|
23 February 2008 18:32 by Andre "DVDBack23" Yoskowitz
| 11 comments
According to a few reports and earnings from UK based ISPs, there has been a sharp increase in bandwidth costs thanks to the BBC iPlayer.
The BBC announced that in its first month of operation, January 2008, 2.2 million people watched at least one program using the service which led to almost a tripling in streaming costs for at least one ISP, PlusNet.
The actual cost per user per month for PlusNet rose from 6.1p to 18.3p, meaning the internet TV service is costing the ISP a hefty sum.
Ashley Highfield however, the BBC's director of future media and technology, has said that the iPlayer has "negligible impact on the UK internet infrastructure".
Permalink to this article
| Topic: IPTV
| |
Related articles:
iPlayer coming to the PS3, eventually (15 April 2008)
Sony and Microsoft wanted too much control over iPlayer on their consoles (11 April 2008)
BBC spars with Internet Service Providers over iPlayer (10 April 2008)
iPlayer comes to the Wii (9 April 2008)
iTunes adds C4 content (18 March 2008)
BBC begins to correct iPlayer exploit (15 March 2008)
iPlayer coming for iPhone, iPod Touch (6 March 2008)
Japanese satellite to provide broadband internet and DTV in Asia (24 February 2008)
iTunes in UK adds BBC programming (19 February 2008)
BBC worldwide content on iTunes next week (16 February 2008)
BBC adds Firefox support to the iPlayer (2 February 2008)
iPlayer coming to revamped Apple TV? (20 January 2008)
BBC iPlayer traffic increases 14-fold in a month (12 January 2008)
BBC iPlayer officially launches (25 December 2007)
|
|
|
| Discuss this article! |
| ammad123 (Newbie) 23 February 2008 20:35 |
|
|
Haha , First Comment
But the thing is,how does this affect the public (consumers), cuz i watched 2 shows on iPLayer today already lol :)
|
| dude845 (Senior Member) 24 February 2008 0:37 |
|
Originally posted by ammad123: Haha , First Comment
But the thing is,how does this affect the public (consumers), cuz i watched 2 shows on iPLayer today already lol :)
This will probably will lead to Uk ISP users to have a rise in there ISP price..
|
| thekingo7 (Senior Member) 24 February 2008 1:12 |
|
|
Oh bitch bitch bitch, pretty soon their gonna pull some net neutrality bullsh*t. Can anyone say throttling. I can see it now, Comcast UK for a better tomorrow.
|
| jonny-x (Newbie) 24 February 2008 5:54 |
|
|
Gotta love the UK and it's infrastructure. Internet is already shockingly expensive for what you get and saying the price may be passed on to the customers sucks.
I pay £30 a month for my internet connection (excluding line rental @ £10 per month also), so £40 in total. I'm meant to be getting 8mbps but I actually get just under 4mbps. Alongside this I have a 40gb per month download limit... so I'm paying around £1 a gigabyte...
Anyone know any decent ISPs out there?!?!
|
| nobrainer (Member) 24 February 2008 6:26 |
|
ISP's in the UK are happy to dupe us all by advertising connections of 8mbps and in reality its around 2mbps for the country as a whole other than llu via decent isp's like BE http://www.bethere.co.uk/ that continually scores high on speed tests via think broadband ( formally adsl guide) and have the best public rating, apart from this anomaly in the isp business, its about time they paid for more bandwidth instead of starving and miss selling a product that ofcom (Gov regulator) does little to change the dirty tactics of.
@ dude845
in the uk we either are subjected to a "fair use policy" on most services sold as "unlimited" which is usually around 10gig and if you exceed this limit on your unlimited connection you are throttled to 256k for the remainder of the month. Or you pay per gb.
But one thing that has sprung up is bandwidth shaping and throttling, in the UK Tiscali, Eclipse Internet and now Pipex since Tiscali purchased it all employ p2p, ftp, ect throttling and reduce speeds to as low as 2kbps. If you read the forums on the think broadband site these 3 companies appear to be the worst anti consumer companies in the UK and are best avoided.
@ jonny-x
Be and UKonline continually have a good score and offer consumer friendly packages without sever throttling or anti consumer "fair usage policy" no fair use with BE on their unlimited and UKonline is 200+mb over the month.
follow the link and compare the companies.
http://www.thinkbroadband.com/isp/compare.html
READ:
Bad ISPs
The BPI Are: SONY, UNIVERSAL, WARNER GROUP, EMI.
The RIAA Soundexchange Are: SONY, UNIVERSAL, WARNER GROUP, EMI.
The IFPI Are: The same anti consumer lot as listed above!
The MPAA Are: SONY, UNIVERSAL, WARNER GROUP, DISNEY, PARAMOUNT, FOX.
How do you stop anti consumer = its easy purchase only second hand media and avoid their propertarian hobbled by DRM hardware! http://www.boycott-riaa.com/
This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 24 February 2008 6:46
|
| RichieTD (Newbie) 24 February 2008 8:04 |
|
I am running 20mbps and have no download limit. (not saying Virgin Media don't cap speeds at certain times) and the package I have got with them means that my Broadband is paying for itself.
As regard with the BBCi service claim by some isp's I have to say is a load of crap. I hate streaming so I download the program first. The downloads on not that fast at all and the files are about half the size to it's avi counterpart that someone may be downloading using bittorrent.
This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 24 February 2008 8:05
|
| nobrainer (Member) 24 February 2008 9:24 |
|
@ RichieTD
virgin are one of the BAD isp that filter, throttle and bandwidth shape and are best avoided. They are also one of the lowest scoring ISP's in the uk alongside Tiscali.
take a look at the comparison!
http://www.thinkbroadband.com/isp/compar...&commit=Compare
The BPI Are: SONY, UNIVERSAL, WARNER GROUP, EMI.
The RIAA Soundexchange Are: SONY, UNIVERSAL, WARNER GROUP, EMI.
The IFPI Are: The same anti consumer lot as listed above!
The MPAA Are: SONY, UNIVERSAL, WARNER GROUP, DISNEY, PARAMOUNT, FOX.
How do you stop anti consumer = its easy purchase only second hand media and avoid their propertarian hobbled by DRM hardware! http://www.boycott-riaa.com/
This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 24 February 2008 9:34
|
| RichieTD (Newbie) 24 February 2008 12:29 |
|
|
@ nobrainer
Still faster than adsl. I have the vip package that has the full digital TV including sky movies and sports and sentana, Talk unlimited, talk mobile, talk international, 20mbps broadband (even when throttled it's better than 8mbps or even better than being far from the exchange and only getting 2mbps), additional box and a V+ box. I used to pay more for less. I also get the full PC Guard suite for free.
This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 24 February 2008 12:31
|
| nobrainer (Member) 24 February 2008 13:36 |
|
Originally posted by RichieTD: @ nobrainer
Still faster than adsl. I have the vip package that has the full digital TV including sky movies and sports and sentana, Talk unlimited, talk mobile, talk international, 20mbps broadband (even when throttled it's better than 8mbps or even better than being far from the exchange and only getting 2mbps), additional box and a V+ box. I used to pay more for less. I also get the full PC Guard suite for free.
Dude they employ traffic shaping, they limit certain protocols speeds, stick with your ISP if you like being told what you can do with your connection, i * though the internet was about freedom of information not restriction!
btw you have a cable connection it is different to the local loop.
http://www.thinkbroadband.com/isp/compar...&commit=Compare
do you even look at the speed comparison?
things to ask your ISP'S before signing up ppl.
* What is the minimum contract length?
* Is there a cancellation fee?
* Is there a limit on the amount of data I can download each month?
* Is the service unmetered?
* Is there a fair use poilicy
* Do you block any ports or restrict P2P apps?
* Is your customer support a premium rate number?
* Are you a reseller or do you manage your own connections?
* Do you provide one or more fixed IP addresses?
* Do you allow customers to run servers?
* Can you set up a reverse DNS entry?
* Does your ISP sell your internet history?
* What the users-to-modems ratio is?
The BPI Are: SONY, UNIVERSAL, WARNER GROUP, EMI.
The RIAA Soundexchange Are: SONY, UNIVERSAL, WARNER GROUP, EMI.
The IFPI Are: The same anti consumer lot as listed above!
The MPAA Are: SONY, UNIVERSAL, WARNER GROUP, DISNEY, PARAMOUNT, FOX.
How do you stop anti consumer = its easy purchase only second hand media and avoid their propertarian hobbled by DRM hardware! http://www.boycott-riaa.com/
This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 24 February 2008 13:44
|
| borhan9 (AfterDawn Addict) 10 April 2008 17:28 |
|
|
If this is effecting the bandwith why dont the bbc have an option open for their users to have a high and lower definition versions of the shows to view.
|
| varnull (Senior Member) 10 April 2008 17:46 |
|
Because they are restrictive drm bastards.. Charging us for a service which requires.. nay demands windows and media player10.. don't have that.. still have to pay for the c****** BBC state mouthpiece *****..
I hate the BBC and their DRM monopolistic unanswerable public compulsory subscription labour party political lackies management..**** them, and **** their crappy service.
If they (virgin ****head media) try passing any costs on to me.. a broadband consumer and forced tv licence payer WHO CAN NOT access the bbc iplayer I will seek legal advice about suing their asses off!!
Free open source software = made by end users who want an application to work....
This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 10 April 2008 17:47
|
|
|
Latest newsLatest news from AfterDawn.com. Circuit City moves toward serious consideration of buyout 13 May, 2008 | 4 comments Libraries' video offerings on the rise but little interest for Blu-ray 13 May, 2008 | 9 comments Nintendo launches WiiWare, six games available 13 May, 2008 | 2 comments HBO may have its shows sell on iTunes for $1.99+ 13 May, 2008 iPhone goes nonexclusive in Australia and India 12 May, 2008 | 1 comment BioWare removes rolling DRM from upcoming games 12 May, 2008 | 15 comments Amazon Unbox to go HD on TiVo 12 May, 2008 | 1 comment 'We can stream live TV to iPods', says Orb 12 May, 2008 | 9 comments Criterion begins its Blu-ray support 12 May, 2008 | 8 comments Amazon offers "Buy 2 Get 1 Free" sale on Blu-ray titles 12 May, 2008 | 8 comments Samsung launches new HD flash camcorder 12 May, 2008 | 3 comments Torrent.is set to return next week 12 May, 2008 | 6 comments
More news... 
Search for headlinesSearch through our news archive. 
Latest threadsRecently updated discussion threads. More... 
Last week's most popular software downloads
Most popular devicesLast week's most popular devices in our hardware section. More products... 
Top linksMost popular links - Blasteroids.com
Download game trailers, demos and more - TorrentReactor.Net
The most active torrents on the web - Digital-Digest
Latest DivX, XviD, DVD, Blu-Ray, HD DVD News - OpenSubtitles.org
download DivX subtitles from the biggest open database - CDRInfo.com
The Hardware Authority - DVDHelp.us
DVD help, tutorials, FAQ, and very popular free help forum! - Digital-Forums
Discussion about Video Encoding, Blu-ray, DVD, (S)VCD, Hardware & Software, Consoles, etc.. - Torrentreactor.TO
The most active torrents on the web

|