On Jul 14, 2014, at 9:46 AM, Miles Fidelman <mfidel...@meetinghouse.net> wrote:

> 7. In the absence of some reasonably balanced formal policies and regulations 
> about settlements - we're going to keep seeing this kind of stuff.

I think here is where many of us may disagree.

While the current (public) dispute between Verizon and Netflix is fun for 
everyone to point fingers at saying "look here, there is a problem", the market 
also "mostly works".  Verizon and Netflix seem to have reached (per press 
reports) an agreement and the largest problem today is the lack of ability to 
turn-up these ports quickly.  Some market players move at light-speed, others 
at more glacial paces.

I've been paying close attention to this for a variety of reasons.  I've heard 
stories of some incumbents taking double-digit months to provision these types 
of services to correct congestion.  I'm expecting the resolution time-scale to 
be much longer than was seen with the Comcast <-> Netflix connections.  

it would not surprise me if it took 18 months to provision these ports.

(I recall phoning AT&T once asking for 100m service at a commercial address and 
it took a swat-team of people on the phone to tell me they would be 4x/mo what 
I was paying..  I politely told them they were too expensive and to not 
schedule a 8 person conference call for a basic service level).

- Jared

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