Original topic on Net Neutrality:http://www.thewolfweb.com/message_topic.aspx?topic=493365I totally called it way back in 2007! http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2009/06/cable-group-turns-net-neutrality-around-over-isp-access-fees.ars
6/18/2009 12:03:51 PM
Can you quote your comment from that thread, not interested in reading it all over again.
6/18/2009 12:27:55 PM
AT&T is a fucking blood-sucker scum company
6/18/2009 12:50:35 PM
And just like with cable, i would absolutely love if I could get rid of every disney owned channel so i didn't have to pay for them.
6/18/2009 12:55:55 PM
no espn?
6/18/2009 12:57:56 PM
For Fail Boat, me in 2007:
6/18/2009 1:37:59 PM
Not bad. But you could have said "capitalists are going to want to get paid one way or the other" and you'd have been right no matter who the counterparty was, service provider or content provider.
6/18/2009 1:40:59 PM
And low and behold, with my Road Runner connection, when I try to access ESPN360:
6/18/2009 1:41:38 PM
6/18/2009 2:08:38 PM
This is a very old story, we have decades of evidence telling us how that will work out. And it does not work out to Time Warner's favor; that is because Disney is not stupid. It knows that if it lets Time Warner make ESPN360 a premium package then they are sunk; therefore, Disney will demand an all or nothing contract, prohibiting Time Warner from doing what you just suggested. As such, the only hope is for either ESPN360 to be a flop with customers or for the FCC to prohibit it under network neutrality rules. If these fail then it is inevitable, a portion of all our internet access payments will be going to Disney, whether we watch ESPN or not.
6/18/2009 2:46:39 PM
Couldn't TWC get the pages relayed to them via some other means so Disney would have no way of knowing who was requesting it? Oh yes, they can, it's called a proxy. If all the service providers get together and decide they will route each others traffic through their own networks to Disney and back, then Disney would have much less bargaining power, all the way to none.
6/18/2009 2:56:04 PM
If that would work, then why didn't it work for Cable Television? Afterall, Comcast can given Time Warner the ESPN signal. But wait, if Comcast did that, then Disney would cut them off for breach of contract. This is not to say a person cannot get around this. If your friend is on Comcast then you can get access if your friend is willing to proxy for you, but I doubt their uplink is fast enough to make it worthwhile, and they could certainly only do that for one person.
6/18/2009 3:18:46 PM
What I don't get is why ESPN is doing this at the ISP level and not the end user level? I'd like to see the numbers but just how many people are going to jump from one ISP to the next if they don't provide 360?
6/18/2009 3:50:48 PM
what i was suggesting was that time warner would offer the same price for existing service + disney channels/websites. Im talking about the entire bundle, disney, espn, whatever.Then for those of us who dont want them charge us less than the normal price. Time warner obviously cant offer channel by channel picks, but if they let us pick by content provider I think we'd both be better off. Time warner would take a hit since i'm paying them less, but it might get through to disney that the amount they charge is too much. IIRC espn and related channels are the most expensive part of the basic cable package. They're not worth what im paying.
6/18/2009 3:51:21 PM
And as I said, if TW tried that then Disney with pitch a fit and cut all TW customers off with a message suggesting TW customers switch providers.
6/18/2009 3:54:26 PM
thats fine with me if thats how they want to do it. I'd stick with time warner. also, the only option for other carriers for most people would mean sattelite.
6/18/2009 3:59:45 PM