On 19 Mar 2014, at 17:03, Wouter van Hulten <[email protected]> wrote:

> If these rules go through, the Dutch net neutrality law in force since 1 
> januari 2013 is threatened


For what it's worth, some are already anticipating. René Obermann, CEO of the 
largest cable operator in NL Ziggo, announced in an interview on the 8th of 
March:

'We want to build an internet platform that provides access to external 
parties: the right speed, with minimal delay. Think video services like 
Netflix, but also to emergency centers, medical care or remote communication 
between devices. These include services that are not "elastic" are [in contrast 
to loading a webpage, red] and a guaranteed network quality demand.'

and:

'This should be an open platform, accessible to small and big players. 
Definitely not a walled garden which Ziggo determines what to do. Our video 
application will be one of the TV services, in addition to those of others.

The article goes on to say that:

'Obermann looks with interest to a recent agreement between Netflix and the 
major U.S. cable operator, Comcast. Although the details are unknown, it is 
clear that Netflix will pay extra for guaranteed good transmission. The network 
provider is no longer a neutral intermediary, critics say. But this could be a 
source of revenue for cable operators as consumers en masse exchange their 
television subscription for Internet services.

(Google translate, from Dutch newspaper NRC 
http://www.nrc.nl/handelsblad/van/2014/maart/08/te-snel-voor-een-logge-tanker-1352508
 . Behind a login btw, I can share the text.)


I recently had a call with the EC who are doing preliminary research on the 
announced take over of Ziggo by Liberty Global (owner of the second largest 
Dutch cable network). Currently both Ziggo and Liberty Global/UPC already have 
regional monopolies, and together they own 90% of the Dutch cable market.  

http://www.telecompaper.com/news/dutch-regulator-to-ask-ec-for-say-on-ziggo-upc-merger--993449

It seems likely though that when the merge happens, the cable-networks will 
have to be opened up for other service providers. In the meantime I hope the 
Dutch can defend their net neutrality principles in the Council negotiations as 
well as afterwards (codecision)

-Bastiaan




Reply via email to