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Advocacy Groups Skeptical of P-to-P Bill of Rights Idea
- From: Brian Warkoczeski
- Date: Wed Apr 16 17:08:58 2008
Advocacy Groups Skeptical of P-to-P Bill of Rights Idea
Grant Gross, IDG News Service, www.yahoo.com
April 16, 2008
Two consumer-focused advocacy groups have objected to a P-to-P bill of
rights and responsibilities proposed by Comcast and Pando Networks,
saying the companies don't have the authority to speak for Internet users.
Cable modem provider Comcast seems to be trying to lessen criticism of
its network management practices after press reports last October showed
Comcast was throttling BitTorrent traffic, said Gigi Sohn, president of
Public Knowledge, a digital rights group.
The P-to-P (peer-to-peer) bill of rights effort, announced Tuesday,
comes after Comcast last month announced an agreement with BitTorrent
Inc., a leading user of the BitTorrent P-to-P protocol, with the two
companies agreeing to work together to solve network management issues.
Pando Networks is a maker of P-to-P software.
"This so-called agreement is simply another way for Comcast to try to
evade punishment for its blocking and degrading of peer-to-peer services
for its customers," Sohn said in an e-mail. "As with the 'agreement'
with BitTorrent, today's announcement is long on rhetoric and short on
detail."
Sohn called Comcast's idea for a customer bill of rights "ludicrous."
"Comcast should fix its internal problems with customers being kicked
off the Internet service for no good reason, or [who] are disappointed
about having programming switched to expensive digital services before
it starts pretending to solve the problems of the Internet that it
helped to cause," Sohn said.
Marvin Ammori, general counsel of advocacy group Free Press, also
questioned the bill of rights.
"Comcast and a company called Pando have declared themselves the
arbiters of consumers' rights and responsibilities," he said in an
e-mail. "Their announcement gives little information about the
arrangement, but Comcast's behavior tells us everything we need to know.
For the past year, Comcast has been blocking peer-to-peer applications--
a practice that they continue to this day with no indication of when or
if they plan to stop."
Comcast seems to be trying to divert a U.S. Federal Communications
Commission inquiry into the traffic blocking, Ammori said. The FCC has
scheduled a hearing on network management and net neutrality at Stanford
University in California Thursday.
"Comcast's announcement is little more than the fox telling the farmer,
'I'll guard the henhouse, you can go home,'" he said. "And that's all
the attention it deserves."
A Comcast spokeswoman didn't immediately respond to a request for
comments. A representative of LimeWire, the distributor of a widely used
P-to-P software package, also didn't immediately respond to a request
for comments on the Comcast proposal.
But an FCC spokesman said Wednesday the Comcast/Pando idea deserves to
be considered. The FCC has invited representatives of the two companies
to speak at the Thursday hearing, said spokesman Robert Kenny.
"Establishing a specific and clearly defined P-to-P Bill of Rights is an
interesting idea with potentially important implications for all
Internet users," Kenny said. "We look forward to more fully
understanding the goals, scope and time frame of this industry effort."
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