Author: tdenton
Ian Scott is right about 5G
/Chairman Ian Scott is most assuredly correct in his request for more power over the placement of electronic equipment, in the light of the approach of 5G technologies. It is reassuring to see that the Canadian regulator is showing signs of active engagement with how Canada will need to adapt to the requirements of 5G. […]
Read more »Fair Play coalition rejected/ yet another dragon lurks
/The CRTC turned back the application of the Fair Play Coalition. The people have Canada have much to be grateful for in this. It always seemed to me like a statute too far: using the Telecom Act to accomplish copyright policy objectives on behalf of broadcasters. The decision speaks for itself. It is gratifying that the […]
Read more »The dominance of the content distribution network, and what it means
/Geoff Huston, chief scientist for APNIC, spoke to the Internet Society of Canada yesterday. His speech is vitally important for understanding the Internet of today. The picture is dark. You ought to know about it. Houston’s thesis is that the Internet has come to be dominated by very few content distribution networks (CDNs) […]
Read more »What is Google’s business, exactly?
/Castle Howard The revelation of the political views of Google’s senior management after the Trump election comes as no surprize. They are all Bay Area liberals. What is odd is how much Google appears as a Guardian institution, not a business. This was revealed by the leak of the video of a collective meeting of […]
Read more »Why the elites are beginning to hate social media
/This tidbit from Spiked on Line: From an elite perspective, a key danger of social media is that it allows political trends outside of the mainstream to spread their arguments more easily. Yascha Mounk, a politics lecturer at Harvard and executive director at the Tony Blair Institute for Global Change, has expressed this fear in relation to the decline […]
Read more »Disruption and Regulation
/A fine article is found in City Journal by Mark P. Mills on the subject of new industries and regulation. In particular, it compares the effects of the railway/telegraph combination with modern content networks. His conclusion: But if history is any gauge, there’s a political law of nature wherein foundational technological revolutions breed new regulatory […]
Read more »Geoff Huston
/Geoff Huston is one of the very few people making sense of why the Internet is evolving as it is. His speech to the ENOG conference last year on the Death of Transit shows how the fundamental forces are playing out. Content services are replacing carriers. Pay attention – there will be questions later. […]
Read more »Harnessing Change
/Thoughts on the CRTC’s “Harnessing Change: The Future of Programming Distribution in Canada”, Report to the Governor in Council The problems start with the title. “Harnessing Change” reflects a long history of Canadian governments and the CRTC sticking fingers in holes in the dike of broadcasting policy and regulation, to keep out invading hordes, while […]
Read more »Ajit Pai: I don’t get it
/The FCC Chairman, Ajit Pai, defended the abolition of net neutrality regulation in the United States in the following terms, which imply that, in a duopoly, we have an adequate choice. Pai added that he has empowered the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) to police internet service providers “for anticompetitive acts and unfair or […]
Read more »Corcoran’s Two-Minute Hate
/My mother turned 100 years old today, on May 29th, 2018. That is a long time to live. Yet a hundred years is still close to forty years younger than the principle of net neutrality. They did not call it “net neutrality” in the 1870s, they referred to it as “no unjust or undue discrimination”. […]
Read more »Precisely wrong, M. Masse
/The near weekly dose of pro-incumbent propaganda emerged in the pages of the Financial Post today. The Montreal Economic Institute was at it again, saying that the CRTC can dissolve now that Canada’s telecommunications sector is mature and competitive. In the same week another report shows that Canada offers the least amount of bandwidth for […]
Read more »Competition does not happen at the cell tower
/George Serentschy wrote an interesting piece in Terence Corcoran’s Financial Post today, which I think is comprehensively mistaken. Mr. Serentschy, a former telecom regulator in Austria, became dismayed with the state of investment in European mobile networks, and has been testifying effectively against the idea of MVNOs (mobile virtual network operators) ever since. I have had […]
Read more »A billionaire speaks about Netflix, and reflections on CanCon
/Multibillionaire Barry Diller used to be chairman of Paramount in the 1980s and has now moved on to the Internet, being the head of Expedia and a number of other ventures. He spoke about the leadership of Netflix recently in the most favourable terms in a recent interview in the New York Times. His thoughts are […]
Read more »Is the government a learning organization?
/One of the strengths of the modern military is that they have determined to be and remain “learning organizations”: tactics are obsessively analyzed, and information shared among officers, so that battles are won, casualties reduced, and what needs to be changed, is changed. The opposite seems to be true in telecom policy. The government says […]
Read more »Despite this…
/You have to hand it to McCarthy’s. Their communications legal luminaries have pursued the goal of subjecting the Internet to the Broadcasting Act since they first became aware of this loathsome innovation, sometime in the mid-2000s, when email attachments challenged the dominion of the fax machine in the legal profession. (I surmise). What I […]
Read more »Legislative Review: Telecom and Broadcasting Acts
/The proposed review of our communications acts is about to proceed, but the problem is finding a significant issue that legislative change would solve. Of course, some improvements are possible. Yet I would gladly forego a few improvements, if the alternative would be to subordinate the Telecom Act to the purposes of the Broadcasting Act. […]
Read more »Why is freedom of speech becoming a conservative concept?
/We are living in an era that combines extreme psychological fragility where people seek the suppression of all opinion that fails to conform to the fragile consensus. Official thought is not just enforced through the state, but through the independent actions of content distribution networks. The censorship is now automated and largely invisible. The censors […]
Read more »Two arguments against US net neutrality regulation
/The arguments of the FCC Chairman Ajit Pai seem to amount to the following. Net neutrality regulation will inhibit investment and lead to over-regulation. I am instinctually in favour of some measure of non-discriminatory access to networks, on the basis of Canada’s Internet traffic management procedures decision. It is vital to understand those who disagree. As […]
Read more »We are governed by ideas, many of them bad
/In the field of telecommunications, there are very few ideas. Such ideas about how the industry works are defended because they produce economic advantage for those who currently have legal privileges and the profits generated by them. These ideas are seldom challenged. They are relied upon to defend economic interests. They lumber along for […]
Read more »Utopia is creepy
/Nicholas Carr is a a blogger of insight. He has the advantage of paying a lot of attention professionally to Silicon Valley,. He believes that the owning class in the Valley schemes to absorb every moment of your consciousness into their devices. Every moment. His collection of essays is in book form under the title Utopia is Creepy, and […]
Read more »Ah Statism, how we love thee!
/There are days when I am seized with the temptation to cite Ayn Rand with something approaching approval. Discussions of Canadian cultural policy tend to bring it out. In an excellent article in the Post this weekend by Calum Marsh, the usual outrage is summoned by the Iron Rice Bowlers because Netflix promises to spend $500 million […]
Read more »Canadians data usage is 22nd in the developed world
/Emily Jackson of the Post reports today that … lower unit price has generally led to an increase in data cap sizes across the OECD’s 35 member countries, which in turn resulted in an explosion of data usage, the report found. But as of last year Canada remained a laggard when it comes to mobile […]
Read more »The iron rice bowl
/I recall the delegation of the Quebec media production types appearing before us – a panel of CRTC commissioners – when we were considering the extension of the Broadcasting Act to the Internet. The issue was whether every Canadian website should be licenced by the state, and taxed, to supply funds for Canadian video programming. […]
Read more »Jolie Joly
/There is a mole in the Minister’s office. Maybe she is in the Heritage Department. She (I assume it is a she) is a secret member of the Internet Society of Canada, but we do not know who she is. We give orders in code and one-time paper. She is loyal and obedient, a true […]
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