Cox Gets Aggressive With Traffic Shaping
from the taunting-the-fcc dept
In a move that's basically baiting the FCC and Congress to see if they will act, Cox has announced that it's going to experiment with rather aggressive traffic shaping, granting priority to bits that it feels have a great priority. Why Cox gets to describe what gets a priority and what doesn't seems pretty questionable. Cox is also the company that implemented a three strikes policy on file sharing without telling anyone.To be honest, this seems like a really tone deaf move by Cox -- and I'd imagine that plenty of telcos and cable companies are pissed off about Cox calling extra attention to the topic right now. There's been plenty of talk of new net neutrality regulations in Congress, and with Cox putting the issue so squarely on the table, it's as if they're begging for such regulations (or at least to be slapped down by the FCC). You would think they would at least wait until it wasn't an issue getting so much attention before drawing extra scrutiny and daring regulators to act.
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Filed Under: net neutrality, regulation, traffic shaping
Companies: cox, fcc
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I just read about this one an hour ago
That's still pretty bad. I'd scream and yell and rave and rant if they blocked my FTP. I use it as an emergency server for work. It's one thing to lose connection because the network is unavoidably slow, it's another to have it intentionally blocked.
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Re: I just read about this one an hour ago
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Foolish? Probably. It remains to be seen however, what the FCC is going to do about it. Swift justice hopefully.
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Foolish? Probably. It remains to be seen however, what the FCC is going to do about it. Swift justice hopefully.
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Did they get new management or something?
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Excuse me...but...
How would one know that one's mail is not being read or the file in a file transfer is not being copied and archived?
Also, going forward, how will DMCA safe harbors not be legally assault-able in an era where the ISP actually DOES CONTROL WHAT and HOW data is transferred across the network?
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Re: Excuse me...but...
How would one know that one's mail is not being read or the file in a file transfer is not being copied and archived?"
Beats the heck out of me. Also, what prevents everyone from going to encrypted data streams?
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It's in the Name!
BTW- TWC does not appear to care how much you DL or UL, I too have been testing the waters for quite some time. Time to get more external HDs.
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'file downloads'
I'd prefer there was enough bandwidth for everything, but Parkinson's law applies; Network traffic (p2p downloads particularly) will simply expand to consume all available bandwidth.
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Re: 'file downloads'
Network traffic (p2p downloads particularly) will simply expand to consume all available bandwidth.
In theory you have some basis, but reality doesn't always follow theory nicely. Those down in the weeks 9rather than the execs and policy makers) claim that current and predicted traffic is nothing that routine maintenance and upgrading can't handle. Which group (execs or technicians) do you think better understand the implications of Parkinson's?
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Re: 'file downloads'
Cable company TV ads frequently tout that their "high-speed" internet services 'make downloads faster!', among other things. I just saw such an ad not 1 week ago. The fact that Cox might be de-prioritizing 'certain' file downloads is less surprising than ironic.
But let's cut to the chase and talk about that elephant. This all seems like a zero-sum issue because of the bandwidth(s) offered as "high-speed" by Cox, Charter and other cable providers here in the US. Mr. Parkinson's old saw may be true in general, but there also exists a minimum level of service required to satisfy customer expectations. It should be no surprise to anyone that those customer needs have a pesky way of increasing over time. And increasingly that client traffic is looking more symmetrical. 5mbps/512kbps down/up rates were enough a couple of years ago, but probably not today and certainly not tomorrow.
Build-out, not box-in. Our cable bills won't be getting any cheaper anyway.
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Re: 'file downloads'
Care to provide proof that there isn't enough bandwidth? So far there's been proof only to the contrary, available bandwidth outpaces the need for it.
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Re: Re: 'file downloads'
Well, if that is true, then you will never notice the traffic shaping rules, and there is no problem.
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Re: 'file downloads'
I hope the Obama administration can do something to improve this situation, as our IPSs have failed to do much beyond trying to squeeze more money from their inadequate, old services.
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Not a right
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Re: Not a right
And if there is no choice, as happens to be the case in many areas? I am sure your argument covers that obvious problem... oh wait, it doesn't.
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Cox Traffic Shaping
Using them for a backup server may be pusing the limits of the home user agreement.
Many poeple around the world have much less bandwidth and pay much more... seems to me that everyone wants unlimited bandwidth for $29.00 a month.
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It's just responsible network managment
So *IF* the tubes get clogged, then they've implemented as system so that your VoIP will continue to work properly so you can use the phone, and your web browsing will still work properly (the primary use of such a connection). Anything else simply gets prioritized down - not blocked.
How is this, in any way, a problem? All they're doing is making sure the network continues to work well for applications that are congestion sensitive!
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I wonder...
Hmmm.
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Re: I wonder...
But if they start shaping my traffic and prioritizing things with my connection there will be hell to pay. I use FTP and torrents to transfers files for work/personal websites that I host from my house(one reason I upgraded as well).
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The a-ha momment...
Imagine a "TDISP" or Tunnel Destination ISP, (or better yet for marketing purposes a "Privacy Management ISP",) whom you contract with who serves to anchor the far end of an always on VPN session that tunnels through your RAT-BASTARD, PACKET SPYING, RIAA LACKEY, TRAFFIC SHAPING, ASSHAT primary ISP like Comcast or AT$T and releases your spring-fresh, unmolested packets onto the internet. As A. L. Flanagan correctly points out above, we can all encrypt our traffic, but usually this is done at the application level. To REALLY slap these invasive ISPs in the face, we need to encrypt all of our traffic.
I suppose an ISP could then block or throttle traffic to these end points but how would they distinguish your connection as a TDISP customer or an Employee?? What if the TDISP was a collective, customer owned enterprise?
If my ISP blocked my VPN connection to my employer, there would be hell to pay.
Ideas....Ideas.....
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Cox service
I'm not a happy customer at this point.
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on the subject of p2p
btw, I am in Australia, where we currently have NO unlimited internet. I have to pay $69/month, to get adsl2+(20mbit theoretical max) with 10gb of peak downloads(10am - 2am) and 15gb of off peak downloads. Once I use this up, my connection speed gets shaped to 64kbps. Believe me, internet shaping is the devil.
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Re: on the subject of p2p
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Yep the net sucks in Australia
I pay 109/mth for 1500/256 + VOIP (all free calls 'cept to mobiles) and get shaped to 64kb/s past that point. I am pretty sure my ISP does *something* to my P2P, it seems nowhere near as fast as it was even 2 months ago -- 40 seeds and I get 10kb/s. It'll get even better when we get the "save the kiddies" filter. Don't laugh, once one "free and democratic" country gets one in, it'll be the thin end of the wedge.
Think about the wider scope though - what if YOUR ISP throttles traffic from a site I visit and traffic from that site to me goes through them ? Not only will it affect their own customers, but anyone "downstream".
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Cox Internet Overcharges
Are we asking Cox the right questions?
Thank you for your thoughts on this . . .
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