New York
- Along with known file-sharing traffic throttler Comcast (NASD: CMCSA), fellow broadband provider
Cox Communications is also interfering with the usage of BitTorrent and similar
peer-to-peer applications by its subscribers, the Associated Press reported,
citing research conducted by German's Max Planck Institute for Software
Systems. The study monitored over 8,000 Internet users worldwide, and found conclusive
evidence of blocked file-sharing connections only by Comcast, Cox and Singapore's
StarHub.
It found that 62% of the 788 Comcast subscribers who participated in
the study had connections blocked, along with 54% of Cox subscribers; the study
also found evidence of blocking at seven other U.S. cable broadband ISPs, but
not in the numbers seen at Comcast or Cox.
After previous research found Comcast to be
throttling file-sharing traffic, the Federal Communications Commission held
hearings and launched an investigation, which remains open.
Despite Comcast's
initial response that it was only managing network traffic at peak congestion
hours, the study found Comcast and Cox to be blocking file-sharing at all hours
of the day.
"This research proves beyond a shadow of a doubt that
consumers, Congress and the FCC must urgently pursue the complaints against
network providers. Now is the time to send a clear signal to the market that
blocking consumers' access to the lawful Internet content of their choice is
out of bounds," said Ben Scott, policy director at Free Press, which
promotes democratic media policies.
Related Links:
http://snipurl.com/29102
(AP)
http://broadband.mpi-sws.mpg.de/transparency/results/
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Being a Cavalier customer, I
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