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Originally Posted by StarrySky but I am quite sure 3G mobile networks handle both differently, in terms of the channels allocated for either type of data. For eg: on a 3G network, browsing may not need a dedicated channel for the user, whereas streaming video always does. |
What channel are you talking about? Circuit switched or packet switched? Data is now entirely packet switched, there is no question of channels.
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Originally Posted by sharadmumbai I guess most people havn't understood the airtel zero |
Yes, you are right about that.
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Originally Posted by sharadmumbai Its like calling a toll freeline which so many banks/service companies advertise. Whenever a user actually uses an app or upgrades or does any transaction, data gets consumed. In this scheme of things, instead of the user paying the charges, the app company pays for it.
How is it wrong i don't understand? |
You are wrong because tollfree phone service is something anybody can avail for a fixed fee. If flipkart got tollfree phone service, so can I. But Airtel Zero is not like that. Google gets it for free because Airtel needs Google more than Google needs Airtel. But Flipkart has to do revenue sharing. If I want my customers to access my website for free, I have to do revenue sharing, not just pay some fixed fee. The revenue sharing can be heavily stacked against the small guy. See post #7 for a clear example.
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Originally Posted by sharadmumbai Secondly debate about the large companies dominating small companies and not level playing field, then all marketing spend is wrong. TOI should charge the same rate for first page as it does for the inside page and on all days; the ad rates on all channels should be the same for all irrespective of the world cup of cricket or kabbadi!!!! |
This again shows that you have not understand net neutrality. I have competitors who outspend me 10,000 times over in marketing expense. But it doesn't bother me. Do you know why? Because they don't stand between me and my customers. They are competing along with me for the same customer. I can deal with that, have been dealing with that. That is how normal business is conducted.
Now let's go back your original example, tollfree phone. I'll show you why it is even more wrong analogy. The toll free phone has a fixed fee and is used for communicating with the customer. The service/product itself is not delivered through tollfree phone. Therefore, if the tollfree provider makes the phone service too expensive, I can switch to email/sms or whatapp to communicate with the customer. But Internet these days is not merely a mode of communication, it is how the service is delivered. If you are buying a streaming video service, it is delivered on the same pipe. If you have switched to cloud computing, you are accessing all your servers over Internet. All your customers are getting your products/services over Internet. If somebody steps on that pipe and chokes it, and demands a share of your revenue, you have nowhere to turn. If somebody does that to tollfree number, I can switch to a different tollfree provider in a day. But my customers could be connected to my cloud services via 100 different ISPs all over the world, whom all can I pay to lift their foot from the pipe?
Example: My service is hosted via ISP X, but my customers are on ISP A, B, C, D, etc. Without net neutrality, I have to make a revenue share deal with ISP A, B, C... to allow free traffic to my site.
Do you still think it is same as tollfree number?
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Originally Posted by sharadmumbai I'm for net neutrality totally, whole heartedly but we must see beyond the smoke. |
Yes, the smoke is being spread by ISP lobbyists to confuse the public. I have been in the telephony domain (analog->TDM->VOIP) since 25 years and have been providing cloud services since 15 years, so I am able to look through the smoke.
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Originally Posted by Isnescrpy Bandwidth is a finite resource and technology to implement FUP is super expensive. |
Why is FUP super expensive? It is just a matter of configuration. I am familiar with network programming and configurations. These are simple things to implement.