4/15/2009 6:01:51 PM
So can we all agree that we would prefer time warner to introduce traffic prioritization rather than outright caps?
4/16/2009 12:38:28 AM
ok heres what i dont get...so like why doesnt time warner just turn people in to the riaa/mpaa so no one downloads torrents
4/16/2009 12:40:26 AM
^ because you can't feasibly prosecute millions+ of people per day.
4/16/2009 12:52:34 AM
4/16/2009 9:21:35 AM
4/16/2009 11:35:39 AM
with some of the anti-competitive lobbying/behavior of twc, it's not the same.
4/16/2009 11:46:26 AM
I fail to see that. If they are operating outside of the bounds of the law in regards to trade practices, then the FTC will get them. If you just don't like their business practices, then stop buying their products.
4/16/2009 11:58:26 AM
well the latest anti-competitive thing i can think of has to with their switched digital video not allowing people using third party DVRs to view many channels. they have been dragging their feet to offer a solution for those people. the FCC has fined them, but I'm sure that's a piddling amount for them to worry about.
4/16/2009 12:03:52 PM
4/16/2009 12:11:09 PM
I honestly don't believe simply having broadband internet access at home is going to make you more prepared for the workforce than someone that does not or even put you at an advantage over other kids that do not have it. The real driving factors for success are motivation and the support of your parents. If you need to view web content, you can go to a library and your parents can drive you there. And for fucks sake, we're arguing about broadband here. What the hell web content do kids absolutely need that they couldn't browse on dial-up? If anything, I'd be willing to wager the sheer throughput of broadband provides greater distraction compared to a dial-up connection.
4/16/2009 12:34:06 PM
disco_stu, try and think of it another way. They are not protesting Time Warner. In my opinion they are protesting the government imposed regulatory environment which left Time Warner the only company they could deal with. And, hell, using ones right to assemble and petition the government for a redress of grievances seems sensible to me. This is because the law turned Time Warner from a private service provider into an arm of the government and therefore ripe for political activism. To address your example, if the city of Cary passed a law saying that McDonalds was the only legal provider of hamburgers, then it seems natural to protest in front of McDonalds if they impose ruinouse restrictions upon hamburger supplies.
4/16/2009 1:03:10 PM
^^ You're a god damned idiot.[Edited on April 16, 2009 at 1:05 PM. Reason : *]
4/16/2009 1:04:50 PM
4/16/2009 1:22:53 PM
But in reality they should be protesting Cary for giving them the monopoly in the first place.
4/16/2009 1:26:36 PM
4/16/2009 1:33:35 PM
4/16/2009 1:42:26 PM
See my edit, quagmire. I admit I'm not familiar with the policies that everyone has a big contention with. I fail to see how RoadRunner has any monopoly on broadband internet access. Any enlightenment on this topic would be appreciated. Obviously the FTC agrees since they have not taken action to change the situation.Regarding calling me a god damned idiot for asserting that the mere presence of broadband in the home is not a significant factor for success for students was a beautiful ad hominem. Care to provide any data that refutes my claim? Admittedly I'm not basing my opinion on data either, but I believe I deserve a counter point rather than name calling.Again, what web content would a child need to excel in school that they could not get from a service other than RoadRunner? Or even on dial-up for that matter? Or from a public internet source? A properly motivated student with no internet access at home will do better than a slacker who has RoadRunner (and is probably using it to do a visit a lot of social network sites and crap)
4/16/2009 1:53:34 PM
4/16/2009 2:05:20 PM
4/16/2009 2:15:42 PM
http://www.raleighnc.gov/publications/Public_Affairs/timewarnerfranchise.pdfIt says its non-exclusive, but it was the only one I could find on their site.So basically what this doc means is Raleigh grants TWC the ability to use some city owned resources (like phone poles or other utility distribution methods) to run their cable/fiber network. If someone else wants to do the same thing, they need to get Raleigh's permission. [Edited on April 16, 2009 at 2:26 PM. Reason : a]
4/16/2009 2:21:22 PM
4/16/2009 2:22:47 PM
4/16/2009 2:38:34 PM
^ the pdf i posted is their franchise agreement. TWC doesnt have a technical monopoly because Raleigh can still grant others the same agreement, but they have a practical monopoly because no one else (that i could find) has the same agreement. Now whether this is because no one has actively sought an agreement or because Raleigh has denied others I dont know. That would be something to ask Mike Williams.
4/16/2009 2:46:57 PM
4/16/2009 2:51:58 PM
I now wish I had seen your post instead of being sucked in by quagmire's wall of text. Based on that document there's no reason another company couldn't set up on the lines, so why haven't they?quagmire, I'm not saying there's no benefit. Obviously there's a benefit. 20 years ago, owning an encyclopedia set at home was definitely a benefit. Did that mean the kids that had encyclopedias automatically did better than the kids that did not? Of course, it's now and not 20 years ago but my point still applies. The kids have to use the broadband (and use it in the right way) in order to receive the benefit. In that I still maintain that the parents are the key here. If the children aren't guided and motivated to use it correctly, then they will not gain the benefit and may very likely do worse than if they had no access at all.But let's drop this argument for the sake of not turning this thread into a Soap Box thread. I'll try to steer us back on topic:I'm honestly not sure if the broadband caps would affect me. I need to update my router's firmware to tomato to turn on the bandwidth monitoring, but at the moment I don't want to risk interrupting my WoW uptime. [Edited on April 16, 2009 at 2:56 PM. Reason : quag] [Edited on April 16, 2009 at 2:59 PM. Reason : .]
4/16/2009 2:52:06 PM
1. Another company would have to go through the same process to get approved by the City of Raliegh.2. Running their own infrastructure is expensive.If they can get past step 1, which would be a question you could send to that Mike guy, step 2 gets into the ROI on infrastructure. They have to roll out infrastructure, set a price lower than TWC, and hope people switch.
4/16/2009 2:59:55 PM
Guy was fast:
4/16/2009 3:01:48 PM
and you'll notice that raleigh isn't in the crosshairs for these caps (likely because at&t is starting to come in). greensboro residents don't have that same luxury.and you'll also notice that channel offerings and services are far better in cities with more than one provider. i guess all i'd like is for their to be a healthy market for broadband in the area.
4/16/2009 3:25:56 PM
Based on the franchise agreement and the response from the City of Raleigh, I'd agree with Shaggy that the primary reason why there are no other cable providers boils down on ROI against the cost of laying the cable and providing a better service than TWC.I actually live in Cary, so I'm looking for an equivalent contact with them to see if the situation is the same. If anyone has other information regarding the state of TWC's "monopoly" in the area it would be appreciated.
4/16/2009 3:31:53 PM
Looks like TWC pulled the plugs on the caps....http://stopthecap.com/2009/04/16/we-won-time-warner-killing-usage-caps-in-all-markets/
4/16/2009 3:32:01 PM
well, that didn't take long
4/16/2009 3:36:37 PM
wow nice
4/16/2009 3:42:58 PM
Haha, awesome. I don't hold it past TWC however to silently still be doing research into this.[Edited on April 16, 2009 at 3:51 PM. Reason : -]
4/16/2009 3:49:29 PM
niice
4/16/2009 3:53:56 PM
disco_stu, he is mistaken. AT&T has not deployed a cable system in Raleigh because doing so has been illegal. To do so would have required passing a law through the city council. Why no one did so is unknown. Either way, the more apropriate metaphore would be: "No one but McDonalds may sell hamburgers without first getting a 51% majority of the city council and majorial approval." Of course, this is a local franchise requirement. As such, what AT&T has done is apply for and receive a state issued franchise agreement, thus bypassing the Raleigh City Government. Therefore, AT&T is expanding its existing telephone franchise to distribute video services. Of course, now that TWC's franchise with the city offers no protection from AT&T, it has chosen to scrap it:http://www.raleigh-nc.org/portal/server.pt/gateway/PTARGS_0_2_411_208_0_43/http%3B/pt03/DIG_Web_Content/news/public/News-PubAff-Time_Warner_Cable_Termin-20090204-16444584.htmlEven if TWC is no longer a government protected monopoly, it certainly was before and the legacy of that is how we find ourselves here today. AT&T cannot expand overnight, so even if AT&T is a competent competitor TWC still has a monopoly in many areas. And if both are poor competitors, the state is not that much quicker to issue franchise agreements than the city was.[Edited on April 16, 2009 at 3:58 PM. Reason : And the caps bite the dust.]
4/16/2009 3:54:32 PM
This was the response that I got from Town of Cary's rep:
4/16/2009 4:32:33 PM
it still pisses me off, and if uverse comes to town, i'll consider switching
4/16/2009 4:36:56 PM
this article has a fair amount of info: http://www.indyweek.com/gyrobase/Content?oid=oid%3A271522apparently there's a law which just took effect which actually has changed a lot of this stuff. so i think lonesnark may have been correct six months ago, but not now. i'm going to read into it a little more.
4/16/2009 5:20:27 PM
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2009/04/theyre-gone-after-outcry-time-warner-uncaps-the-tubes.arscaps are deadFTW!!It's amazing too after certain people bitterly defended them ITT.[Edited on April 16, 2009 at 5:37 PM. Reason : ]
4/16/2009 5:36:54 PM
i fear they may just be kicking the can down the road. they say they're delaying it. and that they'll give users access to their monthly data usage on their website (ostensibly to use as ammunition in a future attempt to implement caps)
4/16/2009 5:47:50 PM
http://www.engadget.com/2009/04/16/time-warner-cable-scraps-broadband-capping-plan-in-rochester-ny/
4/16/2009 5:53:26 PM
4/16/2009 6:00:40 PM
4/16/2009 8:02:04 PM
They canned the thing today.http://www.wxii12.com/news/19199950/detail.html
4/16/2009 8:31:40 PM
4/16/2009 10:01:02 PM
if they eventually do this, they need some kinda "rollover" option for unused gigabytes
4/16/2009 10:11:48 PM
Victory!!
4/16/2009 10:55:12 PM
he look, protesting did something.
4/16/2009 11:37:02 PM
Good thing the "Tea Party" loons are too busy clogging up city blocks to see the effectiveness of perpetual upheaval.
4/17/2009 3:38:14 AM