I've sent off my opposition to the Usage Based Billing to the CRTC comment line. It went thusly:
I will attempt to keep my comments on this matter short, sweet, and to the point.
1. It is impossible for these smaller companies to b uild their own infrastructure (unwanted redundancy, cost threshold, city bylaws, etc), thusly giving larger established ISPs a defacto monopoly on the last mile internet infrastructure - a monopoly granted by the federal government no less.
2. To distinguish themselves from the larger telecom companies (Bell, Rogers, et al), the smaller companies attempt to offer good prices on unlimited internet packages unavailable to the residential user, as well as more personal customer service.
3. This new billing system forces these smaller companies to remove their major defining difference from Bell - why go to a company like TekSavvy anymore when the pricing will be essentially the same.
4. Bandwidth has little inherent price - the estimate provided from informed specialists is roughly three cents per Gigabyte. This is in sharp contrast to the almost unbelievable charges levied by Bell at 2 dollars and most shockingly, Rogers with their 5 dollar gigabyte plan. This kind of gouging is anti-consumer and unfairly punishes users who are more knowledgeable and active in the digital frontier.
5. The only data Chairman von Finckenstein was able to provide was that provided by Bell - was no independent research conducted on this matter? I find the claims made highly suspect and believe that a wider range of data needs to be analyzed, including that of countries where no such Billing system is implemented as well as statistics from TekSavvy. Most suspicious of the claims of Bell are the small numbers of their average bandwidth use and their claim that there is any congestion of the system.
6. Services like Netflix and Steam use far, far more data than would be economical - thusly, such a billing scheme may kill the tech industry in Canada! A video game from Steam or the Playstation Network can be well over 20 Gigabytes, or $40 extra charge by Bell's current pricing scheme. This is frankly unacceptable. An HD movie over netflix is over 1 GB per hour, meaning that it is no longer economical to stream multiple movies in a week. People will go to offline services rather than pay ludicrous charges, and no one will be to blame but the CRTC for letting this ludicrous scam of Bell's through.