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ÇöÀçÀ§Ä¡ : HOME > ¸®Æ÷Æ® > Information Technology > ÀÎÅͳÝ
Net Neutrality
¹ßÇà»ç IDATE

¹ßÇàÀÏ 2014-04
ºÐ·® 138 pages
¼­ºñ½ºÇüÅ Report
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Report's Contents

1. Executive Summary

Some new business models have been designed around traffic delivery

2. Methodology & definitions

2.1. General methodology of IDATE 's reports
2.2. What is Net Neutrality?

3. Status of Net neutrality around the world

3.1. Overall view
3.2. Summary of wireline telcos
3.3. Summary of mobile telcos
3.4. Summary of regulation
3.5. Summary of content and service providers
3.6. Evolution of net neutrality; a review of 2013

4. Australia

4.1. Wireline telcos
4.1.1. Technical measures employed
4.1.2. Statements
4.1.3. Broadband network (NBN)
4.2. Mobile telcos
4.2.1. Differentiation measures
4.2.2. Statements
4.3. Regulation
4.4. Content and service providers

5. Canada

5.1. Wireline telcos
5.1.1. Technical measures employed
5.1.2. Change in policy, from throttling to non-throttling
5.1.3. Statements
5.2. Mobile telcos
5.2.1. Differentiation measures
5.2.2. Statements
5.3. Regulation
5.3.1. Initiatives from the regulator (CRTC)
5.3.2. Parliamentary initiatives
5.3.3. Legal cases
5.4. Content and service providers
5.4.1. Google introduces 'Video Quality Report'
5.4.2. The players ' positions with respect to Net neutrality

6. The United States

6.1. Wireline telcos
6.1.1. Technical measures employed
6.1.2. Statements
6.1.3. Piracy in the United States
6.2. Mobile telcos
6.2.1. Differentiation measures
6.2.2. Statements
6.3. Regulation
6.3.1. Initiatives from the regulator (FCC)
6.3.2. Bills
6.3.3. 700 MHz spectrum
6.3.4. President Obama 's position
6.3.5. Legal cases
6.4. Content and service providers

7. Europe

7.1. Regulation
7.2. CEO Roundtable proposals
7.3. Slovenia and the Czech Republic

8. France

8.1. Wireline telcos
8.1.1. Technical measures employed
8.1.2. DNS hijacking
8.1.3. The five French ISPs versus Google (YouTube)
8.1.4. Free blocks all Google ads
8.1.5. Statements
8.2. Mobile telcos
8.2.1. Differentiation measures
8.2.2. Statements
8.3. Regulation
8.3.1. Regulator (ARCEP)
8.3.2. Draft legislation
8.3.3. Legal cases and proceedings
8.4. Content and service providers

9. Germany

9.1. Wireline telcos
9.1.1. Technical measures employed
9.1.2. Statements
9.2. Mobile telcos
9.2.1. Differentiation measures
9.2.2. Statements
9.3. Regulation
9.3.1. Position of the federal ministry of economics (BMWi)
9.3.2. The regulator 's position (BNetzA)
9.3.3. Other regulatory elements
9.3.4. Legal cases

10. Italy

10.1. Wireline telcos
10.1.1. Technical measures employed
10.1.2. Statements concerning Net neutrality
10.2. Mobile telcos
10.2.1. Differentiation measures
10.2.2. Statements
10.3. Regulation
10.3.1. The regulator 's position
10.3.2. Political positions
10.3.3. Legal cases
10.4. Content and service providers

11. The Netherlands

11.1. Wireline telcos
11.1.1. Technical measures employed
11.1.2. Billing systems
11.2. Mobile telcos
11.3. Regulation
11.4. Content and service providers

12. Norway

12.1. Wireline telcos
12.1.1. Technical measures employed
12.1.2. The case of NextGenTel
12.1.3. Statements
12.2. Mobile telcos
12.2.1. Differentiation measures
12.2.2. Statements
12.3. Regulation
12.4. Service and content providers

13. Spain

13.1. Wireline telcos
13.1.1. Technical measures employed
13.1.2. Statements
13.1.3. Billing system
13.2. Mobile telcos
13.2.1. Differentiation measures
13.2.2. Statements
13.3. Regulation
13.4. Content and service providers


14. The United Kingdom

14.1. Wireline telcos
14.1.1. Technical measures employed
14.1.2. Virgin Media offering Netflix with no traffic management
14.1.3. Statements
14.2. Mobile telcos
14.2.1. Differentiation measures
14.2.2. Traffic management
14.2.3. Statements
14.3. Regulation
14.3.1. The regulator 's position
14.3.2. The government 's position
14.3.3. Legal cases
14.4. Content and service providers

15. Japan

15.1. Wireline telcos
15.1.1. Technical measures employed
15.1.2. Statements
15.2. Mobile telcos
15.2.1. Differentiation measures
15.2.2. Statements
15.3. Regulation
15.3.1. Introduction: ISP competition in Japan is deemed healthy
15.3.2. The MIC Working Group on Net Neutrality
15.3.3. Guidelines for packet shaping
15.3.4. Conclusion: no specific regulation, guidelines are sufficient
15.3.5. Law enforcement on piracy
15.4. Content and service providers

16. South Korea

16.1. Wireline telcos
16.2. Mobile telcos
16.3. Regulation
16.4. Content and service providers


Report's Tables and Figures

Tables

Table 1: Synthesis of the Net neutrality debate relating to fixed networks
Table 2: Synthesis of the Net neutrality debate relating to mobile networks
Table 3: Differentiation practices on fixed networks
Table 4: Differentiation practices on mobile networks
Table 5: Status of regulatory debates and policies
Table 6: Content and service providers ' positions with respect to Net neutrality
Table 7: Excerpt from CRTC 's 2012-15 work plan
Table 8: Dissatisfaction of users by ISP and service (% of respondents)
Table 9: ISP Get: flat rate plans segmented by connection speed
Table 10: Recap of data plan prices as of February 2010
Table 11: Allowable use of the word 'unlimited' according to Ofcom

Figures

Figure 1: The key Net neutrality issues along the video distribution value chain
Figure 2: New sources of income for telcos
Figure 3: Classes of service proposed for Australia 's NBN
Figure 4: List of ISPs who offer unmetered access to ABC iview service
Figure 5: Rogers ' traffic management policy (current, after CTRC intervention in 2012)
Figure 6: Rogers ' traffic management policy (before CTRC intervention in 2012)
Figure 7: Bell Canada 's traffic management policy (before CTRC intervention in 2012)
Figure 8: Bell Canada 's traffic management policy (current, after CTRC intervention in 2012)
Figure 9: CRTC letter to Rogers (Jan. 20, 2012)
Figure 10: Google 's Video Quality Report launched in Janaury 2014
Figure 11: Evolution of download throughput of select ISPs over time
Figure 12: Netflix performance in the United States according to customers ' ISP
Figure 13: Mozilla landing page during protest
Figure 14: Restrictions applied within the European Union
Figure 15: BEREC work on net neutrality
Figure 16: Enablers identified by WG1
Figure 17: Illustration of DNS hijacking by Orange
Figure 18: Message displayed on 12/01/2011 on the screens of Orange customers trying to connect to Megavideo
Figure 19: Proposals contained in the Economic Affairs Committee report
Figure 20: TeleTu information on quality of service
Figure 21: Alice 's current information on quality of service
Figure 22: Internet access plans priced by connection speed
Figure 23: Regulation in the Netherlands
Figure 24: Reasonable traffic management criteria
Figure 25: ONO 's service bundles
Figure 26: Yoigo 's VoIP add-on 'Bono Voz IP', and the La Infinita 35 tariff which already includes this VoIP option
Figure 27: Ofcom presentation on Net neutrality (2006)
Figure 28: Degrees of traffic management
Figure 29: au smart pass, video pass, book pass and song pass


Slideshow's Contents

1. Executive summary

1.1 What is Net Neutrality

1.2 The debate is focusing on the main business issues underlying Net Neutrality
1.3 Some new business models have been designed around traffic delivery

2. Methodology & définitions

2.1 General methodology of IDATE's reports

3. Status of Net neutrality around the world

3.1 Overall view
3.2 Summary of wireline telcos
3.3 Summary of mobile telcos
3.4 Summary of regulation
3.5 Summary of content and service providers
3.6 Evolution of net neutrality; a review of 2013

4. Australia

4.1 Wireline telcos
4.2 Mobile telcos
4.3 Regulation
4.4 Content and service providers

5. Canada

5.1 Wireline telcos
5.2 Mobile telcos
5.3 Regulation
5.4 Content and service providers

6. The United States

6.1 Wireline telcos
6.2 Mobile telcos
6.3 Regulation
6.4 Content and service provider

7. Europe

7.1 Regulation
7.2 CEO Roundtable proposals
7.3 Slovenia and the Czech Republic

8. France

8.1 Wireline telcos
8.2 Mobile telcos
8.3 Regulation
8.4 Content and service provider

9. Germany

9.1 Wireline telcos
9.2 Mobile telcos
9.3 Regulation
9.4 Content and service provider

10. Italy

10.1 Wireline telcos
10.2 Mobile telcos
10.3 Regulation
10.4 Content and service provider

11. The Netherlands

11.1 Wireline telcos
11.2 Mobile telcos
11.3 Regulation
11.4 Content and service providers

12. Norway

12.1 Wireline telcos
12.2 Mobile telcos
12.3 Regulation
12.4 Content and service providers

13. Spain

13.1 Wireline telcos
13.2 Mobile telcos
13.3 Regulation
13.4 Content and service providers

14. The United Kingdom

14.1 Wireline telcos
14.2 Mobile telcos
14.3 Regulation
14.4 Content and service providers

15. Japan

15.1 Wireline telcos
15.2 Mobile telcos
15.3 Regulation
15.4 Content and service providers

16. South Korea

16.1 Wireline telcos
16.2 Mobile telcos
16.3 Regulation
16.4 Content and service providers


List of players studied

Australia
ABC
Exetel
Free TV Australia
iiNet
Internode
Ninemsn
Optus
SBS
Seven Network
Telstra (BigPond)
Vodafone

Canada
Alliance of Canadian Cinema, Television and Radio Artists (ACTRA)
Bell Canada
BitTorrent
Canadian Gamers Organisation
CBC-Radio Canada
Google
Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA)
Netflix
Open Internet Coalition (OIC)
Rogers Communications
Shaw Communications
Skype
Vonage

France
Bouygues Telecom
Canal+
Cogent
Dailymotion
Free
Google (YouTube)
NRJ Group
Orange
PriceMinister
SFR
Skype
Skyrock
TF1

Germany
ARD - ZDF
Deutsche Telekom
E-Plus
Freenet
HanseNet Telekommunikation (Alice)
Kabel Deutschland
O2
SoftEyes GmbH
T-Mobile
Verband Deutscher Zeitschriftenverleger
Vodafone Germany

Italy
3 Italy
FastWeb
Mediaset
Tele2
Telecom Italia
Telecom Italia Mobile
Vodafone Italy
Wind

Japan
au by KDDI
KDDI
NTT
NTT DOCOMO
SoftBank
SoftBank Mobile

Norway
Mediebedriftene
Netcom
NextGenTel
NRK
Schibsted
Telenor

South Korea
KT
LG U+
Samsung
SK Telecom

Spain
Jazz Telecom (Jazztel)
Movistar (Telefónica from España)
Orange
Redtel
Telefonica
Vodafone
Yoigo (Xfera Moviles)

The Netherlands
KPN Mobile Netherlands
NPO
Tele2
T-Mobile Netherlands
Vodafone Netherlands

UK
3 UK
BBC
BSkyB
BT
ITV
O2
Orange UK
PlusNet
Skype
TalkTalk
T-Mobile
UK Music
Virgin Media
Virgin UK
Vodafone

USA
Amazon
Apple
AT&T
BitTorrent
Comcast
Cox Communications
Craigslist
CTIA
eBay
Facebook
Flickr
Google
InterActiveCorp (IAC)
Level 3
MetroPCS
Netflix
Qwest
Skype
Sprint
Time Warner Cable
Time Warner
T-Mobile
Twitter
Verizon Communications
Vonage
Yahoo!


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