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CRTC turns down ISPs' call for temporary injunction against Bell

CRTC turns down ISPs' call for temporary injunction against Bell By:  Howard Solomon On: 13 May 2008 For: Network World Canada Creator

Internet providers who buy high speed connectivity from Bell want the government regulator to stop Bell from slowing some traffic. Their plea for an interim injunction before a full hearing has failed



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An association of Internet providers has lost its bid to get a temporary injunction stopping Bell Canada from throttling Internet traffic from peer-to-peer applications, but the group will continue with its demand for a hearing on a permanent halt to the practice.

“We fouled out,” Tom Copeland, chairman of the Canadian Association of Internet Providers, said of Wednesday’s decision by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC). “We’ll get to bat again.”

The association argues members who resell Bell DSL connectivity aren’t getting the full download speeds promised to subscribers after the telco began managing traffic in March. Bell has been trying to manage traffic during peak hours because people using bandwidth-hogging P2P applications are slowing downloads for everyone. Through deep packet inspection of traffic, it's slowing downloads of people using applications such as BitTorrent to download music and videos.

In its application CAIP said many ISP subscribers have complained their download speeds have slowed. However, the commission said Wednesday it does not believe the association presented sufficient evidence of irreparable harm to its members from Bell’s actions to justify an interim injunction before a full hearing.

Today CRTC gave Bell and CAIP until May 29 to file written arguements so it can deal with CAIP's permanent injunction plea. Outside parties can file papers by June 12. Bell then has until June 19 to file a rebuttal, while CAIP can file its rebuttal by June 26.

The commission also asked Bell and CAIP as part of their submissions to explain in greater detail some of the claims and counter-claims they made in their original arguments.

From Bell, it wants more evidence of claims that that 95 per cent of Internet subscribers were being impacted by a small number of P2P users putting a drag on its network, and how it measured network performance and bandwidth being affected. It also wants to know how Bell's deep packet inspection technology, which measures packet headers so it can identify P2P applications, doesn't affect other network traffic such as streaming and VoIP applications.

From CAIP the commission wants proof of its allegation that Bell's actions are slowing not just P2P applications but everything its subscribers do, whether the claimed drop in throughput is happening at all hours of the day and whether any CAIP members do traffic-shaping of their own.

Bell immediately issued a press release Wednesday praising the regulator’s decision on the interim injunction, which allows it to for the time being continue managing Internet traffic. "The CRTC made the right decision on the CAIP request for interim relief," Mirko Bibic, Bell Canada's chief of regulatory affairs said in the statement.


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Howard Solomon Howard Solomon Howard Solomon is assistant editor of Network World Canada covering network infrastructure and communications issues. An IT journalist  since 1997, he has written for several of IT... more

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Comments (12)

Bell is ripping us Off
5/20/2008 12:00:00 AMI run a video business and upload videos up to my site servers via FTP on a regular basis. If Bell thinks this P2P, they can kiss my a--. I pay Bell royally for unlimited high speed access. We have that in a contract. Maybe a breach of contract suit by those customers of Bell who have a contract is in order.It is bad enough we have info sent from our main site to a Yahoo Email address and over half the messages sent there never arrive in the inbox, or at Yahoo mail at all.
Network Consultant
5/21/2008 12:00:00 AMBitTorrent is also commonly used to download ISO cd and dvd images of Linux software distributions as well as by other software suppliers. This is a perfectly legal distribution method. It is not only used for music and video.
Snr Systems Administrator
5/20/2008 12:00:00 AMI have had enough...the network used to work fine but lately (since March)my service has been appalling - so I will await the CRTC ruling. If it sides with Bell, good bye internet access...I don't need the frustration. I'll retire to ground mail and books.
What do you expect?
5/21/2008 12:00:00 AMIf CAIP's membership were truly internet 'service' providers, they would be building their own infrastructure to compete with the telco's and cableco's. Buying wholesale service and sharing it doesn't cut it - if bandwidth is free, then go build some! Bandwidth intensive users should expect to pay for their usage, or be throttled.
GM
5/20/2008 12:00:00 AMWe subscribe to Bell's business high-speed 'service'; email is critical to our business. Far too often there is no service, or intermittant service, which is a serious impediment to our business. There must be some mechanism for accountability; either Bell must be required to provide the service they claim, or they must be require correct their claims to reflect what they actually provide: unreliable, inconsistent connectivity, and minimal 'speed'.
Not surprised
5/20/2008 12:00:00 AMAdd to the shotty mail service where people can't get their mail for days, when they change configuration of mail server accounts without informing the user [happened to 2 I know], when you can't understand their tech support, when only on the 5th call to tech support you get someone who seems to know something, ....
Kite marks for Broadband
5/16/2008 12:00:00 AMThere is a need to provide a minimum service definition for a Broadband connection. The numbers I am proposing here are from an avid users perspective. http://bbbritain.co.uk/guarantee.aspx More transparency is needed from the engineers on what they've built or what is it exactly have I bought. Court cases should come later. Armed with a bit more information about my service I will need to shape my own traffic to fit within the package I buy. The engineers need help, the execs are in the way.
Been there done that
5/16/2008 12:00:00 AMI was in a similar situation not long ago, DSL service was with a Bell reseller, had so many service call place to try and fix the slowdown, to a crawl, in the evening that I draw my own conclusion, cancel all service with Bell and switch to local cable provider, I am a happy man now !
Systems Specialist
5/15/2008 12:00:00 AMMaybee CRTC oversight is not the answer. Let the customer decide. Bell has just lost my Account I cancelled my Internet yesterday. I would rather deal with a company that cares about, respects their clients. After all It's my money that that makes their buisness. So wakeup Bell and invest some of your profits in to your infastructur backbone to meet demands. I pay for a service I expect that service if I don't recieve that service I will go to a company than can supply that service.
DBA
5/15/2008 12:00:00 AMI've cancelled my DSL account with Bell when I learned that they were trying to dictate how we should surf the net. I subscribed to their premium high speed internet service so I can do what I need to do (eg. download/upload softwares, test cases, training materials from our company/clients) but found out they have set up many restrictions. I agree with Shawn, Bell should invest their profits in upgrading their infrastructure in order to meet demands. It should not be the consumers to meet their bandwidth demands.
Consultant
5/15/2008 12:00:00 AMHow could anyone have expected the CRTC to raised against Bell when it's stuffed with ex-Bell VIPs & other cronies.
Bell and their customers
5/15/2008 12:00:00 AMIt should be against the law for bandwidht providers to limit or cut off bandwidth of customers at a set mimium quality of service including bandwidth. ANd if the go below that they must be penalized by giving a credit to their customers effected or to an enforcement agency
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