[Cialug] Mediacom fscking with web access?
Nathan C. Smith
nathan.smith at ipmvs.com
Tue Sep 8 12:23:17 CDT 2009
And those of us that do care about "good enough" (without jonesing for giant bandwidth) have already switched to DSL with a local provider.
-Nate
> -----Original Message-----
> From: cialug-bounces at cialug.org
> [mailto:cialug-bounces at cialug.org] On Behalf Of Josh More
> Sent: Tuesday, September 08, 2009 12:21 PM
> To: cialug at cialug.org; tdwalton at gmail.com
> Subject: Re: [Cialug] Mediacom fscking with web access?
>
> I think that the vast majority of Medicom's customers don't
> care at all.
> I don't think that there is any backlash worth considering.
>
> If Mediacom works the way we all expect, they keep a few
> people. Let's
> be generous and say 10. Assuming that they get $50/month
> that's $6000 /
> year that they get to keep.
>
> If Mediacom does redirection in a way that is more user friendly, they
> reduce call volume. Assuming an average call worker gets $30k/year,
> which gives a total employee cost (benefits, training, etc) of
> $60k/year. So, they only need to save that one person, one tenth of
> their time to make up for the few people that would be lost due to
> change.
>
> Then, when you add on the possibility that a change could not
> only save
> them call volume but also bring in ad revenue, as well as the
> liklihood
> that the people that would move due to being upset won't actually move
> because Mediacom is the only game in town, backlash is utterly
> irrelevant.
>
> It's more likely that they turned the "feature" off because it
> interfered with an internal process, some business client or somehow
> otherwise didn't work the way that they expected. Remember, Mediacom
> isn't in the Internet game because they love the freedom of
> information
> and RFCs. They're in it because they have a lock on people via cable
> and want to make more money. They target people who want a relatively
> reliable service for a relatively low price. They make their money by
> charging a monthly fee and incuring as little monthly cost as
> possible,
> which means supporting a handful of applications and operating systems
> in "normal" use only. Anyone on this mailing list is already
> outside of
> Mediacom's target market. Everyone else likely won't notice a change.
>
> (As an aside, this is also why net neutrality is a dead issue. There
> just aren't enough people around that care about freedom to
> outweigh the
> volume of people that just care about "good enough" and can therefore
> sustain a business model around an incomplete Internet.)
>
>
>
>
>
>
> -Josh More, RHCE, CISSP, NCLP, GIAC
> morej at alliancetechnologies.net
> 515-245-7701
>
> >>> Todd Walton 09/08/09 12:00 PM >>>
>
> If Mediacom is redirecting 404s, then perhaps they figure on backlash,
> and want to use it to get people to say "maybe DNS error redirects
> aren't so bad".
>
> --
> Todd
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