this post was submitted on 09 May 2024
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[–] Kid_Thunder@kbin.social 56 points 6 months ago (2 children)

The problem historically isn't that streaming services are paying for fast lanes but that they have to pay not to be throttled below normal traffic. In other words, they have to pay more to be treated like other traffic.

Even crazier is remember that there are actual peering agreements between folks like cogentco, Level 3, comcast, Hurricane Electric, AT&T, etc. What comcast did that caused the spotlight was to bypass their peering agreement with Level 3 and went direct to their end customer (netflix) and told them they'd specifically throttle them if they didn't pay a premium which also undermined Level3's peering agreement with Comcast.

Peering agreements are basically like "I'll route your traffic, if you route my traffic" and that's how the Internet works.

[–] mosiacmango@lemm.ee 11 points 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago) (1 children)

Netflix and im sure the other services also have "netflix in a box" media servers that they drop in these peering exchanges and CDN edge datacenters in order to get their media as close to the customers as possible.

The basically bend over backwards to cause ISPs the least amount of traffic, and its still not enough.

[–] Kid_Thunder@kbin.social 10 points 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago) (1 children)

I was trying to find the old Level 3 blog post but didn't because I believe they basically said that Comcast needed to upgrade its infrastructure and never did. Netflix was the cashcow they saw to essentially make them pay for it. As a Comcast customer, I see it as charging the customer twice -- first for the Internet service for the content and again because Netflix is going to pass that extra cost onto you (and everyone else who isn't a Comcast customer).

You're right on about CDNs and edge / egress/ingress PoPs. It also keeps it cheaper for the likes of Netflix/Amazon/etc. in the long run with the benefits of adding more availability.

[–] bitwaba@lemmy.world 3 points 5 months ago

This is how every ISP in the US has acted for the last 2.5 decades. They got their money handout from the government to kickstart broadband country wide (which is why we ended up with oligopolies with things like Cox operating in one county and Comcast operating in another with a little handshake agreement to stay on each other's side of the imaginary line), under the assumption that those ISPs would continue to maintain and grow those networks as the needs increased. So now everyone has broadband and who gives a shit what the advertised speeds are, because at least they're better than dial up.

Then a few years later, it becomes clear that they need to upgrade to keep up with the growing traffic demands from services like YouTube and Netflix, which highlights that 1) they want to charge customers more for something the government paid them to build and that they had advertised to the customers without ever actually delivering in the first place, and 2) they pocketed all the money they were supposed to be using to do incremental upgrades along the way.

So, now they say they don't have money for upgrades, so they need to hike prices so the customers can find the upgrades (which for the customers means they're paying for something they won't even receive until some time in the future), and they start looking for other avenue for money to find this (or just grow revenue on general, cuz capitalism "up and to the right") which is where net neutrality comes in: ISPs turn around and go "hey man we gotta upgrade our network to serve your YouTube and Netflix content, so you should pay for it! You rake in billions. Where's our slice of the pie?!"

And that sounds like a somewhat reasonable argument.... until you realize that their network has already been paid for twice, once by the government, and a second time by the customers. And now they want to charge the companies making money off the Internet users to pay to upgrade it for a 3rd revenue stream. Their justification being "well they're OUR customers! You need to pay US a cut so you can reach them!" (which is not that far off from the same reasoning the mob or drug dealers use if you try to set up on their turf)

They're shitty scummy companies run by shitty scummy people. It's skipping over the principle of the internet: it's a pay-to-get-on service (or if you consider the fact that most internet traffic historically is porn, a pay-to-get-off service. HEY-OH!...).

Paying for consumption is sensible. Like any other service, it takes money to operate it, and the more someone uses, the more it costs to operate. But to charge the upstream providers of there service those customers want to access is just absurd. It's like your home customers paying for electricity, then the electric company trying to charge Black and Decker a cut of their revenue to have toasters on their electric network.

At this point, I think the internet should be treated like any other utility. It suffers from the same infrastructure problems that gas, electricity, water, sewer, and telephone does: building multiple physical infrastructure networks on top of each other isn't sensible if someone is only going to use one of those networks to provide their service. Lots of those services are privatized in the US already, but they're also heavily regulated compared to regular free market industries. I mean... The government practically bought the ISPs out once already when they gave them the money to build the broadband networks. But because we had a giant swing of "big-gubment bad!" they just forked the money over without any strings attached to determine how those companies operated later.

[–] subtext@lemmy.world 9 points 6 months ago (1 children)

Do you have a link to an article or a Wikipedia page that I could read more on this?

[–] Kid_Thunder@kbin.social 12 points 6 months ago

I found this wikipedia article about backbones and peering but it really isn't that great but in the results it also came up with this pretty good presentation from Carnegi Mellon. I was only going to browser a few of the slides but the information isn't really all that much and the illustrations are good. I think Prof. Nace did an excellent job here. Much better than I would have.