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Can the Wireless Internet Be Neutral?

Continued from page 1

By David Talbot

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

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However the FCC chooses to define Net neutrality, Chiang says the specter of regulation hangs heavy over wireless Internet businesses. "As with other industries, uncertainty is worse than anything," he says. "Deploying towers, digging up roads, and standardizing new equipment is a very long-term, capital-intensive thing. If people don't know what is going to happen until litigation sets precedents, that will be a big deterrent to capital expenditures, and that generally is a concern."

The idea of Net neutrality itself is not new. In 2005 the FCC issued principles--but not formal regulations--saying consumers have a right to access legal Internet content and services of their choice. But the matter came to a head last year when Comcast started slowing some customers' peer-to-peer traffic--that is, the bandwidth-slurping exchange of music and video directly between computer-users' hard-drives. The FCC ruled that Comcast had to stop the practice. Comcast sued, challenging the FCC's authority to act in the absence of formal regulations.

In response to the Genachowski speech, the wireless industry was quick to assert there is no problem to solve. AT&T suggested that the highly competitive wireless market--five carriers with more than 10 million customers and 10 carriers with four million or more--provides state-of-the-art service. "Today, American consumers enjoy the broadest array of innovative services and devices, the highest usage levels, the lowest prices, and the most competitive choices of any wireless market in the world," a company statement said, adding that "we have never had concerns with disclosure or transparency regarding network management decisions so long as such requirements are reasonable."

Such industry proclamations don't mean that private interests can't crowd out public ones, says John Palfrey, a Harvard Law School professor and co-director of the Berkman Center for Internet & Society. The risk, he adds, is that big media companies will seek to "solve the copyright debate through bandwidth shaping or other technical means," or that ISPs will curtail certain kinds of speech, as is widely done in some other countries. "Without Net neutrality," says Palfrey, "the most important public network in most people's lives could become dominated by private interests. The parade of horribles that could occur is endless."

Even Net neutrality advocates like Palfrey, however, concede that technology advances faster than government. "The trick will be to say 'Can you draw those rules in such a way that will promote innovation over the medium to long term, not just the immediate term?'" he says. "Any regulation will need to be revised in five or ten years."

Jon Crowcroft, a professor of Communications Systems at the University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom, fears that regulatory meddling will inevitably add costs. "I personally am disappointed that a regulatory agency wants to get in the loop. Generally regulations are needed when we have a market failure," he says. "While today there are lots of anomalies, they are generally localized in geography and time, and generally drift toward a generally neutral network."

He adds: "If someone has to put in extra technology to support existing customer base, it will increase the cost of your components, probably a lot. That would be a very negative effect."

Comments

  • net neutrality for wireless networks
    There are certain realities in the marketplace. Broadband, both wired and wireless, is a commodity. Carriers have tried to avoid this issue for many years by controlling access to off deck mobile products and access discrimination. By extending net neutrality to wireless networks, Congress will be enforcing market realities, not choosing market winners and losers. We, as consumers and professionals, need an open and unfettered marketplace to spur innovation. This will be a powerful move in the mobile marketplace - equivalent to the rules that allowed mobile number porting. Let mobile and digital products operate across networks. -- by the Mobile Lawyer. http://www.web20lawyer.com/page0/page11/mobile-compliance-laws.html
    Rate this comment: 12345

    web20lawyer
    09/30/2009
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    • Re: net neutrality for wireless networks
      You hit the nail on the head.  Bandwidth is a commodity.  Content is the real value driver.  The cable model is dying.  The wireless model has to change.   The internet must remain neutral in order to grow new businesses, industries, and to spur our economy.   
      Rate this comment: 12345

      davidwilson1...
      09/30/2009
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    • Re: net neutrality for wireless networks
      I beg to differ. The only reason that bandwidth appears to be a commodity is because the vast majority of internet traffic is currently transported over TCP, which has excellent congestion control properties. Even here, the traffic engineering that optimizes web access via HTTP assumes more down-link traffic than up-link traffic by about a factor of 10, which is why the ISPs hate peer-to-peer traffic, where bandwidth needs are roughly symmetrical.

      Other emerging applications, especially real time applications (e.g. voice and video over IP, gaming, various forms of tele-operation, etc.), which use the UDP-based RTP protocol, have no congestion control, and rely solely on the fact that real time applications produce data at a predictable rate. ISPs must be allowed to admit and shape RTP traffic, or it can easily overwhelm the network. Similarly, quality-of-service has to be applied to RTP or the real time applications that depend on it stop working. You simply can't do that in a commodity network.

      If you enforce application neutrality, you're condemning the internet to a TCP-based future, which will stifle many promising new classes of applications. I have no problem with location neutrality, where content from different sources must be treated neutrally. But traffic engineering for specific applications is extremely complicated. It is certainly more complicated than a set of regulations can encompass.
      Rate this comment: 12345

      theradicalmo...
      10/01/2009
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  • or that ISPs will curtail certain kinds of speech, as is widely done in some other countries
    I personally would be more concerned about governments curtailing "certain kinds of speech" through the regulatory process then any ISP. 

    All in the name of "fairness" of course.
    Rate this comment: 12345

    sdysart
    09/30/2009
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    • Human rights
      What an ironic statement given that corporations are already deciding that. While my technical knowledge is scant, one thing is very clear: this isn't a technical issue. It's a human rights issue. To allow corporations to decide who gets to "speak" first on the basis of profit is dangerous and unethical.
      Rate this comment: 12345

      Kingofallmed...
      10/03/2009
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      • Re: Human rights
        It's not exactly an either-or situation. There can be human rights/public benefit issues and technical issues at the same time. My problem is that the technical issues won't be handled properly if they're regulated by a blunt instrument like the FCC.
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        theradicalmo...
        10/03/2009
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