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来源类型 | Opinion |
规范类型 | 评论 |
Five Things You Should Know About the Netflix-Comcast Deal | |
Laura DeNardis; Laura DeNardis | |
发表日期 | 2014-02-28 |
出处 | 2014 |
语种 | 英语 |
摘要 | ![]() Edward Snowden’s NSA surveillance disclosures have drawn global attention to the sometimes esoteric world of Internet infrastructure governance. Political reactions have ranged from wanting to “route around” American Internet exchange points to walling off services through data localization and nation-specific cloud computing. But these responses sometimes overlook how the Internet works in practice. Now Comcast and Netflix have announced that they will directly interconnect their networks, rather than having Netflix traffic flow first through a third-party network. With this, another layer of Internet architecture—interconnection and peering—is under the microscope. The Internet is not actually a cloud but a collection of networks that technically conjoin, or “interconnect,” and exchange traffic based on negotiated business arrangements known as “peering” or “transit” agreements. Many have reacted with anger to this recent interconnection announcement, viewing it as a direct threat to the principle of net neutrality. But the responses here again underscore the lack of technical and economic understanding of how the Internet works—which could be attributable to the lack of transparency in this space. Here are five things to keep in mind when you think about the Netflix-Comcast (and soon, perhaps, Netflix-Verizon and Netflix-AT&T) deal. 1. Content companies are already globally connected to Internet access providers. From an engineering perspective, bringing multimedia content closer to “eyeballs” without clogging up a tertiary network is a no-brainer: It decreases delays and optimizes bandwidth consumption. This content distribution is particularly important for bandwidth-consumptive applications like video. 2. Paid interconnection is already the norm. Why would it be more acceptable for Netflix to pay another company, Cogent, for connectivity to Comcast than for Netflix to pay Comcast directly? If anything, a content company connecting directly to an edge network is in the public interest because it avoids susceptibility to a possible outage from peering disputes between an intermediary network and a customer network. Recall that a 2008 Internet outage occurred because of a Cogent-Sprint interconnection dispute. Netflix connecting directly to Comcast circumvents possible outages due to peering disputes beyond its control. 3. This is not a death knell for net neutrality. Given the recent ruling on net neutrality and the history of complaints against Comcast for throttling peer-to-peer file sharing traffic, it is not surprising that many conflate interconnection with net neutrality traffic prioritization concerns. This deal would also not be receiving as much attention if there was adequate broadband competition and less media concentration (think proposed Comcast-Time Warner Cable merger). But, to use a physical world traffic example, interconnection is about building new roads and net neutrality is about speed limits and speed bumps on the roads. There is a significant difference between establishing a no-discrimination rule versus regulating who is allowed to connect to whom. 4. There are good public-interest reasons to pay attention to interconnection between companies. 5. Interconnection needs more transparency and best practices. Maybe we can read these reports while watching new Netflix episodes ofOrange Is the New Black. |
主题 | Internet Governance & Jurisdiction, Conflict Management & Security |
URL | https://www.cigionline.org/articles/five-things-you-should-know-about-netflix-comcast-deal |
来源智库 | Centre for International Governance Innovation (Canada) |
资源类型 | 智库出版物 |
条目标识符 | http://119.78.100.153/handle/2XGU8XDN/182715 |
推荐引用方式 GB/T 7714 | Laura DeNardis,Laura DeNardis. Five Things You Should Know About the Netflix-Comcast Deal. 2014. |
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