On Nov. 7, AT&T announced a plan that seeks to scrap rural American landlines, compelling customers to sign up for AT&T Wireless to continue home phone and broadband service. Abandoning the reliable rural landline has serious consequences for customers that will be indefinitely stuck with usage capped, expensive Internet access and potentially unreliable cell phone service.
Why live with the poor choices and high prices offered by the local cable and phone company? You don't have to sit back and take what they give you anymore.
An increasing number of communities are building their own fiber-to-the-home networks, delivering 21st century broadband service to local residents and businesses. Keep the economic benefits working right at home!
You can take action right now to protect your broadband account from Internet Overcharging practices. Click the title "Fight Back" and learn how you can help get legislation passed to prohibit unjustified rate hikes.
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Phillip DampierFebruary 3, 2010Net Neutrality, Public Policy & Gov't, VideoComments Off on President Obama Reiterates Support for Net Neutrality, Expresses Concern About Internet Overcharging
President Barack Obama reiterated his support for Net Neutrality policies and expressed concern about providers trying to charge higher fees and extract more money from consumers for broadband service.
In a post State of the Union question and answer session held on YouTube, the president responded to a question regarding policies that would forbid broadband providers from tampering with Internet traffic, typically for monetary gain.
“We’re getting push back, obviously, from some of the bigger carriers who would like to be able to charge more fees and extract more money from wealthier customers,” he said. “But we think that runs counter to the whole spirit of openness that has made the Internet such a powerful engine for not only economic growth, but also for the generation of ideas and creativity.”
The reference to charging higher fees and extracting more money from wealthier customers may signal Obama recognizes that Internet Overcharging schemes like usage limits and usage-based billing represent an end run around many Net Neutrality prohibitions. By charging excessively high prices for broadband traffic, Internet providers can effectively choke off potential competition to both its phone and television programming businesses, as well as higher bandwidth innovations still to come.
The Obama Administration’s support for Net Neutrality dates back to the early days of the presidential campaign, when then-Senator Obama expressed support for Net Neutrality. The Federal Communications Commission has been tasked to develop a Net Neutrality policy to be enforced by the Commission.
Critics contend the FCC has no authority to enforce such provisions.
Robert McDowell, one of the two minority Republican commissioners at the FCC predicted any attempt by the Commission to enact sweeping Net Neutrality policies would likely face a rapid challenge in the courts. One popular venue for such cases has been the DC Circuit Court of Appeals, which has a track record of deciding cases in favor of providers.
Such a ruling could partially or completely derail an FCC Net Neutrality policy until Congress passed legislation to specifically authorize the Commission to regulate broadband policy. Congress can also pass Net Neutrality legislation itself.
President Barack Obama answers a question about Net Neutrality policy in his administration.
[flv]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/WSYR Syracuse Cut Your Phone, Cable and Internet Costs 1-25-10.flv[/flv]
Consumer Reports February 2010 issue rates service providers and gives advice to consumers about where and how to get the best deal for telephone, cable, and broadband service. WSYR-TV in Syracuse breaks it down. (2 minutes)
They're in your neighborhood, just waiting to break into your home network, according to WXYZ-TV in Detroit
The biggest security threat most broadband users will encounter doesn’t come from identity thieves or kiddie porn rings roving neighborhoods looking for unsecured computers to exploit — it’s from your neighbors looking for free access to your broadband service.
Local newscasts have recently been running sensationalist stories of mysterious cars parked on neighborhood streets driven by ne’er-do-wells barging onto unsecured home wireless networks.
In fact, the most common threat isn’t from drive-by crime rings, but right next door. With most broadband accounts providing flat rate service, the occasional uninvited guest ‘borrowing access’ probably goes unnoticed. But should Internet Overchargers have their way, the consequences of account sharing in a world with paltry usage limits and usage-based-billing could show up on your monthly bill.
In countries where these overcharging schemes already have taken firm root, reports of customers receiving enormous broadband service bills are common. In Australia, rarely a week goes by without someone reporting a hacked wireless network incident. Consumers have been forced to become watchdogs, constantly checking usage statistics to ensure someone in the neighborhood hasn’t been “borrowing” their Internet account and blowing through their monthly usage allowance.
One customer, who lives in an apartment complex, shares a too-common story:
Over the past 24 hours someone (or something?) has been sucking the life out of my internet connection and chewed up 10Gb of my quota. How do I troubleshoot the cause of this? I have a Buffalo WHR-G54S Wireless Router and my network is secured. I live by myself in a small block of apartments; I have had no visitors either.
Another customer discovered when it’s your word against your provider’s, the provider wins:
Yesterday, I was checking my broadband bill and was surprised to find out that they had charged me for downloading an extra 4 GB of data. I checked my usage online for the current month and it was already 8GB! This is despite the fact that I have been on holiday for ten days, and my normal usage involves casual browsing and downloading e-mails.
Furthermore, I never exceeded my download limit since I started with my ISP. My ISP also confirms that this is quite unusual and against my normal usage pattern. I have asked them to provide me some usage statistics but they can only give me the data that I already see on my account online.
The cost of exceeding the limit can be enormous. BigPond in Australia, for example, has a few Internet plans that charge a $0.15 per megabyte overlimit penalty. That’s $150AUD per gigabyte.
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WXYZ-TV in Detroit ran this sensationalist report on drive-by hackers breaking into wireless networks. (3 minutes)
The solution suggested by most Internet Service Providers is to enable built-in wireless security. How much protection that provides and whether customers will be able to understand how to configure security remain open questions.
Some phone companies providing DSL service have plenty of older equipment still in customer homes that only supports the older WEP security standard. That’s insufficient to protect consumers from intrusion because WEP security has been seriously compromised.
“WEP as a security measure is so broken that your (and everyone else’s) kid sister can easily circumvent it,” computer security researcher Ralf-Philipp Weinmann told the BBC. Weinmann is co-author of the aircrack-ptw tool that can crack WEP in minutes.
Anyone caring about their privacy, said Weinmann, should not use WEP to stop others using their wi-fi hotspot.
Current generation wireless routers typically provide both WEP and the more secure WPA standard. But now there is evidence WPA can also be compromised, with a little help from “cloud computing,” which puts several high powered computers together to quickly work on cracking your password. A service has even been launched to let would-be crackers rent time on the “cloud” to “test” network security passwords, starting at just $17. In as little as 20 minutes, those with relatively simple passwords will find their network security compromised.
You can protect yourself by at least making sure your router is “secured” with a password. Most every router comes with instructions or software that make this process as simple as possible. When you have a choice of security standards, aim for WPA2, if available.
Thus far, most reported WPA network break-ins occur because the user is relying on a simple password — often a common word, name, series of numbers, or something similar that is much easier to break. Try to use a password that is not a word in a dictionary, doesn’t correspond to information anyone could mine off your Facebook page (city/town, school, birthday, parents or siblings names, etc.), and would be impossible to guess off-hand.
The Electronic Frontier Foundation is not happy with the Federal Communications Commission’s proposed Net Neutrality rules because they come with built-in loopholes, the most egregious being a clause which allows providers to throttle, block or otherwise interfere with traffic that could consist of “the unlawful distribution of copyrighted works.”
The movie and recording industries have been attacking Net Neutrality for months, accusing it of providing a copyright-violating-free-for-all. The FCC seems all-too-willing to adopt that meme, and write a convenient lobbyist-friendly loophole into Net Neutrality policies that would suggest provider interference with broadband networks is bad… except when this or that special interest redefines it as “good and lawful network management.”
For years, the entertainment industry has used that innocent-sounding phrase — “unlawful distribution of copyrighted works” — to pressure Internet service providers around the world to act as copyright cops — to surveil the Internet for supposed copyright violations, and then censor or punish the accused users.
From the beginning, a central goal of the Net Neutrality movement has been to prevent corporations from interfering with the Internet in this way — so why does the FCC’s version of Net Neutrality specifically allow them to do so?
The EFF is asking consumers to sign an online petition asking the FCC to yank that exception out of their proposed Net Neutrality rules, and let the industry use existing law enforcement methods to protect copyrighted works. Of all the industries that seem to do just fine zealously efforting to protect its copyright interests, Hollywood and the music industry don’t need additional special protection clauses inserted into broadband policy law.
Law enforcement can use existing laws to chase crime, and most honest Internet Service Providers would tell you they don’t want to police their users. Allowing this exception is a convenient backdoor to do what some have wanted all along — to throttle or block high volume network traffic like torrents and newsgroups, this time under the guise of taking a bite out of crime.
While directly appealing to the FCC might be more effective, signing the petition at least gives the EFF the ability to draw media and political attention to a worthy endeavor.
Let’s not repeat the same mistakes certain other major policy initiatives have endured this past year, where good intentions were steamrolled by lobbyists into a loophole-ridden, industry-protectionist horror show.
The best way to ensure an open and free Internet is to literally demand exactly that — no exceptions.
Telecom New Zealand is under fire as consumer groups, business leaders, and customers condemn the company for a second major outage wiping out wireless mobile broadband and cell phone service for tens of thousands of customers on the South Island. Dunedin, Invercargill, Timaru and Queenstown were among the areas worst affected for the service problems impacting the company’s much-touted “XT” WCDMA network. Affected customers could not access mobile broadband, send or receive text messages or phone calls for several days.
Company officials believe a piece of hardware installed at multiple cell tower sites is responsible for the network outages. It’s just the latest of a never-ending series of problems for New Zealand’s largest telecommunications provider.
In December, a botched software upgrade brought another major outage for the provider, which now risks being defined by customers as unreliable.
Telecommunications Users Association chief executive Ernie Newman said, “From here, it looks bizarre. Even third world countries don’t experience outages of that magnitude and length. The first time before Christmas people were forgiving. This week has made people think. But they cannot afford a third time.”
The expensive promotional campaign launching the “XT” 3G UMTS network was itself highly controversial when the company decided to use British actors in its advertising campaign, annoying New Zealanders. Although a company official touted the “world class advanced XT network” as capable of speeds better than 20Mbps, the company’s website notes average customers are more likely to find speeds somewhere in the 3Mbps/750kbps range.
“After marketing XT as a Rolls-Royce brand, Telecom will be looking at ways to rehabilitate it in consumers eyes,” telecommunications analyst Rosalie Nelson told the New Zealand Herald.
The damage control teams have moved into place, and Telecom today announced a $5 million (NZ Dollars) compensation package for customers south of Taupo who were impacted:
Customers whose service was degraded on Wednesday 27 January:
Prepaid consumer customers – $10 credit
Postpaid consumer customers – One week’s worth of plan charges, including Telecom Extras, such as texting or data packages
Telecom Retail SME customers and Gen-i corporate customers – Two weeks’ worth of plan charges, including Telecom Extras, such as texting or data packages
Customers whose service was severely impacted for up to three days between Wednesday 27 January and 10pm Friday 29 January:
Prepaid consumer customers – $20 credit
Postpaid consumer customers – Two weeks’ worth of plan charges, including Telecom Extras, such as texting or data packages
Telecom Retail SME customers and Gen-i corporate customers – Four weeks’ worth of plan charges, including Telecom Extras, such as texting or data packages
Telecom is also donating more than $250,000 to community projects across the lower South Island.
The company’s problems got extensive media coverage, including daily reports on New Zealand’s national news. Customers were outraged, many spending hours trying to reach Telecom by phone. Many others argued their way out of service contracts, penalty-free, and switched to Vodafone, the country’s other major wireless provider.
[flv width=”640″ height=”380″]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/TV New Zealand Telecom Outage 1-27 1-29-10.flv[/flv]
TV New Zealand’s One News ran several days of reports on the service outage, all presented here in this compilation. (17 minutes)
Telecom New Zealand has been on the receiving end of parodies assaulting the company’s quality of service. This one calls on residents to switch providers. (Strong Language Warning – 2 minutes)
Be Sure to Read Part One: Astroturf Overload — Broadband for America = One Giant Industry Front Group for an important introduction to what this super-sized industry front group is all about. Members of Broadband for America Red: A company or group actively engaging in anti-consumer lobbying, opposes Net Neutrality, supports Internet Overcharging, belongs to […]
Astroturf: One of the underhanded tactics increasingly being used by telecom companies is “Astroturf lobbying” – creating front groups that try to mimic true grassroots, but that are all about corporate money, not citizen power. Astroturf lobbying is hardly a new approach. Senator Lloyd Bentsen is credited with coining the term in the 1980s to […]
Hong Kong remains bullish on broadband. Despite the economic downturn, City Telecom continues to invest millions in constructing one of Hong Kong’s largest fiber optic broadband networks, providing fiber to the home connections to residents. City Telecom’s HK Broadband service relies on an all-fiber optic network, and has been dubbed “the Verizon FiOS of Hong […]
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I see it took all of five minutes for George Ou and his friends at Digital Society to be swayed by the tunnel vision myopia of last week’s latest effort to justify Internet Overcharging schemes. Until recently, I’ve always rationalized my distain for smaller usage caps by ignoring the fact that I’m being subsidized by […]
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