ISP Admits Internet Traffic Is Actually Declining

from the but-what-about-the-exaflood? dept

For quite some time, we’ve been pointing out that all the fear mongering from lobbyists and politicians about a coming “exaflood” of bandwidth that will wipe out the internet unless ISPs are allowed to double charge for the same bandwidth, is something of a myth. Instead, it turns out that traffic appears to be slowing its growth trajectory somewhat. The latest to agree with this is Cogent, who supplies plenty of bandwidth, but actually found overall traffic decline last quarter. Apparently, the unstoppable march of bandwidth consumption isn’t as threatening as some would have you believe.

Filed Under: , ,
Companies: cogent

Rate this comment as insightful
Rate this comment as funny
You have rated this comment as insightful
You have rated this comment as funny
Flag this comment as abusive/trolling/spam
You have flagged this comment
The first word has already been claimed
The last word has already been claimed
Insightful Lightbulb icon Funny Laughing icon Abusive/trolling/spam Flag icon Insightful badge Lightbulb icon Funny badge Laughing icon Comments icon

Comments on “ISP Admits Internet Traffic Is Actually Declining”

Subscribe: RSS Leave a comment
26 Comments
PaulT (profile) says:

Inevitable

This was always going to happen for three very good reasons. First of all, there’s only so many new customers. Most people who want broadband already have it. Those who don’t often live in areas where it’s difficult or expensive to get, so takeup of new subscribers is going to slow down.

Second, as new services come in, they’re more often than not replacing illegal services. For example, if a person uses Hulu instead of YouTube or BitTorrent to watch a TV show, that’s not new bandwidth usage but a new use for the same bandwidth. I think most of the doomsday predictions assumed that legal use would be in addition to the old infringing traffic.

Third is the lack of new applications. Most people use the majority of their bandwidth to download or stream entertainment, play games or use services like Skype or internet radio. Other services (browsing, email, IM, etc) are low-bandwidth cost. Unless a totally new kind of service hits with high bandwidth requirements in the next couple of years, the bandwidth useage is only going to stabilise.

Shohat says:

Cognitive Dissonance much ?

One ISP in the US says that it has experienced a decline in traffic, and your headline includes “Internet Traffic is Declining” ?!
US is a mature, even saturated market, which a large % of not-so-savvy users.

Check the numbers for China, Brazil, India. See what goes on in Japan, Eastern Europe.

This is where the real growth is happening. US traffic has little (if any) reason to increase.

Shohat says:

Re: Re: Cognitive Dissonance much ?

Actually Virgin (UK ) is one of the biggest players in that field… but..
most importantly, the pressure comes from international free market organizations, and pretty much all the technological fathers of the Intertnet (Bob Kahn, Dave Farber, etc..) along with the actual people who “run” the internet (Cisco, Alcatel, 3M, etc..) , and anti-government-regulation organizations.

And it’s more a principal of letting the government(s) regulate the Internet, or let the market do it for himself. So either way, that report, along with the headline, are simply… meh .

P.S
Personally, I am all for net neutrality. I’m just saying that the title has little to do with content, and content has little to do with anything.

Mike (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re: Cognitive Dissonance much ?

Actually Virgin (UK ) is one of the biggest players in that field… but..

Cogent is one of the largest players in the US, and we’re discussing claims of network clogging in the US. So I’m not sure what Virgin has to do with anything?

most importantly, the pressure comes from international free market organizations, and pretty much all the technological fathers of the Intertnet (Bob Kahn, Dave Farber, etc..) along with the actual people who “run” the internet (Cisco, Alcatel, 3M, etc..) , and anti-government-regulation organizations.

What does gov’t regulation have to do here? We’re against gov’t regulation here as well, but this post has nothing to do with gov’t regulation.

We’re simply pointing out that the claims that the internet is running out of bandwidth are pretty clearly bogus.

And it’s more a principal of letting the government(s) regulate the Internet, or let the market do it for himself.

Again, this post had nothing to do with gov’t regulation. Why are you suggesting it does?

Personally, I am all for net neutrality. I’m just saying that the title has little to do with content, and content has little to do with anything.

The only thing that has little to do with the content of the post is your comment here.

Shohat says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Cognitive Dissonance much ?

Allrighty.

Cogent is one of the largest players in the US, and we’re discussing claims of network clogging in the US. So I’m not sure what Virgin has to do with anything?

You didn’t say US. There is no mention of the country you are referring to. Your title implies that Internet traffic is declining, while in reality, it is multiplying, just not in the US, not for this ISP at least.

What does gov’t regulation have to do here? We’re against gov’t regulation here as well, but this post has nothing to do with gov’t regulation.

We’re simply pointing out that the claims that the internet is running out of bandwidth are pretty clearly bogus.

I didn’t bring up net neutrality personally, but PaulT. And for quite a decent reason – since traffic growth is the the main excuse used for traffic shaping/filtering/prioritization freedom that ISPs ask for. Considering the context of the blog, he probably assumed that you have at least considered that angle of your post.
Net Neutrality = Government regulation. Lack of government regulation = death of Net Neutrality. Free market ensues. Net Neutrality is something that needs to be enforced, not the other way around. If you don’t regulate, ISPs will do whatever they want.
You can’t be for Net Neutrality and against Government regulation.
So… since you are against Net Neutrality, and the point of your post is that there is no US traffic growth… erm… Your view is that regulations should be lifted even if no growth occurs ?!

Mike (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:3 Cognitive Dissonance much ?

You can’t be for Net Neutrality and against Government regulation.

Um, yes you absolutely can. I am. I think that a neutral net serves the best interests of both the providers and the users, but it doesn’t need gov’t regulation to get there. It needs competition.

In fact, the whole reason this is even a debate is because of BAD gov’t regulation that created a duopoly of providers.

Shohat says:

Re: Re: Re:4 Cognitive Dissonance much ?

I can’t say I agree with your understanding of the market and the lack of need for regulation, but thanks for explaining your opinion on the issue.
It is usualy assumed that once choice is given to the corporations, NN will cease to exist. And most providers pretty much confirm that this is the case.

But again, this is your rightful PoV, and puts some of the remarks in context.

Cheers.

Sean says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Cognitive Dissonance much ?

I’m trying to decide if I can risk saying that Mike got out of the wrong side of the bed this morning, or that the above is a great flame.
But I don’t want Mike to flame me for making OT comments.

I’ll second all 3 points that PaulIT made above. Static growth, nothing that needs all that bandwidth, and nothing to do with it when you get it.

dave says:

Re: Less legacy software out there

you might have a point about the bandwidth consumption of some legacy software but Lotus Notes is certainly not a good example unless you are talking about a very old version. Calling Exchange a ‘more advanced platform’ is heresy, trying to compare the 2 is like comparing apples an pears. Bear in mind that Lotus Notes is not just a mail, calendar & scheduling server, it is also a web server, an application server, a database server, news server and more and is a lot more secure than exchange …

Peter Gun says:

Re: Re: Less legacy software out there

I think he was referring to Email and you are referring to IBM/Lotus Notes marketing crap.

More and more people are moving over to Exchange/Outlook, analyst predict more than 70% of the enterprise is already on it.

What IBM does is come out with more and more products which requires more and more IBM Global Services and more and more resources to run in a DECLINING Economy !

Allen (profile) says:

whatever

Did you consider the possibility that Cogent may have simply lost market share? Their major customers are going to be multi-homed and can easily shift traffic to other networks to arbitrage pricing or whatever.

Cogent doesn’t have cancer, therefore no one has cancer? Sorry Mike, but if your going to rant about this stuff you need to start picking better examples.

D L says:

What about

Did anyone bother to point out that web apps are becoming more optimized and thus needs to send less data between points? Say if I’m searching for something, not only is Google making search faster, but it’s probably using less bandwidth than older search engines. So while searches are up due to being faster and more accurate, they use less bandwidth. Adapt this analogy to other web technologies and it’s easy to see how usage can be up while bandwidth is down.

Leave a Reply to Sean Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Have a Techdirt Account? Sign in now. Want one? Register here

Comment Options:

Make this the or (get credits or sign in to see balance) what's this?

What's this?

Techdirt community members with Techdirt Credits can spotlight a comment as either the "First Word" or "Last Word" on a particular comment thread. Credits can be purchased at the Techdirt Insider Shop »

Follow Techdirt

Techdirt Daily Newsletter

Ctrl-Alt-Speech

A weekly news podcast from
Mike Masnick & Ben Whitelaw

Subscribe now to Ctrl-Alt-Speech »
Techdirt Deals
Techdirt Insider Discord
The latest chatter on the Techdirt Insider Discord channel...
Loading...