Send Your “P2P Bill of Rights” Suggestions to: Comcast Corp., 666 Road to Damascus …
It’s quite a road-to-Damascus conversion Comcast (CMCSA) is having these days, isn’t it?
Back in February the cable company claimed it was perfectly reasonable for it to throttle or degrade the performance of peer-to-peer file-sharing services on its broadband network. But when Federal Communications Commission Chairman Kevin Martin suggested the agency was mulling action against it, Comcast had a moment of clarity. In March, it said it would work with BitTorrent to develop P2P-friendly network capacity-management techniques. And today it announced plans for an industry-wide effort to create a “P2P Bill of Rights and Responsibilities.”
The document–which is to be created with the help of other Internet service providers, P2P companies and content providers–would specify how ISPs should manage P2P applications running on their networks and how consumers should use them. Said Tony Werner, Comcast Cable’s Chief Technology Officer, “By having this framework in place, we will help P2P companies, ISPs and content owners find common ground to support consumers who want to use P2P applications to deliver legal content.”
And by announcing its plans to create this framework right before the FCC hearing on its P2P-throttling techniques to be held at Stanford (in Palo Alto, Calif.) Thursday, Comcast is hoping the agency won’t take action against it for violating its Net neutrality rules.





Comments
From one “ski” to another, great article, John!!
Today, Comcast Corporation and Pando Networks announced that they will lead the industry to create a “P2P Bill of Rights and Responsibilities” for users and ISPs. With an FCC hearing on Comcast’s anti-peer-to-peer practices scheduled for later this week, this is hardly a surprise. Once again, Comcast makes another sweetheart-sounding deal, but at the wrong time, and with the wrong sweetheart.
It takes a special kind of arrogance for a company that sells Internet Access to team up with another company that sells Content Delivery and together decide what rights and responsibilities that the world’s Internet users should have.
As in its earlier “deal” with BitTorrent, Inc., Comcast’s announcement today doesn’t change any of the facts it faces: in 2006, it assured Congress that network neutrality laws were not necessary, saying it would not “deny, delay, or degrade” its customers in order to deal with traffic congestion. Within a year it was caught secretly doing exactly that! Even after a long string of deceptive and deflective statements and tactics, Comcast continues to degrade their traffic today.
As was the case in the BitTorrent “deal,” neither Comcast Corporation nor Pando Networks represents the millions of customers and other members of the Internet community who were impacted when Comcast secretly launched its anti-P2P attack.
Today’s announcement comes less than 48 hours from the US Federal Communication Committee’s public hearing at Stanford University. There, the FCC is scheduled to hear from two panels of experts followed by two hours of public testimony on the Comcast incident specifically as well as similar industry practices in general.
No doubt we will soon see Comcast and Pando Networking executives start to explain why today’s “deal” signals that Network Neutrality regulation is not needed in the Broadband Marketplace.
Robert M. “Robb” Topolski
Posted by Robb Topolski at April 15th, 2008 at 4:54 pmFour words.
“FCC” By Eric Idle.
Posted by Dina Aniceto at April 16th, 2008 at 7:46 am