almost1337,

Per the article, this looks to be limited to mobile internet and not traditional broadband. While I can understand the practicality of carving out unique bands of the wireless spectrum for specific uses, charging extra for it seems scummy.

stembolts,

Its always, no no this is for X, not Y.

(a few years pass)

They accepted X, now there is precedent, let’s take Y.

This is the start, not the finish.

Fight this or it will make its way to your interests.

My $0.02.

KairuByte,
@KairuByte@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Sure, it’s $0.02 now, but in a few years that’ll be precedent and you’ll start asking for $0.04. I’m on to your game!

kamen,

I hope the EU handles that. I’m happy that I’m not in the US.

obinice,
@obinice@lemmy.world avatar

Oof, they don’t have net neutrality over there eh?

Gonna be bollocks for them until they can get that brought in. There’s an election coming up there right? Maybe they can vote for the party that pledges to bring in net neutrality laws, it’s about time they had them considering it’s 2024.

I wish them the best of luck <3

Archr,

Net neutrality being brought up as an election topic would be very unusual for our politics. Our two party system is very set on the topics that they like and don’t like to bring up.

Of course the parties have negative incentive to do anything more than the bare minimum about these topics that they fight so hard to advertise. Otherwise, they might need to come up with new reasons for people to vote for them.

Beetschnapps, (edited )

Except that ignores how net neutrality only became a thing in the last 2 decades there’s only so many presidential admins in that period. So 5 elections vs 20 years to discuss a topic… it’s not weird that it comes up more outside of an election year. Feigning both sides/everything’s rigged bullshit is a mindless simplification.

Still, I can’t tell if you’re choosing to ignore how Obama campaigned for it or how Biden and Harris campaigned way more for it, especially concerning reversing trumps FCC decisions.

No reason to ignore the fact that Biden made it a priority in the first year or so of the admin.

Acting like it’s rigged absolves republicans of their actions: “Net Neutrality Won’t Survive a Trump Presidency” and lumps good folks in with the worst.

Net neutrality couldn’t happen while republicans block the commissioners for the job: theverge.com/…/gigi-sohn-fcc-nomination-dark-mone…

So why not blame it on the people who are actually documented as destroying net-neutrality and advocating against it. Why instead invent some all powerful Illuminati like cabal only to end up making it a both sides thing?

Republican attacks over bs tweets are just one of the reasons we can’t have nice things. Another reason is because people like to imagine a rigged system pulling the strings to pretend there’s some order in the chaos. All it does is suck the support away from anyone trying to do the right thing.

stringere,

Well said, even if you are the grossest of schnapps.

Pixlbabble,

What!?

coffeebiscuit,

The fuck is “fast gaming”. And what games demand this?

V4sh3r,
@V4sh3r@lemmy.world avatar

Low latency matters a lot more than bandwidth in any game that isn’t turn based.

BreakDecks,

I would guess that since it mentions teleconferencing and gaming, that they want to create low-latency fast-lanes.

But they also mention TikTok, so I am not completely sure that they are referring to latency.

This article isn’t very good at explaining what they’re talking about on a technical level.

Plopp,

Yo TikTok with a latency higher than 2 ms is completely unusable trash!

Or under 2 ms.

BreakDecks,

I have a hard time believing that since TikTok is such a popular mobile app, and 4G users are going to have a minimum of 200ms latency over-the-air.

5G does offer much faster over-the-air latency of only 1ms, but if TikTok were to become unusable if the latency between tower and server exceeds 1ms, I would expect to hear widespread complaints about that, as the vast majority of users aren’t going to have <2ms latency between them and the server. Pinging TikTok.com from my 5G handset (in a major metro area) shows a latency of 80ms. Admittedly, AWS and GCP, where TikTok hosts content primarily for US users, likely has better latency. My personal experience with those platforms doesn’t suggest that it would be that good- pinging the cloudfront CDN endpoints associated with my account, I get latency between 40-60ms.

Besides, video streaming shouldn’t be affected by latency, only throughput. TikTok videos are just MP4 files on a CDN, as long as you can download them faster than you can play them, high latency shouldn’t even be noticeable to the user, outside of initial load times for latency exceeding a few hundred ms (up to a second or so delay if establishing a fresh TCP connection, depending on the latency).

Maybe TikTok Live could be an issue, but its a one-way channel so a delay shouldn’t be noticeable like it would be with a 2-way teleconference. Maybe if there was high jitter or packet loss, the stream could have extremely low quality.

Plopp,

If you read my comment again you might realize it’s a joke about TikTok being trash.

coffeebiscuit,

Reading trough all the marketing terms used. I’m more afraid of selective slowing down connections instead of the mentioned “speeding up” connections.

skulblaka,
@skulblaka@startrek.website avatar

Yeah they won’t speed up shit, that requires investment in infrastructure. They’ll just slow down all existing lanes by 40%, blame it on something unrelated, and then charge you 2.5x as much as you used to pay to get your original speeds back.

rottingleaf,

Don’t do that. Don’t read through them. Let that shit be.

Also don’t help your “non-tech-savvy” relatives and friends with crap you’ve told them before you don’t use. They think it’s fine and normal until they are left alone to deal with it. “But how will I use Facebook?.. I dunno, don’t use it myself, can’t help you”.

The reason crap is popular is also because we the relatively savvy people have conditioned normies to think that they choose what to use and we’ll just help them with everything, but the authority who tells what’s good and what isn’t is not us, it’s Google and Apple and other shitmakers.

No free IT help without representation, I say. Which means that I’ll help them if they suddenly want to become Linux users. Or something else I can respect. But not with things I’ve never advised them to use in the first place, quite the contrary. I’m for adult usage of the Web, with normies accepting responsibility for their own choices.

EDIT: This butthurt comment meant that we shouldn’t wait for normies to abandon all that. Leading by example. Like with ICQ being abandoned in favor of Skype. Network effect isn’t real (… anymore with enshittification negating it fully), it can’t hurt you.

EDIT2: And I know it’s offtopic.

Riven,
@Riven@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

I agree with you, I usually tell relatives to call their isp and scream at them. It’s usually stuff I could probably help with but if the isp gets more hell they might change for the better.

_sideffect,

Fuck these pricks.

The network can handle everyone currently on it yet they cry like it’s causing them issues.

Fucking liars.

laurelraven,

They might not be able to easily, but that’s 100% on them for spending their obscene profits on yet another nesting yacht rather than upgrading their infrastructure to actually keep pace with demand

toiletobserver,

It’s yachts, all the way down

Plopp,

The issue is there are profits left on the table! Unacceptable!

Asafum,

When it’s mafia it’s extortion, when it’s ISPs it’s just “good business practices.”

leanleft,
@leanleft@lemmy.ml avatar

enshittification.

my theory is that they are pushing for more expensive upgrades like fiber.

ghostface,

Charter has/had a dark fiber ring ready for use back in 2005. I assume most other cable providers have similar, because they had to build it out after the first FCC spending bill after 99

suzune,

Maybe they mean low latency internet connections. This might need some better hardware installations on the side of the provider. This is probably not about net neutrality.

ColeSloth,

Read the article before commenting, Nimrod.

suzune,

The article is about positive discrimination. The so-called critics fear that there is room for additional fees for for enhanced services, even the FCC clearly says that services should not be degraded and treated equally.

When FCC says that they never banned all prioritisation every “critic” is in state of alert. They ignore the fact that internet needs kinds of regulations to work properly on technical level and conflate the statement with the one above. FCC probably allows technical measures to regulate important cases of traffic shaping and even blocking when it’s harmful for the service overall. This implies the fact that net neutrality can be guaranteed with these regulations.

Brkdncr,

“Why should we upgrade our tech when we can just artificially reduce capacity and charge more for priority access?”

Gingerlegs,

Exactly why net neutrality was important

CaptainSpaceman,

Obligatory fuck ajit pai

TropicalDingdong,

Has Biden made this a priority?

pearsaltchocolatebar,

He couldn’t until there was a Democrat majority in the FCC.

Now it’s a priority.

TropicalDingdong,

Well he’s got a few months to make something happen then.

Until then its just talk.

pearsaltchocolatebar,

They’re holding a vote on it in October.

clgoh,
timewarp,
@timewarp@lemmy.world avatar

Is he still in charge?

TropicalDingdong,

ajit pai

Looks like no: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ajit_Pai

So, its really Bidens fault at this point. Its an FCC thing, so he has full authority to do whatever the fuck he wants.

pearsaltchocolatebar,

Biden just nominates. The senate decides who gets it.

timewarp,
@timewarp@lemmy.world avatar

I agree Ajit MiPants is a piece of shit, but I don’t hear Biden saying he is going to make Internet a utility anytime soon.

ShepherdPie,

Doesn’t matter what he does with regard to FCC appointments since the next guy can just undo it again.

apfelwoiSchoppen,
@apfelwoiSchoppen@lemmy.world avatar

That’s literally in the article, Rosenworcel has been in charge for a while now. The net neutrality laws that she and Biden enacted are not as strong as the Obama era laws.

timewarp,
@timewarp@lemmy.world avatar

Yeah I know, the whole point was we should be working on holding our own accountable now. Biden running around gleefully shouting he is a capitalist and he’s going to ensure people pay their fair share in taxes, while the rich still avoid taxes and inflation targets the middle class doesn’t help. Not to mention that the average home price in many cities for a basic 3 bedroom house is nearing a million dollars.

apfelwoiSchoppen,
@apfelwoiSchoppen@lemmy.world avatar

Absolutely fair and somehow missing from most discussion.

circuitfarmer,
@circuitfarmer@lemmy.world avatar

Who saw this coming???

/s

mihies,

RIP net neutrality, it was nice knowing you.

Cuttlefish1111, (edited )

Data is data unless they can commodify it. Data is like a river that never ends. Doesn’t cost them Anything. We are subject to monopolies who charge above and beyond maintenance and massive profits while destroying competition

theit8514,

You seem to be misinformed on how the internet works. Nothing is “free”. ISPs have to buy equipment, pay for expensive physical connectivity (without disturbing existing infrastructure), and usually have to deal with constant, ever increasing bandwidth requirements.

I’m all for a bit of net neutrality, but ISPs tend to get a lot of flak for policies like this, for seemingly no reason. For example, let’s say ISP A and Upstream B have a mutual bandwidth sharing policy (called Peering) where both sides benefit equally from the connectivity. ISP A determines that N is using all the bandwidth to Upstream B. ISP A has three options: N gets all the bandwidth to Upstream B (disturbing other traffic to/from that network), N has to be throttled to allow all traffic equally, or ISP A and Upstream B need to expand their network again (new equipment, new physical links) which will cost a lot of money. N doesn’t even pay ISP A or Upstream B, they just pay their ISP C. In the end, ISP A has to throttle N, and N is the one who had to expand/change their business model to deliver content to their customers. They had to go out and buy services from many upstream providers to even the load and designed a solution to install Caching boxes inside each ISP’s datacenter so their traffic could reach end users without going upstream.

OsaErisXero,

The correct answer in that scenario is C should be paying for it, as in the stated scenario C's traffic would be exceeding the peering arrangement with B and/or A, but there were/are a number of reasons that breaks down in the real world.

roguetrick,

Sender pays is what Korea has. It does not work well at all.

OsaErisXero,

Peering isn't Sender Pays, Peering is "I'll carry your traffic if you'll carry mine", with the understanding that when there's an imbalance in one direction or another that an exchange of some sort is had, be it dollars, bandwidth limits, or similar. In this case, where C interconnects with A which interconnects with B, if C's traffic is so substantial that it's saturating the crosslink between A and B, A would need to evaluate whether their peering agreement with C means that C needs to be paying for the network upgrade, or if there's enough traffic moving from A's network into C's to offset that, and that the interconnect between A and B is the root issue. In your example, rather than paying more into ISPs and, essentially, indirectly funding US network backbone infrastructure upgrades across the board, they solved their problem with cache servers that they handed out like candy to avoid their costs to C sky rocketing. G solved this problem by buying a bunch of dark fiber which was laid on spec by contractors and started peering directly with the Tier 1 providers, dramatically reducing their cost delta.

Where Korea's system differs is that in traditional Tier 1 peering, as I understand it, T's ISP (call them P) should be using some of the money they get from T to pay Q and R for the excess traffic of their customer, but instead Q and R were, per the government, allowed to also charge T for delivery of their packets, resulting in T having to pay both on the up and downlink side, charging them twice for the same bit. T, rather than attempt what G did, told Korea to pound sand and exited the market.

kalleboo,

That’s a good summary!

IMO, the customers of A are paying A to access to the internet, including N. So A should charge their customers enough that they can pay for the equipment to deliver that.

In a working market with many participants, customers can choose a cheaper ISP that has congested/throttled peering, or a more expensive ISP with gold-plated interconnects.

The problem is that in the US, typically your choice of ISP is limited by geography. In many other places you have open fiber networks where the last mile is shared and then you can choose what ISP you want ontop of that, and the ISP is what determines how good your peering is.

And installing caching boxes inside of ISPs is actually a really efficient solution (as well as peer-to-peer)

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • technology@lemmy.world
  • GTA5RPClips
  • DreamBathrooms
  • InstantRegret
  • magazineikmin
  • thenastyranch
  • ngwrru68w68
  • Youngstown
  • everett
  • slotface
  • rosin
  • ethstaker
  • Durango
  • kavyap
  • cubers
  • provamag3
  • modclub
  • mdbf
  • khanakhh
  • vwfavf
  • osvaldo12
  • cisconetworking
  • tester
  • Leos
  • tacticalgear
  • anitta
  • normalnudes
  • megavids
  • JUstTest
  • All magazines