if wifi mesh networks- adhoc hardware+power solutions- are the future so be it. But you are right, we should know if we should expect a right of communication integrity, without which the medium slowly erodes to uselessness.
COMCAST FAILS THE LAUGH TEST ON NET NEUTRALITY
by Barry Payne, Economist, Ph.D. ex-FCC staff bbpayne@earthlink.net
Controlling BitTorrent to “improve” network flow?
The way electric utilities interrupt customers on an “interruptible rate” to prevent an outage to customers on the “firm rate”?
If electric utilities did what Comcast is doing, they’d be cutting off or delaying the flow of electricity to FIRM customers BY TYPE OF USE, i.e., lighting, electric motors, computers and hair dryers, not by the NEUTRAL use of kilowatts and kilowatt-hours the way they do now, independent of how the electricity is used.
Comcast is controlling network flow through SELECTIVE, IDENTIFIABLE CONTENT. If Comcast were NEUTRALLY controlling PEAK NETWORK USE to avoid outages or slowdowns to other customers, it would be controlling KILO-BYTES AND KILO-BYTE SECONDS, not SPECIFIC CONTENT.
For example, the use of BitTorrent during peak periods could equal 10,000 emails, 3,000 web page connections or 4 digital movies in terms of IDENTICAL peak use imposed on the network. Each source could be equally (neutrally) responsible for the peak congestion.
Picking and choosing among those sources for delay or cutoff by Comcast based on CONTENT is non-neutral discrimination. For example, a traffic jam could be alleviated by preventing entry of say 200 buses, 200 trucks or 600 cars, where any of the three take up the same amount of road space to cause the same amount of congestion.
Comcast should not be making these choices among internet use content any more than a traffic cop should be deciding whether one bus or one truck causes more congestion than three cars - if there was a “congestion fee”, the bus and the truck should be assessed three times that of a car as a “neutral” control of traffic.
Instead, Comcast and other facility-based broadband providers are posturing to force customers into a newly created “fast-lane everything” package with much higher prices, perhaps double or triple the price for what customers get now. Degraded quality at lower speeds would be used to force customers into the high-price package.
Achieving such market power outcomes requires that the current conditions of net neutrality, in place by default, be undermined and abandoned to whatever degree necessary. That’s why this case is important - it will tend to set a standard for net neutrality going forward absent any hard laws or FCC rules on the issue.
Comcast should be required to show its peak network capacity cannot be met. It should be forced to cease overselling network capacity along with vague language designed to allow it to control delays, cutoffs, pricing and content at will.
If Comcast threatens that it will not maintain maintenance or buildout of the network or to impose discriminatory pricing unless net neutrality is abandoned, its monopoly franchises should be suspended and considered for competitive buyout and takeover by a new provider under conditions of net neutrality.
If Comcast insists that a “fast-lane” is necessary to alleviate congestion, it should be allowed to provide one under the condition that existing broadband capacity and access remains undisturbed and overhauled with clear pricing and capacity maximums available to end users.
Mr. Payne, could you put your comment on your own blog, please?
OK, I'm guilty of doing the same, but my analysis is a lot less reasoned, and more off-the-cuff.
@jbug: the future is what we make it. If Terminator has taught me anything, it's that the future is not set in stone. We have to move the debate. We have to set terms of the debate, meaning we cannot get caught up in the big media rhetoric. Keep the focus on the public good. “What have you done for me, lately?” should be the mantra. Profitability? That's your problem. If you can't see a way to profit in this market, you shouldn't be CEO.
Personally, I think community mesh is the future, and folks like sascha meinrath and prometheus radio are pointing to it. We can no longer be the sheeple. We have to lead.
That's why Harold is such an inspiration. He's up on the Hill kicking butt. We'll be in the trenches connecting the 2-strand together, cranking up the radios, etc.
This is going to be so much fun...
Barry Payne, thank you. This analogy is most useful and pertinent.
Shun, thanks for the kind words.
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Wow.
Now that is serious “put up or shut up” stuff.
Cool. And thank you!