Network Operators Not The Only Ones Against A Neutral Internet
from the enemy-of-an-enemy dept
The major network operators are obviously terrified at the thought of just operating dumb, commoditized pipes, and as such are the chief advocates of the end of net neutrality, which would allow them to exert greater control over how their networks are used. Conversely, big internet firms and techies that are closely involved with the web have generally supported keeping the web neutral. But the issue isn't quite that black and white. Nick Carr points to an interesting article on Stanford's Clean Slate Design for the Internet project, which aims to put out proposals for how the internet could be completely remodeled to achieve better performance. What's interesting is that several of the group's proposals involve making the internet less neutral, or at least less dumb. For example, they would like to see it made harder for people to operate anonymously, so that hackers and spammers find it harder to do their jobs. More broadly, the idea is that the network backbone should better understand a packet's contents for both security and prioritization purposes. None of this is totally new; the idea of making the internet smarter has been bandied about for some time. But it's interesting to see some of the language of hardcore internet enthusiasts and large network operators converge, even if their goals are entirely different. It also underlines the fact that net neutrality is by no means a black and white issue. It would be easy to imagine a net neutrality law aimed at preventing operator abuse also impeding some of the ideas put forth here.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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http://moonsview.blogspot.com/
Do we need a law to change the way the Internet operates today or is the law to protect the future? Are the laws that are on the books today good enough or are more laws needed to protect the Internet?
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Re: http://moonsview.blogspot.com/
I seriously doubt the internet would improve if we neutralized it entirely. It would just make things incredibly slow and stagnate process (much like if the government took over). Of course I also don't think we can back telco's in their claims that they do not need to allow competitors on their systems because they can not be trusted to monopolize.
There really isn't a clear answer in my mind, but it will probably be a coalition of telco's and local governments of some kind (if they can work with each other and not screw the population).
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I'm honestly a supporter of making dummy pipes the norm because this way it removes any and all external interests from filtering in things that do not need to be there. When we start adding things because it's lobbied that it should be there, it becomes the biggest platform for the underhanded practices that currently are used in general law making and it would only serve to benefit specific interested parties.
So, since nobody can be trusted to behave themselves when it comes to what they want to do with the internet's current setup, simply remove everything that could possibly be used to benefit a specific entity vs. the whole and be done with it.
It's a bit heavy handed, but when we start trying to legislate how the internet is used in a social context it's going to start suffering the same pitfalls of any system that works great on paper but fails miserably when a human being is placed in the mix.
As always, bear in mind this is just the perspective of someone who is watching from the sidelines...
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Net neutrality may not be the best possible solution but anything, and I mean [i]anything[/i] that requires trusting the telecos is a non-starter and should be discarded.
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2 Seperate things
Specificially if a backbone is aware of the major applications types, and flow requirements that fine, if they want to give high priority to voice and video, thats fine too...BUT they have to give that priority to ALL applications from any content provider.
This is where neutrality is different, once you make a conscience decision who's applications run fastest based on who pays you the most, then you have broken the internet.
The Internet would benefit from backbone QoS and other application layer traffic enhancements.
The Internet Needs Net Neutrality.
The Internet does not need pay for preference traffic shaping. That's the difference
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Clarificiation
All voice and video applications from all content providers not all applications (otherwise what's the point ;)
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You make a huge error
The entire Internet runs on toll roads policed by gatekeepers and has ever since the NSF backbone was shut down over ten years ago.
And it's obviously silly to let anyone and everyone demand high-QoS for every stream, that defeats the whole purpose of it. As long as the Internet has been under commercial control, it's followed the principle that you get what you pay for. That's the only way it should ever be.
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In fact, the lead proponents of NN are professional telco regulators facing unemployment thanks to the success of VoIP; Save the Internet is funded by Free Press and the consumer groups, the most regulation-happy organizations in America.
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#7 is not correct
You get what you pay for in terms of bandwidth and the ability to burst between you and your provider, not for packet priority..everyone knows' there is no QoS on the internet..otherwise why do company's pay for expensive private WAN links with QoS (MPLS, ATM, Frame etc).
Even if one provider decided to start marking and Queuing who is to say any other provider would honor or pass along that info. They would not.
Currently, a wide open, First in First out internet is what we have, anyone trying to say otherwise is either lying or misinformed.
I will restate my point, QoS is not bad, if its applied evenly to EVERYONE's Voice and Video services. The second you allow pay for preference on the public internet you have changed the status quo and the internet in the worse way
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Nope
These agreements are such that low-latency streams command a higher price than bulk streams, and that's as it should be. Nobody gets to use any Internet pipe for free.
This fantasy that Internet routers are "first-in, first out" repeaters is also a load of crap. Routers select routes for packets that conform to contracts and service requirements, not in some highly random willy-nilly fashion.
And what on Earth is a "public Internet?" The only Internet the public has access to is a network of private networks interconnected by commercial service contracts. The Internet is not a free ride.
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Are you for real?!
Although...the "pipes for free" argument tells me you are reading from the "grass roots" hands off the internet (i.e Telco funded group) playbook. However, it does not matter who you are.
The Public internet is a network of private, public, and educational facilities all connected (peering / paid). I am not going to go into a big explanation, if you don't know what it is then you should not be posting.
On Private networks, yes QoS and Service policies are adhered to end to end, I am 100% in agreement. (and just in case you ask private = company A to company A or to company B carrying nothing but their traffic). And yes some people pay more to make sure their traffic gets though first (ridiculously more).
But this model does not work on the public internet. Sorry....I pay for my access to the internet in its totality, not a select few highspeed sites my "gatekeeper" was paid by. If I wanted anything else, I would have stuck with compuserve
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Nope, not right
Some routes are faster than others, and somebody will generally have to pay more to use those routes than the slower ones. This model works perfectly well on the Internet today, and has for many years.
It's perfectly practical for Comcast and Verizon to make deals with Level 3 or Global Crossing or Verio or WebEx such that the core or overlay provider takes traffic marked a certain way and delivers it to the destination network with bounded jitter, and that's all you need for decent QoS.
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And this is where you argument falls apart....
However, this has NOTHING to do with net neutrality...because ALL my packets are suffering or going really fast, not just the ones my ISP wants to go fast because whatever content provider paid them to. If I don't like the service I can find another ISP (don't get me started on ISP competition in this country)
Why not admit the truth....You and your Telco buddies are simply trying to drum up new revenue by trying to fight off the inevitable commditiztion of bandwidth....only without NN can the telco's offer this *magical* special highspeed links to and across the internet.
The truth is the anti-NN crew are simply interested in double dipping and exploiting their user base for profit by artificially limiting the bandwidth to create the illusion of value...since who will pay the telco's their gatekeeper ransom if the "regular" public internet works fine.
As for your last point about the respecting QoS bits, you are not reading what I wrote...Don't tell me that ANYONE would pay to have the "core" providers QoS their packets when the local ISPs can/will toss the bits and FIFO the packets on the way out to the end users. Com'now... QoS is only valuable and most effective when everyone END to END uses it, yes choke points are important but any link can become saturated and render the rest of the QoS policy moot.
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Re:
I don't know who you've been talking to, but 99% of the network engineers I've spoken to and worked with are wholeheartedly in favor of NN.
I am wholly in favor of prioritizing traffic according to application. That is just basic QOS practice.
The telcos want to prioritize the traffic according to who pays them the most. If they get their way, a paying content provider's email could have a higher priority than a non-paying provider's VoIP traffic.
Now tell me you NN opposers don't have a problem with that.
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Real network engineers oppose net neutrality
Your scenarios are simply ridiculous. Nobody's going to pay to have their e-mail move through the net with no jitter, it's just not a valuable thing.
And "Scared of the Man", every little bit of QoS helps, whether it's end-to-end or not, and yes indeed, my telco buddies want to drum up some more revenue by adding rich services. It's called capitalism, and it's what makes the world go 'round. Try networking without a network and tell me how satisfying it is for you.
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Don't confuse QoS with Net Neutraility
If the Internet worked like you seem to want it, if I am a company with a website or I produce streaming video or I am a VoIP provider. Not only do I have to pay my ISP(s) for my bandwidth, I am going to have pay EVERY ISP between my customer and I to make sure my QoS is honored and propagated. That's not how it works now, that's not how the internet grew and succeeded. Vince Cerf, one of the Internet's Creators has come out against this model, and what he says holds a lot more sway than any of your nameless "engineers"
Trying to suggest the Telco's want any sort of capitalistic free market internet is like saying communism was good for Russia. The Telco's want it both ways...they want government protection for their monopolies, but at the same time they try to end run or lobby down any government protection that even remotely threatens their business model.
These are the same telco's that wanted to charge more for modem calls because it "cost them more" The same telco's who passed laws banning you from using any other phone on their network than theirs. The same telco's that happily took millions of dollars of our money to build out fiber to the home for the people in the country....that well...never really happened
So please take your sillly arguments somewhere else. Greed + Government protected business model do NOT equal capitalism. It = bloated phone companies too big, and too slow, with no desire to innovate whatsoever.
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Naive and foolish
The Google employee you mention, Vinton "Vint" Cerf, was an assistant to the great Bob Kahn when Kahn invented TCP. He stands along among early Internet pioneers in advocating increased regulation of the Internet. Cerf's professor, Dav Farber, Kahn, and End-to-End pioneer David D. Clark are all on record opposing the new net neutrality regulations.
Regarding your claim that telcos don't innovate, this is a surprisingly naive thing to say, especially for a Google fan. Google has developed some great means for selling ads, but that's hardly innovation. The phone companies, on the other hand, invented digital networks, the transistor, the Unix operating system, the C programming language, twisted-pair Ethernet, and optical networking.
If Google's ad network had never existed the Internet would be just fine, but without the technologies the phone companies have invented, there would be no Internet.
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Can't seem to get your argument right....
Regarding your first point...the telephone call analogy is silly, Telephone calls are point to point communication that go over a specific SVC, usually using SS7 for signaling and TDM or TDM over IP for transport so its not the same...This is the root of the telco greed they want the arbitrage model on the internet, they want metered model, that want per minute, per kilobit, per service level, per anything model...because they can't survive with the basically flat rate model for internet access now.
As for Vince Cerf... you seem to know enough about Telco's to know he came From MCI... so he is just as much a telco guy as Seidenberger. And if you look what Kahn said, he and I agree....If you want to do private things on your own network (wikipedia)...knock yourself out, unfortunately the telcos want take that window for innovation and turn it into another way for them to hold the their broadband subscribers as ransom to the content providers.
As for innovation...those days are over my friend...Unix, C, TP Ethernet...old. Bell labs was sold off a long time ago... When I say lack innovation I am talking about new ways of doing things... Why didn't verizon start offering VoIP on its on....cause they couldn't, they are big and fat and happy to collect land line fees.
So where are they now... IP TV (stalled)? FIOS(available in 2 homes nation wide)? That's the best they can do? think of the 100s of new companies that really did something different... I could care less about google and their ads...I am talking about Social networking, wireless location tracking, Municipal WiFi, VoIP, Peer to Peer...technologies that changed the way things are done. Carriers don't innovate...they maintain.
My friend I appreciate its your job to troll around looking to stick up for your telco buddies, I really do... but seriously do you even read what you type? Why are you so willing to stand up for them. If we left the internet to them...we would all still be AOL members on dial up modems...connecting at 33.3K
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Re: Can't seem to get your argument right....
My question is this. You state that the telco's can't survive with the current flat rate model. If they don't survive, how does the Internet continue to work? Don't the telco's own the pipes?
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The answer is the internet will survive with or without the telcos.
They own the last mile, and now due to their merger mania they own a lot of back bone too, but lets say they all went bankrupt, how long would it take for their assets to be bought up, for the fiber to turned back on.
Do you remember the .com boom, how many companies laid fiber, ran DSL and cable ISPs...not many of them are left today...but amazingly all their customers are still running (maybe not all, but the vast majority).
I don't shed a tear at the thought of Telco's going belly up. They are big bloated and inefficient organizations that do more damage than good to innovation in the country. I would love to see smaller Telco 2.0 emerge fast agile companies telecoms who make decisions with the customer's (and the country's) best interest in mind.
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Vint Cerf
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This coming from the fellow who claims to be the worlds first blogger... Hahahahah
Ricky Boy....Just google yourself... and Net Neutrality.
Shoutingloudly(dot)com has a nice little piece on your enormous logic and wisdom.
The fact is your last response shows you have nothing more to say.
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boom era equipment
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Nothing more to say to you
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Where's the Love?
And Spew....again my friend you have been hangin out in the telco crowd too long. If you call the way I completely refute of your half ass "argument", and exposing you for the telco, comment troll you seem to be...spew...well I guess we are all products of our environments.
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The devil made SOTM do it...
And then contribute to the "Get ScaredOfTheMan a Shrink Fund," because if this deluded soul thinks he or she has made an argument (putting premise before conclusion and supporting assertions with facts) he or she is in a sad way.
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Dr. Bennett PhD I presume
Generic QoS on public internet = fine
Ransom QoS to feed greed Telcos = not good
Blocking access to sites = not good
Artificially slowing down access to sites = not good
Nothing good will come if net neutrality does not become law (and it will).
You are nothing more than a Telco shill, No internet user would ever want anything from their ISP other than equal access to and from all sites on the internet (not included parent's with filtering software). Period.
Anything else...for any other reason is a huge step backwards.
So you can make all the crappy arguments you want, you have not convinced (fooled) anyone here. Look at all the Techdirt posts on Net Neutrality....not just this one. the Majority of posts are PRO Net Neutrality, you are in the very very small minority.
If Net Neutrality will ruin the internet, capitalism, the free market and chocolate chip cookies (as you claim), why did the telco's lift their skirts and agree to it for 2 years as part of the ATT BS merger?
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tsk, tsk, tsk
Um, you see, they actually didn't. They agreed to abide by phony net neutrality (only where web sites are concerned), but they got an exemption for telephony and IPTV. And that was the point all along: web sites don't benefit from QoS, they simply need bandwidth. IPTV and VoIP, networked services that don't depend on the Web or even the public Internet to be successful, do need QoS and they're exempt from NN.
The people who claimed NN was needed to protect web sites from QoS never understood the issue. When Ed Whitacre said "Google ain't using my pipes for free" he meant the IPTV pipes, and verily, they can't.
So there you are, little bubba, you've been informed. Now it's up to you to understand the lesson.
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How do you respond to such responses....
My connection to the internet, is just that, MY connection to the internet which I pay for. That means I can use it for IP TV, IP Video,streaming Audio, IM, Web, or whatever else I want.
You see, your problem is you forget that people (us) pay for our connection to the network and Google or revver or myspace pay for theirs.
So I go back to this again...No one in the middle should be allowed to charge EXTRA to deliver packets...we both already paid...and the middle transit ISPs got paid by My ISP and google's ISP. Anything else is simply greed, conflict of interest, against the public good.
Everyone knows the main part of this fight is over next gen services such as IP TV, but if you look at the way ISPs are acting now, (blocking access to web sites they don't like, blocking access to Vonage, forcing home users to get a static IP address at an extra cost for any VoIP applications) then you see why we need NN.
Look man I can stay at this all day and night with you... NN is necessary...without it, you are killing off the NEXT google...or the next vonage, or the next...whatever.
Now why you don't seem to understand this is beyond me.
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IPTV is not an Internet service
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Why are you so fixated on Google?
The Teco's can have all their IPTV they want, I am saying their IP TV gets no better treatment than anyone else. They already have an advantage of being close to their subscribers anyway...so why do they need the extra help. I would have no problem with all IP TV on set ports traffic being given higher priority than the rest. Same goes for voice.
They are a common carrier right? You can't have it both ways, its a conflict of interest and borderlines anti-trust.
And why are you so fixated on google (another savetheinternet Telco Shill tactic) I could care less about google. I care more about the next google that will never be, because they couldn't get past "the gatekeepers"
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net neutrality
ScaredOfTheMan enough already everyone knows NN is bad don't bother responding to this guy
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I'm done with this guy
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SOTM's fundamental confusion
AT&T's IPTV service is just as private as Comcast's Cable TV service. The fact that it's implemented with different protocols (IP vs. DOCSIS) isn't really signficant.
And for the record, I'm not employed by a phone company nor do I have any financial relationship with any phone company or any company with the dog in the NN fight. I speak for myself only.
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I'm done with this guy
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Are Retarded?
If its not an things that use IP are not just Internet services then why did a Federal judge strike down MN attempts to apply telephony Tax VoIP, since its not a phone service its an Internet service.
If I can reach it via my public IP address then its a internet service.
Last double post was a mistake (sorry!:)
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Jesus Christ on a stick
Meditate on this: The Internet is not IP, and IP is not the Internet. The two are related, but not the same.
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ok ok you win...
Goodbye
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on second thought....Read this
AT&T announced Thursday that its U-verse Internet Protocol television service will now allow subscribers to watch live programming on their PCs.
Until now, U-verse had been an IPTV competitor to traditional cable and satellite companies, much in the way Verizon's Fios fiber-optic network competes with cable and satellite. But with the new PC-based offering, an AT&T-branded MobiTV package called U-verse OnTheGo, the company is bringing television programming--some of it live--to subscribers' computers. Now, the company says, subscribers who opt into the OnTheGo deal can watch U-verse TV wherever a broadband Internet connection is available.
You like that last line -- from where a broadband Internet connection is available -- so STFU... your arguments are wrong....You lose...goodbye
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Ha ha ho ho hee hee
It will be interesting to see whether U-Verse OnTheGo does any sort of QoS; I'm guessing it doesn't, hence it's beside the point.
Nice try though, you've probably confused some children and old people.
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