Appeared in the Toronto Star on October 19, 2009 as Canadian Universities Closed Minded on Open Access This week is International Open Access Week with universities around the world taking stock of the emergence of open access as a critical part of research and innovation. The basic principle behind open […]
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CRTC Network Management Hearings, Day Two: Open Internet Coalition, Zip.ca, CISP, Roks, Mezei
Day two of the CRTC network management hearing featured some great presentations from the Open Internet Coalition, Zip.ca, CISP, and two knowledgeable individuals – Jean-Francois Mezei and Jason Roks. The presenters had some strong words about the lack of Canadian competition for high-speed Internet service, the debatable claims about the impact of P2P on congestion, and the overstated advertising claims. Unfortunately, it would appear once again that the Commission has accepted the ISP claims regarding congestion and network costs, leaving the panelists with the challenge of overcoming those basic assumptions.
That said, the day featured some startling revelations including Zip.ca's Rob Hall stating that it is currently cheaper to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars on postage to send DVDs via the mail, rather than distributing the same content electronically through the Internet given the bandwidth costs. Moreover, Jason Roks emphasized peering arrangements, where he stated that Bell is the only major Canadian ISP that refuses to peer with anyone else.
Potential solutions to come out of the day included:
1. Establishing a test for acceptable traffic management. The OIC three-part test focused on whether the traffic management furthers a pressing and substantial objective; is narrowly tailored to the objective; and is the least restrictive means of achieving the objective.
2. Truth in advertising. Emphasis on disclosure as well as possible limits on over-subscription.
3. Regulated peering to bring greater efficiences into the Canadian Internet.
4. Strong anti-competitive action to stop any attempts to leverage network management or pricing plans for unfair advantage.
Full report on the day's proceedings are posted below, again thanks to Frances Munn. Additional coverage from the National Post liveblog, CBC.ca, and CIPPIC's twitter feed.
Uncompetitive Canadian Pricing Threatens Mobile Internet
Appeared in the Toronto Star on July 23, 2007 as Time to Revamp Mobile Internet Pricing The promise of an always-on mobile Internet – delivered through cellphones and wireless devices – has long been touted as the next stage in the evolution of electronic communication and commerce. That next stage […]
Rogers Must Come Clean on Traffic Shaping
Appeared in the Toronto Star on April 16, 2007 as ISP Must Come Clean on 'Traffic Shaping' With well over a million subscribers, Rogers is universally recognized as one of Canada's leading Internet service providers. The company offers several tiers of services, including the "Extreme" package that boasts of "blistering […]
CRTC Radio Review Needs to Dial In New Frequency
My weekly LawBytes column (Toronto Star version, homepage version) focuses on the CRTC's Commercial Radio Review. I argue that missing from the debate is any real vision about how public policy goals to promote Canadian artists and encourage a diverse, financially successful commercial radio market can be adapted to an […]






