Net Neutrality Act On the Agenda Again 242
blue234 writes "On January 9th, Republican Senator Olympia Snowe and Democrat Byron Dorgan reintroduced the bill popularly known as the Net Neutrality Act, and officially called the Internet Freedom Preservation Act. The bill was killed in the Senate last year in a vote split along party lines (Democrats yea, Republicans no), with the exception of Senator Snowe, who voted with the Democrats. Now that the Democrats have a slight majority in the Senate, the bill certainly has a better chance, but it still needs 60 votes to prevent a Republican filibuster.
Wait and see, I think (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Wait and see, I think (Score:5, Insightful)
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Question: Is there any way to word a Net Neutrality bill without loopholes which wouldn't also interfere with legitimate activity?
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I'd hope it would be possible, but it would certainly have to be carefully worded. However, and I'm sure this may put me in the minority here, but I don't think any Network Neutrality laws should be passed at this time. Any type of such regulations will add to costs (if nothing else than from an administrative/legal perspective) and of course those costs will be passed on to
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Clearly this guy has a stick up his pipe (and i
Re:Wait and see, I think (Score:5, Insightful)
I'd say allowing the cable companies to charge people for delivery of content would halt it entirely- there'd be no more small innovations, you would have to be a big player to have a website, period. Nothing new would be possible from the average person- only from the large corporations.
You chose force, I choose the free market (Score:2, Insightful)
I have a lot more faith in the invisible hand
Re:You chose force, I choose the free market (Score:5, Insightful)
You are trusting that your cable IP service won't also have tiered access. Of course, both cable and telephone companies currently provide tiered services (DSL, DSL-Lite, voicemail, premium channels, VOIP, etc) why wouldn't they charge for access to third-party media providers.
It takes more than two sources of broadband to create a free market.
Re:You chose force, I choose the free market (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:You chose force, I choose the free market (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:You chose force, I choose the free market (Score:4, Informative)
Here [dslreports.com]
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The truth is that the major players in any given market often collude with each other on one level or another for their own mutual benefit and the government goes along with it. In fact, governmental int
Re:You chose force, I choose the free market (Score:5, Interesting)
In the real world, the free market is gummed up by many things, such as collusion, friction, well-meaning government interference, and bribery-motivated government interference. What is truly remarkable is how well it works in spite of such problems.
QUOTE OF THE DAY (Score:3, Funny)
Wow, I'm going to have to remember that one.
Re:You chose force, I choose the free market (Score:5, Insightful)
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Once consumers organized on a larger scale, they could more readily pressure companies to not do abusive things. Laws such as those that force telecoms to permit the transfer of telephone numbers would be unnecessary, as that feature would be negotiated on between consumers and te
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Insightful? Maybe intuitive is a better word, because you're wrong. When you say "you", you are of course referring collectively to all consumers/citizens. But, "the body of citizens acting independently as consumers" is not a political entity, so you can't attribute blame to them. There IS a body who is supposed to represent the collective though, and it's called -you guessed it- the government.
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Now, what are you planning on doing about it? Government regulation is one group of people saying - "This is what I think we should do about this issue." You forget that generally most of the government tries to do what most people want most of the time.
Do you object to the government stopping corporate tyrannies? I really don't see a point, unless you are trying to say that since we got ourselves into this mess we deserve what we get.
But that's hardly
Re:You chose force, I choose the free market (Score:4, Insightful)
Yeah, and when a scientific theory doesn't match experiment, it's not the theory that's failed, it's the universe's fault.
Look, what use is a theory if it doesn't match the real world? Free market capitalism's desirable results come from specific predictions about how consumers behave. And if those predictions doesn't match up with how consumers really behave, then the theory has little or no use. A good economic theory shouldn't make demands on how we spend out money, it should take that as a given and develop the rest accordingly.
After all, the economy exists to benefit US, not the corporations. Corporations are just a tool that are supposedly designed to maximize useful economic output.
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With that in mind, let's take a look at your list of example
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As well as the "entire Internet" will attract customers, you could have 100,000 local customers but if you can't get anyone to peer with you, you basically have a city-wide Intranet.
I'm not saying those would happen or even could happen, but a n
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Hello theory, meet reality (Score:3, Insightful)
Plus they are gambling on consumer apathy, as in if Youtube is slow because they're not paying the extortion fee, the customer doesn't know that Youtube is slow because it's de-prioritized, so the consumer just forgets Youtube and moves on. You know what's happening to Youtube but no one wants to hear your
Here is how the free market will sell (Score:2)
Internet access from provider 2: $10/month (see note)
Note: hidden in our contract is a disclaimer that Internet access does not mean access to all the Internet at reasonable speeds -- only access to our "partners" is guaranteed.
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There is no free market when it comes to internet access. The cable and DSL companies have their lines and equipment strung all over public and private property which is all made possible through government granted rights-of-way.
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There they go again... (Score:2)
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Oh, wait a minute....
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Kodos: It's true, we are aliens. But what are you going to do about it? It's a two-party system; you have to vote for one of us!
Man1: He's right, this is a two-party system.
Man2: Well, I believe I'll vote for a third-party candidate.
Kang: Go ahead, throw your vote away.[Kang and Kodos laugh out loud] [Ross Perot smashes his "P
As a North Dakotan (Score:2)
Re:As a North Dakotan (Score:5, Insightful)
From TFA:
"The prioritization of types of content, applications, or services would be allowed under the condition that it is done free of charge, and that it is done for all types of that particular content. For example, the prioritization of packets to insure Quality of Service for Voice over IP must be done for all VoIP providers free of charge to them."
Now since virtually every telco is also an IP carrier you can kiss skype goodby. Anything that competes with POTS is likely to be degraded to death.
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Re:As a North Dakotan (Score:5, Insightful)
Although it sounds like you're coming from the other side of things - those ISPs who don't have VOIP services are going to send them to the bottom of the stack. Still, I take some comfort in knowing that they're going to have to either screw themselves or help their competitors (or, rather, not abuse their position of power and screw their competitors while helping themselves) whenever there's some new market that they want to enter. I see no reason to be racist towards bits, but then again I think I'd put up with slightly slower pira^H^H^H^H Linux
Hopefully... (Score:5, Insightful)
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Operation Preserve Freedom (Score:5, Funny)
It's funny. In this day and age I hear a bill title like that and I automatically assume it's some tyrannical euphemistic horror-show and that I should immediately call my representatives and insist they opppose it.
Incidentally this bill really is evil, because apparently all consumers and businesses currently use tremendous bandwidth without paying for it! I for one think it's about time the internet service providers were paid a monthly bill for the courtesies they provide!
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It's not gunna happen.. (Score:5, Insightful)
My friend sends me a link to a clip on Google Video.
I go to the link, get my clip and laugh at the money drinkin' its own urine, or whatever.
Google gets a bill from my Internet service provider for bandwidth usage.
Google rips up the bill and tells my ISP to go fuck themselves.
My ISP reduces the available bandwidth to connections to Google's ip range.
Great, so then what happens?
My friend sends me another link to a clip on Google Video.
I go to the link and discover that the clip is too slow (or completely blocked).
I moan to my ISP that I can't play these important movie clips from Google Video.
My ISP tells me that I can't play them because Google hasn't paid their bandwidth charges.
I tell my ISP to go fuck themselves and switch to a provider that honours net neutrality.
Everyone else does this too because we really like Google Video.
And there goes the backhanded stupidity caused by ISPs temporarily forgetting that we, the consumers, control exactly how much money they make.
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Re:It's not gunna happen.. (Score:4, Insightful)
Similarly, if you're so sure that ISPs are price fixing, in clear violation of the law, then why bother supporting a new law? Won't they just break that one too?
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It seems to strange to me that the US has become the land of the monopolies and very few people stand up and declare that it aint right.
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Since when? Last I heard, a year or two ago, the partially-state-owned telco had a near monopoly and was farting around with xfer caps for any international traffic. Apparently you live there and all and thus should know more about it than someone who is too lazy to google it, but if what you say is true, it's gotta be a recent phenomenon.
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Even so, it was more of a joke than not while it lasted. The 100 different DSL providers all simply resold lines they rented from the telco, and buying service from them was generally pointless. Half the time the telco would fuck the line up and continuously blame the DSL "provider" (but of course, if you bought the DSL direct fro
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Why should they pay twice?
Not to mention that such an arrangement would freeze
out smaller businesses that cannot afford the
bandwidth pirate fees. And note that the unpredicablity
of such fees will make that especially troublesome
for a small business.
If the ISPs and Telcos cant make ends meet on what
they charge, then there is an easy, direct, non-extortionate
solution to that problem.
Another post in reply to yours has covered the concept
that companies can an
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(why they haven't already attempted to solve the piracy problem this way I have no idea)
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I live in a major city, and have only one option for bandwidth (besides dialup): Comcast. Or somebody else, Earthlink or something, that also goes through Comcast (when I used them, I still had to call Comcast for my tech support). I can't use DSL, my building doesn't support it. Actually, despite living in a number of large urban/suburban areas, I have never yet lived in a single place where I had the option of DSL, or more than one cable network.
I see some variant of your post almost every time net neut
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I tell my ISP to go fuck themselves and switch to a provider that honours net neutrality.
Yeah, but does your provider's provider honor net neutrality? There are few sources of bandwidth outside the existing telco infrastructure, and very few companies that control all that. Everyone else is a reseller.
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And risk you telling them to go fuck themselves? Clearly their first tier support staff will be trained to tell you that the problem is that google's servers are overloaded and you should use a different server like [paid sponsorship here]'s funny video server.
Why do so many people assume that companies are going to tell the truth about the bad things they do?
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Even the mobile phone market is pretty bad, those providers call the shots, you buy their service and their restricted phone with an overly long contract and they charge you about $200 to end the contract.
I think the ISPs are well aware of this.
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2 Senators appeal to YouTube community for support (Score:5, Interesting)
Kennedy's video [youtube.com] (3 min, 22 sec)
Dorgan's video [youtube.com] (1 min, 48 sec)
Dangerous (Score:4, Insightful)
I think this is a dangerous practice. Yes it is a reasonable strategy for a party or special interest group - because if they are persistent enough the bill might just pass. However it is dangerous for the rest of us - since once this bill passes - even if it is merely through insistance and momentum, we are stuck with it. It is much harder to get a law repealed than to get one approved. So we end up with laws that got approved through sheer bloody-mindedness, and are stuck with them because no one dares repeal it. I mean, if it is a law - it must be right, right? People must have agreed with it, right?
Sigh, another pebble is eroded off of the cliff of democracy...
Re:Dangerous (Score:5, Insightful)
Under your ideal government, reform would be impossible, since one could only pass things by consensus - and anything that could not pass a few years earlier would be considered bad.
Change happens in a democracy. We vote in new leaders precisely for the reason that we want them to pass the things that the old ones wouldn't.
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Indeed. I think this is where the phrase 'An idea whose time has come' originated.
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KFG
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Concern (Score:2)
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You want band width, you pay for band width. But don't come telling me my use of the bandwidth I pay for is somehow less important than yours and therefore I can't watch baseball or view youtube so you and your suits can crack wise across the continent.
principally i cant see how anyone could support enforcing a lowest common denominator upon everyone.
How is it that
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Discrimination based on end points would be the real issue.
That would be crucial part of any legislation.
Be very wary (Score:2, Insightful)
1. All backbone providers must allow other providers to connect to them on a naked pipe
2. All providers must use standard protocols
3. Providers may only throttle data/bandwidth based on protocol, not orgin/destination
I believe anything more is harmful to the free market.
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too bad such regulations will never be passed. they're too sensible.
Net Neutrality is the wrong focus, I think (Score:5, Insightful)
THAT is where the free speech comes from: the people. The NN debate seems to be rather focused on the ability to choose between large companies that want to profit through our expression. Even though there may be more options it still represents a consolidation of content. If we want information we must get it from these providers; if we want to share it we must share it through the providers. As a group they become the gatekeepers.
It doesn't have to be this way. If more ISPs would let us use even our measly aDSL uplinks (that we pay for) to legally serve our own content, people would be able to self-publish in all sorts of new ways. Once we can participate directly in the internet without the middleman of some company with servers we'll unleash an amazing amount of potential and innovation.
Software would be created to deal with the technical challenges that would arise, perhaps with legitimate P2P providing interesting solutions to some of these problems. Network-centric computing would get a huge boost too. In any case, that small change in SOP has the potential to really change the way people view and use the Internet.
Network Neutrality proponents love to talk about a level playing field... lets level the playing field between the consumers and the providers as a whole.
mod parent up +1 Insightful (Score:3, Insightful)
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We're not just talking plain ol' web servers here. We're talking anything that might have a use for listening for i
The Truth (Score:2)
The Internet is not something you just dump something on! IT'S NOT A BIG TRUCK! IT'S A SERIES OF TUBES!
Who owns the Internet? Who owns Congress? (Score:2)
So on the face of it, a law mandating Net Neutrality is a good thing.
But big ISPs are also big campaign contributors. The cable and phone companies have long since learned to cover their asses by bribing our elected officials on both sides of the aisle. So odds are good that if Congress does pass
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After all, America
Re:Why the split? (Score:5, Informative)
Think about it this way. This bill is a proposal to regulate the internet itself. Specifically, to regulate how an ISP and network backbone company can allocate bandwidth.
Republicans: Regulation mostly bad.
Democrats: Regulation mostly good.
Capiche?
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Re:SAVE TEH INTERNETS!!! (Score:5, Informative)
The bill came up after the head of ATT complained
about how "google was using his 'pipes' for free".
And how he wanted to correct that, so that google
was paying him.
Never mind that google paid their ISP, and their
ISP and ATT ( if they are not the same, I presume
not, or he would not have cause to complain
( course, I am stupid, he doesnt have cause to
complain then, but still he did ) ) have either
a peering arrangement or a cash arrangement to
carry each other's traffic ( you know, the
arrangements that make the interconnects between
each telco/isp's networks worth much of anything
in the first place... )
But, yes, the Democrats backed the bill.
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This is my recollection as well. I also recall that after the bill was proposed, the big cable/telcos started running counter-factual advertisements in TV and newspapers, essentially saying "Google wants to raise your Internet bill! Stop them!" -- which even those who oppose net neutrality ought to agree is not really correct. But this widespread dishonest behavior does suggest that, even if the major bandwidth providers had not yet started the tiered bandwidth charges the bill was meant to prevent, they st
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type campaign, is that if google *did* end up paying for it, they
would end up passing those costs on to the end users anyway, just
in different ways. So, the end user would get the cost, plus some
percent of profit going to Google for the transaction.
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it was not a problem until a year ago as ISPs (DSL providers anyway) fell under the same regulations as phone companies. the courts ruled that they are not an "information service", thus they are subject to different, less stringent, regulations.
net neutrality is returning the former regulations and standardizing them to
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100% Troll
How appropriate that the rightwingers will lie and spew whatever venom (like "questioning the president is treason") they want, but simple statements comparing their Republican Party behavior to Democrats is called "Troll" by their trollMods. TrollMods are the Slashdot equivalent of the filibuster, but not as effective or boring.