http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/6983375.stm
9/7/2007 12:31:59 PM
this is more of a political discussion than a technical one. to the soap box it goes.
9/7/2007 12:34:21 PM
why the hell is the DOJ weighing in on this?
9/7/2007 1:03:57 PM
Gonzales' last-ditch attempt at a legacy before carrying his office decorations out in a box?
9/7/2007 4:39:58 PM
What I don't get is why people are calling for such regulation (net neutrality) before any problems have developed? Let's wait and see if such product differentiation actually turns out to be a problem. But I seriously doubt most internet users would be upset to have their traffic given a lower priority, if it manages to reduce their monthly bill.
9/7/2007 11:50:57 PM
9/7/2007 11:56:20 PM
9/8/2007 12:58:43 AM
I've never understood why this is the issue nerds get a hardon over.If they really want to help consumers, breakup the broadband duopolies and force companies to actually compete.
9/8/2007 1:07:17 AM
^ works for me.... I just want the fastest internet I can get, for the cheapest price, and without anyone fucking with my data between my computer and it's destination.
9/8/2007 1:21:57 AM
9/8/2007 3:55:58 AM
Oh, my bad. Please provide me links to the concrete examples you speak of, hopefully with explanations for why the only good solution is banning tiered network service? Personally, I don't see how it could be a problem; we live with tiered service on everything, from cable TV to buying a car, I don't see why everyone should be forced to pay the same for network access. Tiered service allows for customer price differentiation, resulting in wider distribution, lower prices for the price concious, and better access for the access concious. Everyone wins, so imagine my shock when you blatantly state without detail that such systems have produced problems and thus should be banned outright. Might we at least be allowed to see what the problems were? Maybe I have a less invasive solution. Thanks.
9/8/2007 8:36:22 AM
^ What incentive does a company have to offer tiered service when there is no competition? I mean, people pretty much hate paying 100 month for internet and cable when they watch maybe 10 channels and browse a couple hours a night, but they do it anyway.Do you think with a tiered model, the cable companies are actually going to LOWER their profits when they are raking it in as it is now?
9/8/2007 9:38:29 AM
Ok, the question is whether there is competition or not. If there is no competition then they will be raking in the profits regardless of what type of service they are allowed to offer. But it is not all bad, in response to high profits the company will try to spread its network as wide as possible and as quickly as possible. But even with a government guaranteed monopoly, which I seriously doubt is what we have, customers will still be better served with tiered service. Whatever network is built by the company, being forced to charge everyone the same price means in order for the company to charge individuals that don't mind "paying 100 month for internet when they...browse a couple hours a night" the full $100 a month, it must also charge individuals that are cost conscious $100 a month, even though they only browse a couple hours a night and so are only willing to pay $60 a month. Well, tiered service allows TWC to offer Road Runner Lite for $49.95, which the cost conscious customer will seek out and sign up for, damn the reduced service. Meanwhile, individuals that either don't care about money or care a lot about faster access will sign up for Road Runner Premium at $100 a month. The company rakes in higher profits, more customers get access, and no one is paying any more than they would without tiered service. But, if it turns out we really do have competition then tiered service really shines. By allowing price conscious users to connect and share the cost the network, which has to be built and maintained regardless of whether they connect to it or not, then premium users can share the costs more widely and thus face lower prices. Of course, I must point out that like all network markets, from railroads to utilities, the existence of just two evenly matched competitors will land both of them in bankruptcy, both waiting for the other to shut down and enable prices to rise. This does not encourage network expansion, hence the phrase "ruinous competition", and why most governments act to discourage competition in such markets. Back in the days before such regulation, by 1890 over half of all railroad miles in America were being managed by bankruptcy courts on behalf of bond holders.
9/8/2007 10:48:14 AM
that's not the "tier" they are talking about, dumbass. the "tier" is "my data is more important than your data because I pay more money than you." Right now, all data is treated equally, no matter how much money the sender pays, and that is how it should be. otherwise, you end up with the telecomm companies telling people to pony up in order for their data to get through, something they have already been shown to try to do.
9/8/2007 1:59:34 PM
I'm sorry, I don't know what you thought I was talking about, but what I wrote applies. Signing up for Road Runner Premium means your data is more important than someone signed up for Road Runner Lite. If the network must decide to drop one of two packets, it drops the Lite (hypothetically, RR cannot currently do this). You see no problem in differentiating service when it comes to throughput, but it is suddenly ridiculous when they start differentiating when it comes to reliability? Why must all data be treated equally? Do you really think a retired grandmother with Road Runner Lite cares that it takes another half-second for her page request to go through? Absolutely not, she cares about the $15 a month it is saving her. Why should she be forced to pay the full $45 a month beyond making you warm and fuzzy about network equality? I admit I might have confused you by using Road Runner as an example because their network is not set up for this, since it is a shared channel network (prone to collisions) until it gets on the fiber.[Edited on September 8, 2007 at 3:44 PM. Reason : .,.]
9/8/2007 3:42:13 PM
Thats just the thing. The demand is somewhat inelastic. The invest is too large still for true competition to happen. People that would rather pay less money for less service don't even have the option, so why would the cable company give them the option to pay them less?We do have monopolies. Subsidized by the taxpayers decades ago, and the cable/phone companies still want more money and government protected wealth.
9/8/2007 4:19:25 PM
don't forget about these great surcharges we allow the cable and telephone companies to charge for network upgrades. Too bad they haven't done any network upgrades.
9/8/2007 5:28:22 PM
9/8/2007 9:36:50 PM
aaronburro, your reading comprehension is poor. Allow me to quote myself: "RR cannot currently do this." I was being hypothetical. Now, again, why is it alright to charge more for increased bandwidth, but abhorrent to charge more for increased reliability? Again, why should grandma be prevented from accepting increased packet loss in exchange for reduced monthly fees? Does it not occur to you that not everyone can afford $45 a month and would gladly accept slightly greater packet loss if they could get service for $30?
9/9/2007 1:27:33 AM
I would say anything less than what we have now would be against the best interests of the public
9/9/2007 3:34:47 AM
Loneshark, you've made it clear that you have absolutely no idea what the net neutrality argument is discussing. Did you even read the article?The issue at hand is the legality of ISPs giving preferential treatment to one type of traffic vs another. You're discussing tiered bandwidth services. The US government is not suggesting a ban on different 'tiers' of customer bandwidth...Aaronburro is completely right.There have been dozens of issues that have come up regarding net neutrality, most notably VOIP, streaming video, and file sharing. Just trying to help you understand the topic at hand. It's probably better off if this thread were moved back to tech talk
9/9/2007 4:39:08 AM
9/9/2007 9:29:45 AM
It's not a highway. You are proving you don't know shit about the internet. In other words, my website timewarnercablesucks.com takes forever to load or doesn't load at all. Now is that fair?
9/9/2007 10:46:43 AM
Yeah, you guys are talking about apples and oranges.Lonesnark: You are talking about purchasing bandwidth, i.e. why can't the end consumer buy as much internet as he wants? Why can't the consumer buy more reliability?aaronburro: He's talking about purchasing content.There is some net neutrality discussion around the ability of ISPs to provide tiered service based on bandwidth. However, the main net neutrality arguement is centered around the question of whether or not ISPs should be able to charge based on content. Should TWC be able to levy a surcharge against the consumer for access to google? Should TWC be able to charge google an additional fee for access to TWC users?I don't think (from reading his posts) aaronburro is against buying bandwidth, nor is he concerned with content limitations based on purchased bandwidth (e.g. not being able to watch video feeds over dial-up). He's concerned with the ability of ISPs to regulate based not on traffic, but rather on content. He's concerned that TWC may deny him access to brentroad.com because brentroad.com hasn't paid an 'access fee' separate from their bandwidth costs.Using snail mail as a poor analogy, aaronburro is OK with buying a stamp for each letter he sends (buying bandwidth). He would not be OK with having to pay extra because of what's in the letter (e.g. love letters cost an extra 10 cents; bills cost an extra dollar).
9/9/2007 10:55:39 AM
Well, there are several ways the market could play out. There is the customer model and the content model. I was addressing one, you evidently only care about the other. It is possible for it to work out as the cable television industry has, but oddly enough it is exactly the opposite of what you seem to theorize. Time Warner pays Disney $1.3 billion so its customers can access Disney's TV channels. Why do we think it would work out the exact reverse for access to its internet content? It sounds to me like the real worry is Google walking up to Time Warner and proclaiming it will block all Time Warner IP addresses if it does not pony up a million dollars in "access fees" to Google. If my picture is fuzzy or if the channels I want to watch are not available on my cable service, I call a satellite provider. Similarly, if Google takes forever to load at my house, because my cable company has blocked them or vise versa, but load instantly at my neighbors house, because they have Fiber, then my cable provider loses. Since the market power seems to be vested the same way in both instances, I believe we should expect the cash flow to also work out the same way. [Edited on September 9, 2007 at 1:29 PM. Reason : .,.]
9/9/2007 1:23:41 PM
9/9/2007 1:58:52 PM
Neither can I, if I have the vested interests worked out right. But what about seeing a content owner blocking access to a certain provider? I agree with you, Google would not do such a thing, I suspect that's why we don't have the Google Channel. But Disney would, I'm wondering why they have not. It is really just tradition that is differentiating pay-access television from pay-access internet?
9/9/2007 2:25:36 PM
I don't think it's tradition, I think it's a difference in interests, as you've mentioned. If Sprint peers with Aol, both parties will likely benefit from the interconnection, as they are improving their customer experience in a number of ways as well as reducing their transit utilization and associated cost. As a result, customers will likely experience reduced latency, potentially higher capacity, and under effective traffic engineer will also experience less downtime as a result of oversubscription, component failure, scheduled maintenance, etc.That said, there are pay-access services on the internet as well, but I guess that's starting to get even more off-topic
9/9/2007 3:27:40 PM
ITS NOT A TRUCKITS A SERIES OF TUBES
9/9/2007 4:21:50 PM
^well put, sir
9/9/2007 8:06:46 PM
I haven't read all the way to the tail end of the thread, but up to the point of "Bumfuck Lite" and "Bumfuck Premium," I'll put forth my agreement that LoneSnark doesn't seem to understand what the net neutrality debate is actually about.
9/9/2007 10:46:13 PM
9/9/2007 11:09:27 PM
9/10/2007 12:42:03 AM
maybe I should have left this in tech talk. I neglected to consider the "IKE" factor of soap box regulars.Also, LoneSnark doesn't even begin to understand what he's trying to argue about. I guess this illustrates why the DOJ has no business opining on things that are far above their technical acumen.
9/10/2007 7:03:10 AM
Net Neutrality was addressed to death last year when it was actually a policy issue before congress, the DOJ report not withstanding. Forgive me if I wish to discuss unconventional aspects to the subject which were not addressed in the article. Feel free to hold a parallel discussion if you feel there is anything of value that was not already said in the last 10 threads with similar titles.
9/10/2007 8:42:34 AM
It would behoove you to comprehend the technical aspects of what you're arguing about. But if people here adhered to that, the soap box would be pretty much empty...
9/10/2007 9:15:37 AM
And which aspects have I gotten wrong? Please, if there is something I do not know then do inform me, I am an engineer and believed myself to already have a firm grasp of network dynamics, evidently in error judging from your words.[Edited on September 10, 2007 at 9:33 AM. Reason : .,.]
9/10/2007 9:33:05 AM
^^^^^Mostly because the internet and cable TV are vastly different in terms of content distribution.Internet is somewhat similar to traditional broadcast television: providers broadcast content to everyone. The only cost to the consumer is the cost of airwave access (i.e. a television). The internet is similar except that the broadcast medium is a computer network vice airwaves. Publishers provide content to all network users, just like broadcast television provides content to all airwave 'users'. The only consumer cost is access cost (a TV or an ISP connection)--the key point being that the user pays for access, not content. This in no different than a telephone line: the user buys access to the telephone network, thereby allowing him to call anyone and say anything.Cable TV does not provide any sort of network whereby all network users have access to all published content. The Disney Channel, ESPN, etc. are not in the business of providing content to end users. They sell content to cable operators who in turn re-sell that content to end users. When you purchase cable TV service, you are buying the content that cable provides. You are not buying access to 'THE' cable network.
9/10/2007 9:37:05 AM
^^ You are confusing bandwidth with traffic prioritization, which are two VASTLY different concepts.
9/10/2007 10:32:16 AM
^ I am not. Like I said, those that read my posts became confused between the two because I was equating the two: in my mind they are not morally dissimilar. As such, my posts were written to argue that the difference between them, to the end user at least, is morally identical. You obviously disagree with this assertion. As such, why do you believe it is perfectly fine for an internet provider to charge more for additional bandwidth, but should be criminal for them to charge more for additional reliability (which is all it is to have a higher priority of traffic: your data goes through at the expense of others, a right you are paying for). A Tanzarian, I agree the two are considered different. But if the firms involved wished for the internet to function like cable TV does they could. They have the IP address of the user, which they could use to discern the internet provider and then either service or deny based upon that information. So, it is not like radio where it is technically impossible to stop anyone with a radio from listening. I guess I am just going to have to settle for the answers I already have: the barriers for entry on the internet is puny depending on the service in question, where-as to start a Cable Channel requires hundreds of millions in capital. So, when TW and Disney get into a contract dispute, TW isn't going to run off and start its own Disney-esk channel, where-as if Disney.com blocked access from TW customers, the DNS server could be changed to redirect Disney.com to the IP of Qubo.com.
9/10/2007 12:49:29 PM
No one is talking about blocking your access to the googles or ur myspaces. Time warner isn't going to say "google you need to pay us to have people access your websites". Time Warner's customers would revolt.What Time Warner is going to say is "Google we cannot gaurantee that your google phone service will work 100% of the time on our network with out you paying more to prioritize the traffic". And this is true. Retards have overblown this to mean that time warner will be killing off everyone but those who pay. But thats not the case. Because things like VoIP are realtime, the packets need to all get there on time and in order. Its absolutely imposisble to gaurantee any QoS over the internet right now. By setting up packet prioritization ISPs can collectively create a "higher tier" of service where the data is prioritized accross networks. In order to keep even that higher teir from being overwhelmed they can either a) limit access by price or b) add capacity. Both results in higher service prices. With option A, those using the higher teir pay more. With option B everyone pays more.Now if you want to lower overall cost, you need more competition. And to do this you need fewer government regulations combined with an actual demand for better services. This is a completely different issue than net neutrality.^All the bandwidth in the world wont save you from bit torrent. Only prioritization can.[Edited on September 10, 2007 at 3:18 PM. Reason : .]
9/10/2007 3:14:08 PM
^ Finally, someone on my side.
9/10/2007 3:22:42 PM
9/10/2007 8:20:53 PM
I would agree that my site-blocking example was poor--I don't think that it will ever reach the point that ISPs will block websites for not paying, or websites denying content because ISPs haven't paid up. However, I do think that net neutrality has a lot to do with ensuring the equitable treatment of data regardless of from who it comes. I guess my net-neutrality stance can be summed up as:- You should pay for the bandwidth you use.- ISPs should largely be in the access business and not in the content business.- I do understand the technical needs for prioritization and such. But all traffic of a certain type should be treated equally, e.g. Google shouldn't be able to 'out-prioritize' Vonage in VoIP by paying more.- I am OK with limiting certain traffic (e.g. torrents) to maintain reasonable quality of service for all.'Tier' is an unfortunate choice of term in the net neutrality debate.[Edited on September 10, 2007 at 9:06 PM. Reason : ]
9/10/2007 9:02:24 PM
9/10/2007 10:32:30 PM
Chance, do calm down. I assumed and then proceded to just talk to no one in particular. I'm glad you know everything and will be more careful in the future to not imply otherwise.
9/11/2007 1:35:40 AM
Great quote, Shaggy!
9/11/2007 2:57:42 AM
9/11/2007 6:48:43 AM
9/11/2007 8:42:36 AM
9/11/2007 10:34:13 AM