I believe a major part of the concern is that a provider can decide to provide 
better service for some rather than equal service for all. For example, if you 
use comcast as your provider, you would be affected if Comcast provided their 
own streaming video at a high QoS while giving Netflix, that you may be paying 
for, a low QoS, thus pushing you to buy their online movies.

Ed
__________

Ed Angel

Chair, Board of Directors, Santa Fe Complex
Founding Director, Art, Research, Technology and Science Laboratory (ARTS Lab)
Professor Emeritus of Computer Science, University of New Mexico

1017 Sierra Pinon
Santa Fe, NM 87501
505-984-0136 (home)                     an...@cs.unm.edu
505-453-4944 (cell)                             http://www.cs.unm.edu/~angel
                                                                
http://artslab.unm.edu
                                                                
http://sfcomplex.org

On Aug 16, 2010, at 12:35 PM, Owen Densmore wrote:

> With all the buzz about Google & Verizon, I'm surprised at the use of the 
> term Net Neutrality including Quality of Service.
> 
> The pundits are concerned that somehow QoS (differential bandwidth/latency) 
> according to service will Destroy The Net As We Know It!!
> 
> My understanding from early on was that Net Neutrality means that the 
> services are provided at the endpoints, and that the net itself is 
> independent of the services.  And QoS entered in via protocol requirements 
> (RTP and other media protocols, for example, can have lower latency if 
> available, possibly with reduced bandwidth).
> 
> But bandwidth concerns seem to be of a different nature .. you can pay for 
> better pipes if appropriate.
> 
> So I find myself confused about the buzz -- anyone got a clear understanding 
> about where NN is endangered by Google & Verizon?  (I only know of one case 
> that concerns me and that's iPhone/ATT providing specialized Voice Mail that 
> is non-NN as far as I can see.)
> 
>    -- Owen
> 
> 
> 
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