nanog mailing list archives

Re: Some truth about Comcast - WikiLeaks style


From: Owen DeLong <owen () delong com>
Date: Sun, 19 Dec 2010 20:47:40 -0800


On Dec 19, 2010, at 6:21 PM, Richard A Steenbergen wrote:

On Sun, Dec 19, 2010 at 05:58:26PM -0800, Leo Bicknell wrote:

I dream of a day where we have municipal fiber to the home, leased to 
any ISP who wants to show up at the local central office for a dollar 
a two a month so there can be true competition in end-user services.

Take a second and think about what THAT would do to the ratio wars. 
Imagine if any hosting/content provider, with potentially hundreds or 
thousands of gigabits of unused inbound capacity on their networks, 
could easily get into providing IP service to eyeballs. Even ignoring 
the existing 95th percentile silliness like "free inbound transit", 
which would no doubt rapidly evaporate under this kind of model, the 
difference in efficiencies between the highly competetive hosting world 
and the highly non-competetive last mile world are simply staggering. 

You say this as if having such a disruption would be a bad thing.

For many content networks, it would be an opportunity to start making 
money on their bits instead of paying for them, and networks without 
content expertise would be in serious trouble.

I'm not seeing the problem here. Like any business in a changing climate,
they would have to either develop expertise or perish.

I personally can't think of a single thing with more potential for 
massive disruption to the business models of incumbent providers. There 
are so many billions of dollars at stake protecting the status quo that 
it's not even funny, which IMHO is why you'll never see any of this 
happen in the US, in any kind of scale at any rate. :)

Yes... This is where the "market makes it best" philosophy fails. When the
market has become entrenched in one way of doing things, a better way
can face serious opposition because of this very fact.

Personally, I don't see such a disruption as a down-side. I think it would
be the introduction of a relatively level playing field in an area where the
playing field has long been very uneven.

Owen



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