The Future of e-Commerce and e-Information?
An anonymous reader writes "The Washington Post has an interesting article on what they label 'The Coming Tug of War Over the Internet. From the article: 'Do you prefer to search for information online with Google or Yahoo? What about bargain shopping -- do you go to Amazon or eBay? Many of us make these kinds of decisions several times a day, based on who knows what -- maybe you don't like bidding, or maybe Google's clean white search page suits you better than Yahoo's colorful clutter. But the nation's largest telephone companies have a new business plan, and if it comes to pass you may one day discover that Yahoo suddenly responds much faster to your inquiries, overriding your affinity for Google. Or that Amazon's Web site seems sluggish compared with eBay's.'" Seems like the idea of the 2-tier internet is really catching on with the market-droids.
I stop using telco-DSL (not that I do, but many people do). This is a bad thing to happen - eventually the telco's will start blocking ISPs who tell them to F off. I am hoping a telco will do something stupid like block Microsoft, Google, yahoo, Ebay, Amazon...block one of the big names and watch how half your business goes down the chute. And let's not forget, this is absolutely ridiculous - the website I go to is not using the telco's lines, I am using telco's lines to retrieve the information...it is like asking my mom to pay for a phone call when I call her - absolutely stupid.
I mod down so you can mod up. Your welcome.
From TFA: Perhaps I'm missing the point here, but aren't the end users paying for these pipes? I know I'm certainly paying enough for mine...
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~ |rip/\/\aster /\/\onkey
From The Washington Post: The Republican-led Congress is struggling with the issue. On one hand, it has taken a deregulatory approach to the Internet, but on the other, it can't ignore the concerns of Google, Yahoo and eBay, some of the most successful companies of the last 10 years. These companies alone have built up businesses worth hundreds of billions of dollars on an unfettered Internet. Moreover, unfettered Internet access has come to be seen by Americans in general as not just a privilege or a product, but a right akin to free speech and free association.
It comes down to who you think is more important: companies like AT&T, BellSouth, etc. that provide a connection to the Internet, or Google, Yahoo, etc. that provide the content that cause people to want to have an Internet connection in the first place.
Personally, I think this is sour grapes by the telecoms, because they didn't think to invest in the content side of things. Let's face it, one share of Google's stock is worth one share of each of theirs combined and then some.
If I'm Congress, I threaten to nationalize the Internet, specifically its infrastructure and connectivity. Tell them the Federal Government now owns the trunks and fiber and they can bid on a contract for maintenance of the whole thing. Thorw some billions their way as "compensation." They'll change their tune in a hurry lest the lose their steady income.
GetOuttaMySpace - The Anti-Social Network
I have already paid for an IP address at a given speed. Anything that screws around with any of my third party dealings (ie Google, Yahoo, eBay, etc.) is theft of service, IMO.
If something like this goes through, these greedy bastards should lose their common carrier status since they are controlling the types of traffic going through their networks. I, for one, welcome the combined forces of the RIAA, MPAA, FBI & DHS permanently shutting down any ISP that slips up even one bit and allows something illegal to go through their system.
Bill Clinton: Pimp we can believe in. - The Shirt!!!
This is the stupidest idea ever and will receive the warm welcome it deserves.
It is the same idea as making TVs that receive certain stations better than others. "What do you think dear, should we get a Sony?" "No, let's get a Toshiba, I want CBS to come in clear and last year Sony made that deal with MSNBC..."
Brilliant thinking.
Capitalism will certainly fix this (non) problem.
Galileo: "The Earth revolves around the Sun!"
Score: -1 100% Flamebait
Capitalism is about competing, yes. But even in a society of competitors, there has to be some degree of cooperation. Imagine if Ford owned some highways, Chevy others, and GM still others; still other highways were owned by the Japanese automakers, and others by the Germans.
You could drive a Ford car on a Ford highway for a reasonable rate (say, $2). However, if the highway you wanted to take was owned by Chevy or GM, you'd be price-gouged (say, $25).
That is what they're trying to do to the Internet. Is this "capitalism", or is this simply "unfair to everyone but the corporate executives and wealthy investors who will profit from it"?
The Internet, like the road system, should be open to everyone for the same rates. Yes, that means that sometimes Company A will have to carry Company B's packets. Tough titty for Company A. Company B has to do the same. And we all win.
Not everything in life is about competing. Christ, I swear that there are some capitalists who'd love to license and market the very air we breathe. (Druuge, anyone?)
With spending like this, exactly what are "conservatives" conserving?
Meanwhile, on the other side, companies like AT&T, Verizon and BellSouth are lobbying just as hard, saying that they need to find new ways to pay for the expense of building faster, better communication networks. And, they add, because these new networks will compete with those belonging to Comcast, Time Warner and oth er cable companies -- which currently have about
Here is a suggestion - offer me the same speeds U/D'l that comcast offers, at the same convenience (no I do not want to have to log-on, I want to play and play). Offer this at a cheaper price, or offer faster speeds at the same price. Offer me better service. Do these things and you will have my business - do it not, and go fuck yourselves! I use comcast, yea I pay more, but you know what - i get 3 times the speed of verizon DSL - and for a programmer/web designer that is important.
And then, with your lack of service, you dare complain you are losing out? And you think you have the right to charge the content providers? They are not the ones requesting to send their information over the net, I am going to them requesting the information...I paid already, i shouldn't have to pay again - and yes I will have to pay again as Yahoo decides to charge me for email.
I mod down so you can mod up. Your welcome.
I don't know what is more scary: the fact that these companies are thinking along these lines, or the fact that our representatives in Congress are so clueless that they haven't done anything about it. I mean, this is a no-brainer. Any sane person would tell the Telecomms to fuck off.
http://msnbc.msn.com/id/10912575/
By having one of the largest lobbying efforts of any company around. So, start the PR offensive right before your coporate wine-swilling legislators step up to defend those poor, down-trodden ISP's carrying the load for those freeloading media companies.
Maybe this will be another another opportunity for Rep. Jim Sensenbrenner (R-Wis.), the great defender of the common man (if that common man happens to be a Fortune 100 company needing sweetheart legislation) to rush to the defense of his constituents.
http://www.opensecrets.org/payback/issue.asp?iss ueid=BA3&congno=109
That's basically the same approach RIAA took. Seems to be becoming the industry model. Heavy lobbying, PR push, profit!!!
That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
This seams to me that it is the internet's version of "buying real estate". Ma-and-Pa stores already have to do it, why not internet companies?
Because it's not the same type of business. If Ma and Pa want to enjoy more sales to people all over the country/world, then they can also register a domain name at GoDaddy for a few dollars, find some $10/month hosting, and have their grandkid create a web site.
Oops! Apparently running a real business on line includes paying professional content people, paying for real hosting, marketing, shipping, warehousing, fraud management, numerous returns, correspondence and phone calls 24x7, language barriers, and enormous competition. You make it sound like the person with the walk-up store is the only one that has competition or overhead.
Further, if Ma and Pa actually do rent out a store on the side of a busy road, they've got something that no Amazon or eBay or any large e-tailer can provided: instant convenience and fulfillment of physical wares.
Did you have the same concerns when mail order catalogs really started to hit it big 15, 20 years ago? It's no different, except that a small retailer doesn't have to commit to a huge printing/postage expense to get a web site out in front of millions of people. Ma and Pa should get online, or Ma and Pa should fine-tune their business around the things that make walking physically into a store preferable over looking at digital pictures, paying for freight, waiting for delivery, and possibly being disappointed with the purchase. Oh: and you don't really think that online stores don't have to pay taxes, do you? The larger retailers have business presences in multiple states, and collect/remit sales tax in every one of them.
If Ma and Pa are worried that someone in their own state might turn to an out-of-state online store to buy something, tax-free, and have it shipped into Ma and Pa's home turf, then they have to remember that they could be putting up their own dot-com, and shipping to that same in-state person for next day delivery by simple ground service. Localized marketing of a web stores is easier than it's ever been (thanks, Google), so there's really no excuse. If a direct competitor of Ma and Pa's moved in right across the street, they'd have to spend money, change what they're doing, and innovate in order to compete and stay afloat. This is no different.
Of course, none of this is what the referenced article is actually about (favored connection speed for favored deal makers), but I couldn't let your comment go without making some points.
Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
This is capitalism on the internet at its finest.
Telecoms are public utilities. This is not capitalism at all, it is the abuse of a government granted monopoly.
Kinda funny how that other government granted monopoly, copyright, is also being used to attack the usefulness of the internet. Perhaps there is a pattern here.
When information is power, privacy is freedom.
Clearly any price increases faced by businesses will be met by corresponding price increases for those businesses customers. For example Amazon would have to charge you more for their products if they wanted to use this prioritised system and Yahoo/Google would have to charge more for adverts which would in turn be paid for by increases in the prices of the advertised products.
Really the only winner in this is the Telco with everyone else ending up paying more for much the same level of service ( I suspect that rather than their customers seeing any great increases in network speed you would see people who weren't paying for this scheme to suffer decreased network speed ).
The best bet would be for no company to sign up to the improved service but this it's probably optomistic to hope this would happen.
Creating a 2-tier internet is hardly anonymous and site owner can easily inform end-users of misbehavior.
Two wrongs don't make a right, but three lefts do.
Americentric
A story on an American-run website writen by an American paper about American companies lobbying the American government....Imagine that!
How is this not racketeering?
Telco: Have we got a deal for!
WebSite: Let's hear it.
Telco: If you pay us $X per month, we won't limit our customers access to your website.
WebSite: <sarcasm>Wow! That sounds like a great deal</sarcasm>
Now, imagine this with the mafia and a Small Business Owner (SBO)
Mafia: Have we got a deal for you!
SBO: Let's here it.
Mafia: If you pay us $X per month, we won't break your customer's knees with a baseball bat.
SBO: <sarcasm>Wow! That sounds like a great deal</sarcasm>
Whoosh. SMACK! (knees crack) AAAaaauughhh!
Anywho, that's just my simplified version of reality, but it does make sense. Telcos and the cable companies dipped their toes into blocking ports (TCP-25 anyone?) in the name of preventing spam. They're already performing traffic shaping so they can make more money on "business" accounts (more bandwithd for more money). I guess they feel they can now work this same scenario from the other end since they have met so little resistance in the two previous cases.
Have we dug our own grave with this one by not pipping up earlier? Is silence in the previous cases the same as conset. The telcos and cable companies seem to think so.