Verizon accused of throttling Netflix traffic

Verizon Netflix Traffic Throttling Accusations
Verizon Netflix Traffic Throttling Accusations

Verizon seems to have found itself in a fresh net neutrality controversy. GigaOM reported earlier this week that bandwidth provider Cogent Communications accused Verizon of “allowing the peer connections” between the two companies “to degrade,” which results in slower wireline traffic for end users. Cogent CEO Dave Schaffer told GigaOM that Verizon says that it’s not adding more ports to its peer connections with Cogent because it’s moving traffic for an unspecified video provider that Schaffer believes to be Netflix.

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“Over the past year Netflix has become a big partner for us,” he said. “This is a business model problem, not an engineering problem.”

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Network World’s Colin Neagle, meanwhile, notes that some Verizon wireline users have been complaining about the quality of their Netflix streams declining despite the fact that they “didn’t change anything on their devices that would cause performance issues.” Neagle also speculates that Verizon might be motivated to slow Netflix’s traffic to give its own competing Redbox Instant video streaming service a boost.

Verizon denies that it throttles traffic for any of its customers but hasn’t yet commented specifically on whether it is intentionally letting Cogent’s peer connections degrade because of its partnership with Netflix or any other major video provider.


This article was originally published on BGR.com