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Google, Amazon ask CRTC to stop Internet traffic shaping

Google, Amazon ask CRTC to stop Internet traffic shaping

By:  Kathleen Lau  On: 26 Feb 2009 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

In a submission Monday to the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC), a coalition including Google, Amazon and Skype demand that carriers and ISPs be banned from traffic-shaping. But an industry observer thinks the submission needs a narrower focus

A submission to the Canada Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) this week from a coalition of companies including Google, Skype and Amazon, demanding that carriers and Internet Service Providers (ISPs) be banned from traffic-shaping, is perhaps too broad in its focus, according to one industry expert.

In the submission on Monday, Open Internet Coalition, consisting of more than 70 member companies, said certain traffic management practices by “Canadian carrier Internet service providers threaten the open and neutral design of the Internet.” That “discourages investment in broadband networks, diminishes consumer choice, interferes with users’ freedom of expression, and inhibits innovation.”

The submission, along with others, were in response to the CRTC’s request for comments in advance of a July investigation into Internet traffic management.

“I think that’s a bit of a broad swipe,” said Michael Rozender, principal of Grimsby, Ont.-based Rozender Consultants International.

While Rozender does believe that carriers should provide unfettered net neutrality, he thinks the Open Internet Coalition’s submission needs to narrow its focus. “Let’s get specific here on what’s happening and why it’s happening and really what needs to be done,” he said.

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The issue is that the CRTC should demand that the carriers (Rozender stresses the difference between carriers and the ISPs — the latter have no choice but to follow the Internet traffic-shaping practices of the former) “build out broadband capabilities to provision unfettered net neutrality, no traffic-shaped services and we well all benefit from it.”

The carriers, Bell Canada Enterprise Inc. and Rogers Communications Inc., must “get with the program” and catch up to the rest of the world in terms of Internet service, he said, especially considering bandwidth customer utilization is not what it used to be.

There is no question, said Rozender, that Bell Canada and Rogers have delayed upgrading their backbone and capabilities to the latest standard, DOCSIS 3.0, which can theoretically support speeds and feeds well into the hundreds of megabits per second per user. “It needs a big pipeline to feed that throughput. And they don’t have it.”

While many organizations globally, in the past couple of years, have already rolled out DOCSIS 3.0, “Rogers is basically twiddling their thumbs.”


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Kathleen Lau Kathleen Lau was a senior writer with ITWorldCanada.com and ComputerWorld Canada from December 2006 to August 2011.In her role as senior writer, she covered broadly technology news and issues r... more

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Comments (1)

Ah, the CRTC.
by Robert McCleave 2/28/2009 12:00:00 AMRemember when Canada had the most advanced telephone system in the world? We had direct dial land lines when most of Europe depended on the Post Office to run the phones and maybe one in ten houses had a phone and it took months to get one and service was terrible. Well, thanks to the CRTC, we've stood still while the rest of the world rocketed by us. The CRTC is still tweaking their regulations protecting AM radio stations from FM competition! Meanwhile our cell phone service is at third world levels (and prices), and our internet service is stagnating in the 1990s. A government that promised to reform this paternalistic, monopoly friendly, technology road block would get my vote.
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