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In short, even if you do identify symptoms in a location where packet skewing exists, well, its legal. And you still have not proven that it is packet skewing - or other internet problems. IOW so what? You have identified where service is inferior. Now what does Skype do? Cry? It's all legal. |
They can target Skype all they like. They can't target them all. They would be trying to build a sandwall against a tsunami.
Their target would be a moving one, too; Skype controls its own software, so skype can look like something else, if it wants to. It can hitch itself to different ports. It can route through proxy servers. It can pretend to be other data. It can encrypt differently. And say, who loses the game if Google blocks Verizon? What history do you care to look at? Examine the history of every company that's planned to 0wn the net in any similar way. This is the Internet, this is the place where hackers found an innocent chat protocol to be the ideal place to swap pirate files. This is the place where people figured out how to send secret messages inside JPG files with no visible difference in image. Legality doesn't enter into it. If I can connect to you, and ship you two 100GB movie files at the same time, I can figure out a way to use 16kb of that traffic for voice. Nobody can stop us. Period. |
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From Washington Post of 10 Feb 2006:
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/. reports today that Microsoft has developed a Skype-style free internet voice service for mobile phones. Who will mess with Microsoft's packets?
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Here's a neat looking map of the internet backbone and who owns/controls each leg. Via Boing Boing.
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Outstanding glatt! My point exactly, and this only covers the routing and not the software aspects. Nobody owns the net, nobody CAN own the net.
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From CBSMarketWatch.com of 23 Mar 2006:
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The internet map shows so much distant traffic across the net is transferred from little providers to the big carriers. There are numerous little carriers. But most of their traffic outside of their little regions gets carried eventually by the big carriers. Also what that map does not show is whose hardware carries those 'grey' lines. Often the XYZ Internet Company uses Bell South, Verizon, Level 3, Alternet, or Qwest lines. That map would not show whose hardware is being used. And one final point. Who controls the last mile. This was the problem that a myopic AT&T management just could not comprehend and solve. The last mile - again what that map does not show - is carried mostly by Qwest, Bell South, and Verizon. You want to service your customers? There is a separate door in every Qwest, Bell South, and Verizon facility labeled ILEC so that the independent - with permission from the big last mile provider - can service his customers via their hardware, their services, and at their prices. Currently, the 'powers that be' are not concerned by AT&T’s threat to destroy net neutrality. But it would be so easy for them to do so once we include all those other facts not found in that colored (*.PDF) internet map. Not shown is whose hardware carries so much of that other (grey colored) traffic, who carries most long haul traffic, AND who controls the last mile. |
No, it's not over....just being censored for content like TV. ;)
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Man, after reading all this and the thread on bush...
HOW long have you put up with tw? and WHEN is he coming back? Arguing with him is almost like a sport, it seems, and I want to be, if not a player, then a spectator! |
How long? Since 1992 or 3, I think.
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Six months later, how has tw's conspiracy prediction held up?
I'm reminded of this thread by this story in which people are trying and think they have figured out how to interfere with Skype. But not for profiteering purposes - it's for Euro regulatory and security purposes. With my ear to the ground I have not heard of one example of VoIP traffic being interfered with for profiteering. Meanwhile, Vonage had an IPO but continues to be hurt by the market noticing that, while Vonage charges $24.95, others charge $0. Google put "Chats" into Gmail. A bunch of hardware manufactures including Philips and US Robotics have come out with VoIP phones for the consumer market. And the carrier fight remains one of providing the most possible and most perfect connectivity and bandwidth, of which all voice over IP requires a tiny, tiny fraction. It's not looking good for tw's predictions. Luckily he didn't suggest a wager for the Cellar calendar. But I won't bring up his mistakes here in any other threads. That would be unfair. |
Blatant Tail Post
It is true that the companies that provide infrastructure for the internet are considering making changes that will possibly affect the basic functionality of the net as we know it, right ??? I could almost swear I heard that on NPR. Was NPR lying?
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That's the net neutrality question, which is different from the blocking voip question. Net neutrality is providers wanting to make extra profit by giving some packets priority so that streaming movies, etc., operate as expected.
Net neutrality is like making the passing lanes and driving lanes a different speed limit. But voice takes so little of the road that it can live on a bicycle on the shoulder lane. |
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