Interesting People mailing list archives
Re: Call for "ISP Point of Contact" Database for Neutrality "Event" Concerns
From: David Farber <dave () farber net>
Date: Wed, 9 Apr 2008 00:56:58 -0700
________________________________________ From: Suresh Ramasubramanian [suresh () hserus net] Sent: Tuesday, April 08, 2008 9:20 PM To: David Farber Cc: lauren () vortex com Subject: Re: [IP] Call for "ISP Point of Contact" Database for Neutrality "Event" Concerns David Farber [08/04/08 10:11 -0700]:
From: Lauren Weinstein [lauren () vortex com] of my primary concerns was that many seemingly reportable "events" that can occur on the Internet -- and that might seem on their face to be network neutrality "violations" -- might actually be caused by innocent technical issues related to ISP operations, testing
Doesnt help that people are so ready to leap to conclusions, eh? This recent little episode about colorado.edu's tests and comcast for example
It is particularly troubling that there generally is no routine mechanism available for early contact by neutrality researchers with appropriate *high level* ISP representatives during investigations
Why should there be and why should high level ISP representatives actually contact you directly?
of network issues that may relate to neutrality concerns. Wide publication of possibly alarming test results followed by ISP denials in innocent cases is decidedly suboptimal for everyone.
Everyone? Who, pray? The researchers who screw up and then have to retract? The ISP? J.Random IP poster? "NN Squad" member?
community, I strongly believe that there would be major positive benefit for all parties if better communications between these groups was available.
Chicken and egg. If "these groups" would actually learn to apply at least some statistical rigor to your crusade for network neutrality, that'd be great. And it might help ISPs come forward. Not when all the average network neutrality crusader does is issue this steady stream of emails to IP, blog posts etc simply criticizing this, that and everything else as a real or more often than not an imagined breach of neutrality.
I hereby offer NNSquad's services to establish a database of individuals who would be the designated ISP point of contacts in cases of detected network events that are suggestive of possible network neutrality concerns in a broad sense.
Sigh. If it is a large enough operational issue to be noticed by you (end user on a cable modem), it is probably affecting service enough to be noticed on nanog and various other forums, and fixed. And ISP point of contact databases - between ISPs, and ISPs to law enforcement say - are dime a dozen. It would be very rare indeed, what you suggest - ISPs providing a db of their senior executives to someone just because they dont want to be blogged about, or written up on IP. Especially where they more often than not do have their own people reading IP who can speak up in their own defense, debunk your next fanciful theory etc etc. I frankly see no point at all in your new database, but that's just me. srs ------------------------------------------- Archives: http://www.listbox.com/member/archive/247/=now RSS Feed: http://www.listbox.com/member/archive/rss/247/ Powered by Listbox: http://www.listbox.com
Current thread:
- Call for "ISP Point of Contact" Database for Neutrality "Event" Concerns David Farber (Apr 08)
- <Possible follow-ups>
- Re: Call for "ISP Point of Contact" Database for Neutrality "Event" Concerns David Farber (Apr 08)
- Re: Call for "ISP Point of Contact" Database for Neutrality "Event" Concerns David Farber (Apr 09)
- Re: Call for "ISP Point of Contact" Database for Neutrality "Event" Concerns David Farber (Apr 09)