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Binge On! - And So This is Net Neutrality?
> On Dec 10, 2015, at 2:32 PM, Chris Adams <cma at cmadams.net> wrote:
>
> I could have paid more to get it faster, and some large-scale shippers
> have special arrangements that seem to get their packages priority. How
> is this different from Internet traffic?
For me the better comparison is international postal services. I can get
USPS to give a package priority on their network, but once it leaves
that SLA is gone. They did their best to deliver it to the next-hop.
The concern I have here is part marketing and part technical reality.
1) ?Unlimited*? doesn?t really mean unlimited, which I?m personally
understanding of, but I?ve seen others take the hard-line approach.
2) ?Peering? is a term that people don?t quite grok, because it?s
overloaded in so many ways with transit, SFI, etc.
3) Networks are rarely equal. T-Mobile has lots of end-users. Their
pattern will look different from someone doing disaster recovery
off-site data storage.
4) corollary with #3 - Through M&A, divestiture and other moves companies
don?t always participate in the same markets in the same way. $dayjob
does not do DOCSIS/DSL services in north america. Should we? Not all
networks are on the same 5 continents/countries/cities. What is that
overlap necessary? The days of being at AADS, MAE-E,W, pac bell, etc
have changed significantly. Content distribution has advanced, edge
speeds have changed making applications feasible that were not thought
possible 10-20 years ago.
With the recent 174 <-> 3320 lawsuit, FCC, etc.. this all is interesting
to me. How do you reach a solution where the customers win?
I?ve seen many approaches to this, and as an engineer I don?t like congested
ports. Congested ports mean someone is unhappy, and minimizing that is a goal.
When two sides are not speaking to each other, it?s less likely things will
be fixed. This is at least people working towards a solution, it may not be
one where I have the old Qwest promise of every movie from everything ever
*prepares to ride the light*, but I expect things to get better over time as
companies adapt.
- Jared
P.S. Regarding ?unlimited? above, things like the new overage charges for
DOCSIS, DSL, FTTx services that were perceived as all you can eat, seeing
a company place a ceiling on the overages seen would be ideal. eg: you
max out at the business class service price, say $50 for residential
$100 business class starting tiers that most companies have.
Having no max for that is unreasonable for all parties as a bill for $infinity
is less likely to be paid compared to 2-3x usual fees.
The same theory could be applied to international data fees, just auto-sign me
up for the roaming plan that matches my usage. I seem to recall Sprint had
a cellular offering like this for minutes used (many eons ago) and for
being shareholder and consumer friendly it seemed to be the right balance.