Andy writes ..
 
> On 17/02/2017 09:04, David wrote:
>
>> Stating the obvious. Except to those associated with our government.
>> <https://www.gizmodo.com.au/2017/02/why-nbn-co-is-wrong-about-gigabit-broadband/>
>>  
>>
> Here's another good article from a journo that seems to know
> his stuff  (a hint for you Simon Sharwood):
>
> http://www.itwire.com/open-sauce/76885-bill-morrow-s-alternative-facts-about-the-nbn.html
> 16 February 2017 Written by Sam Varghese



"nbn™ to cut the charges ISPs pay for traffic"

In theory this should mean ISPs offer faster plans for fewer dollars

17th Feb 2017  By Simon Sharwood   
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2017/02/17/nbn_to_cut_the_charges_isps_pay_for_traffic/


nbn™, the company building and operating Australia's National Broadband Network 
(NBN), has announced changes to the network capacity charge (CVC) it charges 
internet service providers.

The CVC is important because it's one of two costs nbn™ imposes on ISPs. The 
first is the monthly access charge (AVC), a per-month-per-subscriber fee that 
is broadly analogous to a line rental fee, albeit with some variability for 
different bandwidths. The CVC is rather more complex and covers the amount of 
bandwidth a retailer will consume within each of the NBN's Connectivity Serving 
Areas.

Retail ISPs have long argued that the CVC is too high, for two reasons.

Firstly, it's not cheap. By the time an ISP pays CVC and AVC there's not much 
change left from $50. Punters are generally happy paying not much more than 
that for basic internet services, leaving ISPs to find a way to run the service 
at a profit.

Secondly, CVCs have been calculated on industry-wide averages. Small ISPs with 
few customers have therefore ground their teeth as average costs reflecting the 
far larger user populations of big ISPs dragged costs way beyond their own.

Critics say the effect of averaged CVC pricing is that ISPs can't make a profit 
on packages offering fast speeds. Prices therefore remain high, sometimes 
higher than comparable ADSL plans. That, it's claimed, means punters are in no 
rush to move from ADSL to the NBN, crimping adoption rates and depriving nbn™ 
of the revenue assumed in its business plan

nbn™ has been aware of ISPs' gripes for ages, so dropped CVC prices twice in 
the last year. But the industry kept grumbling, especially about averaging. So 
nbn™'s just decided that as of June 1st, 2017, it will adopt a new model that 
sets CVC fees by dividing the amount of bandwidth each buys by the number of 
customers it serves.

“The changes we are making provide a discount, and a bigger discount as usage 
grows on the network,” nbn™'s executive general manager of pricing, Sarah 
Palmer told a conference call for media today. They'll also mean that a 
retailer can keep tabs on their own usage of the NBN, figure out what that will 
cost under the new model and price accordingly.

“What consumers should see is when a retailer has cost certainty they have a 
lot more flexibility to make different offers because they understand what 
their costs are,” Palmer said.

We'll know if this plan works if ISPs offer new products as of June 1st. Watch 
this space. ®

--

Cheers,
Stephen



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