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-   -   Net neutrality update (http://cellar.org/showthread.php?t=33676)

Undertoad 08-02-2019 11:11 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Happy Monkey (Post 1036396)
They want to stream games now, but the main problem there is latency, not bandwidth.

It makes sense. Gamers pay a premium of $500-$1000 to have a PC that can render the 3D video needed to play top games. If you could share the rendering hardware over many gamers, you could turn it into an affordable thing.

You can solve the latency problem partly by giving gaming packets priority, or routing them differently. Guarantee they arrive first, as opposed to all the applications that are bursty and don't mind waiting 100ms for their packet to arrive.

But net neutrality prevents that

tw 08-02-2019 11:23 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Undertoad (Post 1036365)
Hey, those countries that have more bandwidth than us, what are they doing with it that we aren't doing with ours?

Ignored: who are now world leaders in internet devices? China is now the world leader in 5G. Korea is now the world leader in mobile phones. Industries that made America great are being surrendered by business school graduates (ie Trump).

What did UT says about all this? crickets. UT please learn facts before posting. You made this same mistake with Saddam's WMDs.

Using UTs logic, we don't need no sticking internet. 2 Mb DSL was always sufficient even to do Netflix products in the 1980s. Obsolete technologies are just fine using UT's logic. UT must ignore that major fault in his reasoning.

Let's stifle innovation by subverting free market competition - Republican party propaganda. UT says that is also good. Net neutrality that finally made the internet possible and popular (after 15 years of being stifled) must be destroyed. Net neutrality that resulted in sufficient bandwidth for everyone is somehow now wrong. More UT reasoning.

tw 08-02-2019 11:35 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Happy Monkey (Post 1036396)
They want to stream games now, but the main problem there is latency, not bandwidth.

Latency exists (in part) due to restricted bandwidth.

You can have 100 Mb connection from a CMTS to your computer. Does not matter if a best connection to that sever must take alternative routes to the CMTS due to insufficient bandwidth.

Why are so many just beginning to see 100 Mb? Because it was standard 10 years ago in other nations.

Undertoad 08-02-2019 11:43 AM

Quote:

why would they spend millions fighting this restriction if they weren't going to use it? Just to have it as an option? Just because they fight any and all regulation?
Basically what the companies want to do is to develop premium services not permitted under the rules. Gaming, online surgery, driving, these have different networking needs and can't be handled neutrally.

Here is a set of 5 arguments in favor of ending net neutrality. (There is a part 2 page linked at the bottom, with the arguments against it.)

The pro argument is never aired. We have not heard the argument stated properly. The media should help us out here, but it is broken by an activism bubble and doesn't even know what the pro argument are.

tw 08-02-2019 12:02 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Undertoad (Post 1036402)
Basically what the companies want to do is to develop premium services not permitted under the rules.

So they can spend less money on the backbone and spend more money on skyscrapers, TV network, movie studios and theme parks, mobile phone companies, satellite companies, and other investments.

Then charge priority price increases because capital upgrades were withheld from the backbone. Why, in the early days, was the backbone so robust? Because companies had to provide more than sufficient bandband for lower prices. Net neutrality. Free market competition existed - created by net neutrality.

Why were we using 33K and 56K modems over a decade after 2 Mb service was possible? No net neutrality. Companies could even charge a premium for inferior priority service (ISDN, ATM, Sonet). UT wants to go back to those days because corporate spin says that was good.

UT's belief in priority surcharges says free market competition is bad. He even loves it that most everyone only has two internet providers - if they have any at all. He also loves the duopoly that created massive price increases for cable TV and internet. UT actually approves of American now falling to number 20 in the world. He ignored that reality with more corporate lies.

You don't need more internet bandwdith. You cannot be trusted with world standard speeds.

Let's make it even worse. Let's get rid of net neutrality so that Netflix, et al must pay for more Comcast Skyscrapers. Net neutrality means they must, instead, invest that money into their network.

They would have to invest in new innvotions? Investing and upgrading their networks (due to free market competition) would only hurt profits. OMG!

xoxoxoBruce 08-02-2019 01:16 PM

1 Attachment(s)
Quote:

Originally Posted by Undertoad (Post 1036402)
The pro argument is never aired. We have not heard the argument stated properly. The media should help us out here, but it is broken by an activism bubble and doesn't even know what the pro argument are.

Thanks UT, that's really interesting. You're right, I don't think I'm alone in being unaware of those arguments. I'm not sure I agree with them but I'm glad to be aware of them.

BigV 08-02-2019 09:02 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Undertoad (Post 1036399)
It makes sense. Gamers pay a premium of $500-$1000 to have a PC that can render the 3D video needed to play top games. If you could share the rendering hardware over many gamers, you could turn it into an affordable thing.

You can solve the latency problem partly by giving gaming packets priority, or routing them differently. Guarantee they arrive first, as opposed to all the applications that are bursty and don't mind waiting 100ms for their packet to arrive.

But net neutrality prevents that

ORLY?

Like net neutrality poisons the other, even more ubiquitous latency-sensitive IP traffic, VOIP?

Undertoad 08-02-2019 09:18 PM

VoIP is improved by prioritization and on private networks it often is. At the moment VoIP takes up 1/1000th of a UHD video stream so its issues are old news.

Gaming is a full HD video stream (in the case of the app I'm talking about) and more latency sensitive than VoIP. If VoIP encounters network jitter it sounds bad for a moment. If gamers encounter network jitter they die.

BigV 08-02-2019 09:28 PM

One gamer's death is another gamer's "Suck it!"

How are they going to be able to attribute it to network jitter?

Real question, not baiting you.

Undertoad 08-02-2019 11:39 PM

In a lot of games, you can actually see network lag visibly. You make moves and the server doesn't pick them up quickly, so it fails to correctly calculate your angle and position, and the game has to adjust for it. Your car or your character goes a little herky-jerky.

Gamers and their communities go into wild details with these things. Every microsecond counts in twitchy games. In the game I follow (PUBG), players determined that video frame rates were affecting the fire rates of automatic weapons. Like, if you had a good video card and got 80 frames per second, you had a tiny advantage over the person getting 60 frames per second. The game was doing something like waiting for the next frame to draw before firing the next round, something like that, so the difference between 1/60th of a second and 1/80th of a second became meaningful.

tw 08-04-2019 09:54 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Undertoad (Post 1036433)
VoIP is improved by prioritization ...

That is only necessary when bandwidth is restricted - because someone was not investing in the infrastructure.

Latency is even a problem on highways when roads are not built or expanded.

Bandwidth is the solution. Priority is to mask and charge more because bandwidth was not increased.

Undertoad 08-04-2019 11:08 AM

Goes both ways, Sparky: congestion can be avoided and mitigated by traffic shaping.

Your solution is to make every road a highway. That would mostly work -- but is wildly expensive. It's a child's solution: gosh, just make everything bigger and faster! And if you had unlimited resources, maybe you would.

My real world solution is to install ramp meters, high-speed passing lanes, and bus lanes. This allows the existing highway to carry more people, with rules that help both the fast cars and the slow buses.

(And the slow busses.)

tw 08-04-2019 01:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Undertoad (Post 1036502)
Your solution is to make every road a highway. That would mostly work -- but is wildly expensive.

Total nonsense. That is what net neutrality cured. It provided consumers with 2 Mb data access when everyone was limited to about 0.04 Mb. And when that 2 Mb technology was available 15 years earlier. Net neutrality mades highways instead of stop lights.

You have again posted the myth that we debunked many times previously. Death of distance. Cost of a data transmission is same from the Cellar to NYC as it is from the Cellar to Sydney Australia. Highways also mean greater reliability. It means everything is not at 100% - repeatedly suffering from latency - faults and other problems in normal operation do not cause congestion.

Once upon a time, AT&T used your reasoning. And so Mothers Day became a serious network problem. What fixed it? Free market competition. Competitors were permitted. They concentrated on the product (ie network) rather than profits. Therefore competitors were making profits with superior service (ie Sprint's quality so clean that one could hear a pin drop). And AT&T kept selling off divisions to claim that as profits. And even kept wasting money upgrading microwave towers.

Things got so bad in AT&T that their CFO, one day, leaned over to Sandy Weil (a board member) and whispered, "We cannot meet our short term debt obligations." Rather then invest in their network, AT&T had so cost controlled everything that they could not meet payments on their three month bonds.

No problem. They were running their network at near 100% capacity most often. So spread sheets said profits had been maximized. Purpose was profits; not the product.

Yes, that happens when one uses your cost control reasoning rather than invest in the product. Net neutrality means a network that always has sufficient bandwidth. And therefore no or minimal latency. Customers paid less money to companies that were profitable.

That was until Michael Powell, et al, attacked net neutrality so that everyone can only have two internet providers. Powell's, et al reasoning - only two companies will be more profitable. And so
TV cable that once was $8 per month is somewhere well above $50 - and rising to pay for skyscrapers, broadcast networks, and theme parks.

Throttling (also called priority pricing) is what business school graduates love. Minimal network that runs at 100% and does not provide service to everyone every time. Then both consumers and content providers can be surcharged. Prices go up - because the purpose is only profits.

Satellites do something similar for completely different reasons. Priority service is not based in using everything 100% of the time. Priority is an insurance policy - for reliability - to improve the product - not profits.

A Bastille Day event being a classic example. AT&T was the only satellite operator that did not configure their birds for a major sun spot emission. Therefore both AT&T satellites were damaged.

Certain customers (ie broadcasters) sign agreements on other birds. So networks like PBS and CBS moved their network to other birds. Service remains reliable. Priority used as insurance. Not for profits.

Some less priority systems (ie ATM networks) temporarily surrendered their transponders. Priority is not for normal operation. Priority is for the rare or catastrophic event. An insurance policy or a futures contract. Profits are not the purpose - as UT's reasoning is based. The product - in this case reliability - is the only reason for responsible priority scheduling. And that only works when networks (ie highways) have enough bandwidth (roads and bridges) so that latency also is not a normal event.

As a result, some hedge funds hold transponders (that do nothing most of the time) as an insurance policy should another bird fail. IOW excess capacity (not priority pricing to maximize profits) is held in reserve to address the product - to make that network more reliable.

Priority charging, as promoted by UT, is how to increase profits without investing capital in the product. Just another way to get more money to buy theme parks and skyscrapers.

Even latency is only a problem when cost controls have diminished available bandwidth. It does not happen with net neutrality and the resulting free market competition.

It always comes down to this question. What is the purpose of a company: its profits or its product? UT advocates increases profits. Consumers then pay more to have same service. Then Comcast can buy more food companies.

Undertoad 08-04-2019 02:26 PM

My yawn is now the size of the Grand Canyon, but:

Quote:

Cost of a data transmission is same from the Cellar to NYC as it is from the Cellar to Sydney Australia
No variable costs. But there are the fixed costs of the undersea cables you need to lay, in order to guarantee low latency, via always having an overage of bandwidth.

Each one is hundreds of millions of dollars, and you need multiple of them to every connection point on every continent, and you need to build enough bandwidth into them for a world that will require more and more bandwidth. Requiring you to lay new cables... they estimate, every 25 years.

Because the bandwidth requirements increase exponentially. The people require more bandwidth, but there are also more connected people. Each cable you lay to one continent increases the bandwidth requirements to every other continent.

Meanwhile, The Cellar is now located on a virtual server in Newark. Cellar to NYC is over super high-capacity circuits and it's just across the Hudson. You may see a ping of 3-4ms. Any Manhattan dwellars here?

sexobon 08-04-2019 03:58 PM

That was not only in the grey on the improved pyramid, the yawn has it bordering on white. We'll call it: gris supérieur.

xoxoxoBruce 08-04-2019 10:55 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Undertoad (Post 1036511)
Each one is hundreds of millions of dollars, and you need multiple of them to every connection point on every continent, and you need to build enough bandwidth into them for a world that will require more and more bandwidth. Requiring you to lay new cables... they estimate, every 25 years.

Now I feel bad as my favorite porn site is in Australia. :o

Undertoad 08-25-2019 01:43 PM

Bezos and Musk’s satellite internet could save Americans $30B a year

Competition drives pricing, and everyone is going to get two more competitors in 5-10 years.

henry quirk 08-25-2019 01:59 PM

thank Crom for that net neutrality...oh, wait...
 
:neutral:

tw 03-12-2020 10:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Undertoad (Post 1037519)
Bezos and Musk’s satellite internet could save Americans $30B a year

Starlink was suppose to fill the sky with many tiny satellites. But I have notices a trend. For weeks, no visible Starlinks. Suddenly, over a 20 minute period, over 24 appeared in a group. Most only in a 5 minute period. How long before these 'space out'?

Satellite constellations from Amazon, SpaceX, and Oneweb do not talk directly to handsets. These talk to ground stations. Gateways that, in turn, retransmit to other receivers.

More problems exist. Many countries have not authorized frequencies for these satellite. So ech must turn off when over certain countries.

A satellite that can talk directly to phones (as Iridium must do do) still must be quite large. And must support 2G, 3G, 4G, and 5G technologies.

Companies such a Vodafone and Rakuten are working together to develop a technology that does not require ground stations.

Undertoad 03-12-2020 10:41 PM

There are only a few hundred up right now, another 60 going up on Saturday morning.

Undertoad 08-14-2020 09:06 AM

Net neutrality update:

Nothing has happened

in fact we had a lockdown in which everyone worked from home and streamed video all day long

no blocking, no throttling, no pay for play!!

So. What new political boogeymen are we worried about today, that will turn out to be nothing?

Griff 08-14-2020 09:52 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Undertoad (Post 1056522)
Net neutrality update:

Nothing has happened

in fact we had a lockdown in which everyone worked from home and streamed video all day long

no blocking, no throttling, no pay for play!!

So. What new political boogeymen are we worried about today, that will turn out to be nothing?

Download 1.27 Mbps
Upload .29Mbps

Well it is the same... but I wouldn't say everyone worked from home and streamed video all day. I was usually able to stream a low quality video. I have a cell booster now which improves that option a bit (3 bars now) but we don't have an unlimited data option so that's limited.

I think most of us have too much on our plates right now for boogeymen. I guess the left has Trump refusing to leave and the right has fear of masks.

sexobon 08-15-2020 09:56 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Griff (Post 1056524)
... and the right has fear of masks.

Well sure, for a long time the people wearing masks were either bandits or doctors and they both took all your money.

tw 08-16-2020 07:34 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Undertoad (Post 1056522)
So. What new political boogeymen are we worried about today, that will turn out to be nothing?

He fails to grasp the purpose of subverting net neutrality. It is to increase profits.

xoxoxoBruce 09-08-2020 03:02 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Undertoad (Post 1056522)
Net neutrality update:

Nothing has happened
in fact we had a lockdown in which everyone worked from home and streamed video all day long
no blocking, no throttling, no pay for play!!
So. What new political boogeymen are we worried about today, that will turn out to be nothing?

Izatso...

AT&T and Verizon both torture the meaning of the word “unlimited” by offering multiple unlimited plans. But the more expensive ones are either paired with the company’s own streaming service, or the companies degrade the quality of the video under certain conditions. These practices may give the carrier’s content an advantage in the marketplace over smaller, independent video producers.

Sprint has been throttling internet traffic to Microsoft’s Skype service, causing the video quality to be poorer than it should be, which is especially worrisome because Skype is a tool that competes with Sprint’s calling service. These are only two examples of how companies can favor their own content over competitors’ without rules forbidding this behavior.

Comcast has new speed limits where videos will be throttled to 480p on all its mobile plans unless customers pay extra.

A recent study shows that the largest U.S. telecom companies, including Verizon, AT&T, and T-Mobile, are slowing down internet traffic from apps like YouTube and Netflix.

Verizon’s throttling of services even affected the Santa Clara County Fire Department’s ability to provide emergency services during the California wildfires. The fire department experienced slowed down speeds on their devices and had to sign up for a new, expensive plan before speeds were restored.

Redditor AbeFroman21 posted that he and his family are without power or internet due to Hurricane Florence, and that Verizon has throttled their internet access to an unusable trickle, offering to unblock them if they pay for a higher tier of service.

CenturyLink briefly disabled the Internet connections of customers in Utah last week and allowed them back online only after they acknowledged an offer to purchase filtering software.

Doesn't sound like nothing to me.:eyebrow:

Undertoad 09-08-2020 09:25 AM

Net neutrality rules never applied to wireless service, and that's 6 out of 7 of these claims, most of which are from 2018.

tw 09-08-2020 12:49 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Undertoad (Post 1057703)
Net neutrality rules never applied to wireless service,

That explains why violations of net neutrality are most egregious on wireless services.

xoxoxoBruce 09-08-2020 07:00 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Undertoad (Post 1057703)
Net neutrality rules never applied to wireless service, and that's 6 out of 7 of these claims, most of which are from 2018.

And never will since the FCC lost control. The commerce Commission sure as hell won't slow them down.
EDit: Also, 2018 doesn't matter they started disemboweling the FCC in 2017 right after the election and killing net neutrality shifting to commerce means the damage can't be undone without an act of congress.

Undertoad 09-08-2020 07:48 PM

But how about those items huh.

The meaning of "Unlimited" has nothing to do with net neutrality, it's a marketing issue which belongs with the FTC, not FCC. But also, it's now 2020 and Verizon has only one Unlimited. I have this plan. It's unlimited.

Sprint throttling traffic to Skype was a claim from researchers collating information from a third-party app, and Sprint disputed the results. But more than that,
Quote:

[researchers] added that they could not reproduce the crowd-sourced results when running their own tests on a Sprint data plan, leading them to assume that the throttling was only occurring on certain types of plans.
The researchers themselves could not reproduce their findings. That's... unimpressive.

We already went over reducing video sizes over mobile in this thread, and why they were a benefit to everyone in 2018 and not a net neutrality violation.

We already went over the Santa Clara firefighters in this thread. It had nothing to do with net neutrality.

Centurylink blocked people in UT based on their understanding or misunderstanding of a UT state law requiring customers to opt-out of filtering. This has nothing to do with net neutrality.

Finally, a Redditor claimed he didn't get good wireless service during a hurricane, LOL. Are you fuckin' kidding me? This has nothing to do with net neutrality.

~

I am done here. This is my last post on this topic. Please, by all means, have the final words, and enjoy the thread in the future without my input.


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