In message <CE4E1597-280D-4A37-9DC8-0CE3FFBD86E5@delong.com>, Owen DeLong write s:
On Nov 23, 2015, at 17:28 , Baldur Norddahl <baldur.norddahl@gmail.com> wrote:
On 24 November 2015 at 00:22, Owen DeLong <owen@delong.com> wrote:
Are there a significant number (ANY?) streaming video providers using UDP to deliver their streams?
What else could we have that is UDP based? Ah voice calls. Video calls. Stuff that requires low latency and where TCP retransmit of stale data is bad. Media without buffering because it is real time.
And why would a telco want to zero rate all the bandwidth heavy media with certain exceptions? Like not zero rating media that happens to compete with some of their own services, such as voice calls and video calls.
Yes sounds like net neutrality to me too (or not!).
Regards,
Baldur
All T-Mobile plans include unlimited 128kbps data, so a voice call is effectively already zero-rated for all practical purposes.
I guess the question is: Is it better for the consumer to pay for everything equally, or, is it reasonable for carriers to be able to give away some free data without opening it up to everything?
To me, net neutrality isn’t as much about what you charge the customer for the data, it’s about whether you prioritize certain classes of traffic to the detriment of others in terms of service delivery.
If T-Mobile were taking money from the video streaming services or only accepting certain video streaming services, I’d likely agree with you that this is a neutrality issue.
However, in this case, it appears to me that they aren’t trying to give an advantage to any particular competing streaming video service over the other, they aren’t taking money from participants in the program, and consumers stand to benefit from it.
It not being neutral over the content. If content != "video stream we like" then you will be penalised when the customer goes over their data limit.
If you see an actual way in which it’s better for everyone if T-Mobile weren’t doing this, then please explain it. If not, then this strikes me as harmless and overall benefits consumers.
Actually this is as harmful as NAT for the same reasons as NAT. It a opportunity cost at a minimum. T-Mo could have just increased the data limits by the data usage of 7x24 standard definition video stream and achieved the same thing in a totally network neutral way. Instead they choose to play favourites with a type of technology. We are giving X Gigs of additional data. This is enough to allow you to stream your favourite video channels at standard definition all day long and not run out of data.
Owen
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