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by amock 5575 days ago
I think it's more about making things more difficult for services like Netflix and Hulu as well as extracting some extra revenue from their top users who don't have any other choice for internet service.
3 comments

Bingo, especially since AT&T TV (which is all over IP and therefore is just as likely to 'clog the tubes' -- actually even more so since it has better QoS) is exempt.

They are going to go kicking and screaming into the age of being a dumb pipe.

AT&T's video is significantly cheaper to provision; it's housed entirely on their own network.
AT&T is a tier 1 ISP; they don't pay for traffic from outside of their network.

The 'user pays for bandwidth' pricing is fundamentally more efficient, and is a good model to move to long term, provided there are sufficient controls to prevent price gauging in areas where ISP(s) act as a monopoly or duopoly (20c per GB in the US excluding the pricing for last-mile fixed costs seems like price gauging to me - but it depends on the technologies; it is probably a lot more expensive to get extra bandwidth to a cabinet than to an exchange), and the companies don't misrepresent what is on offer to consumers.

However, all information flows should be treated equally; companies shouldn't be able to abuse their market power as network services providers to make their own information services cheaper than those of everyone else. It seems that the best solution would be for regulators to ensure that AT&T and other ISPs charge for bandwidth used by their own applications in the same way as they do for their competitors.

Just because they don't pay a rate to their peers doesn't mean that it's equally expensive to serve traffic on-net and off-net.
BINGO! We have a winner. If AT&T had adequately provisioned their last mile networks, instead of trying to cram 10K households in a 1K household pipe, it wouldn't matter how much bandwidth an individual used.
Good point... I hadn't even considered IPTV and streaming services for some reason. It definitely looks like a move to protect revenue when people may be switching off services like U-Verse TV.
If they were trying to keep people from turning off U-V TV, why would they set a bandwidth cap that no normal TV-watching person would approach?
I think anyone that has AT&T DSL could also have Speakeasy DSL. It's just that Speakeasy costs a lot more.
It also sucks a lot more. I had Speakeasy for over 5 years; AT&T has been a dream comparatively.

Slow. Friendly-but-useless customer service. Multi-day outages.

Let's not forget, Speakeasy is just another BigCo. If you want to stand on your principles, go look up the ISPFH people in Chicago. They'll sell you a DSL line.

I have a 6Mbit DSL line but I checked Speakeasy's availability for my address and no dice.