The Internet Access You Buy Is Not The Internet Access You Can Use
from the ISP-knows-best dept
We've mentioned in the past how ISPs, like Shaw and Rogers in Canada use traffic shaping tools to block out P2P traffic, but the companies don't seem to want to admit it. An ISP may have a valid reason for using traffic shaping tools -- but they shouldn't be able to do that without letting users know that their connection has those limitations. The expectation when you sign up for an ISP connection is that you can actually use it. Letting subscribers know gives them the option of not working with that ISP and, instead, signing up with one that actually gives them real internet access... Aha! I think we've figured out why they keep it a secret.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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No Subject Given
Canada is Canada. USA is USA... and China is China, and not the other way around.
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thats the point of this article, is it not? am i missing something?
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All we do is use a BT client that lets you change the port range... And when they phone me every couple months asking why my bandwidth usage is so high, I apologize and make up some BS excuse about leaving Kazaa open by mistake and say it'll never happen again.
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Nuff said.
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Re: Canada sucks
This brings up a better point- censorship. Sure, the company doesn't want their entire bandwidth bill to pay for p2p traffic (legal or illegal). I can understand that.
I was looking into starting an ISP here in rural areas where I live a few years ago. We had lots of killer ideas, and our service would have really been top notch. Problem was, 2 our of 3 investors wanted to censor what people could browse/surf/download. That did not jive with most others, and so the idea fell flat. Sad, that.
But to the point of censorship, it's complete BS. Howard Stern isn't allowed in Canada. That makes me laugh every time I hear it. What, does that mean all canadians are more moral because of that? They're better global citizens? No. It means HS said something to make canadian officials pissy, and so the made a rule: "No Stern".
Granted, I am going my my standard of living, but if some government official said, "Sorry, you can't read Al Jezira ever"...well...there wouldn't even be a question of impeachment...there would simply be a lynch mob.
As to standards and bein biased, I once had a friend (Canadian girl) that wore this shirt- her favorite. It had a picture of N. America on it, and the text around the pic said, "We're bigger and on top- If this were prison you'd be our bitch". Well, sadly for Canada...this is not prison. Nobody is anybody's bitch. and frankly, I find that more racey than anything Howard has ever said on-air.
Oh, and Canada sucks...just ask Peter Griffin.
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Did I say anything different? I said they might have perfectly good reasons for doing what they do -- but they shouldn't sell things in a way that implies you get full internet access and then not actually offer it.
If they're going to block certain types of traffic, they need to make that clear.
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As always though, I enjoy reading your articles. Very stimulating, compared to articles written by other websites.
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Guys, the word is censor, as in censorship.
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Not all of canada...
I, guess what I'm saying is that this really only applies to the conglomerates (and don't even get me started on Bell).
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As far as ISP's go.... you folks need to get a clue quick...... you have a job... it is a simple one.... your job is to transport data from point A to point B. It is not to choose what data you will or will not transmit...... you job is not to be a censor...... your job is not to choose for me what is and what is not appropiate for me to do on the internet.....
I will decide that..... and if you have problems with that... get out of the business... cause bottom line..... all your job consists of and all we want you to do is transport data from point A to point B.....
You have a good thing here..... don't screw it up or folks will find a way to do what they wan and leave you out of the loop that includes their bank accounts........
You don't want that to happen do you......... I didn't think so......
So handle your dirty laundry and let us get back to business as usual...
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Shaw
Shaw actually does have a stated limit on data transfer: 10, 60, 100 or 150 GB/month depending on which service plan you have, but according to a customer service rep I once spoke with, they don't enforce it in any way, and he wasn't privy to whether they're traffic shaping.
One thing Shaw definitely is up to, I was recently shocked to discover, is the blocking of torrent uploads to The Pirate Bay. I'd been trying for days to upload a torrent I'd created, but I kept getting TPB's default "database problems" page. After someone on TBP's IRC chat told of reports that uploads were being blocked by some ISPs, I downloaded Torpark, and via a German IP, was suddenly able to upload with no problems.
I find it reprehensible that a Canadian ISP would be allowed to engage in the same sort of censorship that so many an authoritarian government are condemned for.
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Shaw is engaging in fraud
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Traffic shaping and port blocking are different
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Shaw denies using any traffic shaping.
When I pressed further saying that their is mounting evidence, he said "our official position is that we don't use any traffic shaping or throttling technology".
It's bullshit, and he knew I could hear it in his voice.
I say Class Action lawsuit. We need to get this started.
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