A test where one Youtube HD video and one Vimeo HD video were loaded with two different internet connections ( bench marking the connections using speedtest.net before the tests ) One connection was a Time Warner Cable Internet service rated for 30Mbps down, 5Mpbs up. These speeds were verified by speedtest.net. I can also verify these speeds are consistent based on things I do like download large games from Steam. The other connection was a Verizon 4G iPhone set up as a Personal Hot Spot. LTE bandwidth in my home ranges from 15-40Mbps down and 4-25Mbps up whenever I do speed tests. I need to make some clarification about what I mean by Time Warner “Throttling” bandwidth. Time Warner isn’t throttling my home internet connection. If they were, I wouldn’t be able to achieve the 30/5 Mbit speed I showed in the video. Instead, they are either throttling the bandwidth from the caching servers their customers are routed to or the caching servers are congested beyond their capacity. Either way, Time Warner has a responsibility to their customers to address these issues. Google doesn’t own the servers that predominantly serve up video to Time Warner customers. Google has a caching and peering network that allows traffic to be routed to servers that are considered “ideal” for the viewer of the video. The viewer’s internet provider, geographic location, and DNS server are all taken into account in this selection. Unfortunately, Google’s peering agreements allow ISP’s to direct …
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Bandwidth throttling on Youtube and Vimeo with Time Warner Cable