Rick's b.log - 2020/08/11 |
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It is the 21st of November 2024 You are 18.190.153.77, pleased to meet you! |
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There are limits, certainly, but when the limit is in the order of 80GB per month, it is effectively unlimited. And in order to "combat digital pollution", the government, in it's habit of making decisions that do not benefit the consumer, wants to jack up the price of these "unlimited" tariifs "because pollution". Or something.
The CNIL (France comms regulator) wants to bring an end to such tariffs and have people pay for what they actually use. I don't believe for one moment that - in a world of Netflix and other forms of streaming - this won't mean more expensive bills for the majority (and, oh look, more tax euros for the government).
If this is voted through, it will be yet another instance of the government kicking the consumer in the balls because that's so much simpler than dealing with the real problem.
So let's look at this, then, shall we...
Now compare WiFi. Sure, it's a short hop of a lower power transmitter to a box that plugs into the phone line. The power brick claims 0.6A which is probably something in the order of 15 watts (230VAC). That may well be considerably less than a mobile tower requires. But it's not the full story. It is 15 watts for 8,760 hours per year. I make that to be about 130 units (kWh) in the course of a year (which at my energy consumption is about a euro a month). For that one ADSL router.
Across an average of the country (rural and inner city both), is mobile comms really so inefficient when comparing how much energy is required to maintain the equipment rather than simply the amount of electricity required to shift some data?
This is what I can get by walking away from the house and into the open field.
Yes - standing in the middle of a field the slower upload rate is faster than my ADSL - period.
There are mutterings and mumbles about bringing out fibre optic to give people fast internet, but there is a huge disconnect between what is promised and the practicalities of making it happen. France is a country with huge expanses of nothing, the odd cow, sheep, or llama dotted around the endless scenery porn.
One of the main problems is that a device is made, released, sold... and by the time it gets in the hands of the consumer it probably won't ever see any security updates or patches. This is because the company has your money, they don't care about supporting your device any longer, and it works to their benefit for your object to rapidly become "old" and need to be updated with a new one.
Legislation like this:
Laws such as that, which try to make people's devices safer, reduce churn, reduce landfill, and attempt to give a reasonable service life to goods purchased ... ought to do more for actual digital pollution than potshkeying around with mobile tariffs.
France and digital pollution
The newspaper Ouest France has reported that the Senate wishes to end unlimited mobile tariffs.
In order to support their assertions, they point to an eight year old study that shows that 4G is estimated to consume "up to twenty three times more energy than WiFi".
The age of the study
The study really ought to be disregarded. Eight years is an eternity in the tech world. While it is true that a lot of older hardware still exists, and is still in use, is it really representative of the sorts of technology in use today?
Surely it's not beyond the capacity of France to perform it's own study that's more up to date.
Actual energy consumption?
Another thing to consider is that it is likely very correct that transmitting a megabyte over home WiFi and 4G is likely to show 4G badly. There's a whole unseen infrastructure, transmission towers, and so on that make the mobile system work.
However, one must remember that not only can a mobile tower share its capabilities with multiple clients, but that those clients can come and go flexibly. I have driven home from Châteaubriant with my phone playing PPN Radio. Apart from a blackspot where there's no reception, it worked most of the way, transparently switching mobile towers as necessary.
Now multiply that by the number of households. You'll soon appreciate that it can add up dramatically.
Broken promises
My home broadband usually runs between 3.4 - 4.2 megabit. Its been faster, it's been slower, but an average is 3.7.
Hooking everybody up to fibre is something that is easy to say but difficult to achieve in practise. The Bretagne 2.0 project was intended to bring high speed internet to everybody in Brittany by 2012-2013. That date came and went. Now (as discussed here), I am supposed to get fibre optic in 2026. I expect that date will come and go. I also expect a very flexible interpretation of the word "everybody" to conveniently discount all of those who are "difficult". Which risks counting for very many in rural areas.
And it does bugger all to tackle the real problem
If the government was serious about tackling pollution around digital devices, then they would introduce some laws that not only do their part to reduce pollution, but also provide proper benefits to the consumer rather than simply helping their hands into the consumer's pockets.
Shops must offer refunds in money and not store credit. Failure to do this is a €10,000 infraction per case.
Shops can then return the goods to the supplier/manufacturer for their refund.
If the shop has gone out of business or changed, then the Mayor of the town will be the one who deals with the problem, though the consumer must accept that repayment will not be immediate in this case.
David Pilling, 12th August 2020, 03:05 Yes! They will have to learn skills like scaling down bitmap images and sending plain text emails.Rick, 12th August 2020, 08:39 I wonder how many emails (with all the modern markup and encoding) can be sent for the equivalent of an hour of Netflix?Sparky, 12th August 2020, 23:39 I agree with 5 years support. Not 3! For security patches, it should be 7 years minimum. So many phones on Amazon are sold with older droid versions, I'd like to see a label saying support ends whenever or already has ended.Rob, 19th August 2020, 14:21 It's video that eats bandwidth ... due to being out of the house 12-18 hours a day at the moment, I've been going through my mobile data rather rapidly. Got to about 110MB left with three days to go, so was sticking to news (and ssh home to work on things) and still had 67MB on the last day. Then I inadvertently clicked on YouTube.... ping, all data used up within moments, let's charge you 5p/MB going forwards. It cost me a pound before the warning text came in and I realised and hit stop!
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