Comments on: Net video explosion triggers traffic jam worries
If too many people download "Lost," Net could turn into an LA highway. New companies want to help.
If too many people download "Lost," Net could turn into an LA highway. New companies want to help.
December 2, 2009 5:21 PM PST
December 2, 2009 4:37 PM PST
December 2, 2009 4:14 PM PST
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The fact is we've already paid for fiber broadband, why haven't we received it?
http://www.newnetworks.com/broadbandscandals.htm
Did you used to be a regulated monopoly so we helped you build your network? We want our money back.
Or those right-of-way passage on our streets to hang your wires? I have cable & cell phones - don't need your wires hanging on my street enjoying a free lunch - I know you're not a hypocrite so come and remove them ...
This implies none of P2P video is legitimate.
That's just not true.
A portion of video swapping is legal, even encouraged. Sources: Google, promos, amateur, etc.
This is a BS story dealing with the economics of scarcity when the cheapest thing in the ground is all that dark fibre.
They don't scare us in the least.
And now a $55 month internet revenue turns into a couple hundred $$$ per month revenue stream. The internet gets bogged down with pipe tolls, newcomers unable to pay the fees that the big boys pay for cannot compete and pretty soon the internet world resembles the corporate real world where consumers have only a few options to choose from.
that leaves only two questions....
Exactly where did I place my (soon to be revived) library card and what will I do with the extra money I save when I cancel my net subscription?
Hmm, me thinks, the industry is full of it qite literally, given the volume of normal commercial data and the ever increasing satellite VoIP from overseas call centres(the daily terabyte unencoded stuff from banks/insurance companies/other usually travel by the standard unescorted white van around the country)
Oh well, we do live in the new age of propaganda, where all journalist's fail to ask the basic questions, and merely reprint comapany handouts verbatim, without verification like Judy M. !!!!!
sidenote: I do not endorse this view but it is easy to see hwo the ISP's can justify why WE are paying for bandwidth while simultaneously being throttled back based upon the content we decide to view.
one word: b@stards!
and Amazon, are offering content to be viewed only while you
are there. Downloads either aren't available or are fee based.
Personally, I've rejected Amazon shorts (digital prose and short
stories) because if I pay for something I want to own it. But, I
think this model is one of the answers to the increasing size of
files being transferred by ISPs. If the content is stationary, the
user goes to it. There is no transfer.
A market oddity I have experienced is having the paucity of
content for my iPod video encourage use of peer-to-peer
networks. That strikes me as an incentive for paid content
providers to make more content available. It is obvious that if
they offer it, an audience will come.
- NOT an issue: inet is already p2p-tested
- by booboo1243 March 24, 2006 3:38 AM PST
- Already millions of users are using the internet to download tons of movies. Ok, it is illegal, but the point is: The net can stand the traffic.
- Like this Reply to this comment
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(14 Comments)Perhaps it will be neccessary to change the manner of distribution from centralized servers to BitTorrent or something similar, but that also has been proven to work with Linux distributions on DVD, so I don't get the point of this article...