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Comments on: House rejects Net neutrality rules

House of Representatives sides with broadband providers like Verizon and AT&T over Internet companies.

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Who do I sign my checking account over too?
by nerantzis June 8, 2006 7:04 PM PDT
So getting my email will now cost me how much? Will that tune
from itunes now have a "service" fee for the extra bandwith it will
take to download? Will skype calling now cost me more than
nothing? And will I ever be able to afford video conferences or
movie downloads?

If I was a repulican I guess I would never have to ask.
Reply to this comment
free markets
by jrzshor June 10, 2006 7:27 PM PDT
There is, never was and certainly will never be, "free markets".
Oil companies say that they are about "free market' yet they get
billions in subsidies, tax breaks and other "evil socialist
governement" handouts. Cable companies get to be the only
game in town via contracts with those evil g-men types. And no,
adding Verizon to the game will not help. Prices have a way of
stabilizing at a certain level--CD's have always been about the
same price regardless of who the seller is , despite so many
sellers. Another example is the cell phone companies. They
setteled on a price, everyone followed. NO ONE undersells the
established price. All they do is add minutes that most people
will never use. Marketing us into believing we are getting
something (free or reduced phones are just a come on so don't
argue for its value -which is nothing by the way).

Companies are about making as much money as possible, in any
way that they can. Your interests will never be valued only your
money -can will all say Enron. And yes they were a much valued
and praised company all they way to the end.

So, point is, stop saying free markets will always be good. Even
in this case, those "free market" companies with the soon to be
exclusive internet pipes, have been guaranteed proctections by
government from the very "free" market forces that they cry for.
View reply
How about access from europe
by tashman June 8, 2006 7:18 PM PDT
This is so stupid. This will do nothing but cost consumers money, time, effort and slow down the adoption of the internet. Unbelievable in a place where freedom is suppose to be supreme we are constantly seeing big business spoon feed big government all at the demise of our basic rights. I can't wait for the day when I can get internet access from a foreign company that just wants to deliver high speed internet and stop all of this bulls*it. I use to think the US wanted to be number one, now I think we are sinking farther and farther down a hole we can't get out of. I for one think it is a shame.
Reply to this comment
Now you get it
by June 8, 2006 8:58 PM PDT
The US peaked after World War II. Now we are on an accelerating downward trend.

Big business, politicians and the voting/consuming public have all proven repeatedly that they can not be trusted to do the right thing.

The telcos will put the screws to the internet users until we have been raped sufficiently that the politicians can no longer take the screaming masses or it directly impacts them in a negative manner. If it is the screaming masses, the politicians will legislate that the masses wear gags. If it is because the politicians are negatively impacted, they will legislate themselves a loophole and gags for the masses to muffle any screaming that may ensue. Kick the currently crooked politicians out of office and big business will buy itself a new batch. Rinse and repeat.

Grab your ankles boys and girls....and get ready for the next ride on the pain train.
View reply
Isn't it about time
by DryHeatDave June 9, 2006 1:34 AM PDT
That the rest of the world built their own internet infrastructure, so that 90% (?) of the traffic does NOT have to go through the US ?

I understand frustration of Europeans (my family in England, included) - being detrimentally (although that has yet to be determined) affected by the decisions made by US politicians. But you DO use the US infrastructure for the majority of internet traffic.

If you don't like it - build the infrastructure you need & stop mooching off the USA !
victory
by komradkyle June 8, 2006 7:27 PM PDT
finally some politicians have some sense. I don't understand why the republicans would want this, Am i starting to favor democrats?????????
Reply to this comment
No Surprises Here.
by sundance_tree June 8, 2006 7:29 PM PDT
I'm not surprised this happened, the traditional telco's business model is constantly being challenged by Internet based services. LONG DISTANCE, once the main bread and butter of the telcos, WILL DIE. They just cant accept that they'd be relegated to simply supplying the pipe to consumers and content providers. Allowing telcos to throttle traffic going in or through their IP networks undermines the basic principles of the Internet(ie free, unfettered exchange of information). Question, does a mall operator charge a shop owner extra when customers flood the store? I dont think so, so shouldnt telcos.
Reply to this comment
Good Point
by hybris06 June 8, 2006 8:05 PM PDT
sundance_tree,

I think you made a good point with the mall analogy. But I doubt any changes will come from this. Because of the competition in the market if one provider started to tax its users then people would abandon it in favor of a ?tax? free provider. And if there are no other choices for tax free providers then I am sure anti-trust law suits would be brought. It will be interesting to see how all of this plays out.
View all 2 replies
Question, does a mall operator charge...
by ahickey June 9, 2006 2:30 AM PDT
From above...

Question, does a mall operator charge a shop owner extra when customers flood the store? I dont think so, so shouldnt telcos.

This is a bad example:
In a mall stores pay by location and by size.

If you want space in a prime location it will cost more than the one by the emergency exit.

If you want a big store to handle a lot of customers then you pay more.

For me the internet questions is different.
Content providers pay extra for the bandwidth they need.

Customers pay extra for higher bandwidth. I pay a premium for an 8Mb line compared to somebody on a 1Mb line.

So, we are already paying extra for the bandwidth.

Also, for streaming unless every provider on the link from the server to the client is optimized the connection will not be fast.
Streaming is like a driving on a road which is full of cars.
If sections of the road are 70mph and others are 30mph because the road if full all the time then the maximum speed the whole road can go is 30mph.
So, to me this extra guaranteed bandwidth is not guaranteed to my door unless the WHOLE internet is going fast.
Malls do
by R Me June 9, 2006 9:58 AM PDT
Rents are based on Sq Ft plus a set percentage of profits. So the answer is YES.

Truckers pay more taxes cause they damage the roads more than other traffic.

A special lane just for car pool vehicles.

VIP seating for rich schmucks

The best concert tickets now going to auction. Think you will ever again get a reserved seating ticket unless you can pony up big bucks like the "too rich to give a sh%t" crowd?

Special treatment for people named McKinny and Kennedy.

Get used to it. If you dont have money to spend and powerful friends it's "BOHICA" time. ( bend over here it comes again)
Well - you might pay
by Xat Nam June 9, 2006 11:59 AM PDT
If the customers simply flood the store, no. But if they buy, that may be a different story. The larger malls generally charge their premises stores a percentage of their gross, in addition to their monthly rent.
VOTE THEM OUT
by LarryLo June 8, 2006 8:44 PM PDT
SIMPLE...Find out how you Government Representative voted, if its not to your liking, return the favor in November.

Greed cannot ruin the internet!
Reply to this comment
greed?
by 1st June 9, 2006 3:16 AM PDT
Cool down... no body want to ruin the internet.
However I do agree with the House. Wire or Wireless, nothing is
free. You pay one way or the other for the signal come to you...
the www was invented at lab that paid by tax payer too. Take a
breath of the existing condition, just consider you are lucky to
get all your initial trail "free" (including all the google beer and
free dinner), R&D relatively free, got way ahead of your
competitor, etc.etc. Now get back to work for a living (for a
change)... World out there in real place are not "free", including
Japan, EU, etc. Since you are still belong to the same category as
the rest of the Human...not imaginary virtue world, la--y-lo...
View all 3 replies
Not an option
by June 9, 2006 7:26 AM PDT
Unfortunately in our system of government you must vote someone else in. Given the current campaign system any one who can win will support their constuents: those who financed the campaign and their next one. Money talks and BS walks.
reform
by R Me June 9, 2006 10:17 AM PDT
The vote was along party lines. So you are advocating a straight line dem vote. Thats the problem.

We need reform.

No more political parties!
No more electorial congress!
No more lobby contributions!

One vote - one count!

Ranked Voting. Vote in order of preference.

That would have given us
pres - Kerry
vp - bush
or
pres - bush
vp - Kerry

Revolt by passive resistance. What if they held an election and N0-ONE came? Imagine the ripple effect of a presidential election with 10% participation. Or what if the winner was "Bozo the Clown" by a write-in vote.

That is the only way we will have reforms. They will never come from the efforts of elected officials or the public by voting.
View reply
That is why
by Mertal June 9, 2006 12:36 AM PDT
The US should NOT have control over the Internet. The prevailing interest in the US is that of the major companies, not of the consumer, and ESPECIALLY not on the consumers from other countries.

Myself I am Norwegian, and I do not know what effects this will have on my own personal Internet usage, however I do not like what is about to happen.

The Internet is supposed to be some sort of "digital library" and as we all know libraries aught to be free to use, with the all-out truth and nothing but the truth, not a place where money rules.
Reply to this comment
agree...but
by R Me June 9, 2006 10:44 AM PDT
Who will pay for the backbone?
Will the Scandinavian countries, with some of the highest percentages of connected users pay on a population based percentage? Would Norway pony up for $10b to share the expense of a decentralized EU backbone to separate non US traffic?

Skip the fact of the origins of the Internet. You seem to forget who pays for the majority of traffic to keep flowing. What you are seeing is capitalism at both its best and worst and only G'mnet interference will change what it presently happening.

Or is it that you want your G'mnet to control the Ineternet. Or maybe the UN, which cant even change their own diapers without two years of meetings, a dozen new councils and a cry for more money and then another two years to further study the problem as they try to figure out a way to side-step the huge US inluence while still trying to force the US to pay the majority of costs.

Or maybe the EU, the new political joke, can do it. Finance it for you by further suing large US based corporations. I would love to see the internal squabling that would result in trying to split up that pie.

The non US world keeps trying to push us out but does not want to pay for what they are even now getting. This only does one thing, it highlights the failure of socialism. While capitalism may not be fun, it does manage to pay its own way.
That is Why?
by gmcaloon--2008 June 9, 2006 11:27 AM PDT
You mention that you don?t like what is about to happen. In fact, nothing is about to happen. If you were a little more knowledgeable about how the US government works, you would know that this bill has no chance of becoming law. I don?t fault you for that. You have got your own government, not to mention the mess that is EU government, to worry about.

The US doesn?t control the internet, but it does have a good deal of influence because so many of the companies that dominate it are American. It didn?t have to be that way, but although it was a Brit who in effect invented the thing, it was the American government in conjunction with American research universities that developed it at first for private use and eventually for public use.

That is the reality and there is simply no reliable international entity qualified to regulate it. At that, you Norwegians couldn?t have all that much to say about it either because the EU can over-ride so much of what your government does. It would be a different story if the EU had a truly democratic construction, but it is a long way from having that and will never have it the presently proposed Constitution is ever adopted. That thing was the brainchild of a conservative former French politician and is an abomination because there is little that is democratic about it.
YouTube, BrightCove, Skype and Vonage should worry
by Don_Dodge June 9, 2006 5:06 AM PDT
What do the telecom carriers want? They want the right to charge extra for certain applications at their discretion. Consumers pay about $40 - $60 a month for unlimited internet access. The carriers are rethinking "unlimited" in cases where applications consume huge amounts of bandwidth. Things like video, IPTV, and VoIP could be the target of extra charges from the carriers. Companies like YouTube, BrightCove , Skype, and Vonage might be asked to pay surcharges for bandwidth.

What is the problem? What happens if Verizon decided to charge Skype and Vonage extra for VoIP but allows its own VoIP service to go over its network for free? What happens if Comcast decides to charge BrightCove and other IPTV companies extra and has its own competing IPTV service? What happens if Comcast and Verizon coincidentilly decide to add a surcharge YouTube traffic? What happens if they decide to add a surcharge to Google, Yahoo, or Microsoft just becuase they have billions of dollars and can afford it?

I wrote an in depth blog on this subject today. http://dondodge.typepad.com/the_next_big_thing/2006/06/what_is_net_neu.html
Reply to this comment
re: YouTube, BrightCove, Skype and Vonage should worry
by 200mbpsBPL June 9, 2006 6:10 AM PDT
These bandwidth hogs should invest more in HI-BANDWIDTH INTERNET ACCESS via hi-speed, symmetrical BROADBAND over POWERLINES !!!

FYI: http://broadbandoverpowerlines.blogspot.com/
updates the Global trend of broadband over powerlines or BPL/PLC !!!
View reply
Funny
by umbrae June 9, 2006 5:25 AM PDT
How they say the government should not get involved here, yet they want to get involved in how I raise my childern by attacking Video Games.

Guess they just haven't learned to talk out of their mouth instead of their a--.
Reply to this comment
an alternative 3rd broadband access: Broadband over Power Lines !!!
by 200mbpsBPL June 9, 2006 6:06 AM PDT
Rejection of Net Neutrality will force Bandwidth hogs to find new Internet access like Broadband ove PowerLines... globally, BPL is gaining such support too. Read more BPL updates: http://broadbandoverpowerlines.blogspot.com/
Reply to this comment
Just what we need...
by umbrae June 9, 2006 6:40 AM PDT
...is my broadband being as unreliable as my power. :/

This is not really a solution to this problem. As there is still an ISP involved that can still charge a premium to content providers for access to the fast pipes. Internet over powerlines is ONLY the way to get the connection to the end users. Other than the end-user deployment, the technology is no different than ANY OTHER ISP OR TELCO.

As such, this is just an off-topic post...
View all 2 replies
Just say no to BPL!
by ddesy June 9, 2006 9:21 AM PDT
BPL causes major communications problems with radio signals. Amateur radio operators that live in areas where BPL is being tested will tell you that. Do you really want to kill the airwaves?
View reply
There Are No Alternatives
by gmcaloon--2008 June 9, 2006 11:33 AM PDT
And then the power companies will exercise the same kind of control as the cable/telecos want to have. The internet over power lines wouldn?t solve any problems. It would just add another player.
KORPORATE AMERIKA
by mnemonician June 9, 2006 7:17 AM PDT
If anyone doubts that the current US administration/government has been hijacked by interests that are inimical to the public (at large) good, then this result should settle any questions.
Reply to this comment
Net Extortion is a conservative value
by YankeePoodle June 9, 2006 8:10 AM PDT
The Telcos are used to defending their regional monopolies, they have more political acumen than the internet companies (and they are more RED than the internet companies). The Telcos have under-delivered the American customer, if you take a look at Cell-phone industry, Phones and Services in Europe and Asia (including the developing parts) are far better and inexpensive than that are in North America. Try calling International with your cell-phone, you would be dished nice huge bill, where as in other countries International calls are being given at the "Calling Card" rates.
The broadband, is another area where Telcos are exploiting, sure they are coming up with Fancy marketting campigns, but the US household braodbands are lesser than most of the developed world.

I would not want to give the benefit of "Good faith" to the TelCos, they have mis-used their previleges and have abused their regional near-monopoly status, if the Congress wont reign them in, the fat-cat execs of these companies are going to suck the blood of hardworking companies as well as individuals. It is just matter of time these "Net Gatekeepers" kick full gas on their "Extortion Racket" and well, our Conservative friends will get their share of funding for campaign about "Values".
Big money wins again!
by bobby_brady June 9, 2006 7:38 AM PDT
This is just complete C R A P! I'm so SICK AND TIRED of our government getting paid off by the big money!!! Once again, the little guys loss.
Reply to this comment
REMEMBER THIS IN NOVEMBER
by canubelieveit June 9, 2006 8:21 AM PDT
Don't forget what the crooks have done!!!!! Post it online!
Spread the word! Our, er, I mean the Korporations'
"representatives" failed---and all for big $...

Wish I could say I was surprised....
Reply to this comment
Questions for the pro-neutrality crowd
by ORinSF June 9, 2006 8:58 AM PDT
That Congress chose not to take control of the Internet is a good thing. If you really think it's a disaster, go on record with some answers to these questions. In five years...

a) I will be paying much more per megabit of bandwidth
b) I will be paying much less per megabit of bandwidth

a) I will have fewer choices of service providers than I do now
b) I will have more choices of service providers than I do now

a) The will be Internet-based competiton for cable TV
b) There will not be Internet-based competition for cable TV

a) My ISP will provide access to fewer Web sites
b) My ISP will provide access to more Web sites

Folks, you really don't want Congress dicating the architecture of the 'net. The term is socialism -- gov't dictating markets -- and it results in scarcity, no matter how good the intentions.

I think that techies and their customers should be making the call. Congress doesn't even know what a packet is...

More here.
Reply to this comment
So which telecom do you work for?
by canubelieveit June 9, 2006 9:40 AM PDT
Usually, it's only folks "on the take" that are taking this stance...
View all 2 replies
None. Care to stay on topic?
by ORinSF June 9, 2006 10:12 AM PDT
Seems like you might have found some sort of political dictionary. Very cute. I don't work for any of the interested parties, but nice of you to ask.

If it's too black-and-white, let's get into specifics then. Packet prioritization -- is it being used now and does it provide benefits? Should it be illegal? Would the Markey amendment make it illegal?

This is an issue that should be decided by network experts, not Congress. Looking forward to answers to the above.

(Sorry for the double post, hit the wrong link earlier.)
View reply
Free market only works when there are many competitors.
by rderveloy June 9, 2006 12:09 PM PDT
Free market only works when there are many competitors.

I understand that adding high speed networks costs lots of money. I also understand that ISPs need to be able to charge customers based on the bandwidth they use and I'm fine with that. That?s what web hosts do every day.

However, what is there to prevent ISPs from abusing their power and forcing a small company's website to load significantly slower than a large company's website because they refused to pay a premium? Isn't that considered extortion?

Don?t Google and other large companies already pay a premium for their internet connection? Last time I checked, T3 lines aren?t cheap.

In my home, I already pay a premium to have high-speed internet through my cable provider. How do we keep my ISP for charging me more just because I want to watch a streamed video review from cnet.com, use Vonage to talk to my family, or play a multiplayer game over Xbox Live?

What's the point of paying for broadband internet if a person has pay extra just to take advantage of it? It's like buying a brand new $30,000 car then paying more so you can get the keys or paying extra every time you start the car.

I'm all about free economy and open competition. However, the free economy ideal is a two-edged sword. It's great for consumers when there is a lot of competition, but it sucks when there are very few providers for a product.

Going back to the car example, no car manufacturer would dream for charging extra for the keys or charging for every time you turn the car on because everyone would just go to any of the many other auto makers. But what would happen if there were only 2 decent auto manufactures and both wanted to do that? Well, then you'd be screwed. Since there would be only 2 auto manufactures, they would be giant, and capable of squashing any other manufacture that tried to spring up and give them decent competition.

Unlike the numerous car manufactures, there are only 2 major broadband providers available for home consumers: DSL and cable. Yes, there are other technologies, but if you want decent connection speeds, you really have to choose between those two. Imagine that, two gigantic providers with very little or no real competition.

So, pray tell, where do I go to get broadband if both DSL and Cable want to charge me extra for taking advantage of what I already pay for?

If I were a tech company, big or small, I?d keep my anti-trust lawyers on speed dial.
Wouldn?t it be ironic if Microsoft sued an ISP on anti-trust grounds?
View all 3 replies
Answers
by RichardPetheram June 9, 2006 1:03 PM PDT
a) I will be paying much more per megabit of bandwidth

'Standard rate' bandwidth will be cheaper, but anythinging of value will not be available on it.

a) I will have fewer choices of service providers than I do now

Government has just proved to be in the pocket of service providers. Don't expect competition any time soon.

b) There will not be Internet-based competition for cable TV

Internet providers = cable TV providers = Telecoms companies. They won't be competing with themselves.

a) My ISP will provide access to fewer Web sites

There will be more websites in existence, but anyone who competes with a service my ISP (read Telco) provides will be blocked.

But what do I care, I live in England where things are working just fine, and looking forward to capitalising on web services while you lot spend the next 20 years in court.
Reply to questions
by Vurk June 11, 2006 10:07 AM PDT
>In five years...
a) I will be paying much more per megabit of bandwidth
b) I will be paying much less per megabit of bandwidth
If the telcos win, then A; if the forces of godd win, then B

>a) I will have fewer choices of service providers than I do now
b) I will have more choices of service providers than I do now
Same answer except that the number of ISP's will remain constant.

>a) The will be Internet-based competiton for cable TV
b) There will not be Internet-based competition for cable TV
Same answer-if the telcos win, there will be no difference between cable TV and the Internet.

>a) My ISP will provide access to fewer Web sites
b) My ISP will provide access to more Web sites
Same answer, except that if the telcos win, my ISP will be priced out of the broadband market.
Besides, the point has never been that the ISP would restrict access, its that the owner of the wires would restrict access.

Net neutrality rules would not allow the govt to dictate the architecture of the Net; merely ensure that all content is treated equally.

As for "socialism," what do you think massive govt subsidies and tax breaks are, if not socialism?
ENRON: the Sequel
by Below Meigh June 9, 2006 9:30 AM PDT
Yeah, lets put broadband over powerlines. Then we can broker the network and power!

I want a list of all those that voted yay or nay. Then a campaign, via the same email to let them know they are ALL on short strings come re-election.

You, the sheeple, are being duped. FCC has no balls, only someone wrapping them up in cash.

We need ACCOUNTABILITY from these that think they are untouchable and full of greed.
Reply to this comment
right on the head
by pmm6 June 10, 2006 8:48 AM PDT
Now the few high speed banwith interenet companies want to sell access to internet websites. Then what will be the incentive to upgrade the bandwith? NONE. Because now they can make money just by charging for access to there customers. The customer gets screwed because it will be limited to speed of access to smaller sites by the provider.
The same thing happen to oil, banking, and cellular industies, Soon there will be Bi-opoloies in all the major industies.
The sheep will get what they want less goverment regulation but less choices too. Prices will be dictated by the two and profits will rule not freedom to choice.
This just another Republican "the Coportion knows what is best for the consumer not the govnerment. Let the Coportion give you less freedom to choose.
Remember when "Republican" meant something decent?
by mgreere June 9, 2006 9:53 AM PDT
(ignoring historical affiliations with racism, etc.)

I like small government, fiscal and personal responsibility, right
to privacy, my right to bear arms (responsibly)...

It's all about kickbacks to huge corporate lobbyists, placating a
religious base that's in the minority, letting the executive branch
seize as much power as possible, and ignoring the gargantuan
deficit.

Maybe kicking them out in November will bring the Republicans
back to their senses -- where they focus on American virtue
instead of fear and corporate handouts.

This whole run of lobby-based bills is reckless and embarassing.
Reply to this comment
When GOP was decent (ignoring racism, etc.)
by workersfirst June 22, 2006 6:38 AM PDT
I agree with you that the GOP is "all about kickbacks to huge corporate lobbyists, placating a religious base..." etc., however, I think you really have to go back to at least the mid 1960s-early 1970s to find any significant number of Republican members of Congress who really supported working class-middle class Americans on economic issues. Although I am a little curious how you could excuse the GOP's "affiliations with racism, etc" from any definition of the word "decent." I guess it comes down to "decent" for whom? Sort of a sad perspective, I'd say.
None. Care to stay on topic?
by ORinSF June 9, 2006 10:11 AM PDT
Seems like you might have found some sort of political dictionary. Very cute. I don't work for any of the interested parties, but nice of you to ask.

If it's too black-and-white, let's get into specifics then. Packet prioritization -- is it being used now and does it provide benefits? Should it be illegal? Would the Markey amendment make it illegal?

This is an issue that should be decided by network experts, not Congress. Looking forward to answers to the above.
Reply to this comment
:-)
by canubelieveit June 9, 2006 11:36 AM PDT
"Congress dicating the architecture of the 'net. The term is
socialism -- gov't dictating markets"

And after that, you make a dig about "cute" political terminology
from someone else?
LOL
Uh, you kinda started that...
Love your attention to detail....

I'm also looking forward to those answers, 5 yrs. from now. Be
sure to post 'em, and I'll do the same.
Don't confuse QoS with TOLL services
by LarryLo June 9, 2006 9:05 PM PDT
Packet prioritization is good, IF AND ONLY IF it is applied evenly, i.e. ALL rtp traffic (Voice, Video), Not only to voice packets from Broadwing (Verizon's overpriced VoIP service), or only video streams from AOL, (Anyone else that can pay the fabercated toll). You want to prioritize some packets on your backbone Mr. Telco, fine go ahead, but apply it evenly to all VoIP Traffic, all video traffic, not just your offerings.

Lets not confuse the two. Paid for QoS is wrong on the public internet, it creates a 2 tier system, the haves and the have nots, with the Telco's holding all the keys. Since the Telco's can't charge us the consumers directly, they are trying to muscle the content provider, by holding thier subscribers connections ransom.
Reply
by Vurk June 11, 2006 2:48 PM PDT
OR, your previous remarks make you appear to be an employee or paid shill for one of the telcos or their lobbyists; this is why you have been accused of such, because you do not realize why a neutral network is more important than a gated network.

As for your questions: yes, packet prioritization is useful; but it should not be used as a revenue-generating device for the bandwidth provider.
No the Markey amendment would not make it illegal; it would make the use of it for profit generation at the expense of other packets illegalI(i.e. using it to slow down non-premium-paid packets).
This issue *had* been settled; it was the telcos who paid to have it *unsettled*.
lawrence lessig title hypocrisy read ip6 and rsvp rfc
by dipnip June 9, 2006 5:57 PM PDT
next time before writing a law! are you thinking straight captain underpants?
Reply to this comment
My priority, my decision
by yikes31 June 10, 2006 5:11 PM PDT
As far as Im concerned, I pay for open access to the internet. Its
up to me to seek what I want from it , when and at what rate. I
dont want to negotiate with some telecom company that tells me
that my emails have to go slower than some multinational
corporation. I dont want to be told where I can go and how I can
use my service. I use my internet line for a vonage phone and as
far as Im concerned, that is not the business of the telecom
company. Im expressing my right to use my service as I see fit.
This is another case of lobbying corporations lining pockets.
How far will this 'biased' two tier internet go? Will one political
party's emails take longer than the other? Will ethnicities be
forced into the slow lane? Will my service be determined by
someone at a telecom company who can swich me to hi or lo
priority at a whim? Would people ever find out?
Reply to this comment
Answers
by Vurk June 11, 2006 2:58 PM PDT
>>How far will this 'biased' two tier internet go?
All the way.

>>Will one political party's emails take longer than the other?
Yes. and websites, and blogs. Whichever party says they will do something about it will have all their partys emails and websites/blogs blocked.

>> Will ethnicities be forced into the slow lane?
Only the poor ones.

>>Will my service be determined by someone at a telecom company who can swich me to hi or lo priority at a whim?
Yes, so watch what you say; those telecom employees can be might vindictive. And they know your IP address :-).
Or they'll just cut off a swath of IP addresses because their wife or boss just yelled at them.

>>Would people ever find out?
Eventually.
Internet should be
by R Me June 11, 2006 9:46 AM PDT
regulated like a utility. Except with a utility there is only one way of supplying the product. Power over line, water through pipes. gas through lines. Internet over POTS, cable, satellite, wireless, BPL, and who know what comes next.

The net has to be utiliized but the last mile needs to be seperated and largely unregulated. The supply however should be regulated as a utility.

While this would be nice to see it will never happen as its makes far too much sense for a group of politicians to grep away contributions.

Guess wee need to kill all lobbiests first.
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get it right
by R Me June 11, 2006 10:35 AM PDT
This has to be one of the most clueless situations I've seen. Full of chicken littles crying FUD.

GET IT RIGHT!

NN has nothing to do at the local ISP level.

Last mile Internet access bandwidth is ever increasing by huge margins. Cable, DSL, and WI-Fi keep upping allowable bandwidth to compete and grab a larger slice of the pie. For them it's nothing more than software settings to change your bandwidth.

What is not increasing is the available bandwidth of the backbone. Everyone expects the increased bandwidth at the local level to just keep flowing as usual. To do so the backbone ownere need to add huge runs of fiber at a cost of BILLIONS. Billions they will not see unless they are able to somehow charge more. So they wish to simply charge the services that are causing this huge increase. Its not normal website surfing but things like video, IPTV, VOIP and other new as of yet emerging tecnologies that require lots of bandwidth.

What it boils down to is that the backbone providers are expecting bandwidth dependant services to have to charge and be charged accordingly. Could you expect a backbone provider to smilingly pony up billions for new pipes without being able to recover just so you can watch old TV shows on your computer?

If NN were ever to pass you could expect the Internet to act like the California power grid. Anyone for rolling net-outs. Not me. The net is not free, someone pays for everything. Its time the FUD spreading crowd shuts up and tells the truth. That is if they can intelligently grep what is really goining on. If you need a clue its called capitalism, where you pay for what you get. So dont expect Internet welfare from the backbone providers, they are the ones who spend billions while hidden behind the scenes so you can happily be a porn wanker while watching IPTV.
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thanks dude
by 1st June 11, 2006 1:40 PM PDT
hallelujah!
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Yes... "get it right", ...and speaking of "FUD"...
by Had_to_be_said June 11, 2006 9:06 PM PDT
The simple fact is that "Network Neutrality" never actually meant anything but...

...Any individual "data packet", in transit, must be treated like every other "packet", regardless of "origin" or "content".

Every "packet" must simply be "passed-on" by any "Internet-access provider", without "transit favoritism" or "service degradation". This NEVER meant that the "Government" could, in any way, "regulate" "...pricing", "...technology", or "...marketing". This would have simply protected ALL "legal uses" of the Internet from artificial "market-manipulation". Furthermore, this fundamental-approach -IS- the basic structure of the Internet that everybody uses, today. In fact, it was one of the CORE-PRINCIPALS, upon which, the Internet was designed.

Additionally, such "network neutrality" guidelines would have, IN NO WAY, prevented "service-providers" from charging MORE for greater "bandwidth usage", ...that is a "marketing" and "customer-acceptance" issue. "NN" WOULD have simply PREVENTED the, publicly-stated, intentions, of the largest "access-providers", to forcibly extract UNDUE REVENUE from those ALREADY PAYING for their "internet-access", ...and artificially "...throttling..." so-called "...undesirable...", or just plain competing, "...uses".

In short, this IS an "anti-trust", and "consumer protection" issue. This NEVER WAS a "government regulation" issue. And therefore, claims of turning the Internet into "...a public-utility", were NEVER anything more than an INTENTIONAL SMOKE-SCREEN, ...a RED-HERRING, created by the very Corporations that intend to ARTIFICIALLY-CONTROL the operation of the Internet, for their own, GREEDY, self-serving ends, ...by virtue of their PUBLICLY-SUBSIDIZED MONOPOLY-POSITIONS.

Additionally, before the inevitable IDIOTIC counter-argument shows-up... IF... the "Big Telcos" DIDNT intend to do EXACTLY this... then WHY, have they expended so much MONEY, and public-relations SPIN and FUD, defeating a law that would have, allegedly, NEVER HAVE AFFECTED THEM in the first place..?

In my opinion it IS truly is SAD that so many sock-puppets are, so eagerly, spewing so much "FUD" (aka LIES), just to protect a CLEARLY CORRUPT GOVERNMENTS OBVIOUS-COLLUSION with such apparent CORPORATE-CROOKS.

But, that DOES seem to be the STATUS QUO, today, ...doesnt it..?
Showing 1 of 2 pages (102 Comments)
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