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    Global treaty may make your ISP spy on you

    Global treaty may make your ISP spy on you

    Canada's broadband sucks, and is expensive to boot: Harvard.

    Canada "is often thought of as a very high performer, based on the most commonly used benchmark of penetration per 100 inhabitants," the study said. "Because our analysis includes important measures on which Canada has had weaker outcomes prices, speeds and 3G mobile broadband penetration in our analysis it shows up as quite a weak performer, overall."

     

    No warrant required, be afraid be very afraid of this slippery slope

    "Your activities on the Internet are akin to your activities out in
    public—they're not private and are possibly open for police scrutiny,
    according to an Ontario Superior Court. The ruling was made by Justice
    Lynne Leitch on—surprise!—a child pornography case. The judge said that
    there's "no reasonable expectation of privacy" when it comes to logs
    kept by ISPs. Canadians, watch out, because everything you do online
    could soon be turned into legal fodder, even without a warrant.

    Link 

    Google to allow users to see if isp is blocking them

    "When an Internet application doesn't work as expected or your
    connection seems flaky, how can you tell whether there is a problem
    caused by your broadband ISP (Internet service provider), the
    application, your PC (personal computer), or something else?" Cerf
    wrote in a blog post.

    Link 

    Major Canadian ISPs Slow Down P2P Traffic

    "Net neutrality really is the hot topic at the moment. After the FCC
    slapped Comcast for slowing down BitTorrent users, Canada is now
    looking into the network management practices of its ISPs. And rightly
    so, as a CRTC investigation reveals that most of the ISPs in Canada
    actively slow down customers using P2P applications."

    Link 

    Bell's internet throttling illegal, Google says

    Google Inc. says Bell Canada Inc. is breaking Canadian
    telecommunications law by slowing certain internet traffic, and is
    urging the CRTC to take action against the company.

    "Bell claims its throttling of peer-to-peer applications is a
    reasonable form of network management. Google respectfully disagrees.
    Network management does not include Canadian carriers’ blocking or
    degrading lawful applications that consumers wish to use," the company
    wrote in a 15-page submission to the Canadian Radio-television and
    Telecommunications Commission, which was made public over the weekend.

    This needs shutting down ASAP! Border guards to become copyright cops.

    Are you sure that all of the songs on your iPod were legally
    acquired? What about the music or movies or other digital content on
    your laptop? You could be subjected to some nasty questioning next time
    you cross the border, if a new international trade body has its way --
    and your ISP might decide to rat you out to the government as well.

    The seesaw ride of Web throttling and copyright

    Well, the last couple of weeks have been a good news/bad news seesaw
    ride for those of us in the Canadian bandwidth throttling/copyright
    playground.

    As you may recall, last month the Canadian Association of Internet
    Providers (CAIP) filed a complaint against Bell-Sympatico with CRTC.
    The group represents 55 smaller Internet Service Providers (ISPs).

    Those ISPs resell Bell bandwidth to their customers, many of whom make
    legitimate use of peer-to-peer (P2P) file sharing. Other Canadian
    carriers, including Rogers, also throttle P2P traffic. CAIP wanted the
    CRTC to provide immediate relief from Bell's bandwidth throttling of
    P2P traffic because that throttling was effecting the ISPs own
    customers and making it impossible to deliver the service the ISPs
    promised. The complaint was supported by more than 1,000 complaints
    from individual Canadians.

    Link 

    ISPs fail in bid to throttle Bell's `shaping'

    A group of Internet service providers that resell bandwidth on Bell
    Canada Inc.'s network has lost a temporary bid to shelter their
    subscribers from the phone company's practice of slowing down certain
    types of Internet traffic.

    The Canadian Radio-television
    Telecommunications Commission yesterday turned down the Canadian
    Association of Internet Providers' request for an injunction, saying
    the group failed to demonstrate its members are being harmed by Bell's
    efforts to "shape" the Internet traffic of its wholesale clients.

    Traffic
    shaping generally refers to the use of special software to sniff out
    and slow down data packets associated with bandwidth-intensive services
    such as file sharing.

    "The Commission finds that CAIP has not
    demonstrated that its members will suffer irreparable harm if the
    interim relief was not granted," the CRTC said.