Steve Cisler on Sun, 10 Nov 2002 17:51:49 +0100 (CET) |
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[Nettime-bold] Re: <nettime> Jeff Chester: The Death Of The Internet |
On Wednesday, November 6, 2002, at 05:52 PM, geert lovink wrote: > The Death Of The Internet > How Industry Intends To Kill The 'Net As We Know It > By Jeff Chester > The phrase you should pay attention to is not "Death of the Internet" but "...as we know it." At the recent Global Community Networking conference Jeff was on a panel I moderated (on short notice) and presented ("Why most of you don't have broadband). He admitted his outlook is very US focused, and others from Japan, Korea, and Canada presented their own views which were much more optimistic--partly because the consumer use of high speed DSL and cable modem services is so much higher in those countries (Korea is #1 in the world). Canada has some amazing examples of citizen initiatives that have brought low cost high speed service to very rural areas. Over the past a lot of network administrators in industry, at universities, and in government and non-profit institutions and consortia have been dealing with net capacity and load management in a variety of ways. When I worked a Tachyon, a VSAT service provider, the company spent an enormous amount of time trying to assess and plan for the ways clients were using their capacity. Because satellite transponder space is so expensive (compared to a land transport system of similar capacity), the schemes to manage the resource became very sophisticated. There was special quality of service pricing and technology to manage it. This is now being applied to other kinds of networks where the load is increasing. The kind of "eat all you want" unlimited access that Jeff may have valued in the 90's and thinks the industry wants to take from us (in North America, at any rate) now, has been the cause of a lot of problems between consumers and companies. Here's an early example: AT&T had an early cable modem service in Fremont in Silicon Valley. In 1997 the company tried to get consumers/subscribers to move from dialup ($20/month) to the cable modem service for $35. They promised 10 Mbits/sec bi-directional and for a while just had some early adopters see the value. I visited my friend's house in Fremont in early 1998 to make video clips of the speed of the service in order to show a conference where few people had ever seen a fast connection. Most of the stuff that showed the transfer speed were movie trailers and maps. Signups to this service were slow, so the early users on this big neighborhood LAN were like a small group of Ferrari owners who had a nice stretch of the autostrada to themselves. Pretty soon they were joined by more users and everything slowed down. There were a number of policy changes (terms of service) and technological impediments placed on the system to inhibit certain types of use. People began complaining about the speed (upload speed was dropped to a tiny fraction of the original 10 Mbits/sec offering). My friend no longer even uses the service. He's a special case in that he switched to a dedicated T1 (1.5 Mb/sec) line. Others went to DSL, and a few to a short-lived wireless broadband service. The point I want to make is that the marketing for broadband raises the expectations and once the system is loaded with users, it deteriorates and the organization (not just big media firms) change their policies. For instance, at one large university the load from dormitory MP3 servers (some student's Mac on the campus network) was far greater than all the academic servers running, so the head of the network limited distribution to just that dorm (sort of like a community radio station except that it crippled the peer-to-peer sharing). There has been a cycle of unrealistic promises about service on the part of all kinds of transport providers: VSAT, cable, DSL, and wireless. there is a disconnect between the engineers at those companies and the people in marketing who promise to much. This has caused class action suits among satelllite users and complaints to DSL and cable modem providers. And a lot of it is due to the new way people (especially young people) are using the network (not just MP3 and digital video). In Hong Kong and Korea, there is very heavy interactive network game traffic. Jeff interprets these restrictions and claims as the industry trying to take away the boundless cornucopia of a high speed network where everyone can use it without limits. I'm not going to bring up the much debated "tragedy of the commons" again, but the policies Jeff calls "monetizing bandwidth" is certainly one way the companies are trying to deal with the load, totally apart from whether the content is pirated/shared/sold. Economists talk about "congestion-based pricing" where you pay more for a resource (mobile and fixed line phone calls, toll highway use) at the times when demand is greatest. We may even see that happening, except that users need a relatively simple scheme or they won't buy the service. When companies see what users are willing to pay for SMS service vs "all you can eat" broadband for a flat rate, they will try new pricing schemes in other realms. I think the restrictions area reaction to the current economic depression in the telecomms industry. The former head of the FCC in the US thinks we won't emerge from it for several years. I live about 10 kilometers from MAE West, a major switching point for the Internet, and I cannot get consumer broadband service from any phone, cable, or wireless company. Evereyone is pulling back, laying off people. I guess I could buy a satellite service more suited to rural Bolivia or China than to a Silicon Valley suburb, except the leading one is technically bankrupt. I'll probably just keep using my dialup service and enjoy this unlimited trickle of spam, files, web pages, and mail. Steve Cisler Steve Cisler 4415 Tilbury Drive San Jose, California 95130 http: home.inreach.com/cisler 1-408-379-9076 cisler@pobox.com "Go on the country, not on the map." -Axle in Tim Winton's "Dirt Music" glocal.crimsonblog.com (web log on ICT4DEV) _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://amsterdam.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold