Tagged: Comcast RSS

  • Gaurav Mishra 10:26 am on December 15, 2008 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: barrack Obama, Christopher Rhoads, Comcast, , Edge Caching, Eric Schimdt, FCC, , Lawrence Lessing, , Net Neutrality, Open Edge, Richard Whitt, Vishsh Kumar, ,   

    Do No Evil + Net Neutrality = Et Tu Google 

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    Vishsh Kumar and Christopher Rhoads at WSJ report that Google wants its own fast track on the web –

    The celebrated openness of the Internet — network providers are not supposed to give preferential treatment to any traffic — is quietly losing powerful defenders.

    Google Inc. has approached major cable and phone companies that carry Internet traffic with a proposal to create a fast lane for its own content. Google has traditionally been one of the loudest advocates of equal network access for all content providers.

    Separately, Microsoft Corp. and Yahoo Inc. have withdrawn quietly from a coalition formed two years ago to protect network neutrality. Each company has forged partnerships with the phone and cable companies. In addition, prominent Internet scholars (like Lawrence Lessig), some of whom have advised President-elect Barack Obama on technology issues, have softened their views on the subject.

    The contentious issue has wide ramifications for the Internet as a platform for new businesses. If companies like Google succeed in negotiating preferential treatment, the Internet could become a place where wealthy companies get faster and easier access to the Web than less affluent ones… (and) choke off competition.

    For computer users, it could mean that Web sites by companies not able to strike fast-lane deals will respond more slowly than those by companies able to pay. In the worst-case scenario, the Internet could become a medium where large companies, such as Comcast Corp. in cable television, would control both distribution and content — and much of what users can access.

    During his presidential campaign, Mr. Obama spoke frequently about the Internet, which was a critical tool in his grass-roots effort to reach new voters, and the importance of network neutrality.

    Google’s proposed arrangement with network providers, internally called OpenEdge, would place Google servers directly within the network of the service providers. The setup would accelerate Google’s service for users. Google has asked the providers it has approached not to talk about the idea, according to people familiar with the plans.

    Asked about OpenEdge, Google said only that other companies such as Yahoo and Microsoft could strike similar deals if they desired. But Google’s move, if successful, would give it an advantage available to very few.

    Richard Whitt, Google’s head of public affairs, denies the company’s proposal would violate network neutrality. Nevertheless, he says he’s unsure how committed President-elect Obama will remain to the principle.

    Google’s Richard Whitt insists on the Google Policy Blog that edge caching does not violate its definition of net neutrality, and many bloggers have supported that view, but it seems to me that any arrangement between content providers and carriers that makes some content load faster that others is indeed against the principle of net neutrality, if not against its technical definition.

    It also seems to me that, with the new ambivalence of Google, Microsoft and Yahoo on net neutrality, the debate on net neutrality is being reframed from “carriers vs. content providers” to “big content providers vs. small content providers”.

    Finally, it seems to me that the sceptics who feared that Google has become too big to stay true to its “do no evil” motto were right. I’m too invested into Google’s many services to stop using them, but I’ll start migrating away from them slowly. I hope others will see the writing on the wall and also take similar steps.

    In the end, all I can say is: et tu Google!

    Also see: Om Malik, Lawrence LessigDoc SearlsBroadband PoliticsTechDirt, Save the Internet, Beyond SearchGizmodo, Broadstuff, Read Write WebGoogleWatch, Sidecut ReportsSteve Schultze, Computer World IT Blogwatch, CNet, Broadband DSL Reports, TeleCompetitor, Portfolio, Network World, ZDNet Between the Lines, PaidContent, Isen Blog, Ed Felten.

     
    • Shripriya 9:44 pm on December 15, 2008 Permalink | Reply

      Just catching up on the day’s happenings and read Google’s blog and Lessig’s response. Amazing. Weak. So much for the champions of network neutrality (as I said in my po’d tweet too).

      “If iFilm can pay what Google can”? (paraphrasing). Unbelievable. The issue is they can’t. The issue is that any startup will be disadvantaged. So much for that…

    • Gaurav Mishra 1:11 am on January 5, 2009 Permalink | Reply

      @Shripriya: We have come to depend so much on Google that it’s not surprising that we expect them to adhere to very high standards. I’m sure that Google thinks it hasn’t compromised network neutrality, and it seems that it hasn’t, technically, but these actions are surely inconsistent with its “do no evil” motto.

  • Gaurav Mishra 9:36 pm on December 13, 2008 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Comcast, , , , John Batelle, ,   

    Video: John Batelle and Evan Williams Talk About Twitter’s Business Model 

    Federated media founder John Batelle interviewd Twitter co-founder Evan Williams at the Conversational Marketing Summit (via J D Lasica) –

     

    Here are the top sound bytes from the interview –

    - The unique visitors at http://www.twitter.com are much higher than the 2.2 million reported by Quantcast and the 3 million reported by Compete. Only 50% of the updates are created on http://www.twitter.com

    - Marketers love Twitter because it is unique in combining one-to-many with real-time. Many use it for marketing; Dell sold $500,000 worth of products through Twitter last year. Many, like Comcast, use it for customer service, often through Twitter Search.

    - Many think of Twitter as a social network, but the one-way nature of relationship is an important distinction.  

    - Twitter will consider charging brands to use additional functionalities, like verification of branded Twitter accounts.

    - http://www.election.twitter.com was the first experiment in Twitter positioning themselves as a media company, by curating conversations around an event or topic.

    - Twitter sees its application partners as a growth opportunity as of now, but may consider working with them if their entire business model is based on the Twitterstream.

    - Twitter may consider search ads, but would like to focus on revenue streams that are organic to Twitter’s model of opting in to live content, like sponsored tweets enabling discovery of branded Twitter accounts.

    - Twitter has not integrated Twitter Search on the homepage because of concerns about infrastructure (remember the fail whale?) So far, traffic from Twitter Search has mostly come from application partners.

    - Twitter’s biggest priority right now is to tweak the user interface to enable easier navigation and discovey to increase its reach beyond the early adopters.

    - Twitter doesn’t have firm demographic data, but based on anecdotal evidence, the average Twitter user is older than the average Facebook user and less than half the users are in the United States.

    - Twitter is working with news organizations to use it as a tool for breaking news, especially in fast developing crisis situations. Twitter trends is one way to highlight such dvelopments. 

    - Twitter and Facebook status are technically similar, but the actual use tends to be different, as  Twitter is primarily one-way while Facebook is two-way. 

    - Twitter doesn’t like the idea of a freemium model because it restricts its overall value and diverts too many engineering resources from focusing on growth. 

    - The biggest challenge for marketers is how to go beyond the campaign mentality and engage in scaled conversational marketing with millions of followers.

     
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