Oh trust me the Open Rights Group has been watching this issue for some time.
http://www.openrightsgroup.org/orgwiki/index.php/Net_Neutrality#UK

----- Original Message ----
From: Brian Butterworth <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2007 6:25:48 PM
Subject: Re: [backstage] BT denies pressurising the BBC over iPlayer

Glyn,

 

You wouldn't think that all those fibre optic pathways that connect the 
telephone exchanges together are bi-directional - but the service sold to the 
punters is asymmetric.  So BT want people to pay AGAIN for something they can't 
actually use....


 

On 13/08/07, Glyn Wintle <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I wonder if BT is worried about being seen to operate in a cartel with other 
ISPs on this issue.


http://www.theregister.co.uk/2007/08/13/bt_denies_iplayer_worries/
Author: Chris Williams

BT has denied reports that it is working with other ISPs to pressurise the BBC 
or consumers into paying extra for delivery of iPlayer on demand TV shows.


Chief press officer Adam Liversage contacted The Reg this afternoon to distance 
the telco from a predictable net neutrality row. He countered reports citing 
unnamed BT sources in The Independent on Sunday, Financial Times, and Mail on 
Sunday that link the telco with comments from Tiscali boss Mary Turner. She 
said the bandwidth demands of the iPlayer may be too much for ISPs to bear.

Liversage wrote: "Whilst we've been fingered as 'part of the gang' in certain 
press reports, BT is not complaining about or discussing the implications of 
iPlayer with the BBC."

The IOS story had quoted a "senior insider": "It is certainly a live debate 
between ISPs and the BBC. If the BBC gets the numbers it wants for iPlayer then 
network capacity could become an issue." The paper reported that BT had made 
its feelings known to the Beeb's new media chief Ashley Highfield.


Liversage rebuffed the claims: "We're not up in arms about iPlayer, we're not 
complaining to the BBC or discussing it with them."

He wrote that BT's only concern over iPlayer was that people would be unaware 
that the Kontiki P2P distribution system which runs in the background would be 
eating into their monthly GB usage allowance even when they are not viewing or 
downloading.

So there you have it.




     
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Please email me back if you need any more help.

Brian Butterworth
www.ukfree.tv
 






       
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