I don't know whether my readers in the USA, Europe and the rest of the world have been following developments in Canada concerning internet usage, but they're very interesting . . . and likely to affect the rest of us before too long. Ars Technica reports:
Metered Internet usage (also called "Usage-Based Billing") [UBB] is coming to Canada, and it's going to cost Internet users. While an advance guard of Canadians are expressing creative outrage at the prospect of having to pay inflated prices for Internet use charged by the gigabyte, the consequences probably haven't set in for most consumers. Now, however, independent Canadian ISPs are publishing their revised data plans, and they aren't pretty.
. . .
Starting on March 1, Ontario TekSavvy members who subscribed to the 5Mbps plan have a new usage cap of 25GB, "substantially down from the 200GB or unlimited deals TekSavvy was able to offer before the CRTC's decision to impose usage based billing," the message added.
By way of comparison, Comcast here in the United States has a 250GB data cap. Looks like lots of Canadians can kiss that kind of high ceiling goodbye. And going over will cost you: according to TekSavvy, the CRTC put data overage rates at CAN $1.90 per gigabyte for most of Canada, and $2.35 for the country's French-speaking region.
Bottom line: no more unlimited buffet. TekSavvy users who bought the "High Speed Internet Premium" plan at $31.95 now get 175GB less per month.
"Extensive web surfing, sharing music, video streaming, downloading and playing games, online shopping and email," could put users over the 25GB cap, TekSavvy warns. Also, watch out "power users that use multiple computers, smartphones, and game consoles at the same time."
You need "protection"
Here's the "good" news: TekSavvy users can now buy "insurance," defined as "a recurring subscription fee that provides you with additional monthly usage." For Ontario it's $4.75 for 40GB of additional data (sorry, but the unused data can't be forwarded to the next month).
There are also "usage vault" plans - payments made in advance for extra data. Consumers can buy vault data for $1.90/GB up to 300GB in any month.
Where once TekSavvy consumers could purchase High Speed Internet Premium at a monthly base usage of 200GB for $31.95 a month, now they can get about half of that data (if they buy two units of insurance) at $41.45 a month.
Starting to hate this? TekSavvy hates it, too.
"The ostensible, theoretical reason behind UBB is to conserve capacity, but that issue is very questionable," noted the ISP's CEO Rocky Gaudrault on TekSavvy's news page. "One certain result though, is that Bell will make much more profit on its Internet service, and discourage Canadians from watching TV and movies on the internet instead of CTV, which Bell now owns."
. . .
The big question now is how these kind of billing changes will impact 'Net consumption patterns. Many subscribers use minimal data, but that's changing as Internet video becomes the norm. If these new plans simply discourage data hogs from backing up their 120GB pirated movie collection over the 'Net every night, there's no sleep to be lost. But if they scare consumers away from legitimate non-ISP affiliated movie and content sharing sites, that should be a firebell concern to consumers, entrepreneurs, and regulators.
And not only in Canada.
There's more at the link.
Commenting on Teksavvy's new limits, Karl Denninger points out:
Well now. That would be about 20 hours of SD viewing, and a bit less than 10 of HD on Netflix, assuming no other usage. Across all devices. Or, to put this in a bit better perspective, about 20 minutes a day.
Overage? $2/gb, or about two bucks an hour of use on SD and $5/hr on HD.
There goes Netflix's "$8 all you can eat" buffet!
. . .
So now to watch an hour of Netflix a night you'd need to spend not $8, but about $13, and for two hours a night (especially if in HD) it's closer to $20.
Again, more at the link.
Trouble is, the owners of backbone data networks want it both ways. They want to charge us, the consumers, for using their bandwidth; and they also want to charge those who provide the bandwidth-intensive content we consume! Ars Technica again, in a different report:
Poor Internet providers. They have to carry all that horrible, horrible traffic from Netflix and YouTube, and they just can't afford it anymore. Unless they start charging end users 21 percent more for Internet access, or unless they're allowed to bill Internet companies at 3.7¢ per GB, the Internet could "become unusable at peak times" due to congestion.
The huge incumbent ISPs have a fairly obvious agenda for the future of the 'Net, one that involves traffic prioritization, more "managed services," and high prices, but rarely is the wish list on such prominent display as in a recent report from consultancy A.T. Kearney. Four of Europe's biggest ISPs - Deutsche Telekom, France Telecom, Telecom Italia, and Telefónica - commissioned a study from the company on "A Viable Future Model for the Internet" (PDF), which involves giving lots more money to ISPs.
The basic argument is simple and well-known. The ISPs claim that they just can't afford all the investment they've been making, and that's it totally unfair that companies like Netflix get to make nice business on their pipes without paying their fair share.
. . .
The report is worth a read, if only to see how the next ISP push to charge more money will look. Commissioned by big European operators, it's not surprising that the targets are generally content companies - especially American content companies.
. . .
ISPs really do seem to believe that content companies are "dumping" traffic onto their networks, but the "source" of all that traffic isn't the content companies; it's the users who have chosen to access those services. Having popular online services is of course the very reason that people pay for Internet access in the first place.
While usage-based billing has already come to places like Canada, it's clear that ISPs would like to extend it to Internet companies as well as to end users.
Read more at Ars Technica.
So, the owners of backbone network infrastructure want to restrict my use of the bandwidth they've contracted to supply to me, and/or charge me a lot more for unrestricted or high-volume usage; and they also want to charge the companies whose services I'm consuming, to allow them to provide their services to me over the same bandwidth I'm already paying for!
Can you say 'extortion'? Can you say 'double-dipping'? I thought you could . . .
I understand that the provision of network infrastructure for the Internet has cost a great deal of money: but the owners of that infrastructure have already recovered those costs, either through charging end-users directly, or through charging other Internet Service Providers (ISP's) for the use of their infrastructure, or through Government subsidies to make it economically feasible to build the network in the first place. For them to protest that they need to pay for it all again is disingenuous at best. Furthermore, I know that new technology will require a great deal of money to upgrade network infrastructure; but once again, those costs are and will be covered by the monthly charges levied against users.
For them to try to charge at every level of the Internet - content providers, service providers, and end users - is greed, plain and simple. We need to start making our voices heard in protest, and let them know that we won't stand for it. I think we can exert enough pressure to short-circuit this money grab before it gains too much momentum . . . but only if we start now, and only if enough of us get involved. If we ignore the problem until UBB is implemented by our own service providers, it'll probably be too late.
Peter
10 comments:
Well, we knew it was coming... sigh...
Some of the geekier of us TOLD you net neutrality wasn't a bad thing!!!
The issue now is that the ISPs want to direct your eyeballs only to websites that pay said ISPs. No pay, no play. I have an older cellphone that barely has "Internet" access. At the top level of the "web access" are buttons to hit for CNN, Yahoo, ESPN and a handful of others - the ones that paid Tmobile to be there.
The FCC says that this sort of idiocy is OK for "mobile user" ISPs but not for home users - for now. What the ISPs do to cellular users is a very good indicator of where they want to go for the rest of us.
We tried to tell you. Instead you (meaning way too many conservatives) listened to Fox news not realizing that what Fox was saying wasn't politically motivated, it was FINANCIALLY motivated by way of Rupert Murdock.
So when the FCC comment period was going on, you bought a line of BS and gave a veneer of "public support" for the wrong side.
Congrats.
Jim, I'm sorry, but you're wrong. Opposition to the FCC's efforts to assume control of the Internet was (at least in my case, and in the case of many I agree with) simply an effort to make sure that the Government doesn't grab control of yet another area that it need not control at all. The market can do so quite adequately, without needing to give more bureaucrats more authority.
That said, this sort of thing can be stopped by government without needing to give the FCC a wider mandate. There's a difference between 'preventing harm' and 'grabbing control'. I hope the powers that be can see that, and do something about it . . . but given the nature of governments and bureaucrats, especially those that plague us today, I'm not very sanguine about our prospects.
Canadian update:
From today's Toronto Globe and Mail
"The [Canadian federal] government is killing an independent federal regulator’s decision on Internet billing, a populist move allowing the Conservatives to cast themselves as a champions of consumers.
... a powerful grassroots campaign against the ruling was so fierce it threatened to become a major political controversy on the eve of a possible federal election this spring."
There's nothing like the prospect of electoral unemployment to focus a politician :-)
Sorry Jim, but we conservatives are always proven right that whatever government takes over, it ruins. Always has, always will. The market may change and there may be some difficulty during the change, but when the consumers have the total freedom of choice, the consumer can still win.
Things cost what they cost, and no government intervention can change that.
My household has already figured out that the time may come that we will completely drop out of the technological world, either because of government censorship or monitoring, or cost, or just because we are tired of it all.
re "Can you say 'extortion'? Can you say 'double-dipping'?" -- oh, come now.
There is indeed a struggle to find the 'proper' balance in revenue streams but it should not be lambasted with criminal allegations.
The concept of 'pay for use' is well established and common, even in public utilities such as electrical bills.
Why should those who use less of the infrastructure subsidize those who use more? What gives those who live on the I'net and spend all their time downloading content and such the right to ride on the backs of those who don't?
We have some very new technologies and concepts trying to find their proper place. It will take some time to figure out just how it will all fit together. We don't need government limiting the options any more than it has to, IMHO, especially when the demand is simply that of voter greed - which it seems to be here.
Whether net neutrality ever is codified into law or not (I'm doubting it will be), these bandwidth caps are more concerning because they can render any kind of net neutrality moot. OK, so your Netflix movie may stream at the same speed as every other packet of data, but if your bandwidth cap is so low that two movies blows right through the cap, you're paying more anyway. The only solution is to use traditional cable or satellite providers for that entertainment fare.
Currently, it looks like most caps are set high enough so that "normal" surfing won't come up against them. Even a movie a week or so won't do it. But if it's your primary method of obtaining entertainment, you have to find a provider with very high caps or none at all (Charter Communications, on their 60Mb tier, has no cap at all, but you're paying $90 or so per month for it).
This seems to me to be the main obstacle to replacing physical media for movies. When Blu-Ray launched, people were saying that downloaded movies will likely make them obsolete. Well, I agreed, but I contended the timetable was such that BR would have a good run first. It's looking more and more like the day of downloaded movies in place of physical media is coming faster than ever, but they won't be locally stored- you'll stream it when you want to see it. And that is a real problem if you have unreliable internet (as AT&T Uverse has been for me) or if the cap is on the low side.
And that's before the issue of the telcos double dipping everybody for the bandwidth- first charging you for the connection and a certain speed, then charging you yet more for the total amount of data moved on your behalf.
Too bad the big carriers all have government assisted monopolies and there aren't any alternative carriers.
Sitting here in sweden, with my 100/10 mbit line, I can tell you I can break that 25GB monthly limit in oh about 20 minutes if I'm downloading some compiled japanese cartoon TV-series torrent or similar... If I were to go full tilt I could download about a terrabyte in a day, though I'd have to buy another harddrive first to make room.
For this 100/10 mbit line with unlimited bandwidth I pay about $39US according to my calculator and last weeks exchangerate.
And I could've told you net neutrality was a must years ago...
WV: Prize
Ugh tired, missed a step in my math. Divide by 5.
5GB in about 20 minutes. 25GB in an hour and 40 minutes, and 360GB a day.
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