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Home >> Voice, Data, and IP >> Carriers and Service Providers

Broadband users 'hostage' to P2P traffic, Bell exec says

Broadband users 'hostage' to P2P traffic, Bell exec says

By:   On: 06 Apr 2008 For: Network World Canada Creator

The telco's chief of regulatory affairs defends the traffic shaping policy that has incensed Internet resellers and led to an application for a cease-and-desist order from the CRTC

“Those who are complaining are those who are serving those bandwidth hogs who are consuming those peer-to-peer applications. Bear in mind, things like BitTorrent were designed to be bandwidth-hog applications,” Bibic said.

Told that ISPs were claiming all traffic, not just P2P traffic, has been affected by Bell’s traffic shaping campaign, Bibic said that’s not supposed to be the case. “The network management initiative isn’t designed to do that. We’ve indicated to our wholesale customers that should they have any evidence of that, we’re more than happy to obviously meet with them and study the issue,” Bibic said. He said none of the ISPs has come forward with that evidence. “We’re still waiting and working through it,” he said.

Bell isn’t the only ISP shaping traffic, Bibic said. “Other ISPs in Canada and elsewhere in the world do adopt objective network management practices. It’s not unprecedented in that respect,” he said.

In the U.S., Comcast has been savaged for its practices, which targeted BitTorrent traffic. Comcast has become a lightning rod in the net neutrality debate in the U.S.

“I’m not intimately familiar with what Comcast has been doing, nor am I a network engineer, so it’s probably beyond me to get into too much detail on this issue,” Bibic said. “But I am made to understand, and I can’t explain it, that their initial approach to network management is different from what we’re doing.”

Network World Canada

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Bibic downplayed the prospect of a CRTC ruling as a legal precedent in the net neutrality debate in Canada. “The CRTC’s going to issue a ruling on the specific facts related to the complaint and will deal with and address each and every single allegation,” he said. “The thrust of the application to the CRTC is that somehow Bell is violating its tariffs, which we dispute. We say our tariffs allow us to protect the integrity of our network and improve the overall performance for the significant majority of users who don’t use peer-to-peer. The other main complaint is that these actions constitute some form of unjust discrimination, and that’s completely false. We are treating wholesale users no differently than we’re treating retail users and we’re not targeting any particular content providers. It’s an objective measure applied to one type of traffic, without discrimination.”










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