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Issue Date: Daily Dog - March 11, 2008


Comcast in Hot Water with FCC: Commission Mulls Taking Action Against Cable Giant for Policing Net Traffic
The Federal Communications Commission is edging toward taking action against cable operator Comcast for monkeying with its customers' peer–to–peer traffic, according to several news reports. Last week, FCC Chairman Kevin Martin indicated during a speech at Stanford University's Law School that the commission may take action against the cable operator, which has been accused of blocking or slowing down the peer–to–peer file sharing service BitTorrent on its broadband network, CNET reports.

Martin didn't say for certain that the FCC would take action against Comcast. But he did say that he was troubled by Comcast's initial denial of slowing or blocking traffic, according to news reports from people who attended the speech. What worried him most was the fact that Comcast wasn't forthcoming to its customers about what it was doing, reports CNET writer Marguerite Reardon on a network blog.

"A hallmark of what should be seen as a reasonable business practice is certainly whether or not the people engaging in that practice are willing to describe it publicly," The Wall Street Journal quoted Martin as saying.

Comcast has argued that it doesn't block P2P traffic. Instead, it says it simply slows down packets so that it can better manage its network. The company has complained that file sharing software, such that used by BitTorrent, permits a few customers to use an inordinate amount of bandwidth, which degrades the network performance for the vast majority of its customers.

Martin has said he understands the need for companies to manage their networks. And he has said that reasonable network management practices are acceptable.

But video–sharing companies, academics, and public–interest groups say that Comcast's actions go beyond simple network management and actually violate several principles outlined by the FCC to ensure that traffic flows freely over the Internet. These groups have launched formal complaints against Comcast, and the FCC has been looking into these complaints.

The FCC held an open hearing last month to discuss whether or not Comcast went too far in its "traffic shaping" measures and what could be done to make the experience more transparent to consumers.

But now it looks like Martin, and by extension the commission, sees Comcast as going beyond simply managing its network. But even if the FCC decides that Comcast has violated Net neutrality principles, it's unclear what the agency can actually do to Comcast. The principles are not agency regulation. And there are no Net neutrality laws on the books, so it's hard to say what kind of enforcement the FCC can impose.

Comments:
Tuesday, March 11, 2008 5:35:16 PM by Anonymous
I am a Comcast captured customer. There is no other high speed available where I live so it's dial up or comcast.

They have COMPLETELY BLOCKED ME FROM USING TORRENT FILES... BitTorrent among them.

I mean BLOCKED. Before I found this story I thought torrent files had become illegal or something... so I quit trying after I paid to belong to a group.
Wednesday, March 12, 2008 11:43:22 PM by Lynda
I find it hard t believe that the FCC is AGAINST Comcast. There has to be a pony in there somewhere.
Thursday, March 13, 2008 9:43:41 AM by Greg Forest
It seems that Time Warner Roadrunner is doing it in some markets too. If I start a torrent, about 10 minutes later my connection dies. If I reboot the cable modem and router, it comes back.

THEORY: There is a software switching widget that detects torrent traffic and either filters or disconnects the ip address the torrent is directed to. Upon reboot I am assigned another floating IP address and it works again until the widget kicks in.

It seem that many providers have oversold their bandwidth and refuse to spend the money to upgrade. Our country's data infrastructure is starting to look like our highways and schools — too long neglected.
Thursday, March 13, 2008 12:17:42 PM by Raymond Jacobs
Corporation and government usually act more in unison than this, I too am a little surprised that the FCC is blowing the whistle. Seems like they are more concerned about auctioning off the broadcast spectrum than policing the corporations.

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