Google Fans Net Neutrality Flames with Web Measurement Lab (
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Google challenges ISPs with Web measurement tools from Measurement Lab, a research effort designed to put ISPs in check. The partly Google-sponsored M-Lab aims to be a new network neutrality weapon for content providers to wield against service providers who throttle Web services or assign preferential traffic treatment. Google is clearly protecting its cloud computing kingdom.Google opened a new front in the network neutrality war between
content providers and ISPs Jan. 28 by offering measurement tools to help
computer users determine why their Web applications are balky.
The search company created Measurement Lab, an open platform upon which researchers can deploy Internet measurement tools, in conjunction
with the New America Foundation's Open Technology Institute, the PlanetLab
Consortium and academic researchers.
Google Chief Internet Evangelist Vint Cerf, one of the Internet's founding
fathers, wrote in a post explaining M-Lab:
When an Internet
application doesn't work as expected or your connection seems flaky, how can
you tell whether there is a problem caused by your broadband ISP, the
application, your PC, or something else? It can be difficult for experts, let
alone average Internet users, to address this sort of question today.
Cerf added that while researchers today are working on tools to let users
gauge their Internet connection speeds and see if their ISP is choking certain
Web applications, so far they lack the computing, connectivity and
collaboration resources to do so with any authority.
To address this gap, Google will provide researchers with 36 servers in 12
locations in the United States
and Europe. Data collected from M-Lab will be made
public for researchers' use.
The move is a warning to ISPs that prefer to manage their users' Web
connectivity and fight with content providers over this on one of the biggest
Internet battlefields: network neutrality.
Part of the House Stimulus Package approved today, net neutrality calls for service providers to have no restrictions on content,
sites or platforms, and on the kinds of equipment that may be attached and the
modes of communication allowed. It also calls for communication not to be stifled
by other communication streams on the Web.
Google, as company whose livelihood and success is predicated on connecting
users to content as quickly as possible through its search engine and on
delivering quality Web applications to users, is a staunch network neutrality
proponent, as are most content providers.