It was mentioned:
It shouldnt take a parliamentary inquiry or
pointed attention from Canadas telecoms
regulator, or the
<https://www.cbc.ca/news/business/rogers-outage-relevant-to-shaw-deal-1.6565709>fear
of having its corporate merger with another
enormous IP network backbone blocked, to bring
those technical lessons into the light.
But not by name.
At 07:21 PM 12/09/2022, Eric Kuhnke wrote:
I did a ctrl-f for "Shaw" in that article and there's zero mention of it.
I realize that the Internet Society is meant to
remain neutral and not comment subjectively on
matters of market competition and conglomeration of telecoms.
It's very concerning to me that the Rogers/Shaw
acquisition-merger will likely be allowed to
proceed, even further reducing competition, and
increasing centralization (the opposite of the
decentralization mentioned in the article). From
the point of view of a Canadian who works
primarily for US-based ISPs these days, at least
in the US there's seven or eight gargantuan
multi-billion-dollar sized last mile cable
operators. In many parts of Canada it's just
Rogers or Shaw. It's not a good situation at all for the consumer.
On Mon, 12 Sept 2022 at 07:42, Sean Donelan
<<mailto:[email protected]>[email protected]> wrote:
Article by Internet Society's Resident Advisor Jim Cowie.
Rogers Outage: What do we Know After Two Months?
<https://pulse.internetsociety.org/blog/rogers-outage-what-do-we-know-after-two-months>https://pulse.internetsociety.org/blog/rogers-outage-what-do-we-know-after-two-months
September 9, 2022
Itâs now been a full two months since Rogers Telecom suffered a nationwide
Internet outage, leaving tens of millions of Canadians without
telecommunications services.
--
Clayton Zekelman
Managed Network Systems Inc. (MNSi)
3363 Tecumseh Rd. E
Windsor, Ontario
N8W 1H4
tel. 519-985-8410
fax. 519-985-8409