This story appeared on Network
World at
http://www.networkworld.com/columnists/2007/103007-bradner.html
I guess truth is
not an option for telcos
y Scott Bradner
Network World , 10/30/2007
If I wanted network neutrality
laws passed I could not think of a better pair of allies than Verizon Wireless
and Comcast. By their duplicitous behavior, both have been doing a very good
job of showing lawmakers just why such laws may be needed.
For quite a while Verizon Wireless
has been selling "unlimited" wireless broadband. I do not suppose it
was a shock to many people when it turned out that the carrierŐs definition of
"unlimited" dropped the "un." More than 10,000 customers
who assumed that Verizon Wireless was using the dictionary definition of
"unlimited" suddenly became ex-customers when their accounts were
summarily canceled. They got letters saying, in essence, that they were using
too much bandwidth so they must have been doing something bad.
The New York attorney general
apparently can read the dictionary and just got Verizon Wireless to agree to
clarify its terms and to pay about a million dollars to compensate the
terminated customers. http://www.networkworld.
It is good that someone is looking
out for truth in advertising, but I find it hard to understand why it should
have taken a nine-month investigation to figure out something that was very
clear to more than 10,000 people a few seconds after they got their goodbye
letters. Note that $1M is less than three minutesŐ worth of income for Verizon
itself. I'm sure that is a major deterrent for future flat-out lies in
advertising.
In mid-October the Associated
Press reported that a series of experiments it had performed had proven that
Comcast was blocking the use of BitTorrent. AP tried to download a version of
the King James Bible but was blocked by Comcast two out of three times. Comcast
was sending a forged hangup signal to AP's computers that appeared to come from
the BitTorrent servers. Comcast said, being too clever by half, that it did not
block "access to" BitTorrent — true enough, the service
provider was just blocking the "use of" BitTorrent. It was lying by
failing to tell the whole truth.
In both cases the carriers were
not doing anything illegal other than lying about it. But why not just be
upfront and clear about its services and let the customer decide if the
offerings are worth the money?
The main thing the carriers have
achieved is congressional interest. It looks like there will now be hearings
about this. The carriersŐ actions have reinvigorated the pro network neutrality
folk since they are perfect examples of what the telecom industry has said it
will not do. (See ŇFather knows best about net neutrality.Ó)
I suppose we who would like to see
the FCC take its head out of the sand on this issue should thank Verizon
Wireless and Comcast for their help.
I do wonder why these service
providers were so greedy that they could not wait a few months until the net
neutrality issue was fully dead before they exposed their true intentions. But
then again, they are what they are.
Disclaimer: Harvard, in general,
understands that doing things at the right time can take a while but it has not
offered an opinion when itŐs the right time to lie, so the above opinion is
mine.
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