  swhx7 Premium join:2006-07-23 Elbonia
·RoadRunner Cable
| reply to Cabal Re: Stop misusing "Network Neutrality"
1. It's true that impartial QoS is not considered a violation of network neutrality. However, if you read the articles you'd find that Comcast's excuse for packet-forging is precisely the fact that QoS doesn't work in the congested-node upstream situation with cable modems.
2. Your definitions are wrong. The double-dipping is one motivation for neutrality violations, but selective throttling itself can be an abusive practice regardless of whether the ISP tries to charge third parties for not having it imposed on them.
3. Comcast's practice would have been acceptable if it had been merely prioritizing other traffic over bittorrent, only when congestion required it. That's legitimate network management and consistent with neutrality, and it would have solved the problem. Instead Comcast totally prevented seeding to non-Comcast peers, regardless of the state of the network. This punishes innocents and prevents a legitimate use of the connection the customers are paying for. It's the discrimination by destination, and in excess of requirements that is out of bounds. |