News

Verizon Issues Cease and Desist against Netflix – Netflix Stands Their Ground

In a heated debate between the american based ISP Verizon and the entertainment streaming service Netflix, Verizon has issued a cease and desist asking Netflix to stop putting down Verizon’s service but to also to “provide Verizon with any and all evidence and documentation that it possesses substantiating Netflix’s assertion”. Netflix is defending their right to display the message about Verizon’s network traffic issues.

Netflix’s general counsel David Hyman wrote a letter, obtained by QUARTZ to Verizon and  claimed that Verizon were at fault for the poor performance some of their mutual customers were experiencing, not Netflix. Hyman also added that they have placed the internet performance related message “The Verizon network is crowded right now” onto their service to show that it’s due to Verizon’s methods of handling traffic at peak times. Netflix has determined Verizons performance by looking at the way it handles Netflix traffic at peak and non peak times.

Hyman: “We are testing this type of messaging across the U.S. with multiple providers,” he also states in his letter that Verizon tried to “shift blame for our customer’s experience on the Verizon network ‘squarely to Netflix itself’”

The full letter follows below.

Dear Randy,

I am in receipt of your letter dated June 5, 2014.

Your interpretation mischaracterizes our messagingThe message you cite to in your letter merely lets our consumers know that the Verizon network is crowdedWe have determined this by examining the difference between the speed at which the Verizon network handles Netflix traffic at peak versus non-peak timesThe messaging is part of our ongoing transparency efforts to let consumers know their Netflix experience is being affected by congestion on their broadband provider’s networkWe are testing this type of messaging across the US with multiple providers.

Furthermore, your attempt to shift blame for our customers’ experience on the Verizon network “squarely to Netflix itself” disregards Verizon’s responsibility to provide its customers with the service it has promised them. Verizon sells residential Internet access to its customers. In fact, it is my understanding that Verizon actually upsells customers to higher speed packages based on improved access to video services, including Netflix. Verizon’s unwillingness to augment its access ports to major Internet backbone providers is squarely Verizon’s fault. As an ISP, you sell your customers a connection to the Internet. To ensure that these customers get the level of service they pay you for, it is your responsibility to make sure your network, including your interconnection points, have sufficient capacity to accommodate the data requests made by those customers. To try to shift blame to us for performance issues arising from interconnection congestion is like blaming drivers on a bridge for traffic jams when you’re the one who decided to leave three lanes closed during rush hour.

As you are well aware, Netflix, for more than two years, through its Open Connect Program, has been willing to bring the data ISP subscribers request directly to any network for free, including Verizon. Despite our willingness to do so, you have chosen not to participate in the Open Connect Program, but instead have allowed your network connection to Netflix to degrade until we agreed to pay for augmented interconnection. We brought the data right to your doorstep…all you had to do was open your door.

We hope that our recent agreement will soon result in a better Netflix experience for our mutual customers. The current transparency test to which your letter relates is scheduled to end June 16 and we are evaluating rolling it out more broadly. Regardless of this specific test, we will continue to work on ways to communicate network conditions to our consumers. We’re also happy to work with you on ways to improve network transparency to our mutual customers.

Sincerely,
David Hyman
General Counsel

What Verizon’s response to this will be, I’m not sure, but it looks as though Netflix have enough evidence to put up a good fight against whatever card Verizon might play next.

Thank you to QUARTZ for supplying us with this information.

Image courtesy of  QUARTZ.

Kyle Williams

Disqus Comments Loading...

Recent Posts

Medieval Kingdom Sim Norland Delayed, Hits Major Wishlist Milestone

A new upcoming Medieval Kingdom SIM game reminiscent of Rim World has just hit a…

2 hours ago

DEEPCOOL MATREXX 30 Tempered Glass MicroATX PC Case

Matrexx 30 is small-sized M-ATX computer case, perfect for gamers looking to build a small…

3 hours ago

Toshiba 10TB Enterprise 3.5″ SATA HDD/Hard Drive 7200rpm

As Big Data drives demand for more distributed storage in the cloud and on premises,…

3 hours ago

PNY NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4060 Ti 8GB XLR8 VERTO EPIC-X RGB Ada Lovelace Graphics Card

NVIDIA® GeForce RTX™ 40 Series GPUs are beyond fast for gamers and creators. They're powered…

3 hours ago

Cooler Master 360mm MasterLiquid 360 Atmos Intel/AMD CPU Liquid Cooler

The next generation AIO liquid cooling is here with the MasterLiquid 360 Atmos. The Atmos…

3 hours ago

Kingston NV2 4TB M.2 NVMe PCIe 4.0 SSD/Solid State Drive

Kingston’s NV2 PCIe 4.0 NVMe SSD is a substantial next-gen storage solution powered by a…

3 hours ago