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Net neutrality: still a work in progress

p2pnet news view P2P | Politics:- The release last week of the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission’s report on Internet traffic management – known as the net neutrality decision – attracted national attention. Canadians, Internet service providers, and politicians debated whether the regulator had struck the right balance in addressing how ISPs manage Internet traffic.

While some headlines seemed to suggest that the CRTC has given Canada’s ISPs the green light to do as they please, the reality is that the decision establishes several notable requirements and restrictions.

  • First, the commission adopted a new test to determine reasonable traffic management practices.  Where a consumer complains, ISPs will be required to describe their practices, demonstrate their necessity, and establish that they discriminate as little as possible.  The CRTC added that targeting specific applications or protocols may warrant investigation and slowing down time-sensitive traffic likely violates current Canadian law.
  • Second, the commission rejected arguments that the market would ensure ISPs provide adequate disclosure on how they manage their networks.  Instead, it mandated full disclosure of traffic management practices, including information on when they occur, which applications are affected, and their impact on Internet speeds.
  • Third, the CRTC banned the use of personal information obtained through deep-packet inspection for anything other than traffic management purposes.  By also prohibiting the disclosure of such information, the commission ensured that inspecting user traffic cannot be parlayed into marketing opportunities.

These conditions ensure that traffic management is not a free-for-all. The days of ISPs arguing they can do whatever they please on their networks — as some intimated during the summer hearing — are over.

With the CRTC framework in place, it now falls to Industry Minister Tony Clement to become more engaged on the issue.  Both the Liberals and NDP have expressed support for net neutrality and some groups have renewed their demands for new legislation.

Yet Clement can advance the issue in several meaningful ways without tabling a bill.  Critics of the CRTC approach rightly note that the onus falls to consumers to compile evidence of traffic management practices that run afoul of the commission’s test and file complaints.

When asked about the issue last week in the House of Commons, Clement stated that he is “watching those providers very closely and I do not want to see a situation where consumers are put at risk in terms of their access to the Internet.”  He can go several steps further by asking the CRTC to conduct regular compliance audits of ISP traffic management practices and by providing financial support to consumer groups who wish to conduct their own investigations.

The federal government also can play a significant role in establishing neutrality for wireless Internet access.  The CRTC acknowledged that many of the same issues arise in the wireless context and that it expects wireless carriers to follow the same guidelines.  Within the next two years, the federal government will conduct another spectrum auction as part of the digital television transition.  Clement could incorporate net neutrality requirements directly into the bidding process, effectively mandating neutrality into new wireless services.

Finally, Clement should acknowledge that net neutrality concerns are largely a function of an uncompetitive marketplace that allows ISPs to leverage their positions without fear of losing customers.  The best way to address net neutrality is therefore to give priority to increased competition in the Canadian Internet marketplace.

Multiple studies have concluded that Canadians pay higher prices for slower speeds as compared to many other countries.  If Clement can solve that problem, he’ll likely go a long way to addressing net neutrality in the process.

Michael Geist – Michael Geist’s Blog
[Geist is the Canada Research Chair in Internet and E-commerce Law at the University of Ottawa. He can be reached by email at mgeist @ uottawa dot ca]

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October, 2009


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4 Responses to “Net neutrality: still a work in progress”

  1. Devil's Advocate Says:

    I wish I could share in Michael’s optimism, but I just don’t see how any of this is supposed to be seen as positive progress.
    As long as the onus is on “consumers” to “compile complaints” (which both the government and the CRTC ignore anyway), the rest of the ruling is simply a joke. The government and the CRTC continue to be the enablers of our continued extortion.

    Every key judgement has merely been “left open for the future”, which is just the usual CRTC-speak for maintaining the Status Quo and not having to cross their friends at Bell and the rest. As usual, we gain absolutely zero on any of this! All the time and taxpayer money spent, and all those public submissions, there’s no excuse for not having significant decisions made on all this stuff by now.

    The CRTC needs to die… period!
    The “Dissolve The CRTC” campaign has only 900 more signatures to go to reach its goal.
    Time for anyone who hasn’t signed the petition to consider it.

  2. Jon Says:

    Do you, too, want to see the end of the CRTC?

    http://dissolvethecrtc.ca/

    http://www.p2pnet.net/story/27034

    Cheers!

  3. Reader's Write Says:

    Jon, it’s now OVER NINE THOUSANDS signatures!

  4. Sad Truth Says:

    Sadly I do not share Mr. Giest’s optimism. There are too many usage of “can”, “could” and “would” and not enough of what the government is committed to do. All of these wishful thinking relies on the CRTC being on consumers’ side.

    See article: Canada’s top Internet regulator calls Canadians “Internet hogs,” pretends not to know about studies showing Canada’s poor global net-performance. http://www.boingboing.net/2009/10/27/canadas-top-internet.html

    Would you trust this guy to stand up for your rights?
    Would you expect him to understand your needs?
    Would you expect him to be impartial?

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