Internode throttles fibre uplink to preserve network

 

Symmetric services still the pipe dream.

Internode has revealed its fibre-to-the-home plans [PDF] use asymmetric speeds to prevent customers from "swamping" the ISP's network using their higher uplink.

The Adelaide-based ISP sold fibre broadband services on Opticomm-owned networks in housing estates in Queensland, South Australia and Victoria.

But all of the plans featured asymmetric speeds, starting with a base 25Mbps downlink and 1Mbps uplink, increasing to 50/2Mbps and 100/5Mbps.

Fibre connections typically provided an opportunity to offer symmetric services - that is, plans with identical downlink and uplink speeds.

Internode's carrier relations manager John Lindsay said the ISP had decided not to provide a symmetric service due to fears that customers could "swamp the network capacity very quickly with outbound traffic."

"We limit the [uplink] rate to prevent that from happening," Lindsay said.

"It's a network performance assurance strategy that has proven to be quite successful. As the [fibre] technology progresses, we'll see services move closer to symmetry."

Lindsay said Internode's fears were based on ADSL usage patterns on its network.

He said that customers were uploading more information than the ISP was sending back to them for six hours every day.

"It's the six hours when most people are asleep," Lindsay said. "They're probably running things like peer-to-peer clients that are seeding."

But Lindsay believed P2P traffic volumes were falling generally due to the increased amount of content available in ISP ‘freezones'.

Internode also said today that it would soon be signing on its 100th fibre-to-the-home broadband customer.

It sold services in Fernbrooke estate southwest of Brisbane, Lochiel Park in Adelaide, and the Alamanda Point Cook and University Hill communities in Victoria.

The ISP would also soon start selling services at Lightsview in Adelaide's Northgate area, and Parkbridge, a master-planned community in Middleton Grange, NSW.

Some estate developers included six months of free access to Internode fibre services as part of house-and-land packages, Lindsay said.


Internode throttles fibre uplink to preserve network
"5mbps is a bit stingy for the 100mbps plan. At the very least allow 10-20mbps? I appreciate they have usage patterns established with ADSL, but that's for 1mbps maximum upload speed - of course ..."
By HyRax
 
 
 
Comments: 2
NumbNuts2009
Sep 5, 2009 12:11 PM
Darn, one of the main reasons I wanted fibre was the symmetry...

Don't ISPs benifit from outbound traffic anyway though? peering (not p2p) ratios and all that
HyRax
Sep 7, 2009 12:00 AM
5mbps is a bit stingy for the 100mbps plan. At the very least allow 10-20mbps?

I appreciate they have usage patterns established with ADSL, but that's for 1mbps maximum upload speed - of course people end up seeding for 6 hours or more. The majority of people out there seed until they hit a ratio of 2.0 only, even less on a public tracker. Having the full 100mbps upload speed would mean people spend less overall time seeding anyway.

The simple fact of the matter is that seeding also incurs a hit to your download quota - after all, you receive a request to send data somewhere. If your quota is used up, people will turn off their P2P clients to preserve what little quota they have left. This is where excess charges work well, but if you're shaped only, then there's little incentive to curb your uploads.
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