Archive for June, 2007

Why isn’t there an Anti-Spam Convention …

Friday, June 22nd, 2007

… and should there be one at all?

According to netdialogue.org, anti-spam efforts on an international level are rather informal and non-committing.  Is the risk of having a bad international convention so high that industrialized nations are reluctant to instigate one?

Herdict Could Make Broadband Market More Competitive

Monday, June 18th, 2007

I’m much excited that the Herdict project, sponsored–among others–by the Berkman Center and the OII, is being pushed to the next level this summer!

The project is awesome because the software will allow users to benchmark the performance of their computers against their peers.  (See here for more information.)

My wish list for Herdict is short–it has only one item if I don’t count the best wishes for the Herdict team:

It would be awesome if Herdict could also periodically measure the available internet bandwidth. 

Here in Switzerland, there’s been a great deal of discussion concerning broadband subscribers who get much less bandwidth than they subscribed for, and I don’t think the situation is much different elsewhere–especially in the U.S. where the average bandwidth is lower than in Central Europe. One of the country’s telcos, Sunrise, already offers a “ADSL speedometer” on its website.

However, this service is inferior to Herdict in several ways:

  • First, the company that offers it is not neutral by any measure;
  • Second, users cannot benchmark test results;
  • Third, it’s a web service, and each testing requires user activity.

The problem with lower-than-promised bandwidth is now, as I perceive it, an information problem–and also a problem of collective action.  Herdict can solve both of them:

  • With Herdict, it would be easy for anyone to get good data about the actual bandwidth of his or her connection.  (The software might even include analyses as to the average bandwidth depending on the daytime, cross-provider comparisons, etc.)
  • In cases where a provider doesn’t live up to its promises, users would see that they’re not alone.  Consumer organizations and the media, both being already interested in the issue, would be more than happy to use and publicize that information.
  • Maybe even the OECD would be interested in high-level aggregates of the so-produced information in order to refine their broadband statistics.
  • At least in countries that allow class actions, providers would be under a credible threat of legal action and could not hide behind the best efforts clauses in their Terms & Conditions any longer.
  • All of this would eventually prompt providers to improve their services and increase quality competition in the broadband sector.  (In Switzerland, at least, there is little price competition since the physical landlines are owned by only two companies, Swisscom and Cablecom, in most parts of the country.)

Of course, where the potential impact of a software on a market is so high and much is at stake for big market players, the prevention of manipulations of all sorts deserves a great deal of attention.

P.S. The release version of Herdict should come in multiple languages, otherwise only a small percentage of users could use it outside the anglophone countries.

Breakup of Book Price Fixing Fosters A2K

Friday, June 15th, 2007

Less than two months after the Federal Supreme Court broke up the Swiss book price cartel, I received a sign that this move does indeed foster the access to knowledge–though not only in the way I argued earlier.

The news came in a letter from Rösslitor, St. Gallen’s biggest bookstore, which had been taken over by one of the country’s biggest book retailers a couple of years ago.

The letter started with a hymn to the importance and societal functions of public libraries and school libraries, follwed by a slightly more modest description of the bookstore’s achievments.

The important thing is that Rösslitor will allow all public libraries and school libraries a 10 % discount on all books and other media, and it will ship them for free.  The discount would not have been possible under the old regime of book price fixing.

Ten per cent isn’t a lot, given that libraries are likely the bookstore’s best customers.  But it’s a sign that the market is moving, and I’m pretty sure that competitors will follow.  Thus, the libraries’ consumer rents will increase (and hopefully politicians will allow them to spend the money thus saved to enhance their services otherwise).

P.S. for those who think I’ve been taken in by a PR stunt, please consider the following: My hope is that if book retailers see that customers are aware of the new competition in the book market, they will be more ready to toughen the competition.

Easter Egg on YouTube

Wednesday, June 6th, 2007

Silke found this nice easter egg today when doing research on YouTube:

Though I wonder whether the monkeys are also highly skilled–it’s easy to find a highly trained monkey, but the skilled ones are really difficult to recruit …