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Sprint Nextel, the carrier who recently launched their WiMax
wireless broadband service in Baltimore,
are the latest company to come under criticism for restrictive policy which
enables them to limit internet traffic on the service.
Free Press, a net neutrality advocate and public interest
group, were the first ones who noticed a clause in the WiMax terms of service
by which Sprint reserved the right to limit bandwidth for particularly
traffic-intensive users and applications such as file sharing. Ben Scott,
policy director at Free Press stated that the group is "very troubled by
this development and the larger moves across the wireless industry to limit
consumer access to the legal content and services of their choice."
Sprint has retorted that their policy is not aimed at
specific individuals or programs, and insists upon the open character of the
WiMax network. ”We will not police the Internet or the content our customers
access," said Sprint spokesman John Polivka. "We do not shape or
modify the delivery of data."
Sprint launched their 4G (fourth generation) wireless
internet service yesterday in Baltimore, and
will expand to Chicago and Washington by the end of this year, followed by
other major U.S.
cities. WiMax, which proposes to offer a high-speed alternative to other
wireless services, or rather a mobile alternative to cable broadband, are
proponents of an “open business model” that does not restrict services and
customer choices in any way and contends that their Terms of Service, which say
that "To ensure a high-quality experience for its entire subscriber base,
Xohm may use various tools and techniques designed to limit the bandwidth
available for certain bandwidth-intensive applications or protocols, such as
file sharing,” have the sole purpose of avoiding traffic congestion, and ensure
that no one customer uses up a disproportionate amount of bandwidth to the
detriment of others.
Free Press representatives however doubt the sincerity of
Sprint’s claims, and warn customers, pointing out that Sprint are promising
unrestricted access while at the same time reserving the right to restrict it.
Sprint are merely the latest in the line of companies to be
criticized for limiting customer bandwidth, as only last week T-Mobile got
pelted by media and bloggers for imposing a 1GB limit on their “unlimited” data
plan for the Google/Android smartphone. T-Mobile has subsequently removed the
limit but still reserve the right to limit excessive users.
Back in August, Comcast were ruled against by the Federal
Communications Committee, who were enforcing their 2005 open internet
principles, which Comcast were violating by using what the FCC called
“invasive” network management techniques when they limited customers’ access to
BitTorrent and other file sharing applications. The ruling set a powerful
precedent, which no doubt will affect future legal decisions, as well as
raising public awareness on the matter.
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