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Comcast must stop blocking internet

ZECH

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FCC to Comcast: Stop blocking Internet traffic - Internet - MSNBC.com


WASHINGTON - A divided Federal Communications Commission has ruled that Comcast Corp. violated federal policy when it blocked Internet traffic for some subscribers and has ordered the cable giant to change the way it manages its network.

In a precedent-setting move, the FCC by a 3-2 vote on Friday enforced a policy that guarantees customers open access to the Internet.

The commission did not assess a fine, but ordered the company to stop cutting off transfers of large data files among customers who use a special type of "file-sharing" software.

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Comcast says its practices are reasonable â?????? that it has delayed traffic, not blocked it â?????? and that the FCC's so-called network-neutrality "principles" are part of a policy statement and are not enforceable rules.

Republican FCC Chairman Kevin Martin proposed the enforcement action and was joined by Democratic commissioners Jonathan Adelstein and Michael Copps in voting for approval. He was opposed by members of his own party, commissioners Robert McDowell and Deborah Taylor Tate, who both issued lengthy dissents.

The commission's authority to act stems from a policy statement adopted in September 2005 that outlined a set of principles meant to ensure that broadband networks are "widely deployed, open, affordable and accessible to all consumers."

The principles are "subject to reasonable network management," a concept the agency has not explicitly defined.

While the FCC action did not include a fine, it does require Comcast to stop its blocking practice by the end of the year. The company must also provide details to the commission on the management techniques it has used and let consumers know details of its future plans.

Martin was particularly critical of the company's failure to disclose to customers exactly how it was managing its traffic, saying this action "compounded the harm."

Martin said Comcast managers were not "simply managing their network, they had arbitrarily picked an application and blocked their subscribers' access to it."

Comcast spokeswoman Sena Fitzmaurice said in a prepared statement that the company was "disappointed in the commission's divided conclusion because we believe that our network management choices were reasonable...."

She said the company believes the order "raises significant due process concerns and a variety of substantive legal questions."

The FCC's action means network operators are subject to the FCC's enforcement process and the agency will act on consumer complaints.

Martin told The Associated Press in an interview before the meeting that the agency will consider fines for future violations, but he declined to speculate on how large they would be.

The FCC action arose when bloggers reported that Comcast customers who used file-sharing software like BitTorrent were noticing their transmissions were aborting prematurely.

The Associated Press ran tests and reported Comcast was indeed cutting off transfers by masquerading as its one of its customers.

The report led to a complaint by public interest group Free Press and others that the company was violating agency principles.

Comcast has said it did not block traffic, but delayed it, and only among users of the file-sharing, peer-to-peer programs that were responsible for taking up a disproportionate share of bandwidth and endangering service for other customers.

The company has pledged to stop using its network management practice by the end of the year and switch to a "protocol agnostic" technique that will not single out any particular type of user.

The action is the first test of the agency's network neutrality principles.


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The enforceability of the principles have been questioned by many, including Martin, who said when the policy statement was adopted in 2005 that they "do not establish rules nor are they enforceable documents."

Members of Congress, including presumed Democratic presidential nominee Sen. Barack Obama of Illinois, have pushed for network neutrality legislation without success.

Large Internet service providers have fought such regulation, arguing that companies that spend billions on their networks must be free to manage traffic.

Verizon Communications Inc., AT&T Inc. and the U.S. Telecom Association all released statements saying the FCC action proved there was no need for federal network neutrality legislation.
 
I was listening to this on tech news today. Thank god. Net neutrality wins! Woot Woot!


It is bullshit anyway. You can't block or throttle a specific transmission protocol just because some people might be abusing it. If it is a big deal they should offer a real service for x amount of dollars and then offer a $9.99 bobo version that has restricted access.
 
Meh ... just more FCC lip service.

The place to get the non-varnished scoop on broadband topics seems to be dslreports:

Today, as expected, the FCC voted 3-2 to do absolutely nothing to Comcast for the company's adventures in packet forgery. While the FCC ruling is being hailed as a victory by network neutrality advocates, and declares that Comcast willfully misled consumers about the throttling of P2P traffic, it creates no new guidelines, may not stand up in court, and ultimately doesn't ask the cable company to do anything they weren't already voluntarily doing.
Full story
 
Meh ... just more FCC lip service.

The place to get the non-varnished scoop on broadband topics seems to be dslreports:


Full story

Funny that you post this. I was listening to a different tech news story later that basically said what this story said. I was happy, then I was sad.

Verizon is working on fiber broadband to homes for a reasonable amount. Their Verizon Fios service is looking good. Right now, the Us is falling behind on broadband throughput. We dropped from third to 20th in a short time. Our data communication companies are more worried about marketing and manipulation than they are about providing good service.

Its too bad. soon, we will start losing the market as other countries start producing technologies that won't feasibly work on our networks because we can't keep up with their speeds.
 
Well I thought this thread had potential, but Monkey man just put his seal of doom on it by posting.


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Funny that you post this. I was listening to a different tech news story later that basically said what this story said. I was happy, then I was sad.

Verizon is working on fiber broadband to homes for a reasonable amount. Their Verizon Fios service is looking good. Right now, the Us is falling behind on broadband throughput. We dropped from third to 20th in a short time. Our data communication companies are more worried about marketing and manipulation than they are about providing good service.

Its too bad. soon, we will start losing the market as other countries start producing technologies that won't feasibly work on our networks because we can't keep up with their speeds.
Same thing with our cell phones Brother K. We get the older technologies in our branded locked phones sold to us by the carriers. If we really want a killer phone then our only choice is to go gray market and buy one unlocked ... if we choose a company that uses a sim card. With Sprint and ATT we're screwed. On my HTC TYTN I can go anywhere and just pop in a local sim card, but with an ATT branded phone forget it.

American data/comm service providers are not even interested in providing us with quality service. They are only interested in quality revenue streams while providing us as little as they can.

On my last trip abroad I had a post paid cell plan that gave unlimited internet and unlimited voice/text for about $16 a month. International calls were billed at a little under 5 cents a minute. They made buku money off of that plan.
 
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