Comments on: Technologists square off on Net neutrality
Why do Internet pioneers Vint Cerf and Dave Farber disagree over whether the feds should mandate Net neutrality?
Why do Internet pioneers Vint Cerf and Dave Farber disagree over whether the feds should mandate Net neutrality?
December 6, 2009 8:40 PM PST
December 6, 2009 7:15 PM PST
December 6, 2009 12:23 PM PST
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Personally, I agree that laws should be avoided if at all possible, with the absolute most being done is a law that states, in effect: "Internet Service Providers shall not sort or prioritize packets or connections in any way with regard to content, source, or destination, for any reason." Nothing else is needed, [i]or wanted[/i].
I'm sure someone will pipe in ab't ICMP vs. TCP vs UDP and whatnot, but seriously - it's not the ISP's responsibility to filter packets - it's the end users who should be doing that.
Wanna get into the ISP game? That's your one and only rule.
I see a few basic questions. First, is there a problem today? If not, the mere discussion of the topic will serve as notice to the carriers to tread warily.
Second, can folks detect the throttling remotely? I should think so. If so, then we'll know when the problem does arise. At that point, we can decide what the carrier is actually doing and whether it is appropriate. If the behavior is deemed inappropriate, the carrier may simply kowtow to public pressure. If that fails, *then* we can enact a law.
Until there is a problem, let's avoid the law. Then we'll avoid the noise that accompanies what we need and prevent judges from inventing something never intended in the first place.
Personally, I believe it would be improper for the internet to have tiered service. A regulation that states: ?transmission shall not be given priority or restriction based on content or origin? would be a good thing. It would preclude stating that content would be restricted, it would also preclude the carriers (dare I say ?common carriers?) from doing any restrictions or priority routing of their own data. Giving the FCC the directive to assure that simple statement is followed would be no different than their directives to assure telephone service is interoperable among the many companies (many more than what the choices are for internet service).
If there is a *real* problem with Net Neutrality, rather than one invented or exaggerated, then the ideal is a simple law such as you have proposed. Sadly, we'll never see that ideal leave the US Congress. Don't forget that directing the FCC or other agency to monitor these things either implies increasing funding to enable the monitoring or a paper tiger.
And the big question: Why is only one side presented with clarity in the entirety of this article? For instance do any of Farber?s quotes ever seem to outline a serious counter argument to Net Neutrality? No, not really. Simple answer: Guess which side of this issue cnet is on? This is exactly proof of why government gets worse over time just as our US government has since its inception. Special interests groups, one by one, taking over the rights of the individual and the individual?s trade in the market. And these special interests groups, one by one, get the media to subversively white lie to the public as this piece classically demonstrates in order to pass destructive laws with Orwellian newspeak names like ?Net Neutrality?.
And the big question: Why is only one side presented with clarity in the entirety of this article? For instance do any of Farber?s quotes ever seem to outline a serious counter argument to Net Neutrality? No, not really. Simple answer: Guess which side of this issue cnet is on? This is exactly proof of why government gets worse over time just as our US government has since its inception. Special interests groups, one by one, taking over the rights of the individual and the individual?s trade in the market. And these special interests groups, one by one, get the media to subversively white lie to the public as this piece classically demonstrates in order to pass destructive laws with Orwellian newspeak names like ?Net Neutrality?.
- Pipeline controls
- by aqvarivs July 18, 2006 6:08 PM PDT
- The reason I want full control as an ISP is so that I can give you better service. I'm all about you man. Trust me.
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