Canadian Regulators Strangling Independent ISPs - Teksavvy CEO: 'Something is very wrong with how the decision went down'Teksavvy CEO: 'Something is very wrong with how the decision went down' (old news - 02:02PM Friday Nov 21 2008) tags: legal · competition · business · world · networking · net-neutrality · Bell Sympatico · TekSavvy Solutions Inc. Tipped by tmpchaos Yesterday, Canadian regulators shocked independent carriers by ruling that Bell Canada's decision to throttle wholesale competitors without telling them was neither discriminatory or anti-competitive. One of the most impacted carriers will be Canada's TekSavvy, an independent operator that have built somewhat of a cult following in Canada due to actually giving customers personal attention in a sea of outsourced incumbent support. We spoke briefly with TekSavvy CEO Rocky Gaudrault about how yesterday's decision will impact his business. Gaudrault says he's "extremely disappointed" in the CRTC's decision, and notes that in addition to the obvious anti-competitive ramifications of the ruling, there's some "collateral damage the CRTC had no interest in," such as the added costs of having to support Bell Canada's throttling hardware. "Going forward we are going to have to consider the multiple hundreds of hours that will be spent in troubleshooting internet DSL problems either caused by -- or as a result of -- deep packet inspection (DPI)," he says.
Most Canadians look to the FCC's recent sanction against Comcast lustfully, hoping their own CRTC will someday become a more Internet-centric agency. Still, many Canadians don't understand that the FCC's sanction was largely decorative for political effect, given it did not create new rules, came with no fine, and may not even hold up to Comcast legal assault in court. That said, the FCC/Comcast and CAIP/Bell Canada fights helped make network neutrality a front-page issue across North America, while providing very concrete abuse examples of a nebulous concept to a confused public. Until this year, the network neutrality debate was largely absent in both Canadian politics and mainstream technology news coverage. Given the growing awareness, Gaudrault says he "can't see the CRTC sitting idly by on this matter." So where's the disconnect? The CRTC's vice-chairman, Leonard Katz, spent 17 years working for Rogers and 11 for Bell. Canada's Telecom Telecommunications Policy Review Panel, tasked with determining regulatory framework, was led by the ex-owner of Inukshuk (sold to Bell/Rogers), an exec that played a huge role in the Bell & Microsoft alliance and a lawyer whose firm represents incumbent operators. There simply isn't much room for either consumer advocate or small business input. As in the United States, the revolving door between regulators, incumbent lobbyists and incumbent executives make regulatory objectivity almost impossible, and incumbent favoritism almost guaranteed. As also in the United States, the result is that smaller businesses have a much harder time succeeding in the market, and, in most cases, wind up being systematically eradicated "for the good of the market." TekSavvy worries that their troubles with Bell may only just be beginning. In addition to throttling wholesale traffic before it reaches TekSavvy's network, Bell has shown interest in double dipping -- charging wholesalers for bandwidth up front, but then applying usage-based charges on the other end. "I fear we're nowhere near done with that one," says Gaudrault. TekSavvy and CAIP's only hope now is that public annoyance results in the CRTC being forced to listen to the under-represented when they pick the issue back up again next summer. "Something is very wrong with how the decision went down and I really hope those responsible for causing this have their day on owning up to what they've done to Internet in Canada," says Gaudrault.
|
quote:
“Based on the evidence before us, we found that the measures employed by Bell Canada to manage its network were not discriminatory. Bell Canada applied the same traffic-shaping practices to wholesale customers as it did to its own retail customers,” said Konrad von Finckenstein, Q.C., Chairman of the CRTC.
“CAIP's application asked us to only consider the specific issue of wholesale traffic shaping within a specific context. The broader issue of Internet traffic management raises a number of questions that affect both end-users and service providers,” added Mr. von Finckenstein. “We have decided to hold a separate proceeding to consider both wholesale and retail issues. Its main purpose will be to address the extent to which Internet service providers can manage the traffic on their networks in accordance with the Telecommunications Act.”
quote:
changes in bandwidth consumption that may lead to network congestion
Internet traffic management practices based on technical solutions or business models that are currently available or may be developed in the future, and
the impact of such practices on end-users.