Net Neutrality And Creative Freedom (Tim Wu at re:publica 2010) by 
Anna Lena Schiller (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0) https://flic.kr/p/7VfazT

Net Neutrality And Creative Freedom (Tim Wu at re:publica 2010) by Anna Lena Schiller (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0) https://flic.kr/p/7VfazT

Net Neutrality

Vuze Study Points To P2P Interference From Cogeco

While Bell and Rogers have attracted much of the Canadian net neutrality attention in recent weeks, a study conducted Vuze, an online video site that uses the BitTorrent protocol, has placed another Canadian provider – Cogeco – in the spotlight.  To better track ISP network management techniques, Vuze created a […]

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April 21, 2008 19 comments News

Next Net Neutrality Steps at the CRTC

Bell did not waste any time in responding to the Primus net neutrality submission as it has called on the CRTC to reject it.  The next steps are fairly clear – CAIP has been given until Monday to respond to the Bell submission.  With those submissions in hand, the CRTC […]

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April 18, 2008 5 comments News

Angus Releases Public Letter on Net Neutrality

MP Charlie Angus has released a public letter to Industry Minister Jim Prentice urging the government to introduce a net neutrality provision into law.

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April 18, 2008 Comments are Disabled News

Does Bell Really Have a P2P Bandwidth Problem?

Bell filed its response to the CAIP submission to the CRTC on its throttling practices yesterday, unsurprisingly arguing that its actions are justified and that there is no need to deal with the issue on an emergency basis.  Several points stand out from the submission including its non-response to the privacy concerns with deep-packet inspection (it merely says that it does not retain or use the data, but does not deny collecting what could easily be interpreted as personally identifiable information) and its inference that P2P usage could be deemed using a connection as a "server" and therefore outside the boundaries of "fair and proportionate use" under typical ISP terms of use.

Most importantly, however, Bell provides data on its network usage that significantly undermines its claim that P2P usage is causing such havoc with its network that throttling measures that impact 100 percent of its (and some of its competitions') users are needed.  Bell again reiterates that the "problem" lies with 5 percent of its users that are heavy P2P users.  Yet that 5 percent apparently uses 33 percent of available bandwidth during peak periods.  That is a disproportionate use to be sure, yet it struck me as far lower than might have been expected. 

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April 17, 2008 36 comments News

Primus Jumps Into CAIP-Bell Throttling Case

Primus Communications has jumped into the CAIP – Bell throttling case, filing a submission in support of CAIP.  The Primus submission, which deals only with the question of interim relief (a fuller submission will come later), argues that the CRTC should grant CAIP’s request for an interim order directing Bell […]

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April 17, 2008 1 comment News