Shared Community WiFi Networking Blog From A Toronto Co-op ISP

Wednesday, June 27, 2007

World's Worst ISP: Exetel!

From a story on ArsTechnica:
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ISP as copyright cop: Aussie ISP kills all user multimedia files nightly

By Eric Bangeman | Published: June 27, 2007 - 09:01AM CT

Envision a world where your ISP does the copyright policing at the behest of the movie studios, television networks, and music labels, where no copyrighted content stays up on a user's account for more than 24 hours. It sounds like a dream for Big Content, but it's also a nightmare for customers of Australian ISP Exetel.

An Exetel support page which features the top ten support questions from the previous month. A frequently asked question from customers is why their multimedia files keep disappearing from their accounts. Exetel says that it takes a "hard approach to copyright issues," and since April 2005 the ISP has run a script that deletes all multimedia content with common extensions including .avi, .mp3, .wmv, and .mov.

That would certainly have the effect of removing any copyrighted content that shouldn't be there, but it also makes it hard for customers to share their own slideshows, home movies, and music, because, as Boing Boing notes, Exetel will automatically delete content that isn't infringing. "Sorry you can't watch the clips of Junior's footy match, mum. My ISP nuked it last night."

LINK

Thursday, June 21, 2007

Telus to Merge with Bell?

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Telus says tie-up would be 'all-Canadian solution'
Jun 21, 2007 08:54 AM
Canadian Press
VANCOUVER – Telus Corp. (TSX: T) says a possible merger with Bell Canada parent BCE Inc. (TSX: BCE) would be "an all-Canadian solution" as pension funds and foreign investors circle its rival, which is Canada's largest telephone company."
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Well, at least we would know who was screwing us when we pick up the phone... ;-)

Seriously, though, would it be better to have one super-sized Canadian provider, or an American-owned provider (ex-Bell) plus a large Canadian provder (Telus)? Neither seems to be a really nice choice.



Now, the rest of the FULL STORY because the Star locks down its articles after 7 days...
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Vancouver-based Telus, the country's second-biggest phone company, confirmed Thursday it has entered into a mutual non-disclosure and standstill agreement and is pursuing non-exclusive discussions with BCE about a possible merger.

"Telus believes the combination of the two businesses would represent a compelling strategic and financial opportunity for all BCE and Telus stakeholders," CEO Darren Entwistle said in a release.

"It would be an all-Canadian solution for both immediate and long-term value creation, whilst ensuring a vibrant player continues in this increasingly competitive industry."

Telus joins a long list of companies eyeing BCE, which confirmed earlier this year it was reviewing options to increase shareholder value, including a sale or merger.

Other suitors include groups led by the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board, the Ontario Teachers Pension Plan Board and U.S. private equity firm Cerberus Capital Management. BCE has reportedly asked the three consortiums to submit their offers for the company before the Canada Day weekend.

Montreal-based BCE announced Wednesday night it's in discussions with Telus to "explore the possibility of a business combination." The two companies have a combined market capitalization of more than $50 billion.

A union of BCE and Telus would likely require the new entity to divest some of its wireline assets where they overlap but there would be few regulatory ramifications for wireline operations, UBS Securities analyst Jeffrey Fan wrote in a note to clients.

"The key questions are: How is Telus valued in a potential merger when BCE is currently valued as an LBO (leveraged buyout) candidate?," wrote Fan, and "is Telus really serious?"

Synergies in wireline communications of a merged company would likely come in around $700 million, Fan noted.

The brokerage raised its target price on BCE stock to $40, continuing its rating of "neutral."

Entwistle said Telus "has a unique opportunity to create a truly national Canadian enterprise with the requisite balance-sheet strength as well as scale and scope to continue Telus's development as a global leader in the deployment of state-of-the-art technology and innovative new services for customers."

Telus said a merger with BCE would "preserve and enhance a public Canadian investment vehicle for ordinary Canadians and institutional investors."

It would also "preserve an income tax base for Canadian governments that would otherwise be eliminated by highly levered private equity structures with non-taxable equity holders and U.S. sourced debt."

Telus is a western-based national telecommunications company, with $8.8 billion of annual revenue and 10.8 million customer connections including 5.1 million wireless subscribers, 4.5 million wireline network access lines and 1.1 million Internet subscribers.

Federal Industry Minister Maxime Bernier acknowledged last week the government is aware of the fierce debate around whether Canada's mobile market lacks competition as industry players exchanged barbs over whether the country's main mobile companies – BCE, Telus and Rogers Communications Inc. (TSX: RCI.B) – have already become too dominant.

Recent media reports, quoting sources close to the company, said Telus was unlikely to join the bidding unless there has a clear signal from Ottawa that it would not block a marriage of the country's two largest telecommunications companies.

While private-equity bids have dominated takeover speculation so far, BCE chief executive Michael Sabia said at the company's recent annual meeting that a private equity takeover is not the only option available to the company. That has led Bay Street to speculate on other possibilities such as a massive share buyback or a merger with Telus.

Teaming up with Telus is a scenario shareholders suggested at annual meetings of both companies recently, only to be brushed off by executives on both sides.

Earlier this year, National Bank Financial analyst Greg MacDonald wrote about the possible combination, citing a lot of savings since both are phone companies. However, the move would be costly considering the jump in BCE's stock recently.

Before the announcement Wednesday, BCE shares closed down 18 cents on the Toronto Stock Exchange, off from a recent high of $40.31.

Telus shares were up a cent at $$65.76.

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

New Longest WiFi Link Record! (382km, 3mbps!)

June 18, 2007 9:18 AM PDT
New Wi-Fi distance record: 382 kilometers

"Researcher Ermanno Pietrosemoli has set what appears to be a new record for the longest communication link with Wi-Fi.

Pietrosemoli, president of the Escuela Latinoamerica de Redes (which means networking school of Latin America) established a Wi-Fi link between two computers located in El Aguila and Platillon Mountain, Venezuela. That's a distance of 382 kilometers, or 238 miles. He used technology from Intel, which is concocting its own long-range Wi-Fi equipment, and some off-the-shelf parts. Pietrosemoli gets about 3 megabits per second in each direction on his long-range connections."


LINK

First Morning at the CRACIN Conference in Montreal

Community WiFi researchers and project leads are getting together for three days this week at Concordia University in Montreal. So far, so good-- lots of academic talk, but each 10-minute presentation has a useful lesson for people doing on-the-ground community WiFi projects.

More later!


Link to CRACIN





Maine passes network neutrality law (sort of)

"Maine has become the first state in the US to pass network neutrality legislation, although the resolution that was finally passed is significantly weaker than the initial bill that was considered.
...
The resolution will actually do little, but it does show that the issue is on the legislative radar screen now, and next year's report could provide the impetus for actual legislation."


LINK

Tuesday, June 05, 2007

Wireless Nomad June Monthly Meeting!

Monthly Meeting Wednesday 13 June 2007

What: Wireless Nomad Monthly Meeting!

When: Wednesday 13 June 2007 at 7:00PM-9:00PM
Where: Linux Caffe
326 Harbord Street
Toronto ON M6G 3A4
416-534-2116