Archive for September, 2007

I Walked The Dinosaur

Friday, September 14th, 2007

I really hope this Verizon Wireless contract of mine runs out soon. I’m not complaining about the fact that their cellular quality of service is, well, probably the best of all providers, but they’re up to their “controlling everything from end-to-end” tricks again. So now they’re suing the FCC over the terms of sale of the latest wireless spectrum. Verizon is a Dinosaur in the age of the Internet, like AOL was until they realized they didn’t have enough market power to demand people get their version of the Internet. If you never experienced AOL in its early years, you might not understand this comparison, but just imagine a world where the services of Google, Amazon, youTube, and Myspace were all provided by AOL and only by AOL and you’re getting close. Now, “do-no-evil” Internet companies are demanding the telecommunication spectrums be given what they’ve needed for years, honest competition and consumer choice.

And Verizon doesn’t like this one bit. They didn’t like me trying to sync my cell phone calendar and contacts to my Mac for a while and they sure don’t like allowing me to move my own files via bluetooth between my phone and other devices. They disable all those factory features and provide their own phone operating system. All the signs are there, Verizon wants to control all channels of access to anything that might involve their services, even when those services run through public airwaves or through public ground. Even if you don’t believe in concepts of public ownership, you rascal of an Objectivist you, you know that the FCC and other government bodies create a regulated field where there aren’t going to be more than 1 set of cable pipes, 1 set of gas lines, 1 set of sewer pipes, or 1 set of phone lines to consumer doorsteps.

Given these realities which are even more real in the electromagnetic spectrum, even libertarians can agree, Verizon is just being silly. The commercial free speech rights of an entity that can purchase the use of a physical radio spectrum from the most powerful government in the world, well, just doesn’t concern me as much as the millions of individual voices they can potentially squelch from a burgeoning global experience. Let’s hope people don’t realize how cool their wireless devices will be when given the freedom of choice on the Internet, ‘cos then Verizasaur will really be screwed.

Seen Your Video

Tuesday, September 11th, 2007

After viewing a total of 30 seconds of Ms. Spear’s travesty of a performance at the 2007 VMA and discussing the freakshow-like qualities of it with friends today, my iTunes played a most appropriate song late this evening. Please listen to (and immediately discard) this evening’s MTV song selection.

Also, if you want a concert and music release calendar built from your iTunes library, check out iConcertCal. It probably won’t pick out every single concert but it’s pretty damn convenient for scanning upcoming events.

Network Neutrality Nonneutrality

Saturday, September 8th, 2007

I’m encouraging you to read up and support Network Neutrality for the Internet. It’s definitely a complex issue, but I encourage you to take a stance and write your elected representatives to tell them to support Net Neutrality.

Recently, The Department of Justice issued a report arguing against any type of network neutrality regulations saying they would ultimately be anti-competive and hinder the free market. In my mind, Network neutrality is about protecting consumers and ensuring non-discriminatory pricing and equal access for all data on the Internet. The same Internet which has been funded by citizens and conceived through research in public institutions. Up to this point, the Internet has been network neutral and we have seen the rise of some amazing things happen on the Web and Internet from virtually little upfront investment. Without net neutrality its easy to imagine circumstances in which customers and companies are essentially levied tolls for what they ‘use’ or offer in addition to the current ISP charges for access.

Another argument from the report that urks me is the claim that if end-consumer broadband ISPs aren’t allowed to charge application and content providers directly (who aren’t necessarily their customers), they won’t be able to keep up with the Internet’s growth in regards to capacity and service needs, passing undue costs to the end-consumer. Companies and consumers already pay the operators of their respective networks for these costs of growth and maintenance, and sometimes citizens even subsidize the expansion of broadband networks through tax dollars (to the private sector for the greater good of the public Internet access).

The fact is, the telecommunications industry is already one of the most monopolistic industries in America today. It’s like the DoJ was so deluded as to say there’s healthy free market activities in the airline industry where major airlines often take corporate welfare bailouts when in the throws of bankruptcy. When’s the last time that there was individual consumer choice over your cable provider? It wasn’t until the recent past that people were given a choice over their long distance providers. The DoJ’s free market rhetoric is disingenous in the face of the industry’s current state for end-consumers. Recent reports that Comcast is shutting off broadband subscribers from their ‘unlimited’ service due to ‘overuse’ without stating any solid policies is the brash behavior of a company enjoying the fruits of too little consumer choice. If network neutrality is not maintained, the only free market that will be fettered is the one which via the Internet has created thousands of jobs and spurred countless innovative technologies and services in the past 15 years.

There’s a thought-provoking column at ArsTechnica proposing that no regulation might be better in the short term because it keeps the network operators under their best behavior and various other reasons. It’s got some weight behind it, but the DoJ report stating that there are studies showing that network operators must charge content providers (web sites) fees directly to keep up with the capacity needs of the Internet suggests they are leaving an open legal door for operators to be on their worst behavior.

As an aside, I would actually be interested in an extensive list of emerging network computing technologies threatened by potential Network Neutrality legislation (e.g. features of ipv6 like flow labeling would be under scrutiny in its application). Legislation does pose the risk of trampling network layer innovation but it’s good to understand what the value of these technologies are, and if they are simply necessary for the future success and progress of the Internet or an overzealous solution to a neutral alternative. From what I’ve read, most deal with providing guaranteed quality of service to the Internet for real-time applications like video streaming.

I read the op-ed article by David Farber and Michael Katz that talked about the real-time needs of a heart monitor application, but my initial thought was ‘Isn’t that was Internet 2 was for?’ and ‘Are you really relying on the Internet cloud for a heart monitor?’ It wasn’t a compelling example for me (I don’t have a hard time imagining a seperate network of networks for life supporting services like health care, fire, emergency response, etc…), but perhaps I’m not taking into account the technical and cost benefits of evolving a single internet to support uses like telemedicine by leveraging the Internet’s (*huhem*) network effect.

The definition of network neutrality suffers from many overloaded meanings in the face of technical topics such as providing quality of service and traffic prioritization (it doesn’t suffer in the face of existing standards for transmission rates and limits because those are widely accepted). Opponents of NN will often point out this ambiguity in the definition arguing that it is against NN to provide QoS and prioritization of traffic since it violates treating all packets equally. Henning Schulzrinne calls this argument a red herring as Network Neutrality does not restrict QoS features as so long as they remain content neutral. So technology offerings for QoS or the prospect of such should not be subject to pricing models or carrier policies that simply take into account the type of application or content data being delivered to consumers.

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