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Another reason for publicly owned infrastructure »
« Gov't watchdogs are needed  
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fiberguy
My views are my own.
Premium
join:2005-05-20

reply to G_Poobah
Re: Ok..

said by G_Poobah See Profile :

Comcrap/Verizon/Etc are trying to double dip, since they currently only get to charge for the 'transport', and want to now get a chunk of the 'production'.
Do you even bother to do your homework before you rant? ... ever?

When did Comcast get drug into a conversation about AT&T and their double dipping?

Eminent domain? if you want a socialist society, there are pleanty of them out there - please, choose one.


Jigsaw
Stardust We Are
Premium
join:2000-10-21
Cleveland, OH
·Cox HSI

reply to valuepac0
said by valuepac0 See Profile :

Where my fiber to the curb...
Its on the curb:p
--
»www.auralmoon.com/html/ Open your mind and your ears.


99664227
Heavily MODerated
Premium
join:2002-11-21
USA

reply to valuepac0
said by valuepac0 See Profile :

Where my fiber to the curb...
Verizon dug up my yard today with that foot thick orange cable.:D
--
Life ain't nothing but bitches and cake!


en102
Canadian, eh?

join:2001-01-26
Valencia, CA
·RoadRunner Cable
·DSL EXTREME

reply to G_Poobah
Seizing commiecast of VZ (including VZW) would be a nice start.
These companies want to take control of your connection to throttle any thing that doesn't pay them toll, or isn't a 'Content partner - i.e. Yahoo/SBC(at&t)'
The flaw with that is we (the customers) pay for access to the Internet - with no restrictions to a specific vendor (i.e. Google) vs. their content partner.

While I do agree that there are limits - i.e. SBC/Yahoo back bone set up to handle OC-48 traffic, and say an online gaming service (or video streaming service) has an OC-192 backbone, it could be conceived as 'throttling', Company A asking Company B to assist in paying for extra capacity. I can see that as a reasonable request. What I don't see as being reasonable is packet shaping technology to filter specific ports/applications down to less than the users pipe size.


AndyWarhol
Premium
join:2004-03-14
Broken Arrow, OK
clubs:


1 edit
reply to footballdude
Not entirely true, if you are under contract with an ISP or a webhosting company, you are allowed a certain amount of information per month and are charged for every bit you exceed your limit, even residential customers are subject to this limit (we all know that bandwidth caps exist in our residential contracts, but they are rarely enforced so we tend to forget about them), but ISPs don't care about residential customers because the margin they earn on them is nowhere near what they earn from business customers. If you can get 100,000 residential customers for $10 a month or 10 customers for $100,000 a month, which would you choose?

Edit: this also proved that they are not attempting to double dip, they are attempting to triple dip. Most domain names are already paying for a certain amount of traffic to their site, and all customers are already paying for their access to that site, so now charging the owners of those domain names not only for the traffic to their site but also for the traffic that passes through any certain network is triple, quadruple, quintuple dipping from the same pot.

RayW
Premium
join:2001-09-01
Layton, UT
clubs:
·XMission

reply to footballdude
said by footballdude See Profile :

Bad example. You pay for how much electricity you use by the watt. You pay a flat fee for internet access, regardless of how much you use it.
Not totally true, I have paid a 'service fee' + the KW usage for my electric for a long time. With my AT&T LD I pay a set rate, and if I call over a certain number of minutes, then I pay extra. My ISP is a flat rate up to 100 gigabytes/month, any more and I get dinged (not that I come close to using that much).
--
I am not lost, I find myself every time.


G_Poobah

join:2004-01-17
Schenectady, NY

reply to Fatal Vector
Your argument is flawed.

Electricity costs money to produce. A bit of data costs nothing to produce, it only costs money to transport. It's known as a temporal asset. It costs the same to run at 1mb/sec as it does for 100mb/sec, given that all other things are equal. The objective of the transporter (comcast/verizon/etc) is to run as close to 100% capacity as possible (aka use every airline seats), since there is no UNIT cost (electricity production) to maximize profits.

If you check your electric bill, you pay for the transport (internet access) and the usage (production).

Comcrap/Verizon/Etc are trying to double dip, since they currently only get to charge for the 'transport', and want to now get a chunk of the 'production'. Greed, pure and simple, and it WOULD NEVER WORK unless it was a monopoly. I, for one, look forward to the day when my locally elected official seizes the assets of comcast and verizon under eminent domain.


ronpin
Imagine Reality

join:2002-12-06
Nirvana
reply to footballdude
...don't give AT&T any "ideas"


Fatal Vector

join:2005-11-26
reply to footballdude

You pay for electric service based on how many KILOWATT HOURS (a draw of 1,000watts for one hour, or equibvalent)you use per month. usually in the range of 9-14 cents per KWH.


footballdude
Premium
join:2002-08-13
Imperial, MO

reply to ronpin
said by ronpin See Profile :

Great...by this logic AT&T should share some of their extra profits thus obtained with the local electric companies -- without whom they could not function as well (or maybe a 2 tier electricity grid...)
Bad example. You pay for how much electricity you use by the watt. You pay a flat fee for internet access, regardless of how much you use it.


ronpin
Imagine Reality

join:2002-12-06
Nirvana
·AT&T Southwest


4 edits
reply to valuepac0
Great...by this logic AT&T should share some of their extra profits thus obtained with the local electric companies -- without whom they could not function as well (or maybe a 2 tier electricity grid...)

AT&T is damm lucky that Google is out-there -- inducing us to rent DSL lines -- at no cost to AT&T! This plan is blantantly anti-competitive unless they also charge their YAHOO partners as well.

valuepac0

join:2001-05-30
Santa Monica, CA
reply to Jafo232
Where my fiber to the curb...
Forums » AT&T: 2 Tier Web 'Beneficial' to CustomersAnother reason for publicly owned infrastructure »
« Gov't watchdogs are needed  


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