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18 January
Cleland's “Common Sense.”
“You keep saying that word. I don't think it means what you think it means.”
--Inigo Montoya,
The Princess Bride
I suppose it's just overkill for me to pounce on Cleland's over-the-top (even for him)
blog post purporting to make the “common sense case” against our
complaint against Comcast and Petition for Declaratory Ruling. After all,
Dave Isenberg and
others have already taken this on. But (a) it helps to restate the facts and focus on the issues, and (b) it gives me a chance to quote
Angels by
Within Temptation, and I
ABSOLUTELY LOVE THAT SONG (In fact, if y'all haven't done so, scurry to your favorite place to buy music online and download this and their other stuff. I'll wait . . . .)
Cleland's claims can be divided into two: whether Comcast's behavior was “reasonable network management” and whether the FCC Policy statement is enforceable. I shall address each (and get to the music quote) below . . . .
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17 January
Time Warner May Pilot Metered Pricing With Easy Consumer Monitoring Tools. Good for now, but bad for ecommerce in the long run.
As reported by Broadband Reports and now
confirmed elsewhere, a Time Warner internal memo indicates Time Warner will pilot a program where it has an explicit bandwidth cap, and users that exceed the cap will pay additional explicit fees — rather like what happens now with your standard cell phone package where you buy a bundle of minutes and then pay for any overages. The pilot will include a website to allow customers to track their usage, moderate their behavior, or buy additional capacity if they wish.
I agree
with Dave Isenberg that this is the best way for Time Warner to handle its network capacity constraints and address the supposed 5% of users gobbling 50% of the bandwidth. We can expect some heavy users to move to other networks without caps, but also expect that users that use much less capacity and frustrated by congestion caused by heavy use by others to prefer plans like Time Warner's because it should produce a less congested pipe overall.
I would be remiss if I failed to note that I was
just musing about this the other day, giving me a chance to do another Stephen Colbert
I CALLED IT!!! dance.
O.K., shameless gloating over. Analysis below . . . .
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15 January
Dave Sez: AT&T Are [Bleep!]
My friend “Dave” recently moved from San Francisco to Sacramento. Being of the modern mobile generation that has “cut the cord” and lives by the cell phone, Dave wanted to get “naked DSL.”
i.e., DSL (or other broadband) without any kind of telephone or video contract (Dave also refuses to pay for cable TV, on the grounds that 99% of the programming “sucks”). To his surprise and disappointment, Dave couldn't find
any naked broadband available in his neighborhood. So he wrote to me, as the known expert on all things broadband. “Isn't there any way I can just get broadband without a telephone contract?” Dave wrote me in an email.
So I thought about it, and I said: “Is Sacramento AT&T territory?”
“Yeah.”
“Well AT&T has to offer
$20 naked DSL, as a merger condition from when they bought BellSouth. Why don't you try for that.”
So Dave dug around until he found the offer for AT&T DSL until he found the AT&T Yahoo! High Speed Internet Package With No Voice Contract:
Basic 768 kbps $19.95
Express 1.5 mbps $23.99
Pro 3.0 mbps $28.99
We talked, and I recommended the “Express” package as probably the best suited to his needs. Dave went to order it. His reactions below (warning, contains frank language and highly suggestive ASCII)....
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Martin Gets the Ball Rolling On “Blocking” Investigation: What Does It Mean And What Happens Next?
As always, I am impressed with the ability of so many people to hate whatever Kevin Martin does, and for so many different reasons! At CES, Martin announced that the FCC would
investigate allegations of blocking content and determine whether they violated the FCC's
four broadband principles. Comcast
pledged to cooperate in any investigation (although, unsurprisingly, Comcast representatives — along with supposed object of Martin's affection AT&T and other big telcos and cablecos — said at CES they would
restructure or eliminate FCC altogether).
As I
said in my PK blog post, while details remain unclear, I am “cautiously optimistic” that this will be a good thing. But it did not take long for the folks in the “Martin is a bastard 24/7 crwd” to express themselves. DSL reports
doubted this would go anywhere, while the “why ya gotta hate on cable” crowd at Techdirt
opined that Martin would never investigate if it were a telco rather than a cable co.
So we flash forward to yesterday, when new developments began to percolate out of the FCC. Of significance:
1) The FCC issued
a public notice asking for comment on our
Petition for Declaratory Ruling that Comcast's “network management practice” of
messing with BitTorrent uploads violated the FCC's “
Broadband Policy Statement,” which includes a principle that network operators may not block or degrade content or applications. In a
separate public notice (but as part of the same proceeding), the FCC also seeks comment on the
Vuze Petition for Rulemaking on how broadband access providers handle and shape IP traffic generally. (Copy of Vuze Petition
here, copy of our Petition
here).
2) Separately, the FCC issued a
separate public notice seeking comment on a
Petition filed by Public Knowledge and the usual suspects asking the FCC to declare that wireless carriers cannot deny short codes or block text messaging. This goes after Verizon's high profile “oopsie” of
denying a request by NARAL for a short code. Although, as we pointed out in the Petition, the more likely and pernicious problem is with plain old anticompetitive blocking, such as
denying a short code to VOIP provider Rebtel.com and denying applications to major banks offering competing services.
3) Comcast confirmed that the FCC
has lanched a formal inquiry into whether it violated the FCC's broadband policy statement. Comcast reiterated that it will fully cooperate with the FCC, and expects any investigation to show that Comcast did not block content and has engaged in legitimate network management practices.
Not bad for a commitment made a week ago. But what does it mean and where will it go from here? Analysis below . . . .
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11 January
Can users shape traffic better than ISPs? Some Lessons From The Electric Industry.
A dialog between David Weinberg and Seth Finkelstein
on David's blog raises an interesting question. Dave W argues (as do I) that a network provider is the
last person who should engage in such practices, because of the inherent potentials for mischief and the possible conflicts of interest. Seth Finkelstein argues that, as a practical matter in the real world, only the ISP can effectively make a determination on traffic shaping that maximizes the use of the network for everyone, protects time sensitive applications, and prevents a “tragedy of the commons” from a handful of users absorbing all the bandwidth.
David Isenberg (in the comments and in
this blog entry) makes the case that we don't need traffic shaping, just more capacity or, in the alternative, neutral means to reduce packet flow such as throttling all traffic equally or going to metered pricing. Others (including myself) have argued that the problems of “bandwidth hogs” are exaggerated, or that users dissatisfied with the “best efforts” environment of the internet should stick with the network optimized for voice (the phone network) or the network optimized for video (cable, broadcast television) rather than “break” the internet to better accommodate these applications. Neither of these answers, however, is popular in regulatory circles. Further, it is a legitimate argument that we should allow ISPs to choose what product to offer customers. If an ISP wants to offer services optimized for VOIP by retaining the power to shape traffic, why shouldn't it bring that service to market? This inevitably leads to a debate on market power, availability of choice, switching costs, captive customers etc., etc.
So lets shake things up with something new. I will — for the sake of argument here — accept the proposition that we “need” traffic shaping (like I “need” “scare quotes” so that people will not “quote” me out of context or argue on trivialities). But accepting the need for traffic shaping does not mean ceding all power to the broadband access provider. To the contrary, I argue that we will achieve far better results by
giving subscribers the ability to shape their own traffic.
Madness you say? “Tragedy Of The Commons” and all that. Maybe, but the electric industry tells a somewhat different tale. As described in
this NYT story, a fair number of folks are taking advantage of pilot projects that allow people to shape their power usage in the same way I propose allowing them to shape their Internet use. Such programs may save $70 Billion in the next few years. Why not see if they can have serious impact on the supposed
exaflood of internet traffic that supposedly justifies traffic shaping? Especially when contrasted with the pur privatization model, that gave us the Enron scandal and the California black outs in 2001?
More below . . .
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