RE: Fair Use Policy

2012-08-23 Thread Frank Bulk
This Forbes article
(http://www.forbes.com/sites/petercohan/2012/08/21/will-google-fiber-waste-2
8-billion/) expresses some well-founded skepticism.  As someone who works
for a service provider that does both town and rural FTTH, I can assure you
that the $2,500 (per home served?) the FCC describes is on the low side in a
rural area.

I guess it's profitable to Google if one considers the buildout a sunk cost.


Frank

-Original Message-
From: Benjamin Krueger [mailto:benja...@seattlefenix.net] 
Sent: Wednesday, August 22, 2012 8:47 PM
To: Jimmy Hess
Cc: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: Fair Use Policy

A unique position? Unlike those poor residential ISPs who only have
literally millions of subscribers to use as leverage in peering
negotiations. Perhaps more accurately, rather than saying "Google can afford
to start almost any project they want" we should say "Google doesn't suffer
the temptation of wringing every last penny out of their aging
infrastructure to ensure maximum profits from minimal investments".

I don't want to turn this into a long-drawn debate, so I'll simply say that
I take Google at their word when they say this is profitable from Day 1 and
I surely take their product offering at its word. I'm not sure who proposed
we require anything, but I suppose we can let the market decide what ISPs
are "required" to do. I can say that I don't know anyone who wouldn't drop
any existing residential service for what Google is selling. Perhaps they
will succumb to some unforeseen boogeyman as you allude to, but to be honest
that sounds a whole lot like the wishful thinking of an industry that has
been deftly out-manueverd at its own game and now finds itself dramatically
behind the curve. Frankly, if I were in the ISP business I would be shitting
my pants.

On Aug 22, 2012, at 6:05 PM, Jimmy Hess wrote:

> On 8/22/12, Benjamin Krueger  wrote:
>> Yeah, totally can't be done. It especially can't be done profitably.
> 
> Google can afford to start almost any project they want,  and they are
> in a unique position to negotiate peering and access to a ton of
> bandwidth, with their Youtube, Google Search et al. As to whether  it
> will be profitable, well, obviously, that is their claim. It's yet to
> be demonstrated.
> 
> I gotta reject the idea that broadband providers should be required to
> follow in Google's footsteps though.
> 
> For now, Google fiber is another risky experiment,  that could have a
> great payout if successful, or could be shuttered within a year or so,
> or fees/rate incs tacked on,  when they figure out just what a mess
> they have gotten into.
> 
> 
>> http://fiber.google.com/
>>
http://gigaom.com/2012/07/26/the-economics-of-google-fiber-and-what-it-means
-for-u-s-broadband/
>> 
> --
> -JH







Re: Fair Use Policy

2012-08-23 Thread Dan White

On 08/23/12 10:51 +0430, Shahab Vahabzadeh wrote:

Thanks about every ones speech in this topic but I think I can not describe
my problem clearly, let me explain it some how more:
You know I have two kind of ADSL services, Limited and Unlimited.
Limited Like:
512Kb-4GB-3Month
1024Kb-4GB-3Month
2048Kb-6GB-3Month
4096Kb-8GB-3Month

Unlimited Like:
128Kb-1Month
256Kb-1Month

and etc. But when a customer is in our sales department they do not know he
will download more or he will have a normal usage? Is he heavy peer-to-peer
service downloader or not he is a doctor that he want to check his emails
only, and he want this service always.


We focus on customer education and tools. A bandwidth calculator on your
website is recommended, both for your customers, and your sales department
(mycricket.com has a great example).

We also provide a way for customers to view their current usage for the
month, in near real-time. We've implemented a monthly bandwidth quota, and
have that discussion up front with new customers (and sent letters to
existing customers) so that they can choose the appropriate tiered service,
based on their expected usage patterns.

--
Dan White



Re: Fair Use Policy

2012-08-23 Thread Eugeniu Patrascu
On Thu, Aug 23, 2012 at 9:21 AM, Shahab Vahabzadeh
 wrote:
> Thanks about every ones speech in this topic but I think I can not describe
> my problem clearly, let me explain it some how more:
> You know I have two kind of ADSL services, Limited and Unlimited.
> Limited Like:
> 512Kb-4GB-3Month
> 1024Kb-4GB-3Month
> 2048Kb-6GB-3Month
> 4096Kb-8GB-3Month
>
> Unlimited Like:
> 128Kb-1Month
> 256Kb-1Month
>
> and etc. But when a customer is in our sales department they do not know he
> will download more or he will have a normal usage? Is he heavy peer-to-peer
> service downloader or not he is a doctor that he want to check his emails
> only, and he want this service always.
> Our problem cause midnights because in the middle of the night in 2:00 AM
> till 8:00 AM and at this time we do not have any traffic counting for users.
> Means they can download free at this time, and if we buy more bandwidth
> only for this time for users it will be unusable in other times like
> mornings.
> I want a logical way to solve this problem technically or sales techniques,
> We must control users usage and I can not do any thing to them they love
> free-times and they want to download, but they are going to make me ran out
> of bandwidth that time, so what about that doctor? and his emails?
> You know no manager will accept increasing bw only for nights :D

You can put the paying ones with a data cap in a guaranteed queue with
precedence, and leave the rest to download as much as possible in
another queue without any guarantees but with fair queuing enabled so
that everyone gets access more or less equally.
When your management or sales department chose the "all you can
download between 02:00-08:00" they should have thought about what
happens to the rest of the customers in this time interval. Or should
have brought you in to hear your technical point of view and the
possible problems this scheme may induce.

my 2 eurocents :)



Re: Fair Use Policy

2012-08-22 Thread Shahab Vahabzadeh
Thanks about every ones speech in this topic but I think I can not describe
my problem clearly, let me explain it some how more:
You know I have two kind of ADSL services, Limited and Unlimited.
Limited Like:
512Kb-4GB-3Month
1024Kb-4GB-3Month
2048Kb-6GB-3Month
4096Kb-8GB-3Month

Unlimited Like:
128Kb-1Month
256Kb-1Month

and etc. But when a customer is in our sales department they do not know he
will download more or he will have a normal usage? Is he heavy peer-to-peer
service downloader or not he is a doctor that he want to check his emails
only, and he want this service always.
Our problem cause midnights because in the middle of the night in 2:00 AM
till 8:00 AM and at this time we do not have any traffic counting for users.
Means they can download free at this time, and if we buy more bandwidth
only for this time for users it will be unusable in other times like
mornings.
I want a logical way to solve this problem technically or sales techniques,
We must control users usage and I can not do any thing to them they love
free-times and they want to download, but they are going to make me ran out
of bandwidth that time, so what about that doctor? and his emails?
You know no manager will accept increasing bw only for nights :D

Thanks


On Thu, Aug 23, 2012 at 9:51 AM, Mikael Abrahamsson wrote:

> On Wed, 22 Aug 2012, Sean Harlow wrote:
>
>  As far as I can tell, the actual cost of the bits being transferred is so
>> minuscule as to be practically irrelevant for anyone who's not at the scale
>> to be dealing directly with Tier 1 carriers.  Capacity costs money, but
>> once it's there utilization is nothing.
>>
>
> The problem the OP is probably dealing with is an incumbant who they are
> buying capacity from at hugely inflated prices, so all of a sudden the cost
> of capacity is a significant part of total operating cost.
>
> There are still markets in the world where a megabit/s of capacity can
> cost hundreds of dollars per month (even when buying tens of them). This is
> usually due to politics and/or law and thus regulatory problems, but it's
> still a situation some have to operate in.
>
> --
> Mikael Abrahamssonemail: swm...@swm.pp.se
>
>


-- 
Regards,
Shahab Vahabzadeh, Network Engineer and System Administrator

Cell Phone: +1 (415) 871 0742
PGP Key Fingerprint = 8E34 B335 D702 0CA7 5A81  C2EE 76A2 46C2 5367 BF90


Re: Fair Use Policy

2012-08-22 Thread Mikael Abrahamsson

On Wed, 22 Aug 2012, Sean Harlow wrote:

As far as I can tell, the actual cost of the bits being transferred is 
so minuscule as to be practically irrelevant for anyone who's not at the 
scale to be dealing directly with Tier 1 carriers.  Capacity costs 
money, but once it's there utilization is nothing.


The problem the OP is probably dealing with is an incumbant who they are 
buying capacity from at hugely inflated prices, so all of a sudden the 
cost of capacity is a significant part of total operating cost.


There are still markets in the world where a megabit/s of capacity can 
cost hundreds of dollars per month (even when buying tens of them). This 
is usually due to politics and/or law and thus regulatory problems, but 
it's still a situation some have to operate in.


--
Mikael Abrahamssonemail: swm...@swm.pp.se



Re: Fair Use Policy

2012-08-22 Thread Mark Andrews

In message <391af4eb-239d-4982-8682-643253440...@seanharlow.info>, Sean Harlow 
writes:
> On Aug 22, 2012, at 21:25, William Herrin wrote:
> 
> > Works for the electric company, the gas company, the water company,
> > etc. Metering I mean, not a use cap. The notion of a cap is pretty
> > broken.
> 
> The difference is that gas, water, and electricity are all resources
> that have actual costs relevant to consumer and SMB-level users.  A
> fiber-optic line costs the same to operate regardless of if it is
> carrying no data or entirely maxed out.  Higher-capacity optics at each
> end of course cost money, but they're fixed cost items which are
> deployed once and don't often need replacement during their useful life
> (especially given the growth rate of network traffic).  Longer runs
> obviously need repeaters capable of handling the data rates in use, but
> the same applies.
> 
> As far as I can tell, the actual cost of the bits being transferred is
> so minuscule as to be practically irrelevant for anyone who's not at the
> scale to be dealing directly with Tier 1 carriers.  Capacity costs
> money, but once it's there utilization is nothing.

Which is why bigger users get discounts on a per GB basis.  The
cost to the consumer has a fixed component which basically covers
the last mile, accounting etc. and variable component which covers
the cost of shipping the bits over the rest of the network which
is almost always over subscribed.  The difference between business
and residential reflects, or should reflect, the level of over
subscription and some penalty allowance to cover out of standard
hours repairs to meet SLA.

Mark
-- 
Mark Andrews, ISC
1 Seymour St., Dundas Valley, NSW 2117, Australia
PHONE: +61 2 9871 4742 INTERNET: ma...@isc.org



Re: Fair Use Policy

2012-08-22 Thread Sean Harlow
On Aug 22, 2012, at 21:25, William Herrin wrote:

> Works for the electric company, the gas company, the water company,
> etc. Metering I mean, not a use cap. The notion of a cap is pretty
> broken.

The difference is that gas, water, and electricity are all resources that have 
actual costs relevant to consumer and SMB-level users.  A fiber-optic line 
costs the same to operate regardless of if it is carrying no data or entirely 
maxed out.  Higher-capacity optics at each end of course cost money, but 
they're fixed cost items which are deployed once and don't often need 
replacement during their useful life (especially given the growth rate of 
network traffic).  Longer runs obviously need repeaters capable of handling the 
data rates in use, but the same applies.

As far as I can tell, the actual cost of the bits being transferred is so 
minuscule as to be practically irrelevant for anyone who's not at the scale to 
be dealing directly with Tier 1 carriers.  Capacity costs money, but once it's 
there utilization is nothing.
---
Sean Harlow
s...@seanharlow.info


Re: Fair Use Policy

2012-08-22 Thread Owen DeLong
I just wish that someone...Google or ANYONE else would do something like Google 
Fiber in the technological wasteland where I live instead of focusing only on 
hotbeds of high-speed internet and well-connected customers like Kansas City, 
parts of North Dakota, Minnesota, etc.

Here in my bandwidth ghetto, TPC can't do better than 1.5Mbps/384kbps and Cable 
has different limitations (ridiculous fees for static addresses, for 
example[1]), extremely variable performance (most days, I do pretty well 
getting 50-70Mbps/10-30Mbps on a line where I pay for 30/10, but often enough 
to be annoying, I get 7Mbps/3Mbps for 8-10 hours at a time...Just long enough 
to go through the trouble report process but not long enough to still be a 
problem when the tech shows up to address the issue.), etc.

I'd love to ditch the DSL line and relegate the Cable circuit to backup status 
(and move to a lower pricing tier on it) with my primary on FTTH.

[1] I _HAVE_ business class cable service, but I find the idea of $5+/month for 
an address that costs them less than $0.001/year ridiculous.


Where is this barren wasteland of bandwidth you may ask? It's in San Jose, 
California. Capitol of Silicon Valley. If I stand on the top of my roof, I can 
see 55 South Market Street on a clear day. (but I have to stand in just the 
right spot and look through just the right piece of the 280x680x101 
interchange).

If anyone wants to do a fiber build in my neighborhood ala Google, I will 
happily go door to door soliciting my neighbors on their behalf.

Owen

On Aug 22, 2012, at 18:46 , Benjamin Krueger  wrote:

> A unique position? Unlike those poor residential ISPs who only have literally 
> millions of subscribers to use as leverage in peering negotiations. Perhaps 
> more accurately, rather than saying "Google can afford to start almost any 
> project they want" we should say "Google doesn't suffer the temptation of 
> wringing every last penny out of their aging infrastructure to ensure maximum 
> profits from minimal investments".
> 
> I don't want to turn this into a long-drawn debate, so I'll simply say that I 
> take Google at their word when they say this is profitable from Day 1 and I 
> surely take their product offering at its word. I'm not sure who proposed we 
> require anything, but I suppose we can let the market decide what ISPs are 
> "required" to do. I can say that I don't know anyone who wouldn't drop any 
> existing residential service for what Google is selling. Perhaps they will 
> succumb to some unforeseen boogeyman as you allude to, but to be honest that 
> sounds a whole lot like the wishful thinking of an industry that has been 
> deftly out-manueverd at its own game and now finds itself dramatically behind 
> the curve. Frankly, if I were in the ISP business I would be shitting my 
> pants.
> 
> On Aug 22, 2012, at 6:05 PM, Jimmy Hess wrote:
> 
>> On 8/22/12, Benjamin Krueger  wrote:
>>> Yeah, totally can't be done. It especially can't be done profitably.
>> 
>> Google can afford to start almost any project they want,  and they are
>> in a unique position to negotiate peering and access to a ton of
>> bandwidth, with their Youtube, Google Search et al. As to whether  it
>> will be profitable, well, obviously, that is their claim. It's yet to
>> be demonstrated.
>> 
>> I gotta reject the idea that broadband providers should be required to
>> follow in Google's footsteps though.
>> 
>> For now, Google fiber is another risky experiment,  that could have a
>> great payout if successful, or could be shuttered within a year or so,
>> or fees/rate incs tacked on,  when they figure out just what a mess
>> they have gotten into.
>> 
>> 
>>> http://fiber.google.com/
>>> http://gigaom.com/2012/07/26/the-economics-of-google-fiber-and-what-it-means-for-u-s-broadband/
>>> 
>> --
>> -JH
> 




Re: Fair Use Policy

2012-08-22 Thread Benjamin Krueger
A unique position? Unlike those poor residential ISPs who only have literally 
millions of subscribers to use as leverage in peering negotiations. Perhaps 
more accurately, rather than saying "Google can afford to start almost any 
project they want" we should say "Google doesn't suffer the temptation of 
wringing every last penny out of their aging infrastructure to ensure maximum 
profits from minimal investments".

I don't want to turn this into a long-drawn debate, so I'll simply say that I 
take Google at their word when they say this is profitable from Day 1 and I 
surely take their product offering at its word. I'm not sure who proposed we 
require anything, but I suppose we can let the market decide what ISPs are 
"required" to do. I can say that I don't know anyone who wouldn't drop any 
existing residential service for what Google is selling. Perhaps they will 
succumb to some unforeseen boogeyman as you allude to, but to be honest that 
sounds a whole lot like the wishful thinking of an industry that has been 
deftly out-manueverd at its own game and now finds itself dramatically behind 
the curve. Frankly, if I were in the ISP business I would be shitting my pants.

On Aug 22, 2012, at 6:05 PM, Jimmy Hess wrote:

> On 8/22/12, Benjamin Krueger  wrote:
>> Yeah, totally can't be done. It especially can't be done profitably.
> 
> Google can afford to start almost any project they want,  and they are
> in a unique position to negotiate peering and access to a ton of
> bandwidth, with their Youtube, Google Search et al. As to whether  it
> will be profitable, well, obviously, that is their claim. It's yet to
> be demonstrated.
> 
> I gotta reject the idea that broadband providers should be required to
> follow in Google's footsteps though.
> 
> For now, Google fiber is another risky experiment,  that could have a
> great payout if successful, or could be shuttered within a year or so,
> or fees/rate incs tacked on,  when they figure out just what a mess
> they have gotten into.
> 
> 
>> http://fiber.google.com/
>> http://gigaom.com/2012/07/26/the-economics-of-google-fiber-and-what-it-means-for-u-s-broadband/
>> 
> --
> -JH




Re: Fair Use Policy

2012-08-22 Thread Joe Greco
> Google can afford to start almost any project they want,  and they are
> in a unique position to negotiate peering and access to a ton of
> bandwidth,

... kind of like all the other major incumbents like at&t, Comcast, and
all those.  Of course, the difference is that at&t, Comcast, etc., all
have cable TV offerings, and these companies can all see that inexpensive
high speed Internet access has the potential to destroy the lucrative
existing TV subscription model that they enjoy.

Claims that the US is somehow magically different than other countries
sound pretty feeble at this point; service providers like Sonic.net
are doing FTTH, and municipal broadband projects are sufficiently scary
to incumbents that they've spent years fighting them in court, rather
than just letting them get built and then collapse - so apparently the
incumbents are pretty certain that these projects would be successful.

250GB/month isn't a whole lot of data when you look at high-def movies.
You can exceed 250GB/mo by running a flat 1Mbps.  Comcast apparently
has a 305Mbps tier (at quite a steep price).  Coupled with a 250GB/mo
cap, that's what, a few hours of 100% use?  :-)  Comcast fans need not 
beat me up, I know there've been some "changes" recently, but I don't 
know exactly what...

It would be nice to see some useful options.  I mean, we all hate frame
relay, right, but the idea of a CIR with an ability to make use of extra
capacity the network might happen to have available makes a certain
amount of sense.  I don't expect to see anything like that anytime soon
for all the obvious reasons.  Heh.

... JG
-- 
Joe Greco - sol.net Network Services - Milwaukee, WI - http://www.sol.net
"We call it the 'one bite at the apple' rule. Give me one chance [and] then I
won't contact you again." - Direct Marketing Ass'n position on e-mail spam(CNN)
With 24 million small businesses in the US alone, that's way too many apples.



Re: Fair Use Policy

2012-08-22 Thread William Herrin
On Wed, Aug 22, 2012 at 8:41 PM, Jimmy Hess  wrote:
> On 8/22/12, Bacon Zombie  wrote:
>> I how you are talking about 3G or there is a typo.
>> An ISP with a 5GB cap that is charging the end user more then 5$ total
>> {including line rental} a month should not be allow to operate.
>
> I don't believe $5 even covers an ISP's typical cost of having a line,
> let alone getting data through it, maintaining, supporting it, and
> providing upstream networking.

If you're talking mobile (3G) then you don't have a physical line. You
have a device which might or might not be making any use of a shared
media (wireless spectrum).

A 56kbps modem can theoretically deliver 18GB of data in a month. My
$125/mo business fios can cough up 8 TB in that time. 5GB on a modern
shared wireless media is... not much.


> Why should the end users who transfer less than 1GB a month, with only
> basic web surfing, have to suffer periods of less-than-excellent
> network performance  or pay increasing costs to subsidize the purchase
> of additional capacity for users at the same service level expecting
> to use 100GB a month?

They shouldn't. The folks who want to use 100 GB a month should be
paying more than $5. ;)


> Even if   the metric is wrong --  the idea of metering bytes
> transferred is broken,
> because it does not positively reinforce the good behavior.

Works for the electric company, the gas company, the water company,
etc. Metering I mean, not a use cap. The notion of a cap is pretty
broken.

Regards,
Bill Herrin


-- 
William D. Herrin  her...@dirtside.com  b...@herrin.us
3005 Crane Dr. .. Web: 
Falls Church, VA 22042-3004



Re: Fair Use Policy

2012-08-22 Thread Owen DeLong

On Aug 22, 2012, at 17:41 , Jimmy Hess  wrote:

> On 8/22/12, Bacon Zombie  wrote:
>> I how you are talking about 3G or there is a typo.
>> An ISP with a 5GB cap that is charging the end user more then 5$ total
>> {including line rental} a month should not be allow to operate.
> 
> I don't believe $5 even covers an ISP's typical cost of having a line,
> let alone getting data through it, maintaining, supporting it, and
> providing upstream networking.  Last I checked you can't even buy
> dial-up services from national ISPs for that low a price,  before the
> per-Hour usage charges,  and those require simpler less-costly
> infrastructure to maintain for the ISP.
> 

I agree that $5 is low. Should be more like $30.

> With residential broadband, if there is not a heavy degree of
> oversubscription,  the ISP will either go broke, or the cost of
> residential service will be so high that the average person would not
> buy it.   "I want my line speed 24x7"  is a technical argument,  it is
> a numbers game, and  the average subscriber does not make that
> argument,  or at least,  rather, the
> average res. subscriber is not willing to bear the actual cost
> required to actually pay
> what it would cost their ISP to satisfy that  for every user trying to
> utilize so much.
> 

Agreed.

> Why should the end users who transfer less than 1GB a month, with only
> basic web surfing, have to suffer periods of less-than-excellent
> network performance  or pay increasing costs to subsidize the purchase
> of additional capacity for users at the same service level expecting
> to use 100GB a month?

Here we disagree -- somewhat.

If you are selling an unlimited product, then you take on the obligation of
making it effectively unlimited. If you are selling the same unlimited product
to the 1GB/Month user and the 50GB/day user, then you are not doing a
good job of pricing your products in a manner that is fair to your subscribers
and you will lose in one way or another:

+   Your product is too expensive and your lower-end customers
depart and you're left with only the few high-end customers.
+   Your product is not expensive enough and everyone gets poor
service because you do not have adequate upstream bandwidth
to service all of your customers.

The way you achieve fairness is to provide different products at different
price points to meet different customer needs.

For example:

Metered products for low-tier users:

1GB/month   $x
2GB/month   $2x
5GB/month   $4x
10GB/month  $8x
Over$0.9x/GB

Flat rate products for power users:

10Mbps/1Mbps$y
30Mbps/5Mbps$2y
50Mbps/10Mbps   $3y
100Mbps/20Mbps  $5y

etc.

Note that there's no unlimited product in the list, but, the flat rate
products present limitations in terms of wire speed while the metered
product allows low-utilization customers to take advantage of high
wire speeds for short bursts of transfer.

That way the customer can choose the pricing model and service
that best meets their needs and all you have to do is make sure that
the values of x and y are sufficient to allow you to upgrade your
capacities as needed to meet the demands of increasing customers
and/or customers moving up the usage tiers.


> 
> There is a certain degree of fairness there.
> 

Not really. It assumes a single one-size-fits-all pricing model which
is bound to be inherently unfair.

> Even if   the metric is wrong --  the idea of metering bytes
> transferred is broken,
> because it does not positively reinforce the good behavior.
> 

While there is truth to this, the bottom line is that selling bandwidth
based on time of use billing to residential customers results in a
product that the consumer simply can't/won't understand and you
can't make any money.

> It's like trying to reduce congestion during rush hour on the freeway
> by imposing a  "40 miles of travel per day"  limit  on each vehicle
> owner.
> 
> That gives no benefit for those effected by the limit to adjust what
> time of day they travel those 40 miles,  however.
> 
> A  "X=10 gigabyte per  4 hours"   rolling average  limit  would make more 
> sense.
> 
> 
> Where "X"  is varied,  based on the actual congestion of the network between
> other users of the same service level.

Try explaining that to the average residential user... It's just not going to 
work.
The incentive won't affect the behavior because they just won't understand.

> 
>> And if your infrastructure and handle 25% at a minimum maxing out their
>> connect them don't advertise " unlimited " since you can't provide it and
>> it is false advertising.
> 
> There's no such thing as unlimited, period.Even if the provider wanted to,
> there will be some physical lim

Re: Fair Use Policy

2012-08-22 Thread Jimmy Hess
On 8/22/12, Benjamin Krueger  wrote:
> Yeah, totally can't be done. It especially can't be done profitably.

Google can afford to start almost any project they want,  and they are
in a unique position to negotiate peering and access to a ton of
bandwidth, with their Youtube, Google Search et al. As to whether  it
will be profitable, well, obviously, that is their claim. It's yet to
be demonstrated.

I gotta reject the idea that broadband providers should be required to
follow in Google's footsteps though.

For now, Google fiber is another risky experiment,  that could have a
great payout if successful, or could be shuttered within a year or so,
 or fees/rate incs tacked on,  when they figure out just what a mess
they have gotten into.


> http://fiber.google.com/
> http://gigaom.com/2012/07/26/the-economics-of-google-fiber-and-what-it-means-for-u-s-broadband/
>
--
-JH



Re: Fair Use Policy

2012-08-22 Thread Benjamin Krueger
Yeah, totally can't be done. It especially can't be done profitably.

http://fiber.google.com/
http://gigaom.com/2012/07/26/the-economics-of-google-fiber-and-what-it-means-for-u-s-broadband/

On Aug 22, 2012, at 5:41 PM, Jimmy Hess wrote:

> On 8/22/12, Bacon Zombie  wrote:
>> I how you are talking about 3G or there is a typo.
>> An ISP with a 5GB cap that is charging the end user more then 5$ total
>> {including line rental} a month should not be allow to operate.
> 
> I don't believe $5 even covers an ISP's typical cost of having a line,
> let alone getting data through it, maintaining, supporting it, and
> providing upstream networking.  Last I checked you can't even buy
> dial-up services from national ISPs for that low a price,  before the
> per-Hour usage charges,  and those require simpler less-costly
> infrastructure to maintain for the ISP.
> 
> With residential broadband, if there is not a heavy degree of
> oversubscription,  the ISP will either go broke, or the cost of
> residential service will be so high that the average person would not
> buy it.   "I want my line speed 24x7"  is a technical argument,  it is
> a numbers game, and  the average subscriber does not make that
> argument,  or at least,  rather, the
> average res. subscriber is not willing to bear the actual cost
> required to actually pay
> what it would cost their ISP to satisfy that  for every user trying to
> utilize so much.
> 
> Why should the end users who transfer less than 1GB a month, with only
> basic web surfing, have to suffer periods of less-than-excellent
> network performance  or pay increasing costs to subsidize the purchase
> of additional capacity for users at the same service level expecting
> to use 100GB a month?
> 
> There is a certain degree of fairness there.
> 
> Even if   the metric is wrong --  the idea of metering bytes
> transferred is broken,
> because it does not positively reinforce the good behavior.
> 
> It's like trying to reduce congestion during rush hour on the freeway
> by imposing a  "40 miles of travel per day"  limit  on each vehicle
> owner.
> 
> That gives no benefit for those effected by the limit to adjust what
> time of day they travel those 40 miles,  however.
> 
> A  "X=10 gigabyte per  4 hours"   rolling average  limit  would make more 
> sense.
> 
> 
> Where "X"  is varied,  based on the actual congestion of the network between
> other users of the same service level.
> 
>> And if your infrastructure and handle 25% at a minimum maxing out their
>> connect them don't advertise " unlimited " since you can't provide it and
>> it is false advertising.
> 
> There's no such thing as unlimited, period.Even if the provider wanted to,
> there will be some physical limits.
> 
> I agree the use of the word is confusing... when they say unlimited
> what they are
> often indicating is  "You are not  limited  by the provider in the
> number of hours a day you can be connected to the service".
> 
>> The world would be a better place if ISPs that either throttled, cut off or
>> added on extra charges to the end users bill were fined to hell for false
>> advertising and repeat offenders were named and shamed on a public website.
> [snip]
> 
> There might be no residential ISPs left
> 
> --
> -JH
> 




Re: Fair Use Policy

2012-08-22 Thread Jimmy Hess
On 8/22/12, Bacon Zombie  wrote:
> I how you are talking about 3G or there is a typo.
> An ISP with a 5GB cap that is charging the end user more then 5$ total
> {including line rental} a month should not be allow to operate.

I don't believe $5 even covers an ISP's typical cost of having a line,
let alone getting data through it, maintaining, supporting it, and
providing upstream networking.  Last I checked you can't even buy
dial-up services from national ISPs for that low a price,  before the
per-Hour usage charges,  and those require simpler less-costly
infrastructure to maintain for the ISP.

With residential broadband, if there is not a heavy degree of
oversubscription,  the ISP will either go broke, or the cost of
residential service will be so high that the average person would not
buy it.   "I want my line speed 24x7"  is a technical argument,  it is
a numbers game, and  the average subscriber does not make that
argument,  or at least,  rather, the
average res. subscriber is not willing to bear the actual cost
required to actually pay
what it would cost their ISP to satisfy that  for every user trying to
utilize so much.

Why should the end users who transfer less than 1GB a month, with only
basic web surfing, have to suffer periods of less-than-excellent
network performance  or pay increasing costs to subsidize the purchase
of additional capacity for users at the same service level expecting
to use 100GB a month?

There is a certain degree of fairness there.

Even if   the metric is wrong --  the idea of metering bytes
transferred is broken,
because it does not positively reinforce the good behavior.

It's like trying to reduce congestion during rush hour on the freeway
by imposing a  "40 miles of travel per day"  limit  on each vehicle
owner.

That gives no benefit for those effected by the limit to adjust what
time of day they travel those 40 miles,  however.

A  "X=10 gigabyte per  4 hours"   rolling average  limit  would make more sense.


Where "X"  is varied,  based on the actual congestion of the network between
other users of the same service level.

> And if your infrastructure and handle 25% at a minimum maxing out their
> connect them don't advertise " unlimited " since you can't provide it and
> it is false advertising.

There's no such thing as unlimited, period.Even if the provider wanted to,
there will be some physical limits.

I agree the use of the word is confusing... when they say unlimited
what they are
often indicating is  "You are not  limited  by the provider in the
number of hours a day you can be connected to the service".

> The world would be a better place if ISPs that either throttled, cut off or
> added on extra charges to the end users bill were fined to hell for false
> advertising and repeat offenders were named and shamed on a public website.
[snip]

There might be no residential ISPs left

--
-JH



Re: Fair Use Policy

2012-08-22 Thread Owen DeLong

On Aug 22, 2012, at 14:45 , Cameron Byrne  wrote:

> On Wed, Aug 22, 2012 at 2:35 PM, Owen DeLong  wrote:
>>> 
>>> And, in the other camp, unlimited offerings from T-Mobile, Sprint, and Metro
>>> 
>> 
>> Well...sort of. To be fair, the T-Mo version of unlimited is unlimited up to 
>> a certain amount
>> (that you paid for) and then all-you-can-sip at incredibly low speed 
>> thereafter.
>> 
>> (At least that's what their marketing literature says... If Cameron knows 
>> different, it
>> would be nice to know.)
>> 
> 
> Cameron* does know different.
> 
>> From the link i posted, here again
> http://www.pcworld.com/article/261247/tmobile_metropcs_roll_out_unlimited_data_plans.html
> 
> "Starting Sept. 5, T-Mobile will offer a new Unlimited Nationwide 4G
> data plan that doesn’t have any data caps or speed limits. T-Mobile’s
> other so-called unlimited data plans do have caps (2/5/10GB), but once
> you go past the threshold, your speed is throttled. The new plan,
> T-Mobile says, won’t have such limitations."
> 
> And to be "fair and balanced" (TM):
> 
> "MetroPCS also joined the unlimited data plan party, but only for a
> limited time offer. "
> 
> CB
> 
> *Works at T-Mobile.
> 
> Marketing literature:
> http://newsroom.t-mobile.com/articles/t-mobile-unlimited-nationwide-4g-data

Cool!!! Does that offer include mobile hotspot?

Owen




Re: Fair Use Policy

2012-08-22 Thread Sean Harlow
On Aug 22, 2012, at 17:35, Owen DeLong wrote:

> Well...sort of. To be fair, the T-Mo version of unlimited is unlimited up to 
> a certain amount
> (that you paid for) and then all-you-can-sip at incredibly low speed 
> thereafter.

The new plans being brought out are supposedly true unlimited, but are not 
allowed to tether.  The previous unlimited but throttled to 2G after X amount 
of transfer plans remain available for those who tether.
---
Sean Harlow
s...@seanharlow.info


Re: Fair Use Policy

2012-08-22 Thread Cameron Byrne
On Wed, Aug 22, 2012 at 2:35 PM, Owen DeLong  wrote:
>>
>> And, in the other camp, unlimited offerings from T-Mobile, Sprint, and Metro
>>
>
> Well...sort of. To be fair, the T-Mo version of unlimited is unlimited up to 
> a certain amount
> (that you paid for) and then all-you-can-sip at incredibly low speed 
> thereafter.
>
> (At least that's what their marketing literature says... If Cameron knows 
> different, it
> would be nice to know.)
>

Cameron* does know different.

>From the link i posted, here again
http://www.pcworld.com/article/261247/tmobile_metropcs_roll_out_unlimited_data_plans.html

"Starting Sept. 5, T-Mobile will offer a new Unlimited Nationwide 4G
data plan that doesn’t have any data caps or speed limits. T-Mobile’s
other so-called unlimited data plans do have caps (2/5/10GB), but once
you go past the threshold, your speed is throttled. The new plan,
T-Mobile says, won’t have such limitations."

And to be "fair and balanced" (TM):

"MetroPCS also joined the unlimited data plan party, but only for a
limited time offer. "

CB

*Works at T-Mobile.

Marketing literature:
http://newsroom.t-mobile.com/articles/t-mobile-unlimited-nationwide-4g-data



Re: Fair Use Policy

2012-08-22 Thread Owen DeLong
> 
> And, in the other camp, unlimited offerings from T-Mobile, Sprint, and Metro
> 

Well...sort of. To be fair, the T-Mo version of unlimited is unlimited up to a 
certain amount
(that you paid for) and then all-you-can-sip at incredibly low speed thereafter.

(At least that's what their marketing literature says... If Cameron knows 
different, it
would be nice to know.)

Owen




Re: Fair Use Policy

2012-08-22 Thread Cameron Byrne
On Wed, Aug 22, 2012 at 2:17 PM, Sean Harlow  wrote:
> On Aug 22, 2012, at 17:06, Bacon Zombie wrote:
>
>> An ISP with a 5GB cap that is charging the end user more then 5$ total
>> {including line rental} a month should not be allow to operate.
>
> I agree entirely.  The US is not exactly known for great broadband access, 
> particularly where I live in the midwest (unless one is in a lucky pocket 
> with FiOS, Google Fiber, or the like), yet I could easily host 200 
> 512kbit/sec subscribers off my residential cable connection without even 
> thinking about caps much less throttling on top of caps.  It'd be 
> oversubscribed, sure, but most users don't max out the line regularly so I 
> don't think I'd have a problem.  My mobile phone is through Sprint, known for 
> being the slowest of the national 3G carriers, yet I can exceed 1mbit/sec in 
> the middle of a corn field miles from anything resembling civilization and 
> again do not have any monthly cap.
>

On a slow connection, "all you can eat" is effectively all "you can sip"

Nonetheless, it appears there are now 2 camps forming where (AT&T +
VZW) want to clamp down access (Facetime?) and increase price

And, in the other camp, unlimited offerings from T-Mobile, Sprint, and Metro

http://www.pcworld.com/article/261247/tmobile_metropcs_roll_out_unlimited_data_plans.html

These 2 camps also cleanly break into Ma'Bell vs Other

CB

> A 5GB cap on 512kbit/sec service could be blown through in under a single 
> day.  That's absurd.  If a 256k user maxed out their line all month, they'd 
> have transferred just short of 80GB.  Why in the world would it make sense to 
> limit someone to 1/16th of that just for the "privilege" of double speed 
> which is still so slow it's beaten by any 3G service?
>
> Wired internet providers should not even be thinking about caps below the 
> 250GB/mo point.  Neither of these example speeds can even reach that level, 
> so if you feel the need to cap you are doing it wrong and should rethink your 
> business model.  Wireless carriers get a bit more leeway due to spectrum 
> limitations, but even there a 5GB cap is barely reasonable for an entry level 
> offering.
> ---
> Sean Harlow
> s...@seanharlow.info
>
>



Re: Fair Use Policy

2012-08-22 Thread valdis . kletnieks
On Wed, 22 Aug 2012 17:17:14 -0400, Sean Harlow said:
> Wired internet providers should not even be thinking about caps below the 250
> GB/mo point.  Neither of these example speeds can even reach that level, so if
> you feel the need to cap you are doing it wrong and should rethink your
> business model.

Why? It's a perfectly reasonable business model - it allows you to skimp on
upstream provisioning if on any given day15/16th of your users are at low/zero
bandwidth due to hitting their cap *and* allows you to upsell bigger caps.  The
only downside is that if you do this, you'll only get away with it for like 36
hours before public outrage makes the local public service commission step in
with the big hammers and make you behave.

Oh, wait...


pgpWfl2I87o1A.pgp
Description: PGP signature


Re: Fair Use Policy

2012-08-22 Thread Sean Harlow
On Aug 22, 2012, at 17:06, Bacon Zombie wrote:

> An ISP with a 5GB cap that is charging the end user more then 5$ total
> {including line rental} a month should not be allow to operate.

I agree entirely.  The US is not exactly known for great broadband access, 
particularly where I live in the midwest (unless one is in a lucky pocket with 
FiOS, Google Fiber, or the like), yet I could easily host 200 512kbit/sec 
subscribers off my residential cable connection without even thinking about 
caps much less throttling on top of caps.  It'd be oversubscribed, sure, but 
most users don't max out the line regularly so I don't think I'd have a 
problem.  My mobile phone is through Sprint, known for being the slowest of the 
national 3G carriers, yet I can exceed 1mbit/sec in the middle of a corn field 
miles from anything resembling civilization and again do not have any monthly 
cap.

A 5GB cap on 512kbit/sec service could be blown through in under a single day.  
That's absurd.  If a 256k user maxed out their line all month, they'd have 
transferred just short of 80GB.  Why in the world would it make sense to limit 
someone to 1/16th of that just for the "privilege" of double speed which is 
still so slow it's beaten by any 3G service?

Wired internet providers should not even be thinking about caps below the 
250GB/mo point.  Neither of these example speeds can even reach that level, so 
if you feel the need to cap you are doing it wrong and should rethink your 
business model.  Wireless carriers get a bit more leeway due to spectrum 
limitations, but even there a 5GB cap is barely reasonable for an entry level 
offering.
---
Sean Harlow
s...@seanharlow.info




Re: Fair Use Policy

2012-08-22 Thread Bacon Zombie
I how you are talking about 3G or there is a typo.
An ISP with a 5GB cap that is charging the end user more then 5$ total
{including line rental} a month should not be allow to operate.

And if your infrastructure and handle 25% at a minimum maxing out their
connect them don't advertise " unlimited " since you can't provide it and
it is false advertising.

The world would be a better place if ISPs that either throttled, cut off or
added on extra charges to the end users bill were fined to hell for false
advertising and repeat offenders were named and shamed on a public website.
 On 22 Aug 2012 20:42, "Shahab Vahabzadeh"  wrote:

> Dear Owen,
> Would you please describe this some how more in my bussiness plan?
> I have both limited and unlimited users.
> For example I have these services in my package:
> 512Kb-5GB-1Month
> 256Kb-Unlimit-1Month
> And like this.
> Thanks
>
> On Thu, Aug 23, 2012 at 12:02 AM, Owen DeLong  wrote:
>
> > Right... more specific aspect of the same coin. If you have adequate
> > facilities, you don't need to shape users.
> > If you have users that are overconsuming for your pricing model, there
> are
> > two good solutions:
> >
> > 1. Raise the prices enough for everyone that you can absorb these users.
> >  2. Implement usage-based charges (or usage based charges above a certain
> > usage tier) that cause these users to either self-regulate or pay for the
> > necessary
> >  upgrades to your infrastructure.
> >
> > Claiming to deliver "unlimited" service and then shaping it is, IMHO, a
> > questionable business practice at best.
> >
> > Owen
> >
> > On Aug 22, 2012, at 12:06 , Shahab Vahabzadeh 
> > wrote:
> >
> > What I am talking mostly is some services like COA, in which you can
> > change users shape time-base and periodically without disconnecting them.
> >
> > On Wed, Aug 22, 2012 at 11:33 PM, Owen DeLong  wrote:
> >
> >> If you want to control usage that way, sell a metered product. Bill the
> >> heavy users more for their usage.
> >>
> >> Otherwise, price your services such that you can build adequate upstream
> >> capacity to serve your users.
> >>
> >> I'm not a fan of using "rateshaping" (which is what you are describing)
> >> to cover for inadequate facilities.
> >>
> >> Owen
> >>
> >> On Aug 22, 2012, at 11:57 , Shahab Vahabzadeh 
> >> wrote:
> >>
> >> Dear Owen,
> >> As you know in pick time of internet usage like midnight in which we
> have
> >> free-access times too, some users which really want to use internet for
> >> their daily usage and not downloading or using peer-to-peer services
> >> unfairly affecting this problem.
> >> Some companies are using some polices for users to solve this problem.
> >> Do you have any Idea?
> >> Thanks
> >>
> >> On Wed, Aug 22, 2012 at 11:22 PM, Owen DeLong  wrote:
> >>
> >>> I think the first step would be to define what you mean by fair use.
> >>>
> >>> Are you talking in the DMCA sense of the term, the legal sense of the
> >>> term as applies
> >>> to IP in other areas, or something else?
> >>>
> >>> Owen
> >>>
> >>> On Aug 22, 2012, at 11:40 , Shahab Vahabzadeh  >
> >>> wrote:
> >>>
> >>> > Hello Everybody,
> >>> > Has any body any good and easy setup idea for "Fair Use Policy"
> >>> service for
> >>> > my xdsl customers?!
> >>> > Can do this in the BRAS side and nothing done with accounting and
> >>> radius?
> >>> > Thanks
> >>> >
> >>> > --
> >>> > Regards,
> >>> > Shahab Vahabzadeh, Network Engineer and System Administrator
> >>> >
> >>> > Cell Phone: +1 (415) 871 0742
> >>> > PGP Key Fingerprint = 8E34 B335 D702 0CA7 5A81  C2EE 76A2 46C2 5367
> >>> BF90
> >>>
> >>>
> >>
> >>
> >> --
> >> Regards,
> >> Shahab Vahabzadeh, Network Engineer and System Administrator
> >>
> >> Cell Phone: +1 (415) 871 0742
> >> PGP Key Fingerprint = 8E34 B335 D702 0CA7 5A81  C2EE 76A2 46C2 5367 BF90
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >
> >
> > --
> > Regards,
> > Shahab Vahabzadeh, Network Engineer and System Administrator
> >
> > Cell Phone: +1 (415) 871 0742
> > PGP Key Fingerprint = 8E34 B335 D702 0CA7 5A81  C2EE 76A2 46C2 5367 BF90
> >
> >
> >
>
>
> --
> Regards,
> Shahab Vahabzadeh, Network Engineer and System Administrator
>
> Cell Phone: +1 (415) 871 0742
> PGP Key Fingerprint = 8E34 B335 D702 0CA7 5A81  C2EE 76A2 46C2 5367 BF90
>


Re: Fair Use Policy

2012-08-22 Thread Robert E. Seastrom

Hi Shahab,

You can find out how much bandwidth they're using by having that
reported periodically via RADIUS (or at least when the session ends,
worst case).  Store in database.  SELECT sum(blah) from foo where id="bar".

Next question is what do you want to do to them once they exceed their
bandwidth?  Drop them into a walled garden (different Virtual-Template
/ address pool)?  Turn their service off?  Rate shape the heck out of
them so they feel like it's 1993?

-r

Shahab Vahabzadeh  writes:

> Dear Owen,
> Would you please describe this some how more in my bussiness plan?
> I have both limited and unlimited users.
> For example I have these services in my package:
> 512Kb-5GB-1Month
> 256Kb-Unlimit-1Month
> And like this.
> Thanks
>
> On Thu, Aug 23, 2012 at 12:02 AM, Owen DeLong  wrote:
>
>> Right... more specific aspect of the same coin. If you have adequate
>> facilities, you don't need to shape users.
>> If you have users that are overconsuming for your pricing model, there are
>> two good solutions:
>>
>> 1. Raise the prices enough for everyone that you can absorb these users.
>>  2. Implement usage-based charges (or usage based charges above a certain
>> usage tier) that cause these users to either self-regulate or pay for the
>> necessary
>>  upgrades to your infrastructure.
>>
>> Claiming to deliver "unlimited" service and then shaping it is, IMHO, a
>> questionable business practice at best.
>>
>> Owen
>>
>> On Aug 22, 2012, at 12:06 , Shahab Vahabzadeh 
>> wrote:
>>
>> What I am talking mostly is some services like COA, in which you can
>> change users shape time-base and periodically without disconnecting them.
>>
>> On Wed, Aug 22, 2012 at 11:33 PM, Owen DeLong  wrote:
>>
>>> If you want to control usage that way, sell a metered product. Bill the
>>> heavy users more for their usage.
>>>
>>> Otherwise, price your services such that you can build adequate upstream
>>> capacity to serve your users.
>>>
>>> I'm not a fan of using "rateshaping" (which is what you are describing)
>>> to cover for inadequate facilities.
>>>
>>> Owen
>>>
>>> On Aug 22, 2012, at 11:57 , Shahab Vahabzadeh 
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>> Dear Owen,
>>> As you know in pick time of internet usage like midnight in which we have
>>> free-access times too, some users which really want to use internet for
>>> their daily usage and not downloading or using peer-to-peer services
>>> unfairly affecting this problem.
>>> Some companies are using some polices for users to solve this problem.
>>> Do you have any Idea?
>>> Thanks
>>>
>>> On Wed, Aug 22, 2012 at 11:22 PM, Owen DeLong  wrote:
>>>
 I think the first step would be to define what you mean by fair use.

 Are you talking in the DMCA sense of the term, the legal sense of the
 term as applies
 to IP in other areas, or something else?

 Owen

 On Aug 22, 2012, at 11:40 , Shahab Vahabzadeh 
 wrote:

 > Hello Everybody,
 > Has any body any good and easy setup idea for "Fair Use Policy"
 service for
 > my xdsl customers?!
 > Can do this in the BRAS side and nothing done with accounting and
 radius?
 > Thanks
 >
 > --
 > Regards,
 > Shahab Vahabzadeh, Network Engineer and System Administrator
 >
 > Cell Phone: +1 (415) 871 0742
 > PGP Key Fingerprint = 8E34 B335 D702 0CA7 5A81  C2EE 76A2 46C2 5367
 BF90


>>>
>>>
>>> --
>>> Regards,
>>> Shahab Vahabzadeh, Network Engineer and System Administrator
>>>
>>> Cell Phone: +1 (415) 871 0742
>>> PGP Key Fingerprint = 8E34 B335 D702 0CA7 5A81  C2EE 76A2 46C2 5367 BF90
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> Regards,
>> Shahab Vahabzadeh, Network Engineer and System Administrator
>>
>> Cell Phone: +1 (415) 871 0742
>> PGP Key Fingerprint = 8E34 B335 D702 0CA7 5A81  C2EE 76A2 46C2 5367 BF90
>>
>>
>>
>
>
> -- 
> Regards,
> Shahab Vahabzadeh, Network Engineer and System Administrator
>
> Cell Phone: +1 (415) 871 0742
> PGP Key Fingerprint = 8E34 B335 D702 0CA7 5A81  C2EE 76A2 46C2 5367 BF90



Re: Fair Use Policy

2012-08-22 Thread Shahab Vahabzadeh
Dear Owen,
Would you please describe this some how more in my bussiness plan?
I have both limited and unlimited users.
For example I have these services in my package:
512Kb-5GB-1Month
256Kb-Unlimit-1Month
And like this.
Thanks

On Thu, Aug 23, 2012 at 12:02 AM, Owen DeLong  wrote:

> Right... more specific aspect of the same coin. If you have adequate
> facilities, you don't need to shape users.
> If you have users that are overconsuming for your pricing model, there are
> two good solutions:
>
> 1. Raise the prices enough for everyone that you can absorb these users.
>  2. Implement usage-based charges (or usage based charges above a certain
> usage tier) that cause these users to either self-regulate or pay for the
> necessary
>  upgrades to your infrastructure.
>
> Claiming to deliver "unlimited" service and then shaping it is, IMHO, a
> questionable business practice at best.
>
> Owen
>
> On Aug 22, 2012, at 12:06 , Shahab Vahabzadeh 
> wrote:
>
> What I am talking mostly is some services like COA, in which you can
> change users shape time-base and periodically without disconnecting them.
>
> On Wed, Aug 22, 2012 at 11:33 PM, Owen DeLong  wrote:
>
>> If you want to control usage that way, sell a metered product. Bill the
>> heavy users more for their usage.
>>
>> Otherwise, price your services such that you can build adequate upstream
>> capacity to serve your users.
>>
>> I'm not a fan of using "rateshaping" (which is what you are describing)
>> to cover for inadequate facilities.
>>
>> Owen
>>
>> On Aug 22, 2012, at 11:57 , Shahab Vahabzadeh 
>> wrote:
>>
>> Dear Owen,
>> As you know in pick time of internet usage like midnight in which we have
>> free-access times too, some users which really want to use internet for
>> their daily usage and not downloading or using peer-to-peer services
>> unfairly affecting this problem.
>> Some companies are using some polices for users to solve this problem.
>> Do you have any Idea?
>> Thanks
>>
>> On Wed, Aug 22, 2012 at 11:22 PM, Owen DeLong  wrote:
>>
>>> I think the first step would be to define what you mean by fair use.
>>>
>>> Are you talking in the DMCA sense of the term, the legal sense of the
>>> term as applies
>>> to IP in other areas, or something else?
>>>
>>> Owen
>>>
>>> On Aug 22, 2012, at 11:40 , Shahab Vahabzadeh 
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>> > Hello Everybody,
>>> > Has any body any good and easy setup idea for "Fair Use Policy"
>>> service for
>>> > my xdsl customers?!
>>> > Can do this in the BRAS side and nothing done with accounting and
>>> radius?
>>> > Thanks
>>> >
>>> > --
>>> > Regards,
>>> > Shahab Vahabzadeh, Network Engineer and System Administrator
>>> >
>>> > Cell Phone: +1 (415) 871 0742
>>> > PGP Key Fingerprint = 8E34 B335 D702 0CA7 5A81  C2EE 76A2 46C2 5367
>>> BF90
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> Regards,
>> Shahab Vahabzadeh, Network Engineer and System Administrator
>>
>> Cell Phone: +1 (415) 871 0742
>> PGP Key Fingerprint = 8E34 B335 D702 0CA7 5A81  C2EE 76A2 46C2 5367 BF90
>>
>>
>>
>
>
> --
> Regards,
> Shahab Vahabzadeh, Network Engineer and System Administrator
>
> Cell Phone: +1 (415) 871 0742
> PGP Key Fingerprint = 8E34 B335 D702 0CA7 5A81  C2EE 76A2 46C2 5367 BF90
>
>
>


-- 
Regards,
Shahab Vahabzadeh, Network Engineer and System Administrator

Cell Phone: +1 (415) 871 0742
PGP Key Fingerprint = 8E34 B335 D702 0CA7 5A81  C2EE 76A2 46C2 5367 BF90


Re: Fair Use Policy

2012-08-22 Thread Shahab Vahabzadeh
I am using Cisco 7206 VXR with NPE-G2 as my BRAS's.

On Wed, Aug 22, 2012 at 11:40 PM, Alastair Johnson  wrote:

> Depends on your BRAS. Some support time-of-day or other threshold based
> policy changes.
>
> Generally speaking though you would be better going to an external policy
> engine.
>
> -Original Message-
> From: Shahab Vahabzadeh 
> Date: Wed, 22 Aug 2012 23:36:40
> To: Owen DeLong
> Cc: 
> Subject: Re: Fair Use Policy
>
> What I am talking mostly is some services like COA, in which you can change
> users shape time-base and periodically without disconnecting them.
>
> On Wed, Aug 22, 2012 at 11:33 PM, Owen DeLong  wrote:
>
> > If you want to control usage that way, sell a metered product. Bill the
> > heavy users more for their usage.
> >
> > Otherwise, price your services such that you can build adequate upstream
> > capacity to serve your users.
> >
> > I'm not a fan of using "rateshaping" (which is what you are describing)
> to
> > cover for inadequate facilities.
> >
> > Owen
> >
> > On Aug 22, 2012, at 11:57 , Shahab Vahabzadeh 
> > wrote:
> >
> > Dear Owen,
> > As you know in pick time of internet usage like midnight in which we have
> > free-access times too, some users which really want to use internet for
> > their daily usage and not downloading or using peer-to-peer services
> > unfairly affecting this problem.
> > Some companies are using some polices for users to solve this problem.
> > Do you have any Idea?
> > Thanks
> >
> > On Wed, Aug 22, 2012 at 11:22 PM, Owen DeLong  wrote:
> >
> >> I think the first step would be to define what you mean by fair use.
> >>
> >> Are you talking in the DMCA sense of the term, the legal sense of the
> >> term as applies
> >> to IP in other areas, or something else?
> >>
> >> Owen
> >>
> >> On Aug 22, 2012, at 11:40 , Shahab Vahabzadeh 
> >> wrote:
> >>
> >> > Hello Everybody,
> >> > Has any body any good and easy setup idea for "Fair Use Policy"
> service
> >> for
> >> > my xdsl customers?!
> >> > Can do this in the BRAS side and nothing done with accounting and
> >> radius?
> >> > Thanks
> >> >
> >> > --
> >> > Regards,
> >> > Shahab Vahabzadeh, Network Engineer and System Administrator
> >> >
> >> > Cell Phone: +1 (415) 871 0742
> >> > PGP Key Fingerprint = 8E34 B335 D702 0CA7 5A81  C2EE 76A2 46C2 5367
> BF90
> >>
> >>
> >
> >
> > --
> > Regards,
> > Shahab Vahabzadeh, Network Engineer and System Administrator
> >
> > Cell Phone: +1 (415) 871 0742
> > PGP Key Fingerprint = 8E34 B335 D702 0CA7 5A81  C2EE 76A2 46C2 5367 BF90
> >
> >
> >
>
>
> --
> Regards,
> Shahab Vahabzadeh, Network Engineer and System Administrator
>
> Cell Phone: +1 (415) 871 0742
> PGP Key Fingerprint = 8E34 B335 D702 0CA7 5A81  C2EE 76A2 46C2 5367 BF90
>



-- 
Regards,
Shahab Vahabzadeh, Network Engineer and System Administrator

Cell Phone: +1 (415) 871 0742
PGP Key Fingerprint = 8E34 B335 D702 0CA7 5A81  C2EE 76A2 46C2 5367 BF90


Re: Fair Use Policy

2012-08-22 Thread Shahab Vahabzadeh
What I am talking mostly is some services like COA, in which you can change
users shape time-base and periodically without disconnecting them.

On Wed, Aug 22, 2012 at 11:33 PM, Owen DeLong  wrote:

> If you want to control usage that way, sell a metered product. Bill the
> heavy users more for their usage.
>
> Otherwise, price your services such that you can build adequate upstream
> capacity to serve your users.
>
> I'm not a fan of using "rateshaping" (which is what you are describing) to
> cover for inadequate facilities.
>
> Owen
>
> On Aug 22, 2012, at 11:57 , Shahab Vahabzadeh 
> wrote:
>
> Dear Owen,
> As you know in pick time of internet usage like midnight in which we have
> free-access times too, some users which really want to use internet for
> their daily usage and not downloading or using peer-to-peer services
> unfairly affecting this problem.
> Some companies are using some polices for users to solve this problem.
> Do you have any Idea?
> Thanks
>
> On Wed, Aug 22, 2012 at 11:22 PM, Owen DeLong  wrote:
>
>> I think the first step would be to define what you mean by fair use.
>>
>> Are you talking in the DMCA sense of the term, the legal sense of the
>> term as applies
>> to IP in other areas, or something else?
>>
>> Owen
>>
>> On Aug 22, 2012, at 11:40 , Shahab Vahabzadeh 
>> wrote:
>>
>> > Hello Everybody,
>> > Has any body any good and easy setup idea for "Fair Use Policy" service
>> for
>> > my xdsl customers?!
>> > Can do this in the BRAS side and nothing done with accounting and
>> radius?
>> > Thanks
>> >
>> > --
>> > Regards,
>> > Shahab Vahabzadeh, Network Engineer and System Administrator
>> >
>> > Cell Phone: +1 (415) 871 0742
>> > PGP Key Fingerprint = 8E34 B335 D702 0CA7 5A81  C2EE 76A2 46C2 5367 BF90
>>
>>
>
>
> --
> Regards,
> Shahab Vahabzadeh, Network Engineer and System Administrator
>
> Cell Phone: +1 (415) 871 0742
> PGP Key Fingerprint = 8E34 B335 D702 0CA7 5A81  C2EE 76A2 46C2 5367 BF90
>
>
>


-- 
Regards,
Shahab Vahabzadeh, Network Engineer and System Administrator

Cell Phone: +1 (415) 871 0742
PGP Key Fingerprint = 8E34 B335 D702 0CA7 5A81  C2EE 76A2 46C2 5367 BF90


Re: Fair Use Policy

2012-08-22 Thread Shahab Vahabzadeh
Dear Owen,
As you know in pick time of internet usage like midnight in which we have
free-access times too, some users which really want to use internet for
their daily usage and not downloading or using peer-to-peer services
unfairly affecting this problem.
Some companies are using some polices for users to solve this problem.
Do you have any Idea?
Thanks

On Wed, Aug 22, 2012 at 11:22 PM, Owen DeLong  wrote:

> I think the first step would be to define what you mean by fair use.
>
> Are you talking in the DMCA sense of the term, the legal sense of the term
> as applies
> to IP in other areas, or something else?
>
> Owen
>
> On Aug 22, 2012, at 11:40 , Shahab Vahabzadeh 
> wrote:
>
> > Hello Everybody,
> > Has any body any good and easy setup idea for "Fair Use Policy" service
> for
> > my xdsl customers?!
> > Can do this in the BRAS side and nothing done with accounting and radius?
> > Thanks
> >
> > --
> > Regards,
> > Shahab Vahabzadeh, Network Engineer and System Administrator
> >
> > Cell Phone: +1 (415) 871 0742
> > PGP Key Fingerprint = 8E34 B335 D702 0CA7 5A81  C2EE 76A2 46C2 5367 BF90
>
>


-- 
Regards,
Shahab Vahabzadeh, Network Engineer and System Administrator

Cell Phone: +1 (415) 871 0742
PGP Key Fingerprint = 8E34 B335 D702 0CA7 5A81  C2EE 76A2 46C2 5367 BF90