O’Reilly – Belize Latest Country to Block VoIP Traffic?

April 24, 2006

Original Story:

http://www.oreillynet.com/etel/blog/2006/04/belize_latest_country_to_block.html

Russell Shaw has a pretty damning post today on what sounds like serious VoIP-blocking being done by Belize Telecommunications Limited, the local telco in Belize. The good news is that it seems that enough people have made enough noise that the Belize PUC is getting involved, and Russell points out that some very influential people there are not at all happy with the situation:

(From ZDNet article below)

Well, on Wednesday, the Belize PUC will hold a hearing on the matter. Expect to hear from some very influential people, such as Andrew Godoy, director of the Belize Tourism Industry Association. “The Board is appalled by the actions of BTL,” Godoy tells the San Pedro, Belize Sun. “We have heard from many of our constituents and this is negatively impacting their business.”


Russell Shaw from ZDNet – “Trouble in the tropics”

April 24, 2006

Original Story:

http://blogs.zdnet.com/ip-telephony/?p=1048

btl.jpg

For the last few months, VoIP users in Belize have been up in arms at what they perceive to be an organized effort by Belize Telecommunications Limited to block outgoing calls over Vonage, Skype and other Internet phone service providers.

Online forums have bristled with frustrated posts. The Vonage Forum has a busy thread on the subject. And last Friday, the Belize Free Internet Consortium posted this:

Have you been a regular user of Skype, Vonage, SpeakEasy, VerizonSpeak and others? Noticed that lately you've been experiencing trouble connecting and utilizing these services? Silent moments, repeated sounds, buzzes?Here's the good news: it's almost certainly fixable. The bad news? WE MUST lobby the Public Utilities Commission (PUC) to fix it.
VoIP customers around the world are discovering that their calls cannot be connected because telecom companies (like BTL) are blocking the movement of such traffic across the net.

It turns out that BTL has jammed the signal on VoIP (voice over internet protocol). They have gone as far as jamming chat and messenger programs like GoogleTalk, MSN Messenger, Yahoo Voice and other. What this means, simply, is that BTL is mandating what you should and should not do with your internet connection.

This continues to create a monopoly which BTL should no longer have and forces us to continue to pay exorbitant prices per minute for international calls. It is unwarranted for Belizeans to be held hostage by one company who already makes a substantial profit with fixed lines, cellular services, Internet fee and various other services.

The BTIA would like your assistance in surveying the effects of BTL's actions on providing your products and services. Once we have ascertained the extent of effect, we will forward an official position to the PUC.

Well, on Wednesday, the Belize PUC will hold a hearing on the matter. Expect to hear from some very influential people, such as Andrew Godoy, director of the Belize Tourism Industry Association. “The Board is appalled by the actions of BTL,” Godoy tells the San Pedro, Belize Sun. "We have heard from many of our constituents and this is negatively impacting their business."

When the tourism industry in that part of the world gets fired up, they can move mountains- and governments. I mean, the Aruba tourism establishment yelled long and hard for some action on the Natalie Holloway case, and finally their influence seems to be prevailing over the connections of some of the suspect's families to the establishment.

I know that Belize is not Aruba, but there's tourism's loud voice campaigning against a monopoly. This one is going to get real interesting.


PUC MEETING REMINDER

April 24, 2006

If you care about this issue, even a little bit, please attend this meeting on WEDNESDAY.

Wednesday, April 26, 2006

Radisson Fort George, Belize City

Caracol Room

9 a.m. to 12 noon.

Here is a decent map of Belize City that includes the following locations pertinent to the meeting:

http://www.geoffschultz.org/2004_Sailing/Maps/images/Belize_City_Map.jpg

#4 – Radission Fort George – Right on the water near the entrance to the canal.

#5 – Caye Caulker Water Taxi Terminal – Walking distance to Radisson

#13 – Municipal Airport – Taxis are available


BTIA MEMBERSHIP SURVEY – VoIP – Does blocking VoIP affect YOU?

April 21, 2006

The BTIA (Belize Tourism Industry Association) has issued a Membership Survery regarding VoIP: 

 
Have you been a regular user of Skype, Vonage, SpeakEasy, VerizonSpeak and others? Noticed that lately you've been experiencing trouble connecting and utilizing these services? Silent moments, repeated sounds, buzzes?Here's the good news: it's almost certainly fixable. The bad news? WE MUST lobby the Public Utilities Commission (PUC) to fix it.
VoIP customers around the world are discovering that their calls cannot be connected because telecom companies (like BTL) are blocking the movement of such traffic across the net.

It turns out that BTL has jammed the signal on VoIP (voice over internet protocol). They have gone as far as jamming chat and messenger programs like GoogleTalk, MSN Messenger, Yahoo Voice and other. What this means, simply, is that BTL is mandating what you should and should not do with your internet connection.

This continues to create a monopoly which BTL should no longer have and forces us to continue to pay exorbitant prices per minute for international calls. It is unwarranted for Belizeans to be held hostage by one company who already makes a substantial profit with fixed lines, cellular services, Internet fee and various other services.

The BTIA would like your assistance in surveying the effects of BTL's actions on providing your products and services. Once we have ascertained the extent of effect, we will forward an official position to the PUC.

SURVEY:

Does BTL's actions in blocking VoIP affect your business adversely?

 
_______ Yes or _______ NOIf the answer is Yes, kindly state some reason why:


BTIA MEDIA ARTICLE – VoIP is NOT for you and me?

April 21, 2006

Ned arrived back from his walk around the city early – he was looking to wake up early to catch the first water taxis to Caye Caulker.

He found Janielle, Leo and Andy once again on the veranda enjoying the cool evening breeze after a hot day.

"You still yarning about the old GST?" He asked.

"Right now it's the VoIP Janielle's vexed about," Andy said.

"At least it's a new set of initials," Leo said.

"What's wrong with Voice Over Internet Protocol?" Ned had to ask.

"Nothing's wrong with it," Janielle said, "Except that BTL doesn't want us to have it."

"Well there's more initials I know," Ned said, "A bloke in Placencia said it stands for Betta Try Later, and after tryin' to call home, I understand. But at least you can say it's expensive…" the Kiwi said.

"VoIP is out of our hands," Andy replied.

"You're a democracy, aren't you? Nothin's out of your hands. "People living in a democracy pretty much deserve what they get, 'ey."

At this everyone had to spend a moment of quiet reflection. "All we can do is try," Janielle said, "But right now they're making it so's we can't use it."

"Crikey! That's all I use at home for all long distance, and our phone service is about a quarter of what yours is…

"What's gonna happen when travel agents and tour operators use it to cut their operating costs, but they can't contact you here at the Sea Breeze?

"And if a business man, either vacationing or investing finds he can't use his favourite, cheap means of communication, what's he gonna think about Belize?

"You're gonna have an image problem that will hurt investment and travel numbers."

"Well, it's also hurting Belizeans right now that we don't have access to cheaper calls," Janielle said.

"Especially with so many Belizeans livin' in the US," Leo added.

"You're right! And I'd do somethin' about it quick smart. Let the politicians know. Sounds like you sent a good message this last local election. And who's the regulatory authority? You must have one"

"The PUC," Leo said.

"Well then, let them know how you feel. You gotta remember that they represent the majority, not the few."

"Well, that's the way it's supposed to be…" Janielle said, getting up heavily for a cup of coffee.

"First GST, now BTL, VoIP, PUC, PUP and UDP, CSME, GATS… don't people use words anymore? I'm gonna go shoot some pool. You wanna come Leo?"

"OK" Leo answered.

For more information on developments and events in Belize's tourism industry, contact BTIA at telephone 227-5717 / 1144, E-Mail: info@btia.org or visit our website at www.btia.org.


Low Tech vs High Tech And Security

April 19, 2006

This was submitted to various government bodies as well as the San Pedro Sun. I think the author makes a good case:

IN 2004 there was one significant event that made Belize a viable place for investment for a new breed of investors that rely upon high tech communications in order to do business on a world-wide scale and in Belize. The same event set the stage for a significant increase in the amount of retirees from around the world that would consider Belize a place to spend their hard earned retirement accounts. That event holds promise to all Belizeans of equal access to information, as it holds keys to knowledge and the power that brings along with it.

DSL and high speed internet access had arrived – or has it? A Digital Subscriber Line to the internet and the world wide web means a lot of things to many people; the arrival of high technology. It represents the digital age and the information age. It is the ability to communicate inexpensively, efficiently and above all, securely. It represents privacy and at the same time, the ultimate public access and awareness.

Various countries in Central America recognize the value of outside investors; as well as retirees looking for an alternate location; whether it’s due to the inadequacy of their own countries in providing a safe and economically viable retirement, or just the desire to live happily in a warm and pleasant environment for health or mental sanity.

These individuals have needs that some countries such as El Salvador, Panama, Costa Rica, Honduras – and to some extent Belize – cater to, and in fact compete for – some more successfully than others.

Most of us know what this does for a country; for every new real job created approximately 4 new jobs will ensue. For every $ spent, each $ will be re-spent and create 4-5 times it’s value for the country it’s spent in. This is referred to as the multiplier effect and is a basic term in economics.

GROWTH – is what the game is all about. It is what Belizeans need – economic power; and it is what BTL needs. It is what any economy must have to sustain its population with goods and services and the shareholders of BTL with earnings and dividends.

So, what do we do to attract these funds to Belize? We find out what these groups of people need and we try to accommodate those needs.

In the case of investors and retirees a HIGH TECH image is very attractive. A modern businessperson expects the ability to communicate with a VPN connection to his or her home office; to jump on a video conference at the spur of the moment, to safely and securely browse the web and do research; to place a VOIP call to his or her office; which these days often does not even encompass a digital T1 or a PRI circuit (both conventional voice circuits), but utilizes increasingly VOIP for interoffice communications with a multi-channel VOIP router that works seamlessly with large PBX (phone) systems. It has significant advantages and features; besides security – over conventional phone systems.

The largest emerging group that will provide the most growth to Belize, sustainable for the next 20 years, are retirees. And we are indeed looking at the tip of the iceberg. Similarly, retirees look for ways to communicate with their relatives and loved ones. These are not high-volume users, nor are they users that can afford to call the US with the rates offered by BTL. All the neighboring countries offer reasonable rates to the US and Europe; where the absence of VOIP may not even be an impediment and they are all HIGH TECH for anyone who cares to look – and there are many lookers these days. They are informed consumers and they evaluate their choices carefully. IP telephony is one of the great incentives they have and I assure you; as it was for me, its dealmaker. The saddest part for myself is the ability to communicate with my 14 year old son in Seattle with video conferencing – not a substitute for phone calls considering volume.

Blocking VOIP increase the immediate call volume to the US. Then it will decrease and the remaining premium will be small. This is because email IS a substitute, as is satellite communications; and for anyone to believe that they can limit satellite communication is extremely naive. What will remain is a regressive LOW TECH image; and a significant decrease in the flow of investment and funds to Belize. This faltering growth, in comparison to what is ought to be, will have a lasting effect on both Belize’ economy and the financial well being of BTL. I believe its shareholders will recognize this and it will be reflected in the expected future value of it’s shares.

Though individual investors are not normally very smart; or they would all be creating so called money machines, the market is intelligent; and what it may see for the future of BTL and the local economy; if the choice is to take a step backward and move to LOW TECH image, will be negative. Negative, because all the areas of growth in a modern society and in modern telecommunications focus around HIGH TECH and opportunities in the HIGH TECH sector; opportunities that BTL should focus upon and embrace so that it can continue to experience growth – intermediate and for the long term; instead of a few months with a mediocre increase. This is what I believe the expectations for BTL's stock will reflect in a few months if a LOW TECH image is adopted.

There will be no significant increase in calls to the US except for a short interim period, and only for a very small percentage – large investors became large investor because they are good at creating wealth – not spending hard earned money. A few individuals switch to satellite connections over the course of a year, but the many will conclude their business in Belize and go elsewhere – this is already the trend and talk amongst many of the largest investors here – those that already have significant holdings outside of Belize. Nicaragua is staged to attract a large number of investors from Belize.

The few local businesses will simply suffer and put more less money into the local economy, which in turn will hurt BTL.

Retirees are buying one of the most expensive DSL connections in the entire world. Count the blessings. ADSL is about 10 times the cost of ADSL in any other country. The phone rates to any European country, as an example; are between 35 and 40 times (yes you read right) of what the rate is for neighboring countries – and that is not VOIP, these are conventional voice rates. What’s the cost? About two cents to the US maybe 4 or 6 to most countries to Europe depending upon how you wish to terminate the call – if BTL is paying more I will help get that cost down as this is my particular area of expertise and I do have all the right connections.

I believe that BTL will make more money decreasing the cost of DSL – allowing it to become accessible to more Belizeans. Bring in the masses. As an example look closely at and compare to cell phone usage.

Though I believe a lowered cost of broadband will increase BTL revenues, broadband access can remain relatively expensive as far as the some aspects are concerned – the phone rates kill business and growth. One large fact to consider; when the rate and cost goes down people call more and the economy gets a boost and then people spend more and call more!

The lowering of telecom rates in the US has not lowered the overall spending on telecommunications. People simply call more. The average expenditure for telecommunications in the US per consumer for long distance is $50 BZ. This does not include the line charges. It has remained almost constant for over two decades. The difference is in the volume of calls and the ability for individuals to communicate more and reach farther. This stimulates economic growth and if Belize and BTL can stimulate growth, it will increase its earnings.

Every day I encounter young Belizeans whom are looking to high tech as their future; web hosting and web programming. Take advantage of the relative wage structure and become a force in web related business and call center operations for instance.

There are many areas where Belize telecommunications industry can grow if it chooses a HIGH TECH image.

The immediate one is a greater number of retirees and larger Investors. Call center operations; requires broadband and VOIP termination. The clue here is a lot of broadband access as in multiple T1s (a T1 is 1.5Mbps up and down). Broadband and Hosting. Domain Registration: .BZ is a great domain name. Western Samoa in association with of of my bus partners; and his relationship the King of Samoa; under exclusive licensing, launched themselves as .WS [WORLDSITE] – Western Samoa is doing quite well with that.

As you all know; a handful of people contribute the majority of the tax base for Belize – these people rely on and are accustomed to having a HIGH TECH infrastructure. The absence of which will further deteriorate the already strained relationship between BTL and those individuals. Distrust is becoming an issue at this point and that is paramount in any symbiotic or business relationship.

BTL; in light of trade agreements set to take effect as well; make a choice for yourselves and for all Belizeans. Go HIGH TECH; grow faster in a healthy environment. Be the industry leader when competition eventually takes hold, though as a business person I applaud your stature at this time and the tenacity you have shown to remain a true monopoly for so long. Be proactive and become and INDUSTRY leader with a HIGH TECH image, be part of creating and contributing to a positive and prosperous future for Belize and for BTL, and experience and continue to experience REAL growth for years to come.

Do you want to lead and grow and prosper, or do you want to follow and lag behind further and further and take steps backwards? You either embrace HIGH TECH now or you loose the ground you have gained since 2004.

Briefly about myself as my background is relevant in this case. I’m an Engineer in Telecommunications from Norway and Sweden; BA Management, MBA, USA; Frmr. Stockbroker, Series 7 and 63, currently semi-retired with interests in Telecommunications in the US. and business advisor to the founder of a publicly trade telecommunications company in the US with 250,000+ individual telecommunications representatives.


Guardian (UK) – Trouble On The Line

April 7, 2006

This is not about Belize specifically, but extremely relevant.

Original Story:

http://technology.guardian.co.uk/weekly/story/0,,1747343,00.html

VoIP customers around the world are discovering that their calls cannot be connected because telecom companies are blocking the movement of such traffic across the net. Jane Dudman finds out why

Thursday April 6, 2006
Guardian

Theodore Peckler lives in Monrovia, California, and is one of the 1.5 million people in the US who uses Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) systems to make cheap phone calls via his cable modem connection. But last year, after five months using the VoIP service from the US provider Vonage without problems, he noticed an abrupt deterioration. "The line was choppy, very choppy and you could not understand any words spoken," he recalls. Puzzled, Peckler ran pingplotter – a program to detect problems such as packet loss and latency (delays in sending over the separate "packets" of internet traffic). It revealed major latency between his cable modem and local internet service provider (ISP).

"I contacted the ISP and was told it did not support third party VoIP," explains Peckler. "Vonage ran a test. It seems the ISP was blocking the cable modem when the Vonage adapter went into use. I ran a test of my own. I ran pingplotter for 10 minutes: no blockage, then I picked up my Vonage phone and placed a call: immediately there was a 100% blockage on the cable modem. This was a continuous loss as long as the phone was used."

Peckler is not alone. Users on VoIP online forums in the US and other countries, including Qatar and Mexico, have been noting similar problems since last year. For while VoIP (often pronounced "voype") might seem like a great deal for the average person, entrenched interests in the telecoms industry see it differently – and are taking action against it.

Consultation

Mindful of what has happened in other countries, the UK telecoms regulator Ofcom took the unusual step in February of announcing that it will look at the growing VoIP market, and report next month on whether new laws are needed to protect it. The consultation document says: "VoIP service providers have expressed concern that their ability to provide a reliable service may be impacted by internet access providers (ISPs) selectively degrading or blocking their VoIP traffic."

Ofcom says it has no evidence this is happening in the UK; only about 500,000 customers use it. But the forecast is for that to rise by 3m in the next six months.

And VoIP blocking happens in other countries, often those where there is still only a single telecoms company. In Saudi Arabia, for instance, national carrier Saudi Telecom is using software from US supplier Narus to block all VoIP calls.

Telcos in the US and other countries are reluctant to have their bandwidth encroached on by traffic from which they earn no revenue, and have been challenged over similar alleged incidents of VoIP blocking. Blocking VoIP traffic is technically difficult, but not illegal, and blocking specific types of internet traffic is on the increase.

Luxembourg-based VoIP provider Skype, now owned by eBay, has been particularly controversial. Skype is used by 75m people. But not everyone wants Skype on their network.

Skype is considered by many to pose a potential security threat because it opens an encrypted tunnel out of the network and forms supernodes that sit on a network and set up VoIP calls. There is considerable debate about how much bandwidth such supernodes eat up. US blogger Paul Kedrosky (http://tinyurl.com/mjelx) noted a major impact on his main office PC, and links to warnings that in supernode mode, Skype may even saturate a 100 Mbps line.

"Skype calls can be very scary for the owners of the networks over which they run," says Steve Bannerman, vice president of marketing at Narus.

Bandwidth

Skype says its software does not put undue pressure on bandwidth. "Users who have become 'supernodes' will not be able to notice any performance decreases on their computers," says Kurt Sauer, head of Skype's security operations. "A supernode will use approximately a tenth of the bandwidth of a user listening to radio on the internet. There are companies blocking or attempting to block Skype, but we believe they are making a mistake."

There's a lot of divided feeling about Skype, says Louise Cooke, managing director of Blue Coat Systems, whose ProxySG software can block Skype. "Some IT managers detest it," she says. "They don't want their network becoming a super-hub for Skype. But others see it as something that may have business benefits. We use it all the time."

VoIP blocking is often a function added to network or security management software, such as Narus's IP Platform, Verso Technologies' NetSpective 2.0 and SonicWall's enterprise appliances. Other providers with software capable of blocking VoIP include Bitek International, Packeteer, iPoque and Blue Coat Systems, and the list is growing.

One UK organisation that has blocked Skype is Brunel University. "We had a number of concerns about uncontrolled traffic," says Simon Furber, Brunel's network manager. "Skype is unpredictable because of its uncanny ability to become a supernode, so … we shut the front door."

This is still Brunel's official policy. "But this is a balancing act: a lot of people use Skype and asked us why we were blocking it," explains Furber. "And Skype just finds another way out of the network."

So Brunel has now partitioned off its Skype traffic, using Packeteer's Packetshaper software. "We have corralled it so we can keep an eye on it and see what impact it is having," says Furber.

How blocking works

Blocking specific types of traffic over an IP network is usually done by blocking "ports" – equivalent to boarding up doors (if you imagine a network as a house with 65,536 doors) or denying access to specific IP addresses (equivalent to turning away particular people).

But Skype traffic is hard to identify, because Skype uses proprietary protocols, is encrypted and spreads from peer to peer, using a random combination of IP addresses and ports that defeats traditional port-blocking filters.

That means it can be blocked only by investigating the headers of every internet packet crossing the network to find the "Skype" ones. The challenge is to do this quickly enough so that other services aren't degraded. Narus claims its software can do this, and a major European customer confirms this.

A proxy appliance, widely used to apply controls to web traffic, can also be used to block specified unwanted traffic, including voice calls, if necessary.


PUC Petition Letter – DOWNLOAD

April 3, 2006

Thanks to Katie Valk for putting together this effective letter to the PUC. You can cut/paste this and email it or you can download the pdf and mail it. Please make the PUC aware of your concerns.

PDF Version to PRINT/SIGN/MAIL:

PUC Petition Letter PDF

Digital version to COPY/PASTE and EMAIL to consumeraffairs@puc.bz:
Date:

PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION
59 Regent Street
Belize City Belize
Dear Chairman Gilbert Canton:

I am writing to seek your support in our efforts to obtain fair and reasonable telecommunication services. Belize Telecommunications Ltd (BTL) is stripping us of our right to be treated fairly and justly.

They have jammed the signals on VOIP (voice over internet protocol) devices marketed by such companies as Vonage, SpeakEasy, VerizonSpeak, TomatoVine and others. They have gone as far as jamming chat and messenger programs like Google Talk, MSN Messenger, Yahoo Voice and others.

If BTL can prevent Belizeans from using the Internet to communicate using the argument that we should be using their telephone services, the postal service could argue that they have a right to block BTL’s telecommunication system as less Belizeans write letters as they rely more on telephones and even more so now… the Internet.

This continues to create a monopoly which BTL should no longer have, and forces us to continue paying exorbitant prices per minute for overseas calls. They sell TCP/IP but don’t give us all the features; yet, they still charge us a full price.

It is unwarranted for a people to be held hostage by one company who already makes a substantial profit with fixed lines, cellular services, Internet fees and various other services.

I urge you to do what is right and fight the big fight. We are not able to do it alone and individually could not possibly fight them in a court of law due to finances. The PUC should not even entertain talks of this jamming as a possibility. The monopoly is officially over, but the people are still held hostage by the actions of BTL. Why should we be thrown back into the ice age when the world around us is booming with technology?

Sincerely,

Name:

Address:

Cc: Hon. Ralph Fonseca
Minister of Communications
Ministry of Communications
Belmopan City


PUC Meeting Invitation Flyer – DOWNLOAD

April 1, 2006

PUC 4/26/06 Meeting Flyer

Please download this flyer and post it in high-visibility public places in your town or village.


PUC’s Official Public Invitation

April 1, 2006

The PUC is organizing a public forum on the theme "Opportunities and Threats for VoIP in Belize". The PUC's intent is to inform the general public and stakeholders on the law, and to receive their views and recommendations as the PUC formulates its position on Voice Over Internet Protocol (VoIP).

The forum is to be held on Wednesday, April 26, 2006 at the Radisson Fort George Hotel Caracol Room, from 9 a.m. to 12 noon.

The PUC is seeking the participation of members of the public in the forum. We urge you to discuss the forum topic with family, friends and professional colleagues and attend the forum to take part in the discussion.

The forum discussion is to be led by a panel comprised of representatives from the telephone providers, government, ISPs (internet service providers) the PUC, and a citizen's advocate. An international consultant has been asked to make a presentation on the global regulatory perspective, and he will act as forum moderator. Each panelist will take 10 minutes to present before the forum enters a plenary discussion to hear the views and receive the feedback of the general audience.

Please place the forum on your calendar, and feel free to contact the PUC for any clarification or other information you may wish to access regarding the forum.

Sincerely,
Anne Wade
Public Information Consultant