The Internet should be fair—not free—to everyone

The heaviest users comprise just two per cent of the total

by the editors on Friday, February 18, 2011 9:20am - 827 Comments
The Internet should be fair - not free - to everyone

Clement Allard/CP

The Internet is a many-splendoured thing. Among its countless and revolutionary contributions to 21st-century life has been the broad democratization of information and opinion. And this has given rise to the popular conceit that everything about the Internet should be free. Not so.

In spite of its many gifts, the Internet is certainly not costless. Billions of dollars of private capital have been invested in building and maintaining Canada’s high-speed Internet network. And more investment is continually required as demand and new services grow exponentially. Access to the Internet is thus like most other things in life: it has a real cost, and if you want more you should expect to pay more.

Last week we criticized the federal government for using Twitter to reverse a key decision from the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission, an independent agency, regarding Internet access pricing. This week we examine the practical implications of the move.

At issue is the ability of Internet carriers such as Bell Canada and Rogers Communications (the parent company of Maclean’s) to establish usage-based billing, by which all customers pay incrementally for the service they use. In its recent ruling, the CRTC agreed that usage-based billing offers the fairest and most convenient means of allocating Internet access. Currently, small Internet providers who connect to the carriers’ existing networks are able to offer unlimited access plans, which attract the heaviest bandwidth users and lead to network congestion for everyone.

The average Canadian Internet user consumes approximately 16 gigabytes of data per month. By contrast, the heaviest users, who comprise just two per cent of the total, gobble up hundreds of gigs on a monthly basis. And in the same way that roads become congested during rush hour, Internet networks also become clogged at peak times due to these heavy users. Solving this situation requires a means of reducing congestion.

According to the CRTC, management of Internet traffic congestion is best done through “transparent, economic measures.” And the most practical is the concept that heavy users should pay more. “As a general rule, ordinary customers… should not have to fund the bandwidth used by the heaviest retail Internet customers,” says a CRTC release. Closing a loophole by which average users were forced to subsidize the massive consumption of a few heavy users is in keeping with a commitment to fairness and market-oriented solutions.

It’s also worth noting that the CRTC did not ignore the situation of small independent providers. To maintain a competitive environment and encourage a diversity of services, the regulatory body also mandated that the large Internet carriers provide a 15 per cent “wholesale” discount to these smaller firms. Unfortunately, this significant quid pro quo has been entirely lost in the one-sided discussion over usage-based billing.

As a result of wild online outcries from the heaviest users and their Internet service providers, Prime Minister Stephen Harper quickly sent out a tweet that he was unhappy with the CRTC’s decision. Industry Minister Tony Clement followed up with his own Twitter posting that the agency would be forced to drop its existing policy and “go back to [the] drawing board.”

Such a casual approach to important public policy is an embarrassment to the government. It’s also another example of how the Harper government occasionally allows populism to interfere with sound decision-making. In much the same way the Conservatives seem convinced our country is besieged by criminals, they are now encouraging the popular delusion that usage-based billing will condemn Canada to backwater Internet status. Rather, we have one of the fastest and most modern Internet networks in the world.

There are no detached observers in the debate over Internet access. Everyone has a stake in the system, either as consumer or provider. Customers who’ve been receiving subsidized Internet service can naturally be expected to complain about any new system that forces them to pay for what they use. But on the whole, the CRTC’s original decision struck an appropriate balance. It protected the vast majority of average users while providing heavy users with a competitive marketplace and small Internet firms with a 15 per cent wholesale advantage. That may not be free, but it’s certainly fair.



Last month, Maclean’s editorialized on the lack of attention paid to minimum beer prices in Canada (“Why is your government standing in the way of cheaper beer?” Jan. 24, 2011). We’re pleased to see Ontario Progressive Conservative Leader Tim Hudak has since taken up the case, so to speak, and is arguing against minimum pricing. It’s a policy worth sharing with the whole country.

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  • Greg Jankowski

    This article is extremely bias, as we all know MacLeans is owned by Rogers Communications.

    Aside from this, they are trying to deceive the entire nation and they take us for fools. Whether accurate or not, 16GB average bandwidth per user may be the average now, however many new information sources are becoming available which require much more bandwidth. This creates a discrimination of what internet users can view (less HD videos for educational purposes, and innovative technologies).

    Overall this is a complete absurd embarrassment and insult to the intelligence of the citizens in our nation. This is the information age, and internet profits earned by large telecom companies are already extravagant. The greed associated with this is pathetic and I have lost much respect for the management of Rogers.

    How do we innovate new technologies (a highly respected industry in Canada) at a cost effective rate with UBB in place? This is anti-competition and extremely far from fair.

    Pathetic, absolutely pathetic. We are not fools. Consider the intelligence of the people of our nation before acting with avarice. We are well educated and many are outraged by this lobbying.

    Our government needs to be aware of consumers needs for competition

  • Mike J

    Why did Macleans remove the link to this article from their opinion page? Feeling a little foolish now are we?

  • bomac42

    Jim you started a good idea. To carry it a step farther, there should be rules in place to prevent telecommunications companies (Rogers, Bell) from ownership of news media as they are prone to do. The subsequent use of these news media companies (Macleans) to spout their propaganda is outrageous but expected. We need new rules on ownership with rigorous enforcement.

  • Ric

    Fair?? There is nothing fair that involves government. Its all about money. If you have money you get what you want. If you don't have money you get the shaft.

  • Joel

    Well, there you got it, I went through about 10 pages in the comment. I think there was about 2 persons who somewhat tried to agree with this hatchet job, perhaps to be different. It is very rare such an issue is as polarized against the author's intention as this one. Even a shocking Amiel editorial can't ever match this. There is no divide here, passing this would make everyone despise those responsibles. It's a bad business strategy to alienate almost all your clients. Even those 98% who don't use more than their ration.

    The problem here is just pure greed. Telecom is a monster in Canada and it's very hungry for cash. Some Canadians may spend as much as 10% of their yearly income on the telecom giants, with plenty in the 5% range. That's a huge chunk of change, going into a very few pockets of quite large corporations. Of course, that comes from being a postindustrial economy, we don't consume just food and solid goods, but entertainment and communication. So really, how large a portion of Canadian incomes do you want to engorge in? Your services are rarely prices with a reasonnable profit margin, such as that you'd find in a grocery, where something that cost them 89 cents is sold to you for 99 cents. You charge something that cost you a few pennies by the dollars.

    I have a friend in the US for instance who pays only 7$ (you read this right) for his cellphone. It's one of those phone he use just in case of an emergency, with pre-paid services. It's cheap alright, but it's a service someone can offer in the US, yet still make a profit off of it. Why isn't that possible here? Again, because Canadian telecom are all about maximizing profits beyond any reasonnable limits, shamelessly to. And when those companies grab a good chunk of the national incomes, you only have to ask: How much is enough?

    • Ronnie

      I live in Toronto and have a prepaid cell phone from 7-eleven that costs me just a bit over $2 a month. I use it just for emergencies. So now I buy a $25 card that is good for a year and the average cost is just over $2 a month. Shop around and you will find we have good deals here as well.

    • Stewart

      Lets take a look… I earn around 30k a year take home and my wife makes about 15k, that is 45k we have to play with, our cost for living (mortgage, condo fees, food, utilities not including communications, keeping a car) eats around 60% of my income so I have about 18k for other things. Phone (land line) is about $50 a month with long distance charges, cable is about $80 + extra for on demand stuff at a price of $6 per movie, say one movie a day = $42 a month more, internet is $80 + any over-usage charges (with 2 adult children living at home but in school that can be a lot of over-usage) + cell phones for self & wife assuming I make the kids pay their own… lets say another $200 a month lets see now just how much that is… that puts us in the $400 to $500 range per month JUST FOR COMMUNICATION SERVICES, that is like $6000 a year or about 7.5% of my income and this is assuming VERY LOW overage charges, on demand consumption, cell usage, etc and does not include any costs for online gaming, subscriptions, etc SO at this time many households are already paying closer to 10% of their combined household income on the telecoms…

      • Mike514

        Your bills seem a bit high. Not that I'm defending Rogers or Bell here, but 80 bucks a month for cable seems very steep. We pay less than half that, with a very good selection of channels. 80$ for Internet also seems steep. Again, we pay almost half that.

        Have you considered ditching the land line? We haven't had a land line in about 4 years now, as we both have cellphones. And the best part is that Bell no longer gets my money for a land line. Less money for Bell/Rogers is always a good thing. Cellphone long distance plans can be very competitive if you shop around.

  • Concered

    This article is pure Crap
    This Clearly shows the Rogers is trying to confuse Canadians

    Well You know what the People Vice is Stronger no matter what sick disgusting tatic Rogers uses

  • Regular User

    Isn't it embarrassing to be so transparent? MacLean's, you are a joke. I will never read another one of your article's again. I will never buy your print copies. And Rogers, you should try to hide your pay-offs a little better.

  • Bill hillier

    We all need to have our voices heard. We paid for everything these companies have, everything. Either through the monies we pay them every month or government money AND they have still returned tidy profits. If it wasn't for us, their customers, they would not exist. Then they insult us regularly. what ever happened to "the customer is always right".
    The single biggest thing that wll make us heard is to take our money back out of the corporate wallets. We need to actively look for alternatives to their services and switch where we can.
    Contact you elected representatives, voice your concerns often. Let them know that you care and are watching them closely. http://stopthemeter.ca http://www.facebook.com/openmedia.ca

  • Bob

    1) as noted Macleans is not an unbiased in this subject (given they are owned by the same people who what to impose the cap).

    2) one charge 5$ a G over the limit, when it costs only pennied per gig. in most normal area that price gouging.

    3) in a duopely there is no real competition unless artificially created.imagine if burger king and mcdonalds were the only two restaurants everywhere that you could buy from. then they could charge 50$ for a MAC and you would have little choice.

    4) why then are the caps so much lower here then the US. there the smallest cap i have seen is 200G (comcast). so there are other reasons. like trying to limit competition from NEXFLICKS/online demand (Rogers and Bell own o huge media outlets and are worried that they will lose the control.

    • http://www.jonathanblaine.com Jonathan Blaine

      Former Comcast marketing director here… Actually, the limit is 250 GB, not 200. It was imposed mainly to stop customers from operating file sharing services out of their basements. File sharing has effectively been blocked in Canada, so that is not a reason/excuse for Canadian cable companies for their draconian caps/overcharges. 24/7 file sharing can eat up bandwidth; Comcast really was not concerned about the amount consumed, but rather everyone uploading and downloading at the same time, and all the time. Comcast also offers higher priced small business products with higher limits, so that played a part in the decision, too.

      • Stewart

        Good show… based on your perspective and background can YOU come up with any reasonable explanation as to why Canadians should have such low caps and such high overage fees? Can you explain how UBB would improve our networks, our access, our innovation… how it would be better for the consumer? How it would be better for business? OR is it like most of us seem to believe and just an outrageous money grab which just happens to protect other aspects of the big telecoms business interests at the same time and wipe out competition…

        • Jonathan

          Um, no. I can't explain that at all, because it won't improve anything except big cable and big telco's bottom lines. Since this service is not searchable, I'll risk the wrath of others accusing me of self-promotion and link my February 1st blog article about this whole mess: http://www.jonathanblaine.com/wpress/2011/02/cana…

  • Stewart

    WOW, what a read… I just finished going through ALL the feedback.

    Conclusions:

    1)People who support UBB seem to fall into 2 categories. 1) Those who get paid to support it or have a vested interest in doing so like employees of the big telecommunications companies or people who act as investment consultants for same, 2) those who have been hoodwinked into believing that just 2% of users are causing all the problems and only 2% will be affected by the moves of lowering caps and increasing charges for over-usage… the second group is smaller and may just be a sub group of the first anyway as the vast majority see the gaping holes in any arguments forwarded by these groups.

  • Stewart

    2)UBB is not a deterrent, it is nothing but a 2 edged sward. One edge is to grab as much cash as it can while the other is to kill competition PERIOD. By lowering caps and charging many thousands of times what it costs to provide the service the telecoms are insuring that in an age where usage demands are going up and that everyone will be a heavy user. They are trying to convince everyone now that only 2% of users are heavy users and if they can get everyone to agree that these heavy users should pay “their fair share” that when we all become heavy users, we will also agree that we should pay more and will not complain when they start charging even more. Even though it is costing them virtually nothing extra to run the service they will have willing sheep willing to pay more for less.

  • Stewart

    3)Content providers and service providers MUST be broken up into independent entities. By having the same company provide you with a connection to the internet and then to have a vested interest in controlling what you access through the service is to Orwellian, it provides these companies with the ability to try and tell us all what to think and how to act and what is and is not acceptable and limit your access to any alternate points of view.

  • Stewart

    4)The CRTC is a flawed, lost organization which at the very least must be overhauled and brought into the 21st century or at the worst simply disbanded as an irrelevant, wasteful and harmful entity. To be fair, if what I have read is correct the CRTC was mandated to be more receptive to business needs HOWEVER this has been interpreted by the CRTC to mean the telecommunications business alone when I believe that what was meant was ALL business… every business out there is connected to the internet in one form or another, the most obvious being the debit and credit card machines used to pay for purchases or to pay bills etc… never mind things like online inventory or connections to the various government departments to remit taxes or submit employee info or whatever… The lowering caps and increasing fees imposed by UBB will help kill small businesses everywhere by making the use of internet resources prohibitively expensive so the CRTC has only been more receptive to the wrong businesses and not to the end consumers at all.

  • Stewart

    5)10 years ago Canada was on the cutting edge in internet technology. Today it is far down the list and dropping fast. This has happened as a direct result of the conglomerate mergers of the powerful few spending all their profits on scooping up the various player in the market rather than investing in the infrastructure. The companies see that the Government is going to force them to share the last mile so they make no investment there, instead they invest in content and in protecting their legacy operations. These companies understand that no one will ever allow them a true monopoly (though what they have is as close as you can get) and as such are doing as little as they can get away with in upgrades while using the excuse that they need UBB to make improvements that they have no intention of ever making with or without it… until the government gives them a stranglehold on the last mile they say they will not invest in it and once they have the stranglehold there is no longer a need to invest as you can only have what they will allow you to have… these manipulative blackmailers must be put in their place once and for all.

  • Stewart

    6)Going forward I see 2 primary possible solutions: 1) Do away with the CRTC and its various mandates related to both Canadian content and Canadian ownership and open the market to everyone who wishes to enter it or 2) have the Government take over the “infrastructure” both the backbone (Canadian Gov) and the last mile (Provincial or Municipal Gov) or have it transferred to a not for profit company who run it and lease it out to ALL others.

    Lastly I pray that IF the Government of Canada & the CRTC do not take the current frustration of Canadians seriously and do not do what is needed to fix the system and the problems in it that Canadians have the moxie to do what was done in Egypt and march on Ottawa and stay at it until their demands are heard and acted upon.

    • Susan K.

      How dare you compare the struggle for democracy and basic human rights in Egypt to the desire for unlimited enjoyment of the internet in Canada. People sacrificed their lives for freedom from tyranny in Egypt and to suggest people sacrifice their lives for unlimited internet downloading in Canada is disgraceful. Shame on you!

      • Stewart

        I do not care where the corrupt powers are… as a Canadian I have been screwed into the ground by the government and big business for years, I have seen these big telecoms screw their employees, screw their customers and sh*t on all of us over and over, I have been screwed like every other Canadian by the banks all so the rich can get richer and the poor can go blow… I am not suggesting that we have had it as bad in Canada as in Egypt BUT we are a long way down the slippery slope and in the past couple years things have gotten worse here than most people realize and I say we the people of this country have had enough and if the only way to fix things here is the same way they fixed things in Egypt than so be it… you may not believe it but the fight here is not just about the internet, it is also about basic human rights and freedoms and whether or not our democracy stands for anything any more… and when our entire lives have been tied to the internet IF this UBB crud goes through you will soon see people in this country having to decide between eating or staying online, I am not talking about for entertainment, I am talking about essential services that are only available ONLINE…

      • Stewart

        The more I ponder your reply the more it angers me. First off I did not make any comparison between what is happening in Canada and what has happened in Egypt, YOU DID. I simply said that I hoped Canadians acted like those in Egypt… you know, marching to the seat of power and demanding their rights… and IF I remember correctly what happened in Egypt was for the most part peaceful.

        I served in the Canadian Forces and as such was willing to fight and die to protect what I believed Canada to be and today there are people still in the Forces who ARE dieing to protect what we as Canadians believe related to how people should be treated SO to have our own government and big business treat Canadians in ways that we will die in defending others FROM, you know, defending those basic rights and freedoms, why should Canadians not be willing to stand up and be counted???

      • Jonathan

        Agreed. Equating spending $40/month too much on Internet cannot be equated to people dying in streets and 40 years of being tortured by police serving a dictator.

        • Stewart

          Sorry man but did you even READ what has been said before making your comment???

    • Mike J

      I agree that the analogy Susan K and Jonathan put forth is completely off the mark and what is so frustrating about the general view on these issues.. I don't see Stewart's main point to be about the money we pay for internet. While that is most people's focus here it's not the really important issue. Susan used the word tryanny and that is what we are talking about. Free internet does not mean free as in beer, but free as in speech.

      • Mike J

        I have no problem paying for the ISP to provide the service. But we are at a crucially important point in our evoloution. As the article starts, the internet has proviced us with "broad democratization of information and opinion." Ironic that the 'editors" point that out as this is what's *really* at stake. Making the dissemineation of ideas, media and opinion prohibitively expensive puts the control of ideas, media and opinion more in the control of those with money. This has already happened three times in our evolution. Print, Radio and TV. Very powerful technologies that have shaped humanity. The internet came upon us so quickly that those who control those powers, both for greed and for control, were unable to keep a handle on it and now they are backpedlling trying to regain their control in this country. Other countries are shaming us in this regard.

        • Mike J

          Yes, these issues are as important as basic human rights. You have basic human rights in Canada because the vast majority of people here are educated fairly accurately. Knowledge is power. The internet has allowed for a disemination of knowledge globally that the world has never before seen. It is one of the main reaons that what happened in Egypt *happened*. Those who are capable of critical thinking in this country and who are able to see beyond their own pocket book see these issues at stake here and realize that this is a crucial point in the infancy of the web and in our actual evolution as humans. Shame on you for not seeing this and continuing to allow yoursel to be duped. Here's a little quote for you: "Propaganda is to a democracy what the bludgeon is to a totalitarian state"

          • Mike J

            To Stewart, if you read this, I only say that I agree with every last point you wrote and found it concise and succinct. I only urge you to reiterate this again and agin to the CRTC, your MLA and your ISP in writing and with your dollars whenever possilbe.. And I hope everyone else who feels the same continues to do so. That is how we march on parliment in this country. Let's hope things don't revert back to the point where we once again have to do it with our feet.

          • Stewart

            Thanks

  • cyberclark

    I have captured a couple well thought out fact sheets and put them up at http://albertathedetails.blogspot.com/2009/11/sha… They point to the fact we are over priced and under serviced in Canada as compared to other countries.

    It is no surprise they come after our gold when streaming video has come to the fore front with 8 dollar a month subscription to on line streaming available. The new upscale packages being offered by Shaw in Alberta push the price of streaming video to a point it is more expensive than their video on line service. This, considering the tax payer has already paid for all the fiber optic lines.

    It is simply a rip off; all the market will bear.

  • Lex Keyes

    It is not all private capital into the osp ( outside plant) for the provincial governments give cable companies like EastLink Cable and Access Cable capital to build high speed internet for certain rural areas. The truth of this whole issue is that the phone and cable companies are seeing decreased revenue by customers supporting VoIP, netflix and other vod sites. If the big internet suppliers get their way then it will be too costly for the end user to enjoy these less expensive services. As for the CRTC well, when was the last time they looked out for the good of the end user?

  • Kevin Smith

    Notice no author. This article is a statement of the position of Maclean's Magazine, which is the Roger's corporation….
    Two blatantly false statements:
    "At issue is the ability of Internet carriers such as Bell Canada and Rogers Communications (the parent company of Maclean’s) to establish usage-based billing"
    False – usage based billing already exists, it is in fact the only type of billing that either roger's or bell offers. The issue is exactly the opposite it is about the ability of other ISPs to offer an unlimited pricing scheme, this is about the oligopoly that controls our communications in this country attempting to make illegal a pricing scheme by their competition which is drawing customers from themselves.
    "we have one of the fastest and most modern Internet networks in the world." what one of the top 50? thats not that good guys.

    I have just one question, if this usage based billing does pass and the rest of us light users no longer have to 'pay for' the heavy users as you suggest, are Roger's and Bell then going to substantially cut the prices that we are currently paying for internet? or is it all just going to further the bottom line.

  • Kevan

    So In the UK I can rent a physical server with a 3 TB unthrottled bandwidth, and if I go over that in a month they drop my connection to 10 Mb for the rest of the month. This costs me $33/month Canadian including the hardware.

    But for some strange reason it costs me $60/month for a 10 mb connection with only 125 Gb bandwidth? Then $2 for every Gig over? How exactly are we supposed to compete on an international stage?

  • Kurt

    So if 2 % of these heavy users are clogging up our bandwidth then I think the infrastructure is flawed. To charge me 50 dollars a month and have 2 % of my peers affect my service well i am sorry i should be paying less. That is the issue we are already paying to much for low cap bandwidth.
    As for this rag magazine, why not get the Rogers family and CEO out on our door steps begging us for the cash so they can continue their golf member ships and private tennis lessons. This is a conflict of interest to say the least and you should at least had a section on what the consumers want or suggest. Propaganda…. I don't own this magazine and never will… well unless I need a copy because I ran out of 2 ply.

  • Cpserve

    hmm seems kind of fishy rogers covers more areas and so does bell http://ww2.cox.com/residential/arizona/internet/preferred-internet.cox?campcode=ln_internet_pref_0329 <—–these packages are UNLIMITED!!!!!!!!!!!!!! to bad no avaiable to canada but just to show you a smaller company then Rogers and bell can offer its customers UNLIMITED INTERNET because YES PEOPLE THE INTERNET IS UNLIMITED!!!!!! hard drives on the other hand im still waiting to see an Unlimited hard drive as to Bandwidth well shucks thats not diskspace at there cost its at the cost of our hard drives! the data they store is at the cost of there own drives

  • DMG

    I'm pleased to see that not a single one of the comments here so far buy this garbage.

    Canada enjoys one of the highest broadband penetration rates in the world, but with all the lines held by two players we pay the most exorbitant rates per gigabyte of the developed nations. It's seriously time for some real competition.

    I've heard of an interesting approach where some countries have split their telecom companies into two distinct entities: the network operator, who offers wholesale service to all ISPs at the same rates; and the customer-facing ISP/content provider. I wonder how Bell or Rogers's ISP arms would like competing against the smaller ISPs on equal footing.

  • anonymous

    Well, I know which magazine subscription I'm not renewing a few months from now….. Truly pathetic macleans, truly pathetic.

  • Luis

    It is easy to see that MacLean’s magazine keeps its journalistic objectivity in this case…NOT. I would expect more from a news magazine than a parroting of the owners views, but maybe I’m being naïve. The truth of the matter is that the incumbents are lowering service. When I started with Bell Internet service I was paying the same amount as today, but in that time, my download limit has been reduced from 100Gb to 60Gb and now to 25Gb with the price not changing a penny, even though the cost of networking equipment has been dropping like a stone (I know as I’m in the IT field).. Why is it that Ontario is stuck at 25GB while Quebec is 60GB and no limits anywhere else? Is there more bandwidth available in those other provinces? Why were the caps lowered just as Netflix and other internet video services are coming into the country. What about telecommuters? We are starting to push family/work balance which has people working from home. With these ridiculous caps we are effectively stopping that cold. I don’t have a problem with caps but they should be realistic, 25GB is not. A cap of 250GB I can live with. That would allow consumers the flexibility of consuming products (ie movies) on the internet, get work and research done and use it without fear of going over. Additional usage would be changed. As it stands, Bell, Rogers and Telus are trying to protect their content business by controlling their delivery system.

  • Login Jones

    It seems to me that Macleans is compromised due to conflict of interest, being owned by the companies it argues in favour of. Who's the author of this article? some anonymous group of Macleans editors?

  • Frank

    Be sure of one thing..it's about greed. It's time to open the floodgates and let competition come in from all over the world. The old days are gone and it's time for our own little revolution of sorts. Get out of our wallets bell and rogers! And stay out. We won't be dictated to by a bunch of money hungry investory who want a greater return on investment. The internet is bigger than you so if you want out get out..i bet we find some one to replace you. If implementing this would cost your investors money that it wouldn't get back the public wouldn't hear a peep out of you. So put all the spin on it you want but we all know it's about money, greed and power. It's got nothing whatsoever to do with fairness.

  • more_internets

    Macleans, please stop clogging up my bandwidth with pandering editorials like this one.

  • Sylvain

    Also don't forget everyone that the signal is repeated and amplified in the modem using the USER power outlet then the power sent back to the Telcos to be redistributed to the other users.

    So the heavy users give the most electric power to the Telcos.

  • Bill Hillier

    This article is just wrong!
    I will never again purchase your magazine!

  • Andrew

    Should happen but it won't. The CRTC is full of ex-CEOs and other executives of the Bells and Rogers in Canada. They're not about to eliminate the monopoly their buddies have over the entire media and entertainment systems of this country.

  • ManOfMerit

    The Conservative government knows exactly what you corporate pigs are up to…and what it means for consumer/Canadian satisfaction and how that translates into votes.

    As for Mr Von Fyourself stein…I think we know who is going to be paying for his children's education now (or that fattys retirement)… ..for giving the pigs the go ahead…

  • jlc

    Note it says, "By the editors" because no self respecting reporter would put their name on this crap. Rogers wrote this and said, your publishing this or else. Only proving why we need to break up these companies. Oligopoly Canadian crap yet again. These companies should not be allowed to own so much of the media we consume. The news we consume. You can try to bury this news story but the people are already educated and we use twitter to contact our politicians we don't need you. Welcome to losing all your power. Welcome to the new world. Thank god netflix came in, so they can't spout that we are all criminals downloading.

  • http://www2.macleans.ca/2011/02/18/the-internet-should-be-fair-not-free-to-everyone/ blobblobllowblowme

    Time to nationalize the internet as a "right" and an Essential Service. Vote for me. Rogers already has me in their back pocket (damn dark & stinks). Will change my tune once elected & give them DOUBLE what they wanted.

    Populace? WTF? WGAS, I live in a Crystal Palace!
    sick of it. not buying another f'n thing from these (&other) shysters
    BOYCOTT NOW!

  • Johnny Kanuk

    This statement about how only a small percent, and I will quote here, “the heaviest users, who comprise just two per cent of the total, gobble up hundreds of gigs on a monthly basis.” Shows then that it only takes 2 % of the entire internet using population to slow our,”Canada’s” internet down. It also then means, if we take it further, that our infrastructure has limited to no growth potential unless internet use is curbed and the only way they can do that is charge more and allow less usage, IE UBB. To use this ploy that the rest of Canadians are helping the heavy users is just spin. came within 90% of my cap 2 months ago when I had 3 hard drives go bad on me, never buy Seagate! Just the reinstalling of Windows 7 and its updates plus the 5 games I have from Steam put me close to 80 gigs. Thats when i realized how bad having a cap was.
    The max speed in Canada for download from any of the big 3 is 25Mbs and I highly doubt anyone is hitting that speed. That is a speed limit, you can not go past that even if you wanted to, but with this speed you just get to your cap faster. Why not lower the max speed and offer unlimited? It is simple math, so much down per second times 30 days and bam thats your cap. Charge a rate that is exceptable and you are done. None of this silly UBB. I don’t understand why unlimited is such a bad term in this Country. I would pay $99/month for the speed I have now and unlimited downloads. I am sure many more would too. It’s a good idea that I just don’t understand why Rogers, Bell, and Telus can’t get their heads around.

  • fairinternet

    hmm, Rogers owns Macleans, Macleans writes an article supporting somthing that would boost their profit.

    i personally think that there shiuld be laws against this sort of thing. I’m writing this to say good bye to your magazine forever.

    how about for fair chsnges we charge people on how fast they want their data?

    big users wiill clump their data usage together and charging per GB will not solve this, introduce speed limits if an ISP cant afford to let users download at x mB per sec then dont offer it. They are getting into a numbers war, claiming x mB per second when they cant sustain it should be against the law as well, dont sell me 10 mB a sec if i can never achieve that speed. this way people who want to use netflix etc can buy the speed they need and forget about bandwidth – and cancel their TV.

  • http://thisismyurl.com Christopher Ross

    This reads more like a press release for your "parent company" than a serious piece on the subject.

    Before we concern ourselves with the need for extra costs, we should first establish if there is an actual issue, or if this is simply a money grab to plug a hole created by NetFlix.

  • jaco

    Hi , this article is writen by Rogers ! , UBB will never get put into place, write that down on your fridge !

    Rogers Publishing Limited, which has more than 70 consumer and business publications. Rogers Media Inc. also owns 54 radio stations, and several television properties including terrestrial television stations and cable television channels.

  • Nemo

    This is not reporting. It is spin doctoring. How an editor would let such a one sided diatribe full of opinions and metaphors instead of facts says much about Macleans's biases. You are an ad man not a reporter.

    Independents pay for last mile access. Not interenet access. They pay for internet thorughput themselves on their own fiber from the demark point. To charge independents for bandwidth over the last mile is simply wrong. There is no congestion there.

    Please also note that the price for sending a GB over the internet is now down to 3c including all overhead and maintenance. It was only 12c in 2003. Oddly actual facts are missing from this press release. Your overlords will be pleased.

  • John

    LOL.. The average user at 16 gigs is using $1.60 worth of delivery a month.. Sold for 50 bucks..
    What a special bunch of twits following around those annoying Rogers teenagers..

    The average user should be paying $9.99 a month.. and the power users 50 dollars..

    The debate (if there is even one) is turned on its ear by a billion dollar company..
    The bad guy is the average user willing to pay a 3000% mark up.. Everything after that is tainted RED..

    Advertising, vested interest and the eco herd thinking has a obscene mark up sold as the only fair choice..

    Let in the American ISPs and lets get a taste of their free market politics.. or let the Canadian Government take over our ISP business at a 200% profit mark up..

    We deserve far better goods and service from our ISPs..

  • Dan

    It is regrettably in place. Look at your ISP's detailed coverage plan. It will show that if you use over a certain limit you will have to pay more for your use. This is a disgusting fact.

  • Stewart

    Hate to say it BUT one way or the other these corporate crooks will get what they want unless people do a lot more than vent their frustration in blogs like this… we need to take to the streets if need be, force the gov to end the CRTC, make it against the law for service providers to have any financial interest in content of any kind AND regulate how much can be charged for access to the network such that the company or gov agency that controls it has enough to keep the network growing and improving but this agency should have a ZERO profit mandate, let the content providers duke it out for what they can make… if they are competitive they will make it, if not… their problem

  • Taft

    What's a shame is that the integrity of a fine Canadian news magazine is sacrificed in this way.

  • Dwayne g

    I agree with you completely. And the big three charge ridiculous rates for terrible speeds. You can get 7.5 mb for half the price from primus then shaw. I also would like to point out that majority of this issue was dissucsed over the Internet so it is just reasonable to answer or reply over it as well. The author points out that it takes a lot of money to set up actual equipment. But it takes penny’s to actual maintain and send a gb of data, unfortunitly I cannot remember were I read this article but it mentioned that Rogers has a 5000% markup on it’s data that exceeds it’s limit. Ya I am pretty sure they are making their share of money. I love how this issue has just arrised since the major Internet providers now own tv networks and would like to stream these shows direct to TVS and smartphones which of course use data. I am very happy the government is listening to the people who elected them and not the oligopoly of Internet providers.

    Just a side note, I am shocked and impressed that crtc actually made a smart decision that Netflix is not broadcaster of local content making it so they don’t have to pay those stupid fees. Sorry about the grammar

  • nicemandan

    The problem is, the speeds your internet is sold at are never achievable due to the contention ratio of the number of other people in your neighbourhood using the same infrastructure. There was a big row in the UK over this a few years ago, so much so that they can no longer advertise "unlimited" broadband as it is always limited in some way. Hence you wont get Roger, Telus or Bell offering $99 for unlimited downloads as they just can't provide that service, even though they advertise as such. This would also be their argument for introducing UBB.

    However the UK has realised that paying for internet usage would kill the internet economy over there, so their solution is to allow ISP's to throttle content from specific providers e.g. Sky could pay a a big ISP, say Virgin, millions to deliver their content faster than their competitors, say the BBC. This would then mean certain ISPs would have a content bias, being able to control content by throttling other sites.

    This, in theory will allow more ISPs to appear in the market place and more money being exchanged between content provider and network provider – a new market. It should allow consumers to then chose the ISP with the content bia they prefer. In practice, it seems likely that Sky (owned by Murdoch) could eventually buy out smaller ISP companies and control media delivery.

    The UK solution is not a nice proposition, as it has all sorts of implications for media freedom. However, it still means UK consumers should get to download as much as they like without an increase in price. It may even reduce prices offered to consumers.

    If only Canada had the ability to explore options like that, which could benefit consumers, without being stifled by legislation that favours an oligopoly. Yet is seems Canada has already passed over the threshold of media freedom and most of what we get to watch is already controlled in subtle ways (disguised as market forces) by Bell, Rogers, Telus and the CTRC.

  • Jesse

    if 2% of the internet users can clog the pipe….I'm sorry, your pipe is too damn small to begin with.

    This is absolutely 100% without a shadow of a doubt a self-protectionist issue.

  • Robert

    So Jesse, what is your proposal for funding the construction of a bigger pipe? Should everyone pay more for their service or should the folks driving the highest demand pay for it?

    When you look at the ADSL technology used by the phone companies to provide broadband it has been upgraded 5 times in the last 10 years. So roughly every two years, the access network needs to be upgraded with new technology – who should pay for that?

  • http://www.jonathanblaine.com/wpress Jonathan Blaine

    Robert, WHAT Canadian telco corporate-generated crapola are you reading? I just responded to more of your misinformation in another thread. I laughed at the "5 times over 10 years drivel.

    DSL is held to maximums due to the technology; the farther away from the phone company's central office, the lower the speed. Cable broadband is not held to that law of physics. There has been next to nil "upgrading" of the last-mile twisted wire pair in Canada, unlike the US, where there has been much investment in fibre to the home (Verizon, for instance). Canadians paid for much of this last-mile over decades, supplemented by government investment, suburb property developers and high long distance rates.

  • http://www.forgetthebox.net Jason C. McLean

    Methinks I detect a wee bit of Rodgers influence in this editorial. Where large ISPs in Canada want to set their cap is well below what they can afford to offer. Let the resellers give unlimited access because the internet is an unlimited medium. It's not cable TV. With cable, providers pay for the content they charge extra for. If I post a YouTube video and watching it makes someone pay more for their internet, do I get a cut? Or I'll let the Spice Girls tell it like it is…[youtube TlCbvByAvUA http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TlCbvByAvUA youtube]

  • Dave Ming Chang

    Rogers owns Macleans. They also own Andrew Coyne. Move along people. Nothing to see here.

  • Mike P

    "Such a casual approach to important public policy is an embarrassment to the government. It’s also another example of how the Harper government occasionally allows populism to interfere with sound decision-making."

    Just as MacLeans is an embarrassment to the Canadian public for even attempting to legitimize Bell and Rogers plan for internet domination. Heaven forbid that Harper do what the Canadian public wants done, NO DATA CAPS and no gouging consumers Imagine a politician that listens to the public, what's the world coming to?

    I wouldn't mind paying my "fair share" if I got a fair shake to begin with. It costs anywhere from 1 to 3 cents per gigabyte to transfer data over the internet. How come the likes of Bell and Rogers want to charge upwards of 3 dollars per gigabyte? That's a ridiculous mark up anyway you look at it.

    How about Macleans letting people know that it's impossible right now for a new company to enter the marketplace? You can't get permits to run new lines to people's homes. That's the reason Bell and Rogers were forced to share the central office line to the customers home. When the day comes that a new company can run a line right to my house, Bell's line will be permanently disconnected and I'll throw the line out on the street.

  • Mike514

    Le Canada est un pays très, très protectionniste. C'est devenu très important d'empêcher des entreprises non-canadiennes à investir ici, pour la raison ridicule de "protéger les intérêts du Canada"… Le résultat? Un oligopolie dans le secteur de télécommunications.

    C'est dans l'intérêt des Canadiens de payer des sommes ridicules pour des services "sub-par" (comme on dit en anglais)!!! Complètement ridicule. J'espère que le gouvernement Conservateur deviendra plus courageux, et changera les lois sur les investissements étrangers, pour permettre à des compagnies américaines/européennes/etc. d'investir ici, et de promouvoir de la vraie compétition.

  • Frrosty

    then I wonder how charging $2.50 for every GB that a customer goes over the cap when the actual cost is mere pennies seems more like robbery than an attempt at fairness. If they are going to charge for going over the cap, then maybe they should reimburse me $2.50 for every GB I am under the cap. I mean if the whole purpose of this is to reduce congestion, then this would work better, wouldn`t it? Unless, of course, this is just a huge money grab to compliment what is already one of the most overpriced internet services in the free world.
    .
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    BAM

    I concur.

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