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The FCC is planning new net neutrality rules. And they could enshrine pay-for-play. - The Washington Post
- Subject: The FCC is planning new net neutrality rules. And they could enshrine pay-for-play. - The Washington Post
- From: owen at delong.com (Owen DeLong)
- Date: Tue, 29 Apr 2014 11:14:59 -0700
- In-reply-to: <[email protected]>
- References: <[email protected]>
On Apr 29, 2014, at 10:48 AM, Jay Ashworth <jra at baylink.com> wrote:
> ----- Original Message -----
>> From: "Owen DeLong" <owen at delong.com>
>
>> What is absolutely contrary to the public interest is allowing $CABLECO to
>> leverage their position as a monopoly or oligopoly ISP to create an
>> operational disadvantage in access for that competing product.
>
> I was with you right up til here.
>
>> The so-called â??internet fast laneâ?? is a euphemism for allowing $CABLECO
>> to put competing video products into a newly developed slow-lane while
>> limiting the existing path to their own products and those content
>> providers that are able to and choose to pay these additional fees.
>
> So, how do you explain, and justify -- if you do -- cablecos who use
> IPTV to deliver their mainline video, and supply VoIP telephone...
>
> and use DOCSIS to put that traffic on separate pipes to the end terminal
> from their IP service, an advantage which providers who might compete
> with them don't have -- *even*, I think, if they are FCC mandated
> alternative IP providers who get aggregated access to the cablemodem,
> as do Earthlink and the local Internet Junction in my market, which
> can (at least in theory) still be provisioned as your cablemodem
> supplier for Bright House (Advance/Newhouse) customers.
I donâ??t explain it, donâ??t justify it, donâ??t support it.
> Those are â??fast lanes" for TV and Voice traffic, are they not?
Carving the pipe up into lanes to begin with is kind of questionable IMHO.
I realize itâ??s tradition, but if you think about it, it was only necessary
when things were TDM/FDM. Once everything is IP, dividing the IP up among
different TDM/FDM is just a way to take one large fast lane and turn it into
slow lanes (some slower than others, perhaps) where some traffic can be
given preferential treatment.
> They are (largely) anticompetitive, and unavailable to other providers.
Agreedâ?¦ I thought thatâ??s what I said above.
Owen