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CRTC Bell throttling decision: full document

p2pnet news | Freedom:- More than 1,100 Canadians filed complaints in support of two CAIP submissions to the CRTC demanding Bell Canada be ordered to stop its traffic throttling activities.

Yet the CRTC (Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission) has, for the moment, at least, ignored their concerns.

Instead, it’s turned down the CAIP (Canadian Association of Internet Providers) request for interim relief against the way in which Bell Canada is routinely throttling competitor ISPs’ ADSL traffic.

“We’ve lost our status as one of the world’s most connected nations and decisions like this should cause Canadians and the government serious concern,” says CAIP chairman Tom Copeland (right).

The CRTC said the ISPs hadn’t shown their businesses would be irreparably damaged by Bell’s activities, p2pnet reported earlier today.

“This is an unfortunate decision”, says Copeland, going on, “We feel the Commission has misapplied the test for interim relief by deeming the evidence of harm to CAIP’s members insufficient and in failing to even consider the harm to the public interest occasioned by Bell’s unilateral and unwarranted actions.”

He says it’s difficult to imagine that, in the face of Bell’s “high-handed actions against small, independent ISPs and the public outcry that this has generated,” the CRTC would allow Bell Canada to, “reap the benefits of flouting its tariffs and the Act during the time that it will take the Commission to process CAIP’s application on a final basis”.

But, CAIP promises, Canada’s smaller ISPs aren’t about to give up the battle.

“While the Commission feels we didn’t fulfill the test required for interim relief, this has no impact on the final resolution of our application,” says Copeland, adding:

“We’ll continue our pursuit of the application in the interests of all Canadians.”

Here’s the CRTC decision in full >>>

Telecom Decision CRTC 2008-39

Ottawa, 14 May 2008

Canadian Association of Internet Providers’ request for interim relief regarding Bell Canada’s practice of “throttling” its wholesale ADSL access services

Reference: 8622-C51-200805153

In this Decision, the Commission denies the interim relief requested by the Canadian Association of Internet Providers (CAIP). In regard to the process associated with the disposition of CAIP’s application on a final basis, the Commission has set out the process in a letter to the parties to be issued on 15 May 2008.

Introduction

1. On 3 April 2008, the Canadian Association of Internet Providers (CAIP) filed an application requesting that the Commission issue an order directing Bell Canada to cease and desist from “throttling”1 its wholesale Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line (ADSL) services and in particular, the wholesale service known as Gateway Access Service (GAS).

2. As part of its application, CAIP requested interim relief on an expedited basis. Specifically, CAIP requested that the Commission issue an order directing Bell Canada to immediately cease and desist from throttling wholesale GAS.

3. In this Decision, the Commission disposes of CAIP’s request for interim relief.

4. The Commission received comments from Primus Telecommunications Canada Inc. and Bell Canada’s reply. The proceeding closed on 24 April 2008 with CAIP’s final comments. The public record of this proceeding is available on the Commission’s website at www.crtc.gc.ca under “Public Proceedings.”

5. The Commission has identified that the issue to be considered is whether CAIP has satisfied the test for interim relief.

Has CAIP satisfied the test for interim relief?

6. Before granting an application for interim relief, the Commission requires the party requesting the interim relief to demonstrate that its application meets the criteria set out by the Supreme Court of Canada in Manitoba (Attorney General) v. Metropolitan Stores (MTS) Ltd. [1987] 1 S.C.R. 110, and modified in RJR-MacDonald Inc. v. Canada (Attorney General) [1994] 1 S.C.R. 311. These criteria (the RJR-MacDonald criteria) are that: a) there is a serious issue to be determined; determined; b) the party seeking the interim relief will incur irreparable harm if the relief is not granted; and c) the balance of convenience, taking into account the public interest, favours granting the interim relie.

Is there a serious issue to be determined?

7. CAIP submitted that its application raised the following issues that met the threshold for a serious issue to be determined:

a) Bell Canada was imposing unauthorized and unilateral modifications to its tariffed services on its wholesale customers, contrary to sections 24 and 25 of the Telecommunications Act (the Act);

b) Bell Canada had failed to provide notice of network changes;

c) Bell Canada was granting undue and unreasonable preference on itself and was applying a disadvantage to competitors, in violation of section 27(2) of the Act; and

d) Bell Canada was violating privacy and common carrier obligations, contrary to sections 7 and 36 of the Act.

8. Bell Canada submitted that CAIP’s request for interim relief did not satisfy the evidentiary threshold for a serious issue to be determined. Bell Canada submitted that

a) it was not operating off tariff, contrary to sections 24 and 25 of the Act;

b) it was not granting undue and unreasonable preference on itself nor applying a disadvantage to competitors in violation of section 27(2) of the Act; and

c) it was not affecting end-users’ privacy nor controlling the content nor influencing the meaning or purpose of telecommunications as set out at section 36 of the Act.

9. The Commission notes that the threshold for a finding that there is a serious question to be tried is a low one. The issue is whether or not the application for final relief is frivolous or vexatious. Based on the record, the Commission is satisfied that CAIP has demonstrated that there is a serious issue to be determined regarding whether Bell Canada’s practice of throttling Internet traffic carried by CAIP’s members subscribing to the GAS tariff is in accordance with the requirements of the Act.

Will the party seeking the interim relief incur irreparable harm if the relief is not granted?

10. CAIP submitted that Bell Canada’s traffic shaping measures were causing irreparable harm to its members subscribing to the GAS tariff. CAIP submitted that its members had suffered the following harm that could not be cured or could not be quantified in monetary terms:

a) difficulties in managing the services they provide to their end-customers;

b) reductions in traffic volumes delivered to Internet backbone providers resulting in the need to pay for capacity they could no longer use;

c) the requirement to pay for GAS components even though Bell Canada was not delivering traffic volumes to justify the need for these components;

d) threatened or actual cancellation of service contracts; and

e) a loss of goodwill and permanent loss of market share.

11. CAIP submitted that the harm to its members who are GAS customers would be irreparable for the following reasons:

a) there was no prospect of compensation in damages;

b) there was no way to quantify or recover goodwill and market share loss, threatened and materializing;

c) even if losses of unusable GAS capacity and backbone/transit capacity were quantifiable, they were unlikely to be recoverable in a civil suit;

d) there was no way to mitigate losses; and

e) damage to the public interest in the orderly provision and development of telecommunications and the inviolability of telecommunications carried by Bell Canada could not be compensated in damages.

12. Bell Canada submitted that CAIP had not provided facts or supporting evidence to prove any harm. In Bell Canada’s view, there was no evidence to support CAIP’s arguments that there were difficulties in managing service to end-customers or that reductions of traffic volumes delivered to Internet backbone providers were causing CAIP’s members to pay for capacity that they could not actually use. Bell Canada submitted that even if there was financial harm resulting from delivery of reduced traffic volumes, the harm would not be irreparable because CAIP’s members were obligated to pay for contracted transit capacity and GAS whether interim relief was granted or not. Bell Canada also submitted that CAIP had not produced evidence of actual lost customers, loss of goodwill, permanent market share loss, or that CAIP’s members would not be able to recover any lost revenues. According to Bell Canada, damage to the public interest should be addressed under the third of the RJR-MacDonald criteria (i.e. balance of convenience).

13. The Commission notes that the second criterion of the test for interim relief requires the party seeking the relief to demonstrate that it will suffer irreparable harm if its request for interim relief is not granted and its request for final relief is granted. The Commission notes that the test of irreparable harm relates only to the harm suffered by the applicant and does not relate to the public interest.

14. The Commission considers that CAIP did not provide sufficient evidence in support of its claim that its members no longer need the amount of transit capacity and GAS service components that they have contracted for, and that they will suffer irreparable harm if interim relief is not granted. Similarly, the Commission considers that CAIP did not provide sufficient evidence in support of its claim that Bell Canada’s throttling practices will make it difficult or impossible for CAIP’s members to properly manage the services that they provide to their end-customers and that these practices will result in permanent loss of market share or goodwill. Finally, with respect to CAIP’s claim regarding loss of revenue due to customers terminating service, the Commission considers that CAIP failed to demonstrate that its members will suffer irreparable harm as a result of Bell Canada’s throttling practices. In conclusion, the Commission finds that CAIP has not demonstrated that its members will suffer irreparable harm if the interim relief was not granted.

15. In light of the Commission’s determination with respect to irreparable harm, it is not necessary for the Commission to consider whether CAIP has satisfied the balance of convenience criterion.

16. In light of the above, the Commission concludes that CAIP’s application for interim relief does not meet the RJR-MacDonald v. Canada criteria. Accordingly, the Commission denies CAIP’s application for interim relief.

17.

In regard to the process associated with the disposition of CAIP’s application on a final basis, the Commission has set out the process in a letter to the parties to be issued on 15 May 2008.

Secretary General

Reference

1 “Throttling” has been used by CAIP in reference to traffic management activities implemented by Bell Canada to control traffic flow, delaying some packets in order to meet certain criteria. In its application CAIP also refers to activities to “shape,” “throttle,” and/or “choke” traffic. In this Decision the terms “throttling” and “traffic shaping” are used interchangeably and are assumed to include all such traffic management activities.

Stay tuned.

Jon Newton - p2pnet

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6 Responses to “CRTC Bell throttling decision: full document”

  1. Reader's Write Says:

    how much did that bs document cost???
    I think its time to to first Boycott Bell and second Shut down the CRTC.

  2. Curmudgeon Says:

    It’s not so bad. They basically didn’t buy that CAIP members would suffer irreparable harm if interim relief were not granted.

    I think there is still some hope for this application. In the decision they do state:

    “Based on the record, the Commission is satisfied that CAIP has demonstrated that there is a serious issue to be determined regarding whether Bell Canada’s practice of throttling Internet traffic carried by CAIP’s members subscribing to the GAS tariff is in accordance with the requirements of the Act.”

    Also interesting is that public interest played no part in the decision. Since the application failed to meet the irreparable harm criterion, no consideration was given to public interest.

    If the CAIP application HAD passed the irreparable harm test, then the CRTC would have to have considered the very thorny issue of public interest - that’s what this is all about in the end - and their interim ruling would seem more like a premature final ruling.

    It’s probably better this way. On closer and longer examination, a lot more dirt will come out on what’s really happening, as opposed to what Bell (shaw, rogers, et al) are telling us about how our data stream is handled.

    I’ve read new snippets that suggest the DPI software they use is more sophisticated than they let on, and has the ultimate purpose of turning paying users into a commodity to be sold to corporate content providers. The loss of privacy implications are huge. Maybe we’ll get to know exactly what they’re doing in this regard if the Privacy Commissioner takes on the CIPPIC application.

  3. Curmudgeon Says:

    And speaking of dirt to be dug up, here’s a little chink in Bell’s armour, namely their PR guy, Jason Laszlo, who got a little too honest on his Facebook page:

    http://www.dslreports.com/forum/r20247550-Jason-Laszlo-Bell-spokesmans-real-thoughts-on-this-issue~start=80

  4. Russell McOrmond Says:

    I actually think this is an OK outcome for this very early stage. This was a request for interim relief, and I didn’t think they would get it. At the core of the need for quick relief was the suggestion that people would switch away from CAIP members to Bell and Rogers because of the problem. The very fact that Bell is doing this, and that CAIP has started the process of taking this to the CRTC, will likely benefit CAIP members in both the short and long term.

    Looking forward to seeing some people from this forum on Parliament Hill for the rally. This decision doesn’t indicate that the discussion is over, but that it has finally begun.

    By the way, please make sure you have written your MP about this issue. While the CRTC will be reviewing this issue under current regulations, there is a need to make clear to politicians why these competitive access rules are needed in the first place. It would be great if parliamentarians stepped in and strengthened the rules and remedies such that all Cable companies are mandated to offer competitive access, and phone companies will no longer do what Bell has done.

    Please also note that the privacy complaint is being investigated in parallel, and that avenue may shut Bell’s harmful activities down as well.

  5. Stray Mongrel Says:

    Looks to me like the consumer field is ripe for competition. An investment in the infrastructure to compete with Bell would pay off, it seems to me. Why isn’t any other company taking advantage of this?

  6. Paul Kambulow Says:

    Our Major ISPs in Canada, Bell, Rogers not only are they both guilty of false, misleading advertising, unfair and restrictive trade practices but they are also still the same thieves and liars who mostly have not met their contractual promised obligations now too

    How would Bell like it if I paid up to 50 dollars a month depending on what actual Bell Internet speed they had delivered me, or I had said I would do my best to pay them? Absurd they would reply. Well it is unacceptable how they had lied about their unlimited high speed internet, being the fastest too in the country, when for a start their phone lines, equipment in many areas cannot handle it even.. they Bell are just con artists, liars, guilty of false, misleading practices who should go to jail directly now for it rightfully as well.. Unlimited is an oxymoron, how can you cap an unlimited account the customer had agreed to and paid now as well.

    No one should be the false big brother.. especially Bell… Bell’s Big brother’s false regulations, supervision is just another dirty word for Bell just screwing someone some more in the interest of making more money, more profits for the Bell corporation and is always still contrary to the laws on free speech, our Charter of human rights too. Only the much too many clear fools and idiots at the CRTC, in the Conservative and Liberal governments sre the ones who cannot see this now too. Simple too.

    http://newmedia.crtc.econsultation.ca/topics/show/4?root=56#comment_54

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