BT Throttling Online Video For Competitive, Not Congestion, Reasons
from the not-nice dept
While the broadband providers often talk up the need to break network neutrality in order to avoid "congestion" problems, most people have recognized that's just a smokescreen. The congestion issues are not an issue at all. Broadband costs have been going down, consistently, and most network engineers admit that with basic upgrades (nothing out of the ordinary), there's no bandwidth crunch to worry about. The real reason why broadband providers are interested in breaking network neutrality is because many of them want to get into the content business -- and they don't want to compete on even ground.Case in point? BT. The British telco is starting to heavily throttle all video -- especially the BBC's online video player. This is the same BT, by the way, that just two years ago was saying there was no need to traffic shape or break net neutrality, and that it could handle all traffic issues with basic upgrades. So what happened? Well, it appears BT didn't like the competition from online video providers, so it decided to pretend it needed to do this for congestion purposes.
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Filed Under: competition, congestion, throttling, traffic shaping, video
Companies: bt
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Fixed link
http://fastnetnews.com/dslprime/42-d/1758-bt-heavily-throttling-bbc-all-video
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Blu-Ray is already broke...
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oops
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Bandwidth crunch shit
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Re: Bandwidth crunch shit
First realize that capped/tiered/shaped service is not the same as metered service. Capped/tiered/shaped service is bad. True metered service (like electric service where the customer pays only for the quantity used) can be good. Why? Because with metered service, the more the customer uses, the more the ISP profits. This gives the ISP an incentive to provide higher speeds so as to facilitate more usage. So no matter who customers get their "content" from, the ISP profits from the download. Of course, ISP's don't like the idea of true metered service. They'd rather use caps and tiers and shaping so that customers get less than they pay for. Even with flat rate service, ISPs have little incentive to provide faster or better service since the customer pays the same regardless of how useful the service is or isn't.
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Re: Re: Bandwidth crunch shit
ISPs are not required to release the true cost to them of bandwidth, and as can be expected none of them ever do. There is no way to know what would be a 'fair' metered access price.
Most of all, metered usage would force everyone to negotiate with their internet. It would frighten the vast majority of consumers into never using their internet connection for fear of running up their internet bill. People have to use electricity and gas, but the internet can be avoided if one is really desperate. In other words, all bandwidth-intensive online services would be killed by metered usage.
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Re: Re: Re: Bandwidth crunch shit
The question is how to apportion payment for capital investment in a way that is fair to both heavy and light users and that encourages ISPs to maintain and improve infrastructure. Oh, and there is ongoing capital investment after the initial one that must be met.
Bits are not a finite resource like electricity or gas.
Actually, electricity is an infinite resource because you can always make more of it. That's why it's usually called "electric service". They aren't selling you electrons so much as they are the "service" of delivering them to you (and then they make you give them back, but that's a technicality).
Now take the example of a nuclear power plant. After the equipment, construction, distribution and maintenance costs, the cost of fuel is negligible. And in the case of a solar plant, the fuel is completely free. A lot like an ISP, no? Yet, you would argue that there is nothing positive about metered electric service? Would you suggest that everyone should pay the same monthly bill regardless of usage? How many cities in the US have free or flat rate electric service? I haven't heard of any.
ISPs are not required to release the true cost to them of bandwidth, and as can be expected none of them ever do.
Walmart is not required to release the true cost to them items that they sell either, and as can be expected they never do.
There is no way to know what would be a 'fair' metered access price.
As opposed to, say, flat rate? How do you set the "fair" price for that? You sound like you are arguing for gov't regulated prices. I would argue for free market pricing instead. And in order for that to work, there needs to be open competition. But that's a separate issue from billing model.
Most of all, metered usage would force everyone to negotiate with their internet. It would frighten the vast majority of consumers into never using their internet connection for fear of running up their internet bill.
That's easily disproved by looking at electric service as an example. If what you said was true, then the vast majority of consumers would never use electricity for fear of running up their electric bill. I don't think that's the case.
People have to use electricity and gas, but the internet can be avoided if one is really desperate.
Not true either. People don't have to use electricity and gas either. They can both "be avoided if one is really desperate".
In other words, all bandwidth-intensive online services would be killed by metered usage.
No more so than it has killed electrical usage. Or metered fuel usage has killed the automobile. Or many other examples. I could go on and on.
Looking back on your post, I see most of it is just not true.
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Re: Re: Bandwidth crunch shit
So, if i live in a dense area, perhaps it is more costly to upkeep the infrastructure given the heavier use. If that's the case then it might make sense to set pricing based on ones metro area, but individually it's just price gouging.
Tel-cos are in the business to make money, they are not non-profit groups, so I can't really blame them for trying. However, they need to try harder to find legitimate reasons to raise rates.
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Re: Re: Re: Bandwidth crunch shit
No true. Capacity is being consumed. You mention water. There is a lot of water on the planet, but as with information, the cost is in getting it to you, and that requires distribution capacity which you typically pay for based on usage.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but the tel-co doesn't have a router dedicated solely to my connection.
They could, but in most cases they probably don't. But the electric company probably doesn't have a power plant dedicated solely to your house either.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Bandwidth crunch shit
The cost in getting water to the consumer is less in transportation (unless you live in a desert i.e. Las Vegas) and more in treatment. This is why desalinization plants are not yet an economically viable solution. A person could cut out the middle man and drink from the river, but that is not recommended.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Bandwidth crunch shit
No, just the opposite is true. And in fact sometimes water from sources requiring much more treatment than some others is used because it is so much cheaper to treat the closer, lower quality water than it is to transport better water from further away.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Bandwidth crunch shit
Huh? Not even. If you're on a shared media system, like cable, then all of your capacity is shared right up to your house. Even with a dedicated media system like DSL, you're still consuming shared internet capacity with all the other customers. Hub vs switch? I've got news for you, the infinite capacity switch has yet to invented. You really don't know what you're talking about.
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Title
congestion should be congestive... noun noun or adjective adjective
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come to canada
Then you can have shaped *AND* capped *AND* metered internet service.
All encrypted traffic is downgraded. That includes such activities as encrypted (reliable) email and VPN access.
I'm thinking that Rogers is planning to become the ISP of choice for the Chinese government. Their philosophies on what constitutes "desirable internet access" are closely aligned.
--GJ--
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Re: come to canada
Then you can have shaped *AND* capped *AND* metered internet service.
Rogers doesn't provided metered service. It's capped service. I'm unaware of any major ISPs offering metered service.
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Re: Re: come to canada
Rogers charges extra money when you go over their (arbitrary) limit of bandwidth usage per month, which triggers extra rows to appear on your invoice.
--GJ--
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Re: Re: Re: come to canada
If it isn't tiered or capped and you pay only for what you use, then yes. Otherwise, it's some other kind of "plan".
Rogers charges extra money when you go over their (arbitrary) limit of bandwidth usage per month, which triggers extra rows to appear on your invoice.
That's capping.
(Warning - Automobile analogy ahead)
Think of it like gasoline. If a station sells gas by the gallon or fraction thereof (within the limits of the meter), and you pay only for what you get, then that's metering. And by the way, you can share or even resell the gas you buy if you want to. In fact, the station's happy to see you come back for more. Basic economics.
If, on the other hand the station were to sell gas in, say, 10 gallon prepaid increments (tiers) and you had to forfeit any portion of any increment that your tank wouldn't hold (no sharing or hording), that would be tiered pricing.
Now, if the station sold gas in fill-ups but with an undisclosed cap and meter visible only to them and the ability to fine you an exorbitant fee for going over that invisible cap, but no refund for staying under it, then that could be described as capped pricing. Again, no sharing allowed but everyone would be too scared to anyway.
And finally, if the station sold gas by the fixed-price unlimited fill-up, limited to the size of your tank and with the condition that you couldn't share any of it, then that would be flat-rate pricing. That might be a good deal for the big rig trucks, but not the motorcycles.
All of these models use meters, but only the first one is really a metered (or measured) sale. And of all of these models, metering seems the most reasonable to me. The rest kind of seem like scams.
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