narrow down the list of valid codes even smaller. Just take the valid numbers, cross-reference them with the list of Visa or Mastercard bank codes, and with the smaller list of numbers, find the banks that are in the local area, and use it knock off a few more numbers (someone in the US will probably not have a UK credit card, for example - they might, but it's extremely rare).
The entropy in the first 4 digits is extremely low.
Anyhow, sharing codes is easy to prevent - just do IP geolocation - non-UK IPs should be restricted from using the codes (and for the most part, IP geolocation is reasonably country accurate), and ensure that one code isn't used from multiple IPs in too often a time, or one code used simultaneously.
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Or you could buy a boatload of CC#s from a Russian clearinghouse for a coupla bucks.
Not that I would do what iCONICA did of course, but you'd have to have a truly niche skill-set/hobby/ethics to puzzle out iCONICA's CC#, and not just buy them directly.
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Actually it sounds like deciphering a CC# with the available digits is more of an application of a known algorithm... in which case you don't have to have a skill-set other than being able to search on google for said algorithm and plug in the numbers provided.
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OK, but you also need the ethics and inclination.
Also, no algorithm is going to get it right the first time (?), so you'll need to go through a lot of different suppliers and safe-drops before it works. This is, arguably, a skill although a purely criminal one.
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mine ends with 42
I don't think the BBC is asking for more money (Score:2)
I think the idea is that you'd pay your ISP more to cover their costs of carrying iPlayer traffic. Cue proxy servers in 3, 2, 1...
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If iPlayer requires more money to cover everything then they should have to do it through the licence and justify the increase. This isn't that different from the case of B&W and colour TVs. One gives you a better picture and you pay more for it through the licence if you want and it covers the BBC content only rather than making it easier for ISPs to convert the web into a very costly and limited n
Charge TV users instead (Score:2)
But let's face it; Bureaucrats see it as their job to think of new ways to through levies, fees, taxes and charges at customers.
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The license fee is a model the BBC see as unsustainable - so they are seeking other means of funding.
This is not the way. Personally I would just slice it off income tax and thus it wouldn't disproportionately burden the poor. As it stands its practically a poll tax.
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Its a flat tax against everyone in the UK i.e. a poll tax. Last time someone tried to openly introduce a poll tax there was rioting, so the only reason it stands for the license fee is because Brits are quite fond of the BBC.
The problem is mainly that the BBC is (rightly) moving beyond TV and radio and producing a lot of online media. This is being paid for by a tax on TVs which is a fairly bizzare state of affairs.
Non-commercial media is a good idea, but the model for raising the funds has to be fair and s
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The lack of advertising would be appreciated more if the BBC stopped their advertising and trailing of other BBC products in between programmes. It just gives the impression that they are struggling to fill the airtime. I want to be informed and educated, not told what is coming up on other channels, I can find out that for myself.
Re:I already pay my tv licence (Score:5, Insightful)
It's also implied the iPlayer may show live content at some point as well. They know full well PCs are goinjg to become a major part of watching TV and they won't let that licence money disappear.
I suspect even now you'd get harassed and made to prove you never watch live broadcasts online if you opted not to pay the licence and got rid of your TV.
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You can already watch BBC One, Two, Three, Four, News, Parliament, and CBBC (And that's only after a quick skim), for example BBC One [bbc.co.uk] (Beta, limited to UK IPs).
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The live content on iPlayer is not "implied", it's an actual current feature. All the BBC's main TV channels, with the sole exception of BBC Alba (the BBC's new Scottish language channel), are now available online for live streaming through the BBC iPlayer web site.
The addition of BBC One and BBC Two to live streaming was within the last few weeks, but I believe the other 6 channels (BBC Three, BBC Four, CBBC, CBeebies, BBC News and BBC Parliament) have been streaming for some time now. I'm not sure that
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My friend has neither a TV nor does he pay his TV license yet he makes use of iPlayer and has done since its release, they're certainly not at the stage where they're chasing you up for using it without a license yet as they have never once yet contacted him.
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Note, this just means he's not in their database. Their policy has nothing to do with whether you require a licence - they just assume everyone without a licence is breaking the law, and send them harrassing threatening letters.
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It's not like he lives under the radar, he's as visible as anyone else. It's trivial to get hold of a list of every address in the country which they do and check which addresses don't have TV licenses associated. There's absolutely no reason he wouldn't be listed, he doesn't live in a new house or anything.
They clearly therefore don't send letters to every address without a license, but that's not to say they don't send letters to some. It seems to be a case of people driving past from the license agency m
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You need to have a TV licence if you watching live TV on the PC as well.
You don't need a license for iPlayer (http://iplayerhelp.external.bbc.co.uk/help/about_iplayer/charge; at least that's what the BBC say, they should know!) nor I think do you for using a PC, unless it has a "TV tuner". So if you're viewing a stream over the internet, live or not, you don't need a license.
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You do need a license for live broadcasts... the watch live pages (eg. http://www.bbc.co.uk/bbctwo/watchlive/ [bbc.co.uk]) state clearly "Don't forget - to watch TV online as it's being broadcast, you still need a TV Licence.".
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http://preview.tinyurl.com/8b7wx6 [tinyurl.com] : tvlicensing.co.uk
"You will not need a TV Licence to view video clips on the internet, as long as what you are viewing is not being shown on TV at the same time as you are viewing it."
Thankfully buffering ensures that you are not viewing at at the same time as it is being shown ... strictly speaking.
I'm guessing that one may not wash - perhaps the uncertainty of the BBC as to whether using "watch live" requires a license or not. For example, on your link it merely states t
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Actually, not so much in my experience. I'd heard of people having huge trouble with the TV licensing people but I sent them a letter saying that I didn't watch TV, I have a TV with games consoles plugged into it and they were welcome to come and see if t
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The TV licence is anyway ridiculous when you consider the populist direction that the BBC has taken in the last 10 years.
While I'm tempted to agree with you, if the BBC were to do as you ask then it could (and inevitably would, in many cases by the same people) be argued that the license fee should be revoked because nobody's watching it.
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No, you don't. [metafaq.com]
We tried this back in 2004, and in mobile network. (Score:5, Interesting)
I work for an ISP/Telco. A few years ago this whole "access Internet from your phone" was just coming and GPRS costs were crazy. At that point we made quite a few studies that basically came to the effect of "in ISP world, with DSL, cable etc, people are already used to flat rate - you can't change that. In mobile, folks are still used to idea of different price for different services - case in point text messages".
Well, we missed the boat on that one (technology was there - all traffic goes through GGSN and they supported tying a Layer 4/7 switch to a accounting server). There were some ideas proposed, like concepts of "sponsored links" where if you normally paid X amount per megabyte some advertiser could perhaps do it for you and so on.
We missed the boat on that one, and now everyone is in the "flat until X MB (where X can be infinite), then extra bytes cost extra from that point on" model - even in the Internet accessed from mobile phone. In regular ISP world it's a doomed proposition since we have had 10-15 years of flat rate broadband now.
There's just *no* way this is going to happen anymore. Sure, business customers might be interested (and are) paying for e.g. guaranteed delivery for their internal VoIP traffic and guaranteed QoS, but it's just not going to fly for average consumer. Some "added value" services might be in there (stuff like, say, some freebies at iTunes), but QoS-related stuff for *generic Internet service* is not going to be one of them.
Re:We tried this back in 2004, and in mobile netwo (Score:5, Insightful)
Good.
I want to be in charge of the QOS I receive. I disapprove of any model in which the content provider pays the ISP for more QOS. That leads to a Disney and Coca-Cola Internet.
The consumer should be the one to choose (and pay) for QOS. And payment should be to the ISP, not the content provider, which would end up as a kickback to the content provider's ISP.
Only in this way can we hope to ensure that the Internet is not filtered by the content providers with the largest pockets, and by the ISPs themselves.
Re:We tried this back in 2004, and in mobile netwo (Score:4, Informative)
Considering QoS...an ISP can only guarantee QoS to any practical degree in their own network.
The whole point of term "Internet-based service" is the fact that it's accessed through a mystical cloud of multiple networks held together by glue, duct tape, BGP and peering agreements. Accessing Slashdot (for me) goes through four AS numbers (try in Linux traceroute with the -A option). So while all those ISPs have been able to agree to exchange bits either in peering or customer/provider model, there's no practical way that I could negotiate a guaranteed access quality to slashdot.org across all those various organizations at any practical cost...
BBC *is* a special case that topologically they have their own network [bbc.co.uk] which is able to peer with other ISPs at lot of places (at least if you are either in US or UK) so they might be able to wrangle deals with directly-connected ISPs to provide some QoS to their peering point. As their customer-base would be UK license payers it might, technically, work.
Whether anyone is actually willing to pay extra for that...I seriously doubt it.
Re:We tried this back in 2004, and in mobile netwo (Score:5, Interesting)
I understand the QOS issue. With a packet network such as the Internet, you cannot guarantee QOS. All you can do is promise to prioritize packets, and provide a certain bandwidth within the network that you control. Out in the cloud, one can try to set up special arrangements, but as you know, nothing is for sure. One can always lose or delay a packet if traffic is heavy.
Thus, there really isn't a technical solution beyond what IP6 provides - which is not a guarantee.
What I am saying is only that I do not want QOS to be managed primarily by ISPs who deal with the deep pockets. I want the ISPs instead to attempt to treat each packet without regard to where it is from, and deal with the QOS service issue by providing enough bandwidth to satisfy their customers, without playing favorites.
At the consumer endpoint, the consumer should have the ability to improve performance by buying more bandwidth, but you are right, that if there is insufficient bandwidth at some point along the way the traffic will be choked. But if that occurs, I want it to occur evenly and fairly to all of the customers of the ISP that is causing the choking. No favorites.
That is the only way that we will ensure that players with big wallets will not hog the Internet and cause response time for other sites (perhaps ones with more open content) to be accessible.
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You *can* guarantee QoS as an ISP/NSP if you control almost all of the connectivity end to end. Case in point: Comcast's IBONE network. They're slowly moving away from using Tier 1/2 providers for a lot of traffic and pushing those packets across their own nationwide network.
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BitTorrent & p2p? (Score:3, Interesting)
Why don't they use BitTorrent or similar p2p networks to distribute their files? Sure, it might be a bit more difficult for live-streaming, but most content is not live content* and p2p networks have shown to be a good alternative to regular Server-Client-downloads.
(* I don't know about you guys, but hate anyone trying to force me to watch some tv show at a specific time. I want to watch what I want, when I want. I believe this is true for most people and most content).
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It wouldn't be as profitable for them.
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That's what Iplayer was written as, a concealed Bittorrent-like client. The need to support non-Windows platforms, and their own decisions to use Windows Media to provide the DRM they insisted on, forced them to break their usage model and provide something closer to normal video streams for Mac and other clients.
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Why could they not have used p2p technology for the mac and linux clients as well as the windows one?
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Because their business plan absolutely demanded 2 features.
* It must apply DRM on all recordings to only be playable for one week. There is exactly one graphical player for which that works reliably and is in fact a key point of the software's existence, and that player is Windows Media Player.
* It must only work within the UK. Again, the only player that does that is Windows Media Player.
There was also another feature which I suspect, but cannot personally prove was relevant:
* They must be able to claim th
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They now use a flash based client that does all the above on multiple platforms, and have no dependency on Windows.
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A P2P model is far worse from an ISPs point of view as they have to provide twice as much bandwidth (once to receive the file, once to send it on).
With the traditional download model, ISPs can cache static files (including iPlayer shows) within their own network, vastly reducing costs.
I don't know why ISPs are complaining about iPlayer so much, I'm sure it's much less of a problem than things like youtube where the variety of content is much higher, even if the bandwidth used is lower.
I really don't want my
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Ugh. Intel Macs only, requires Adobe Air, and only works for the same movies that I can already get with iplayer-dl without DRM.
I wish the BBC would realise that they transmit unencrypted, HD, H.264 streams over the air for all of this content, and anyone with a DVB-t receiver and a hard disk can permanently archive them. It makes absolutely no sense for them to spend so much effort trying to protect the lower-quality versions.
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Don't most ISPs already have tiered service plans (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Don't most ISPs already have tiered service pla (Score:5, Informative)
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Alternatively you could just get Be Unlimited, which gives you up to 24mb/s and NO CAP for £18 a month. Why anybody uses anything else I have no idea.
Sam
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Because they're horribly oversubscribed. Because they have no decent support. Because they have the audacity to actually charge *per month* for IP addresses so to replicate my current 16 IPs would jack the price up to £42 per month (making them simultaneously the most expensive and cheapest ISP.. a neat trick).
And your £18 a month contract is a minimum 12 months. Costly when you want to change, or even just move house. Many, like myself, won't even consider such a contract.
To get decent, rel
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Most of the Virgin connections are not fibre for the last mile, they're the same old coax to the house, with a fibre backbone. That said, I still get 10Mb/s from mine (1.2MB/s sustained transfers, so 9.6Mb/s + protocol overhead).
I'm visiting my mother over Christmas. Unlike me, she is a BBC license payer[1], but because she lives out in the country and can only get a 512Kb/s connection, she can't watch streamed iplayer content because it doesn't buffer adequately and so pauses every minute or so.
[1]
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BT are rolling out ADSL2+ slowly and it's already in major cities. These things take time.
If you think virgin media is actually fiber I've got a bridge to sell you.
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Comcast screws with Voip traffic. I switched from comcast to DSL and my Voip service quality improved dramatically.
Comcast induces a lot of jitter and other problems because they increased the buffer times in the modems. Increasing this time will completely screw with Voip service. When you get their voip service the modem is different and designed to not do that to the voip ports.. oh but your old voip service will not work as they are hogging those ports for your ip address.
I used to work at Comcast,
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Article suggests right (Score:5, Insightful)
The BBC is not there for this! (Score:2)
I cannot see how this was modded as 'insightful'.
The suggestion, as I read it, is that the BBC should increase the quality and resolution of its output at the expense of the UK TV licence payer, so it takes more bandwidth. This will mean it will not download at a reasonable rate unless ISP suppliers worldwide sell the viewers an expanded service for which it can charge.
None of your ten dollars to your ISP gets back to the BBC. I do not see it as the duty of the BBC to provide future revenue for your IS
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How long before... (Score:2)
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IIRC all cable and satellite companies have to offer a la carte pricing for their channels. The problem is that the a la carte pricing is ridiculous. For basic level channels, by the time you add more than 7 or 8 of them you're past the price point where you could have just bought the package that includes every basic channel they offer.
Many of them also have minimum purchase levels that you must make. So if you JUST wanted the Sci-fi channel only or something (which would be less than $5 per month), th
I'm confused.. (Score:5, Insightful)
If $ISP cannot profitably sell $x mbit/s at $y dollars/month they need to either increase $y or decrease $x. It doesn't cost anyone more to deliver traffic from the BBC than anywhere else (peering ratios/contracts aside). It sounds like the problem is that average people are ... *gasp* ... actually using their internet connection for more than e-mail and web surfing and the bandwidth:customer ratios are no longer extremely in the ISPs favor.
ISPs should instead be looking at ways they can reduce their costs while providing better service to their customers, such as a peering arrangements with the likes of YouTube, BBC, etc. or a local appliance that serves up the most bandwidth expensive content (you know, like any content delivery network does).
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Here is one solution [akamai.com] to that problem.
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In the US, ISPs are fighting for market share. Most home connections are operating at zero or negative profit so they can acquire greater market share. This is offset by other business operations, such as telephone service, cable TV, etc.
If things are in the same state in the UK, then the ISPs (a) can't charge their customers more and (b) aren't charging what the connection costs.
One big clue to this is to look at pricing where market share isn't being fought over. Business connections in the US are anyw
Re:I'm confused.. (Score:4, Informative)
One big clue to this is to look at pricing where market share isn't being fought over. Business connections in the US are anywhere 2-4x the prices being charged for home connections. This is not a matter of higher utilization because these business connections are sold on the same terms as home connections with "burstable" bandwidth and maximum transfer caps.
First, why would you think that ISPs aren't fighting for market share with business connections?
Second, the reason business connections cost more is that generally you get a lot more. Although I agree with the amount of the price difference, my bandwidth is 24/7 guaranteed, with no cap on the total amount of data transferred. Sure, I pay about double what a "residential" customer pays, but all that really gets me is 5 static IPs, no blocked ports, and an SLA. In general, business customers don't have any of the limits that residential customers have, and that's why the connection costs more for the same speed, but that's not true with my ISP (Verizon FIOS). Residential customers get the same guaranteed bandwidth and no cap (not even a hidden one).
At my work, we also pay a fixed rate regardless of bytes transferred, have 24/7 guaranteed bandwidth, and have no cap. I don't know what residential customers of that ISP get, though, as I don't know any in the area.
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Wow you're funny.
Comcast broadband is NOT in any way operating at cost or near zero. They get decent profit from the broadband services. Just look at the quarterly reports sent ot shareholders, it's spelled out right there.
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True. But I think influence would have some effect on the decision making process of ISPs and content providers alike wether from the company itself or the executive with their connections. I'm hoping it won't come down to a Coca-Cola internet as another poster noted, but based on the volume of media Apple is selling in iTunes store, it wouldn't surprise me if they at least asked for some $$$$ or QoS preference. Or vise versa - that is the ISPs or Tier backbone providers asking Apple for $$$$$ since iTunes
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I estimate that strategies one and two probably have around 200,000 customers, and the remaining 20 million lines are with the liars :-)
The average joe sees that unlimited broadband for cheap offer and plumps for that- he's typically He's got no way of telling he isn't getting what he's paying for. He isn't going to plump for another offer that costs more or
And a BBC viewer says : (Score:3, Informative)
They do not need better quality (Score:2)
Except for mayby some TV games, there is no need for higher quality.
TV is one-way so just buffer more.
Preferably download it all before you start to watch it (that's what mimms is for).
Would you rather pay 10pount/year or watch the stream delayed an extra second?
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Because today they will start by charging $10 for HIGH quality. Tomorrow they will start by charging $10 for NORMAL quality.
Give corporates a small chance to increase price for a select few, and they will increase the price for ALL.
Treat all corporations as criminals unless proven otherwise.
bandwidth (Score:3, Insightful)
Wait a minute... I already pay more per month than my neighbor, so I will have a faster internet connection. Faster for EVERYTHING. Now the ISPs are going to ask me to pay even more, so that certain selected (by them, not me) content will be supposedly faster? Yeah, good luck selling that one...
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go figure out a business model (Score:2)
Seems to me that the BBC has become lazy and reliant on broadcast fees and thinks it's everybody's job but theirs to figure out their business model.
If you can't figure out how to stream megabit streams profitably, then don't stream them. Don't try to mess up the Internet just because you don't have a business model.
If it's the Beeb you can count on 2 things (Score:2, Interesting)
1) they have their head up their asses
2) they mumble under their breaths what the BNP says aloud.
no comprende (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm afraid I don't understand. Most broadband companies where I live offer tiered service already with slower speeds costing less and higher speeds costing more. Or is that not the case in the U.K.? If no, why are they treating this like it's some brand-new idea?
Why do companies and governments not see that cheap, plentiful broadband is the only way to grow Internet adoption and the online industry as a whole? Especially now that the worldwide economy is in the shitter, the information age is poised to drag us out of it, if only self-serving companies and conrgresscritters wouldn't stifle progress to make their own quick buck.
When the Internet was this shiny new thing, large companies didn't want anything to do with it. The first ISPs started out as ma-and-pop operations because big communications companies thought it was a silly idea to connect two consumer's computers together over some distance. Remember that? The telcos were the ones that fought the hardest because they hated having dialup modems on their voice network. Now that the Internet is clearly here to stay, everyone with a bit of power and/or money wants their own slice of the pie and in the process make it more costly, more inconvenient, less open, and overall less beneficial to the average individual.
Re:no comprende (Score:5, Insightful)
Correction. (Score:2)
Why do companies and governments not see that cheap, plentiful broadband is the only way to grow Internet adoption and the online industry as a whole? Especially now that the worldwide economy is in the shitter, the information age is poised to drag us out of it, if only self-serving companies and conrgresscritters wouldn't stifle progress to make their own quick buck.
Apparently you've missed [wikipedia.org] the [wikipedia.org] news [zeropaid.com]. The "information age" was stifled a long time ago, and its remains expelled from its gestation chamber in a dead bloody mess.
Fuck you, Rose (Score:2)
I'll back tiered charging when you back tiered (monthly) rebates from ISPs who slowly take away benefits like usenet, the ability to run your own ports, etc. Looking at you, Comcast.
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I'll back tiered charging when you back tiered (monthly) rebates from ISPs who slowly take away benefits like usenet, the ability to run your own ports, etc. Looking at you, Comcast.
since when has 2 gigs a month been useful on usenet?
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Combined with for-the-kids ratings... (Score:3, Interesting)
Who watches TV live anymore? (Score:2)
Other than news channels and sports broadcasts there are very few programs which need to be live streams. Even the news channels are suspect as they often report the same news from this morning with 'live interviews' later in the day.
Seems to me we could probably do without live streams all-together for the public.... let the sports bars host live events using a satellite feed or some such for the sports junkies (it's more fun in a group at a bar anyways) - and let the news junkies get their fix from RSS fe
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About the same number of people are watching highlight "event" broadcasts as before - topping out at about 14 million (of about 60) in the UK:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2008/dec/26/wallace-and-gromit-lead-bbc-to-christmas-ratings-victory [guardian.co.uk]
That's not a hugely different number to any time in the last 20 years. The death of broadcast TV has been greatly exaggerated.
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obama has all of us by the balls and we will pay through the nose for anything we need in life.
This is rather funny.
If someone came to abduct me and subject me to the horrors of my every need being catered to for the rest of my life they wouldn't need a gun or knife to make me go : )
If they were coming to abduct me and make me empty my account so they could buy weapons and drilling equipment, however, i'd take as many of them with me as possible.
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To my eyes, blurry as they may be for this hour, the quote appears to suggest that media streams may be delivered in varying qualities, dependent upon the user's available bandwidth.
Which is nothing new. Realplayer was doing that for media streaming many years ago.
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Correct me if I'm wrong.
You're not, but it won't stop the "Youtube is better than the BBC" brigade from whinging about it.
It's not too surprising when almost all of the coverage online has been of an "extra BBC tax", which isn't what Rose said at all (but which he probably should have made clearer that he wasn't saying). The register's summary was among the more balanced ones.
What hasn't been thought through would be how that extra bandwidth could be delivered. Where I live, even the cheapest ADSL deal will get me the fastest po