Cox to try coaxing the Internet into submission
Our friend at Cox is about to get selectively friendly toward Internet content.
(Credit: Dong Ngo/CBS Interactive)Net neutrality fans, grab your chairs; I have some rocking news.
Cox Communications, the third-largest cable Internet provider in the U.S., announced Tuesday that starting February, it will begin testing a new method of managing traffic on its high-speed Internet network in Kansas and Arkansas.
This means during the times the network is congested the company will--to put it bluntly--discriminate between Internet content and regulate the bandwidth accordingly.
The company divides Internet traffic into two categories: time-sensitive and nontime-sensitive, with the former taking the priority during the congested hours.
Here's the company's break-down of these two categories:
The time sensitive category includes:
- Web (Web surfing, including web-based e-mail and chat embedded in Web pages)
- VoIP (Voice over IP, telephone calls made over the Internet)
- IM (Instant messages, including related voice and Webcam traffic)
- Streaming (Web-based audio and video programs)
- Games (Online interactive games)
- Tunneling & Remote Connectivity (VPN-type services for telecommuting)
- Other (Any service not categorized into another area)
The nontime-sensitive category includes:
- File Access (Bulk transfers of data such as FTP)
- Network Storage (Bulk transfers of data for storage)
- P2P (Peer to peer protocols)
- Software Updates (Managed updates, such as operating system updates)
- Usenet (Newsgroup related)
Cox says the new congestion management plan only kicks in when congestion levels reach a certain high. It also insists the company will ensure that its customers continue to have a good online experience.
Personally, I don't really mind this, because I live in California and games are categorized as time-sensitive. For those who are more concerned, you can learn more about Cox's congestion management plan here.
Dong Ngo is a CNET editor who covers networking and network storage, and writes about anything else he finds interesting. You can also listen to his podcast at insidecnetlabs.cnet.com. E-mail Dong. 





- by johndporter July 8, 2009 4:51 AM PDT
- People keep saying Cox can do this because they're "the only game in town".<br />Where is this true? It's certainly not true in my neck of the woods - Cox is up against Verizon and RCN (formerly Starpower)... and possibly Comcast as well.<br /><br />I also caution people to look at the total customer experience when choosing a provider. I was with RCN for many years until I decided, recently, to take advantage of Verizon's hot deals on FiOS. What a mistake! RCN always treated me well; they're a small, regional company. They have weaknesses typical of a small company. For example, their support hotline is only up from 9-5, five days a week. A big company like Verizon, with their 24x7 help desk, was tempting. Reality: Verizon suffers from too-big syndrome. I had some problems in the transfer of my phone number (I had the three-way package), and Verizon was completely unable to sort it out. I had to talk to half a dozen different departments (going through endless phone menu trees) and none of them knew what the others were doing. It was a frustrating mess. After 3 days of no resolution (and no phone), I said, Screw it, and called Cox.<br /><br />What a breath of fresh air. Cox is large enough to have their act together, yet small enough to offer personal, customized service and support. They handled all of my issues in a timely, successful manner, and most amazingly, you can reach a live human on their help line 24x7. This is something neither the juggernaut Verizon nor the scrappy RCN were able to do. Cox also didn't give me any BS about why they couldn't install my service on the appointed day, as Verizon did. <br /><br />So, I don't know - maybe if you watch a lot of high-res video streaming, or play WoW constantly, or some such, Cox's bandwidth offerings might be insufficient. I don't do that, and I've had only positive experiences with them. They even diagnosed and fixed an *inside-the-house* phone line problem (red/green reversed) which I've had for years, at no charge. <br /><br />Take this as one data point.<br /><br />I don't really have an opinion on the whole net neutrality issue. I hope KamilionSchnook is right, and it's just about respecting ToS markers already in the packets. I do want to clarify one thing: the post above says Cox is going to "discriminate between Internet content." This is misleading. They are going to look at the protocol of each packet, and possibly other "meta-data" such as ToS markers. Yeah, at the data link layer, this info is "content", but it is not content as the user thinks of it. They're not going to look at the URL of your http request, and slow down accesses to playboy.com relative to other sites, for example. I do think it's strange that they consider email a time-sensitive protocol, however. Email is the ultimate NON-time-senstive protocol! I hope that's simply a mistake.
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- by simstick December 11, 2009 8:00 PM PST
- If you conduct business from home email might be important.
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