학술논문

Where Has the Time Gone? Examining Over a Decade of Broadband Latency Measurements
Document Type
Conference
Source
2024 8th Network Traffic Measurement and Analysis Conference (TMA) Network Traffic Measurement and Analysis Conference (TMA), 2024 8th. :1-10 May, 2024
Subject
Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
Surveys
Sensitivity
Network topology
FCC
Telecommunication traffic
Market research
Software
Broadband communication
internet measurement
latency
longitudinal analysis
Language
Abstract
The “Measuring Broadband America” (MBA) program created by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) recently paused a large-scale thirteen-year study of access network performance in the United States. Throughout the program, continuous active measurement across a diversity of service providers, network technologies, and testing topologies rendered a rich set of observations for examining the evolution of fixed broadband access speed and latency performance. This paper examines the MBA latency survey methodology followed by a rigorous longitudinal analysis of the multi-year data set. Our evaluation compares the corpus of historical MBA network observations to evolving broadband latency performance expectations and measurement interpretations. Following our longitudinal analysis, we discuss opportunities to clarify consumer perception of latency measurement methodology. We conclude the study by discussing how different latency measurement methodologies and descriptive interpretations of these observations may impact consumer understanding of the FCC's proposed broadband label. This study's data products and software artifacts are made available to the research community at https://github.com/UCBoulder/bclear/tree/main.