Internet

Connections

DUE TO INABILTY TO RESOLVE THE ISSUE OF HIGH LATENCY (below), THE JAMULUS SERVER “STUDIO C” WAS DELETED 20250521 AND UBUNTU DELETED. I WILL REINITIALIZE THE SERVER AND REINSTALL JAMULUS AT A LATER DATE. ANOTHER INSTANCE OF JAMULUS IS RUNNING, “STUDIO D” IN THE JAZZ GENRE. PLEASE USE IT.

Jamulus application

Latency using AT&T fiber (many nodes routed) from Jamulus client to Linode


Linode data center in Fremont, CA to local client: Jamulus running and registered


Comcast cable delivering Jamulus client appication to Linode:

Finding: Comcast cabled wireless has lower latency from client to server than AT&T fiber and Ethernet wired! Obviously, 1 gig symetrical does not help users, at all, running on AT&T network or fiber!

If Comcast cable does it, AT&T is preventing it from being done. Why pay more for less?

And … the answer is (wait for it …. “Internet Tyranny”): AT&T Light…. (no doubt AI is at work)! Actual proof:

What you see is essentially the same application (JackTrip) running the exact same core application software (“OPUS”) under a different wrapper than Jamulus. The only difference is how the lightspeed’s DNS is handling the data stream. In this case it’s routing based on some business decision. That decision is probably related to AT&T’s data streaming income (I’d guess), rather than its function as a public utility.

More looks at latency:

Guess (for sure … I have no idea what’s going on): AT&T’s 71.148.135.232 pairing node misconfigured and/or (3) configured to route other than “business class payment” to the next node:

Conclusion and proof: This is Comcast cable residential service!

VIOLATION! And this shows the upstream data path to the AT&T “enterprise.”

Violation of state Network neutrality!

Here’s a screen shot from another “lightspeed” user running AT&T fiber (hop #2 pushing the datastream out of the state) and hop #3 doing the shuttle of the datastream outside of the geographic boundary. The screenshot was taken by a user who also experiences high latency (providing unequivocally that AT&T is doing it):

Network Nutrality