More action this week on the subject of bandwidth throttling as practiced by the Canadian ISPs, namely Bell Canada and Rogers Telecommunications. All very shortsighted.
http://www.itbusiness.ca/it/client/en/home/News.asp?id=52207&PageMem=1
As one article leads to another, you will find a link to: http://www.saveournet.ca/ in the above article where you can express your point of view.
And as always the CRTC, champion of the rights of the user forever looking out for their rights and freedoms: http://www.crtc.gc.ca/eng/home-accueil.htm. Except not this time. The CRTC has come out in favour of deep packet inspection by saying there is not enough evidence to prove it is not necessary. (Read: Telecom Decision CRTC 2008-108)
Every technology has good and bad points. The technology that spreads viruses, in essence brings us updates as well. The purpose if a virus is to spread doom and gloom and wreak your working environment. Agreed, terrible stuff. But the virus program looks for the existence of certain applications, and takes advantage of a computer that meets its requirements. By the same token, programs that update themselves look for opportunities within your computer that meet their requirements. While their purpose is at opposite ends of the spectrum, the basic process is similar.
And so it goes with P2P as championed by BitTorrent technology. Originally created to share large files across the Internet which meant music and movies (as in piracy), BitTorrent is now used to share all sorts of other legitimate files as well. It is an amazing piece of programming. Basically BitTorrent uses existing downloaded files across all shared PCs to facilitate each request. This reduces the load placed on each computer. It cannot reduce traffic, since the size of the file does not change. Just reduces load distributing it across computers all over the place.
Deep Packet Inspection from our ISPs invade our privacy (for those that assume we still have any) and discriminate against a technology that has perfectly legitimate uses. This might backfire on the ISPs. One of the goals of, it seems everyone, is to have the Internet be the official carrier of everything. From telephones conversations, to TV signals, to eMail and anything else you could possibly imagine.
Our telcos have been abysmally slow at getting fibre to our door, but they will have to do that sooner or later. Once that is done, we will be able to get our TV channels through the Internet. One wire into the house as opposed to three or four. Once we can watch television programming, it follows that we will also be able to watch our movies through the web. These are large files necessitating a lot of traffic. Unless of course, the telcos come up with a miraculous bit of programming that could somehow reduce the load by using the files already downloaded as a source for each request. Oh my God! The telcos will have to deep packet inspect themselves.
Add to this the existence of Dark Fibre. This is the fibre that the telcos have installed but not lit. There is a lot of it under ground and is leased out to companies such as Cogent. What is stopping our telcos from using these lines to increase the available bandwidth?