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Subject: [IP] Comcast FCC filing shows gap between hype, bandwidth reality




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From: dewayne@warpspeed.com (Dewayne Hendricks)
Date: February 13, 2008 9:19:08 PM EST
To: Dewayne-Net Technology List <xyzzy@warpspeed.com>
Subject: [Dewayne-Net] Comcast FCC filing shows gap between hype, bandwidth reality

Comcast FCC filing shows gap between hype, bandwidth reality

By Nate Anderson | Published: February 13, 2008 - 12:42PM CT
<http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20080213-comcast-discloses-network-management-practices.html >

Comcast has come clean to the FCC about its secretive traffic- management practices... not that Comcast thinks it has been keeping secrets. According to its 57-page filing, "experience suggests that Comcast needs to ensure that its disclosures on matters such as network management are timely and in sufficient detail to ensure transparency while not providing a roadmap to those who would seek to defeat its efforts at reasonable network management." While that doesn't explain the months of stonewalling from the company, at least now we have some official answers to how Comcast's Sandvine network management system works.
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The FCC launched an investigation into Comcast's network management practices earlier this year after Vuze, a company that uses P2P to legally distribute video content, objected to Comcast's practice of degrading P2P connections on its network. Comcast has finally changed its Terms of Service to make more clear that the company reserves this right, but the FCC wants to know whether Comcast's system goes beyond "reasonable network management."

How it works

To understand the system, it's important to realize that each household with cable lacks an individual line back to the central office. Instead, homes are wired up to local nodes, with every home on that node drawing from the same pool of bandwidth. In the Comcast network, each node typically serves 450 households, but when as few as 15 BitTorrent upload sessions are running concurrently, all 450 homes can see their network access impeded enough to be noticeable when surfing and making VoIP calls. This is due to a second feature of cable networks (and ADSL networks): upload bandwidth is far more limited than download bandwidth.

These networks were built to suck data from the center of the 'Net to the edges. P2P inverts that model, pulling data directly from other users along the edge of the network. This creates a problem for Comcast, which asserts that it applies no blocking, delaying, or throttling to downloads, no matter how many are proceeding simultaneously on a local node.

But Comcast doesn't delay all P2P uploads, either. According to its filing, network management only kicks in "when P2P unidirectional upload sessions (i.e., sessions where a computer is only uploading and not simultaneously uploading and downloading) reach a predetermined congestion threshold in a particular neighborhood." The goal here is to stop unattended machines from using significant upload bandwidth, though Comcast says that the "delay" is removed once the "number of active uploading sessions drops below that threshold."

How does the delay work? Exactly as the AP and the EFF have claimed: TCP reset packets. These are generated from Comcast's network management hardware and tell the uploading computer that some sort of error has developed in the connection and that it needs to start over.

According to Comcast, "it is not accurate to describe these reset packets as 'forged'," though it doesn't say why. (To the uploading computer, the packets appear to come from the machine on the other end of the connection.) Comcast also calls critics guilty of "inflammatory hyperbole" on this point.

[snip]


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