-----Original Message-----
From: Nnagain [mailto:nnagain-bounces@lists.bufferbloat.net] On Behalf Of Livingood,
Jason via Nnagain
Sent: Monday, October 2, 2023 11:10 AM
To: Network Neutrality is back! Letīs make the technical aspects heard this
time!
Cc: Livingood, Jason
Subject: Re: [NNagain] On "Throttling" behaviors
On 10/2/23, 10:51, "Nnagain on behalf of Mark Steckel via
Nnagain" <nnagain-bounces@lists.bufferbloat.net
<mailto:nnagain-bounces@lists.bufferbloat.net> on behalf of
nnagain@lists.bufferbloat.net <mailto:nnagain@lists.bufferbloat.net>>
wrote:
> In both cases it is rational for the ISPs to favor this content
over other content. This can be done by zero tier ratings, throttling, etc.
What I have observed in practice is the businesses of connectivity and
content are separately run & tend to act with a very high degree of
independence. To take the example of throttling - all that would do is (1)
prompt customer contacts
[RR] Did you mean “contracts”?
- driving cost to the ISP, or (2) prompt churn - also driving cost +
reducing revenue. My personal view is that the whole notion of throttling
streaming video (or whatever) is a non-issue to any large ISP. That is why I
think there is consensus support for 'no throttling or blocking' in the ISP
community.
> While there are numerous issues around NN, the core of it starts
with whether the public and companies that use the Internet are entitled to
transparent, fair and and equal access to the Internet.
That is likely why I think industry writ large agrees with the notion
of no blocking/throttling/prioritization.
JL
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