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Net Neutrality Voted Down in U.S. House Committee

Ana10g writes "Business Week provides a look at the recent vote by the House Committee on Energy & Commerce, in which the FCC would have been given the power to prohibit discrimination of Internet traffic. The battlefield seems to be centered around which group has the better funded lobbyists, with companies such as Google, Yahoo, Microsoft, and many others competing against the well funded Telecommunications lobbysts. The committee voted the amendment down, 34 to 22."

354 comments

  1. Anyone Suprised? by UniAdept · · Score: 1

    I certainly am not suprised that the house reps are supporting the telecoms.

    1. Re:Anyone Suprised? by kitejumping · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This just reinforces the fact that the common public interest is not correctly represented by congress.

    2. Re:Anyone Suprised? by DrMrLordX · · Score: 5, Insightful

      As the old saying goes, the opposite of progress is Congress.

    3. Re:Anyone Suprised? by dgatwood · · Score: 1
      Well duh. They haven't represented the public interest since at LEAST when I was born....

      Dirty, greedy, corrupt leaches.

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    4. Re:Anyone Suprised? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      13 years ago?

    5. Re:Anyone Suprised? by Reverend528 · · Score: 3, Informative

      Although the telecoms are powerful, this isn't just an issue of telecoms vs. the public. There are a lot of powerful voices saying that the telecoms shouldn't have this power, such as google, amazon, and intel.

    6. Re:Anyone Suprised? by Firehed · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Unfortunately, Google can't do anything as buying senators qualifies as "evil", which is in direct disagreement with their slogan.

      --
      How are sites slashdotted when nobody reads TFAs?
    7. Re:Anyone Suprised? by Reverend528 · · Score: 4, Funny

      I think congressmen are like patents. It's morally acceptable to purchase them for defensive purposes.

    8. Re:Anyone Suprised? by x2A · · Score: 4, Funny

      So it's YOUR fault?!!

      *grr*

      --
      The revolution will not be televised... but it will have a page on Wikipedia
    9. Re:Anyone Suprised? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "I think congressmen are like patents."

      Umm...I think you mean parasites
    10. Re:Anyone Suprised? by escher · · Score: 1
      Umm...I think you mean parasites

      There's a difference?
    11. Re:Anyone Suprised? by CarpetShark · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You're almost certainly joking, but it's worth pointing out that a lot of corruptions start with well-intended abuse. It may seem reasonable to encourage a politician to do the right thing by unorthodox means, but that only leads to further corruption. What we need to do is expose any failures in the system that lead to politicians doing the wrong thing.

    12. Re:Anyone Suprised? by SamSim · · Score: 2, Funny

      And the opposite of the Constitution is... well, you work it out.

    13. Re:Anyone Suprised? by Zediker · · Score: 3, Funny

      Prostitution! Whoo Hoo! =D


      Do I get a cookie?

      --
      I love to slaughter the english language.
    14. Re:Anyone Suprised? by couchslug · · Score: 1

      I AM surprised that the likes of Google and Microsoft aren't "getting" that they need lobbyists to buy influence and beat the telecoms.

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    15. Re:Anyone Suprised? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      As the old saying goes, the opposite of progress is Congress.

      Actually that is a common misconception due to the traditional perceived notions of "Pro" meaning for, and "Con" meaning against in debating. The opposite of progress is actually regress, meaning to move backward.

    16. Re:Anyone Suprised? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What was that WHOOOSHING sound you just heard?

    17. Re:Anyone Suprised? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tell me, what exactly is the common public interest?

      I'm not a fan of your Congress more than the next guy, but it's not clear that there are enough informed voters out there to begin with.

    18. Re:Anyone Suprised? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How do we find out who voted which way? TFA doesn't give those specifics. I want to politically hang any reps that vote for telecoms.

    19. Re:Anyone Suprised? by unheard02 · · Score: 1
      --
      "If you have legs and are flammable, you are never blocking a fire exit." -- Mitch Hedberg
    20. Re:Anyone Suprised? by krewemaynard · · Score: 1

      You should totally teach civics.

      --
      I saw it on Slashdot, it must be true!
    21. Re:Anyone Suprised? by X0563511 · · Score: 1

      hmm, how do you go about building a legislature without people in it?

      --
      For large sets, this will be our guide even unto death, for the LORD will work for each type of data it is applied to...
    22. Re:Anyone Suprised? by Will+Rodger · · Score: 1

      So -- get involved. Write your Member of Congress, Senator, whoever. Call them while you're at it. Tell them why you and your business will suffer. And be polite as you can.

      Reps respond when you respond. Had folks who support intervention gotten more involved, and earlier, we might not be having this debate today. Chairman Barton says he will "pop" anyone who steps over the line of neutrality in the real world. He says he just doesn't want to write another law to enforce it.

      Well, then, let's take him at his word. Let's look for problems in the networks, and then scream bloody murder if they pop up. If Congress really thinks small business is suffering from aggressive traffic "shaping," they will change their minds. That couldn't be a bad thing...

      Will Rodger
      osaia.org
      ccianet.org

    23. Re:Anyone Suprised? by iminplaya · · Score: 1

      That's because the common public is not interested in congress.

      --
      What?
    24. Re:Anyone Suprised? by Will+Rodger · · Score: 1

      Good point but, alas, those exposures seem to do little. News accounts are filled with tales of corruption, greed and incompetence, much of it entirely true.

      Each year sees literally thousands of bills introduced. That same year results in maybe a few dozen new laws, at most. In between, a mere 435 Members of Congress and 100 Senators try to understand "the issues," and fail. With so much activity, one elected official is lucky to understand two or threee issues in depth. The rest they leave to staff, leadership and the rest.

      Given all this, it is probably folly to expect government to fix much of anything. The best thing they can do, most days, is leave things alone.

      Will Rodger
      osaia.org
      ccianet.org

    25. Re:Anyone Suprised? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And pretending they can't detect click fraud isn't evil?

    26. Re:Anyone Suprised? by Lord+Flipper · · Score: 1
      As the old saying goes, the opposite of progress is Congress.

      Actually that is a common misconception due to the traditional perceived notions of "Pro" meaning for, and "Con" meaning against in debating. The opposite of progress is actually regress, meaning to move backward.

      Thanks for that Einstein. How many of us out here, do you figure, ONE, already knew that and Two, have a sense of humor that you are apparently in sad lack of?

      Get back with your mathematical answer, and remember, "LOW BATT" doesn't count.

      Oh, and since you're such a fucking english genius, Latin should also be right up your "dark" alley, so for bonus points:
       
      Checkout tonight's Famous Latin Saying:
       
      Semper ubi sub ubi

      Hint: It is very 'literal', if not literary.

    27. Re:Anyone Suprised? by Kelsen · · Score: 1

      Just for the sake of clarity.

      Congress is the term we use to refer to both the House of Representatives (a member of which is referred to properly as a Representative or Congressman) and the Senate, a member of which is interestingly enough never referred to as a Congressman, but almost exclusively as a Senator).

      Congress consists of both chambers, and does not properly refer to the House exclusively.


      RFT!!!
      Dave Kelsen

  2. Hmm... Technicalities. by Davus · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The proposal, by Rep. Ed Markey (D-Mass.), would have given the Federal Communications Commission the power to prohibit discrimination when it comes to sending traffic over the Internet. Couldn't this, technically, also eliminate QoS/fair queue'ing and general firewall rules?

    --
    The above is most likely humour. Slashdot foot icon goes here.
  3. There's something so wrong with this story by Reality+Master+201 · · Score: 5, Insightful
    The battlefield seems to be centered around which group has the better funded lobbyists, with companies such as Google, Yahoo, Microsoft, and many others competing against the well funded Telecommunications lobbysts. The committee voted the amendment down, 34 to 22.

    So long as we're clear: it's just big companies with lots of money fighting each other for the right to make money off of us. God for-fucking-bid the "battlefield" should in anyway involve some kind of consideration of what might be best for the human constitutents the congresscritters are elected to serve.

    1. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      "What's best for the biggest corporations is best for all of us. You're not a commie, are you?"

    2. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by NitsujTPU · · Score: 1

      I'm confused. Can you tell me how this would have effected you personally?

      People keep saying how it will effect them personally, but I guess I just don't understand how.

    3. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny
      "What's best for the biggest corporations is best for all of us. You're not a terrorist, are you?"

      There, brought you up to the 21st C.

    4. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by RoffleTheWaffle · · Score: 4, Insightful

      A-fuckin'-men, bro'. I'm of the mind that the means to communicate should be a utility, not a luxury. Our taxes did after all subsidize the telecommunications industry to allow them to lay the copper lines to make this happen in the first place, and everyone and their mother knows that this has shit to do with fiber. It's all about money and who gets to play with it.

    5. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by theripper · · Score: 3, Informative

      affect, the word you were looking for is affect

    6. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think I see your confusion. You think because the information on your screen arrived in the form of packets, the ideas embedded within are the creation of those packets and it's the packets themselves who are worried. No no no, it's the human who is watching the most powerful and open means of communication in human history being pulled like a rag doll between corporate pitbulls with no other motive than locking in a future of guaranteed profits. Or are you one of those people who still pine for the days when a 'fax line' had a higher monthly charge?

    7. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by littlerubberfeet · · Score: 5, Informative

      I called my representative (Jim Moran) and had a productive conversation with a senior staffer. My congressman is in agreement with net neutrality, and has been since the issue first manifested itself. My two Virginia senators don't even have public issue statements yet, and are difficult to contact, even the staffers. Allen and Warner are difficult to deal with generally.

      But anyway, to the meat of my comment: Our reps actually DO listen, at least when we call or write (on that flat white thin stuff...email is ignored) so, I chose to make some phone calls.

      My basic pitch to the representatives: I'm a small business owner in Virginia. I voted for you. I might not in the future. A core part of my method of business relies on a neutral, accessible internet. If congress were to allow the telecoms to restrict access, my business might fail, along with many others in the state. Help us, and we will help you.

      Basically, let your reps know your point of view, and make them recognize that this is a litmus test issue for you. Ask them to work for you and keep your vote. This won't work for the complete whores in congress, but the ones on the fence, or in vulnerable elections will listen. So: CALL OR WRITE THAT PERSON WHO YOU VOTED FOR, AND ARE PAYING TO REPRESENT YOU. IT WORKS SOMETIMES.

      --
      Sig (appended to the end of comments you post, 120 chars)
    8. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the companies can discriminate traffic, they can divide the internet into two parts. The "open" net that they give lower priority and the "paid" net that gets the highest priority.

      The result is that if you visit website A you might get a transfer rate of 1K/s, but if you visit website B you will get 10000K/s. The difference is that you ISP has a "partnership" with website B to give them priority over non-partners.

      The ISP will extend this to make more money. You will end up having to pay for access to partners, either a small cost per web site or a subscription based service.

    9. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by some+damn+guy · · Score: 1

      "So long as we're clear: it's just big companies with lots of money fighting each other for the right to make money off of us. God for-fucking-bid the "battlefield" should in anyway involve some kind of consideration of what might be best for the human constitutents the congresscritters are elected to serve."

      So, have you bothered to write your congressperson about it?

      Yeah, thats what I thought.

      How the hell do you think the people in congress are going to get the idea that this is in the 1% of important issues that a sizable number of voters actually cares about? By whining on slashdot?

      The two groups battling over this happen to be the only two groups who actually are willing to take the time and effort to make their voices heard. If that scares you, you have only yourself to blame. Just remember, one hand written letter from a genuine constituent represents hundreds if not thousands of votes to a congressperson.

      They need campaign contributions to get votes after all, so they don't do them much good if they piss off a lot of voters in the process. The only problem is that no one gets pissed off enough to actually bring the hurt down on them- and it isn't because the numbers aren't there. It's because people just whine about it and then throw up their hands in disgust without actually doing anything.

    10. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by Xaositecte · · Score: 1

      I'm in total agreement here, would be modding up if I had any points left.

      The end loyalty of elected officials is to their respective electorate, and if enough of that electorate makes it clear what their desires are, no amount of lobbying will presuade them to give up their chances of reelection.

    11. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by Arker · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Not only that, we also subsidised all that fibre already as well. The telecoms pocketed most of the money and now they're complaining they need to finance the fibre we already paid them for once.

      On the bright side, it's nice to see MS money going to a good cause. I bet Bill Gates is rolling over in his coffin at the thought.

      --
      =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
      Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
    12. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by NitsujTPU · · Score: 1

      I was just kidding. Looking for responses since everyone seems to complain about this, but few really seem to understand it.

    13. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by eno2001 · · Score: 5, Informative

      OK Dim son. Here goes (all hypothetical):

      1. You get your internet access from AOL
      2. They get their access from a metaISP. Let's just say AT&T for simplicty
      3. AT&T is finacially related to... let's say Barnes & Noble Bookstores
      4. You want to hit Amazon to buy a book
      5. Barnes & Noble tell AT&T to provided the slowest possible access (modem speeds) to their competitors and lightning fast access to Barnes and Noble. AT&T Complies
      6. You try to get to Amazon.com and you either get a timeout or the site renders VERY SLOWLY
      7. This makes you think that Amazon sucks, so you ditch them and go through others until you find this really great bookseller online: Barnes & Noble

      Nevermind that their prices are higher and they don't provide access to used books and media. So you just got hamstrung. Now... let's say you discover through friends who have excellent experiences with Amazon that you are missing out. What do you do? You could change ISPs to one who is a partner or in some other way is financially related to Amazon. But then... your access to your favorite news or sports site slows to a crawl. That's how this is going to impact you. Nice huh?

      --
      -"...bad old ideas look confusingly fresh when they are packaged as technology" - Jaron Lanier (Digital Maoism on Edge.o
    14. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by Tim+C · · Score: 2, Informative

      On the bright side, it's nice to see MS money going to a good cause. I bet Bill Gates is rolling over in his coffin at the thought.

      You do realise that the Gates Foundation has given grants worth $10.2 billion since its inception, right?

      Bash MS and Gates all you like, but at least bash them for legitimate reasons, and Gates' lack of caring about good causes isn't one of them.

    15. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      affect, the word you were looking for is affect

      A dash - the punctuation you were looking for is a dash.

    16. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative
      On the bright side, it's nice to see MS money going to a good cause. I bet Bill Gates is rolling over in his coffin at the thought.
      Indeed; it's well-known that Bill absolutely despises charity.

      http://www.gatesfoundation.org/

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill_&_Melinda_Gates_ Foundation

    17. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by Tim+C · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Not only that, but the vast majority of that fibre and copper is laid through public land. I say that if the telecoms companies start charging content providers like this, you guys should start charging them for use of your land.

    18. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by something_wicked_thi · · Score: 1
      I bet Bill Gates is rolling over in his coffin at the thought.

      Damn you. Don't get my hopes up like that.

    19. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by professionalfurryele · · Score: 1

      Don't know if you noticed but relection isn't decided by these issues. It is decided by who gets the largest campaign donations so they can do the most fear moungering.

    20. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Having worked at a school district that received one of MS's grants, I can assure you that they bill copies of Office and XP as the going market value. Meaning, giving a $2.00 disc gets writeen off as $500. Kinda inflates your numbers.

      Also, ever notice that when Gates gives money in other countries it's almost always when they are about to pass a law or regulation that is not in MS's best interests?

      Yes he has done good, but he's not 100% genuine it seems.

    21. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      If thinking that big corporations don't give a rat's rear about what's good for us, then yes, I'm a commie. I'd rather be a commie than a gullible fool.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    22. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by pimpimpim · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Well, you could of course sign up for 2 DSL contracts at the same time! This way, there's profit for everyone*! I think you really made the final goal of all this clear, man :)


      * you excluded

      --
      molmod.com - computing tips from a molecular modeling
    23. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by stinerman · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Its really not even that.

      Some^H^H^H^H Most districts are so overwhelmingly gerrymandered that there is a snowball's chance in hell that the incumbent will lose. A friend mentioned that an incumbent is more likely to lose his/her seat by death or resignation than due to being voted out. I never got a source for that, but it seems to be correct over the past few elections.

      For instance, Stephanie Tubbs Jones represents a district designed to elect a Democrat. I can guarantee you that if she did not campaign or raise any campaign contributions, she would still win at the very least by a 2-1 margin. She wins by default. Ohio (where I live) is among the worst gerrymandered states in the nation. I recall seeing a statistic that said something like 51% of all House of Representative votes across all districts went to Republicans, but they ended up with 66% of the delegation.

      My rep (Dave Hobson) doesn't ever have to listen to a thing his constituents say. He's in a safe district. Quite a few Republicans and nearly all independents would have to vote for the Democratic challenger him to lose. It simply doesn't happen.

    24. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "A-fuckin'-men, bro'. I'm of the mind that the means to communicate should be a utility, not a luxury."

      Ergo, a public good, you fucking moron?

      You like to be fucked, as long as you do not realize who fucks you (Google) and it's not your preferred villain (telcos), don't you?

    25. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by dpilot · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I know this is all satire, humor, etc. I'm not THAT impaired. But sometimes the reality makes it a little less funny.

      But a week or so back, I saw a show (on the History Channel?) about Carnegie and his right-hand man, and about how they squashed a steel strike in Pittsburgh in the late 1800's and destroyed the union there. They painted a pretty grim picture of life in Pittsburgh at that time for ordinary working people.

      Please tell me what about our nation's current legislative direction doesn't appear to hold that condition as a desirable end.

      --
      The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
    26. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly! Here is the contact info for those that don't have it: http://energycommerce.house.gov/108/subcommittees/ Telecommunications_and_the_Internet_Members.htm

      With members

      Fred Upton, Michigan Chairman

      Michael Bilirakis, Florida

      Cliff Stearns, Florida

      Paul E. Gillmor, Ohio

      Ed Whitfield, Kentucky

      Barbara Cubin, Wyoming

      John Shimkus, Illinois

      Heather Wilson, New Mexico

      Charles "Chip" Pickering, Mississippi

      Vito Fossella, New York

      George Radanovich, California

      Charles F. Bass, New Hampshire

      Greg Walden, Oregon

      Lee Terry, Nebraska

      Mike Ferguson, New Jersey

      John Sullivan, Oklahoma

      Marsha Blackburn, Tennessee

      Joe Barton, Texas(Ex Officio)

      Edward J. Markey, Massachusetts Ranking Member

      Eliot L. Engel, New York

      Albert R. Wynn, Maryland

      Mike Doyle, Pennsylvania

      Charles A. Gonzalez, Texas

      Jay Inslee, Washington

      Rick Boucher, Virginia

      Edolphus Towns, New York

      Frank Pallone Jr., New Jersey

      Sherrod Brown, Ohio

      Bart Gordon, Tennessee

      Bobby L. Rush, Illinois

      Anna G. Eshoo, California

      Bart Stupak, Michigan

      John D. Dingell, Michigan(Ex Officio)

    27. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by rwyoder · · Score: 1

      "What's good for M & M Enterprises will be good for the country." -- 1st Lt. Milo Minderbinder:

    28. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by penix1 · · Score: 1

      "The two groups battling over this happen to be the only two groups who actually are willing to take the time and effort to make their voices heard. If that scares you, you have only yourself to blame. Just remember, one hand written letter from a genuine constituent represents hundreds if not thousands of votes to a congressperson."

      I claim bullshit on this. On any one given issue, congress is swamped with letters in both directions. The answer they give is the same for both...."We support your position". What matters is what they do on the floor which is something that Americans don't pay attention to six minutes after the vote. When the dust settles after a vote on a touchy issue, it is forgotten about. Just ask yourself this: how did your representative vote on other similar issues like the telecommunications reform act (which includes the DMCA), etc? As long as there is something in it for that representative's area, they will vote for it. How else do you think things like the "bridge to nowhere" got funded?

      "They need campaign contributions to get votes after all, so they don't do them much good if they piss off a lot of voters in the process. The only problem is that no one gets pissed off enough to actually bring the hurt down on them- and it isn't because the numbers aren't there. It's because people just whine about it and then throw up their hands in disgust without actually doing anything."

      Again, I claim bullshit. I live in WV where one representative (Shelly Moore-Capito, R-WV) has spent millions on her campaign far exceeding what any opponent has spent. You don't think that she got that funding from WV citizens do you? Hell no! She got it from the national party (among other non-state centered sources). All that matters to a party is if they control seats and they will do anything to ensure that they do. That is why independent parties are almost non-existent.

      What it comes down to is never underestimate the power of stupid people in large numbers.

      B.

      --
      This is a sig. This is only a sig. Had this been an actual sig you would have been informed where to tune for more sigs.
    29. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by saltydogdesign · · Score: 0

      I'll write, but two out of my three reps (Chambliss and Isakson) regularly reply to my missives with form letters which make it abundantly clear that nobody in their office even bothered to read my letter.

      For example, I write: "Please don't support Bush's end run around the Constitution."

      I receive: "Thank you for writing. Bush is indeed the greatest leader in human history."

      Fuckers.

      --
      // This is not a sig.
    30. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by The+Snowman · · Score: 1

      The problem is that comparing the total popular vote across all districts to the proportion of parties in the House is not an accurate measure of everything. For example, we all know that Texas is predominantly Republican, so much so that Texas Democrats are really moderate Republicans in order for there to be more than one person on the ballot. I don't have real statistics but I know the overwhelming majority of Texas votes Republican in the House elections. A good number of other districts in the country are a lot closer. Even if voters vote along party lines and given gerrymandering, the election may only be 45/55: there is just no chance for the challenger to make up that last mile, but compared to other states such as Texas, it is a lot closer. The end result may be that the overall popular vote is fairly well matched, but because the votes aren't even throughout all the districts, one party wins significantly more of the seats.

      I think if we got rid of gerrymandering this problem would go away and members of the House would be more responsive to their constituents' needs. However, getting rid of gerrymandering is a losing battle. According to the Constitution, the people in charge of redistricting are the ones who have the most to gain. Courts lately have been loathe to intervene, even though the Constitution says they can if the districts are not fair. Yes, they do, just not as much as they should. Personally, I think each Congressional district should be a convex polygon. In cases where the state is oddly shaped (Aleutian islands, parts of Michigan, that little part of Minnesota that sticks up, etc), make the district the intersection of a convex polygon and the state, so that the border of the state need not be convex. I think this would solve problems where we have long skinny districts that carve a fairly balanced region into multiple pieces: one that is 95% leaning toward one party, the sacrificial lamb, and two or more other regions that are more even, say 45/55, but have a loyalty to the other party that doesn't waver. This is exactly what happens with urban areas in Texas. They carve all the Democrats into their own little districts. They let them have their cookie, and they district the rest such that the Republicans are guaranteed to win.

      --
      24 beers in a case, 24 hours in a day. Coincidence? I think not!
    31. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1
      You do realise that the Gates Foundation has given grants worth $10.2 billion since its inception, right?

      And so did Rockefeller and Carnegie. Both evil bastards responsible for killing and enslaving a whole lot of people and all sorts of unspeakable misery for others. I hear Al Capone was big on charity too. Hitler made trains run on time, or so I am told. And so on. No, whatever Gates does now is far too late to clear his name. In other words, giving away a portion of your ill gotten loot to try to buy respectability is never going to work except with naive fools who fall for such transparent schemes.

      What counts is how you got the money. If it were not for Gates, that money would be already invested in a lot of other places, much of it in various good causes. May I remind you that nearly all charities and research institutions paid piles of money to Gates to begin with?

    32. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      The OP's comment was along the lines of "MS money going to a good cause? Gates must be spinning in his grave!". My reply was to point out that actually, Gates has already given a lot of money to good causes.

      Neither of us made any comment as to how the money was made in the first place, which is irrelevant to the point he made or my refutation, as is the question of Gates' respectability or lack thereof (which again, neither of us commented on).

    33. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by bigpat · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What do you do? You could change ISPs to one who is a partner or in some other way is financially related to Amazon. But then... your access to your favorite news or sports site slows to a crawl. That's how this is going to impact you. Nice huh?

      Right on the money. And there is nothing to prevent content providers from charging ISPs now either. So, Google could turn around and block access to its content from certain ISPs, after all at some point if the content provider is going to be blamed for poor performance, then why bother pretending that your content is available from a certain ISP. Just let everyone from Verizon or Comcast or whomever is engaging in anti competitive mafia like behavior that their ISP is to blame for trying to shake down the content providers or enaging in bandwidth fixing for its partners.

      Could just turn into one big fiasco like cable tv, where some channels pay the cable company, some channels the cable company pays and the customer always pays for everything and has to sit through commercials on top. Of course, it doesn't matter too much for a broadcast entertainment medium like cable tv, but a fragmented communications infrastructure is a disaster which should see regulation to prevent, unless of course these type of exclusionary business arrangements are already covered by competition laws.

    34. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by timeOday · · Score: 1
      Can you tell me how this would have effected you personally?
      I'm a Vonage subscriber. If Comcast has the go-ahead to wreck Vonage in favor of their own phone service, I won't have any freedom in choosing a VOIP provider.
    35. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by bigpat · · Score: 1

      Of course, it doesn't matter too much for a broadcast entertainment medium like cable tv, but a fragmented communications infrastructure is a disaster which should see regulation to prevent, unless of course these type of exclusionary business arrangements are already covered by competition laws.

      And what I mean by that, is that in certain localities certain broadband providers are monopolies, such as my town where Comcast is the only option, so it seems that such an anticompetitive practice as bandwidth fixing must be considered illegal even under current anti competive laws... I've noticed a precipitous drop in vonage call quality these last couple weeks. Is it just vonage growing too big too fast, or is Comcast degrading their quality on purpose without telling me? I'd guess comcast is more than willing to screw over its customers to herd them into its own voip service.

      But it is just this type of behavior that we hear of that now means we cannot trust that any service offered over the internet will not at some point be secretly blocked or degraded by our ISP based on some whim. Commerce will suffer, quality of life will suffer.

      If it turns out that Comcast is really blocking Vonage and Congress is going to do nothing about regulating commerce then it means that Congress just allowed me to be screwed out of my money because they listened to the happy horse shit from Verizon and Comcast and ATT. It will not benefit the marketplace to allow bandwidth fixing on the internet just so that companies can squeeze their customers for a few more dimes, any more than it would have been of benefit to allow phoen companies to drop calls from competitors on a sliding scale based on the level of kickbacks they were getting from other telephone companies.

      QoS is the worst thing that the IETF has ever collaborated on. Unregulated QoS will destroy the Internet.

    36. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1
      The OP's comment was along the lines of "MS money going to a good cause? Gates must be spinning in his grave!". My reply was to point out that actually, Gates has already given a lot of money to good causes.

      All of which being of course horribly wrong as both Gates Senior and Junior are alive and kicking.

    37. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by Blakflag · · Score: 1

      This is possible. But my personal guess is that most large companies will just bite the bullet and pay the protection money to keep thir bits a'flowin. They will raise prices/fees to compensate. Your $$$ -> Telcos. Also smaller and medium sized ISPs who depend on tier 1 providers will also have to pay protection money to keep their customers web services from suffering. ISP charges customers more. More of your $$$ -> Telcos. So I bet things will remain basically as they are, except we'll all be giving more cash directly or indirectly to the telcos. Links to foreign sites or non-corporate approved sites however may suffer. :P

      --
      *** DRINK MORE COFFEE ***
    38. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is false. He used the correct word.

      http://www.m-w.com/dictionary/affect

    39. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by Chmcginn · · Score: 1

      There's always people who hold the idea of control over others as a desirable end. There's just more of them in control right now.... but, eventually, the cycle will peak again, and then things will get better... for awhile.

      --
      Have you been touched by his noodly appendage?
    40. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by MBGMorden · · Score: 1

      The coffin reference was meant to imply vampirism ;).

      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
    41. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1
      The coffin reference was meant to imply vampirism ;).

      So much for highly ambiguous jokes. Perhaps it should have mentioned something about him only sleeping in it during the day.

    42. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by johnny+cashed · · Score: 1

      So: CALL OR WRITE THAT PERSON WHO YOU VOTED FOR, AND ARE PAYING TO REPRESENT YOU. IT WORKS SOMETIMES.

      I agree with most of what you said, but it is no good for me to call or write the person I voted for, they lost. So, you shouldn't call or write the person who you voted for, but the person who won the election and therefore represents you. I'm sure this is what you meant, I just thought it was funny, because I seem to be on the losing side all too often.

    43. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow you just compared a dictator responsible for genocide to Bill Gates. The depths of some peoples ignorance is astonishing. Good game.

    44. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1
      Wow you just compared a dictator responsible for genocide to Bill Gates.

      No, I just listed extreme examples of mindless attempts at whitewashing of evil individuals by focusing on their "good works". Both Adolph and Gates are in the same boat on this one, although it is quite obvious that the kind of evil they represented is drastically different, one was presiding over a genocide and the other over pilfering the world out of billions while setting the computing industry back by decades.

      The depths of some peoples ignorance is astonishing. Good game.

      At least you come to the discussion declaring your ignorance as "astonishing" upfront. For which we should be grateful, I think.

    45. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by Jon+Kay · · Score: 1

      > QoS is the worst thing that the IETF has ever collaborated on.
      > Unregulated QoS will destroy the Internet.

      No, it isn't. QoS is a completely reasonable architecture. It's the only way you can get guaranteed-good-quality audio and video over the Internet to people willing to pay, which is a good thing. And it's completely orthogonal to the realities of your situation, since Vonage doesn't directly use QoS. This is about treatment of best-effort traffic. And that's BellSouth and Comcast want to start discriminating against.

      If your provider is discrimatorially dropping traffic for which it has bandwidth of a particular type for reasons other than misbehavior, you can almost certainly haul him into court for breach of contract. They said they'd provide a service, and they aren't providing it.

    46. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by akad0nric0 · · Score: 1

      God for-fucking-bid the "battlefield" should in anyway involve some kind of consideration of what might be best for the human constitutents

      Agreed. I said out loud when I read this "I guess I'm in the group with the worst-funded lobbyists: the American public."

      It would be nice to see a grassroots campaign to fund lobbyists who lobby against lobbyist-friendly rules (campaign finance, schmoozing, etc.). I think that sort of an organization would get a *lot* of donations.

      --
      akad0nric0

      This sentence no verb.
    47. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by heinousjay · · Score: 1

      Please explain one thing, as I suspect it to be rampant hyperbole.

      How did Bill Gates "[set] the computing industry back by decades" ?

      --
      Slashdot - where whining about luck is the new way to make the world you want.
    48. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 2, Interesting
      How did Bill Gates "[set] the computing industry back by decades" ?

      By discarding existing, advanced technologies and re-inventing the wheel, poorly, for the sole purpose of making sure that everything he touched will be in some way enslaved to Microsoft. Most of the components of Windows-based systems which are "new" today, particularly in Enterprise scenarios, existed as far back as 1960s (OS virtualization for example) and are only now re-appearing after a 40-year hiatus, in wake of the the scenic ride through the thorny bushes of the garden path Bill took us all on. Add to this technologies such as "thin clients" (i.e. 1970s graphical terminals), before that PC LANs crippled by horrendous single-user, non-multitasking nature of DOS (a problem well solved long before that, complete with the TCP/IP protocol) and so on. The list is very, very long. Microsoft simply relied on the general lack of know-how of the computer-technologies-illiterate public, combined with fraudulent advertising and other underhanded chickanery involivng suppliers, and later abuse of its monopoly powers to establish itself as the "innovator" while in fact its entire history, with few exceptions, consists of essentially playing a three-card monty with consumers.

    49. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If your provider is discrimatorially dropping traffic for which it has bandwidth of a particular type for reasons other than misbehavior

      How do you prove that?

      you can almost certainly haul him into court for breach of contract.

      Probably not, they already changed their contract years ago, didn't you see the notice they filed in the basement bathroom behind the beweare of the tiger sign?

    50. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by heinousjay · · Score: 1

      It seems like you don't remember the capabilities of the machines that DOS and Windows originally targeted. Networking wasn't ubiquitous. Memory protection didn't exist in the hardware. Processing power and memory were extremely limited. Storage was ridiculously expensive. The home market couldn't take advantage of these 'advanced technologies' because the power to do so simply wasn't there.

      Things evolved forward from that point, complete with some shady business dealings that crossed the line of legality, but the picture you paint is so revisionist it should be discarded. It's not like Microsoft was incorporated with a business goal of keeping computing from its potential.

      Truth be told, Bill Gates brought computing to the masses. Instead of setting things back, he pushed them forward more than anyone else in history. Maybe someone else would have done it in his absence, and maybe it would have been done better, but that's purely idle speculation. It can't be backed up one way or another.

      The reality is, you've bought into the "M$ EVIL" mindset, so you have to swallow it whole now. Willingly donning blinders like that aren't going to help you out any.

      --
      Slashdot - where whining about luck is the new way to make the world you want.
    51. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by afidel · · Score: 1

      The most fun thing about all this, the government won't regulate interstate business practices that damage citizens but uses the interstate commerce clause to arrest cancer patients in California that grow weed to help with nausia.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    52. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      No, he didn't. Read the definitions of "affect" and "effect" more carefully instead of spouting links and looking like an idiot.

    53. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by bfizzle · · Score: 1

      Huh and cable is regulated by the government... what makes you think that government regulation is going to save the Internet? I rather see the Internet unregulated and let the market settle everything out.

    54. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1
      It seems like you don't remember the capabilities of the machines that DOS and Windows originally targeted.

      They were more powerful then the original 1960s mainframes. This relationship remained true till today. Most mainframe systems have fast and massive i/o capabilities but are very weak in CPU speed and memory sizes.

      Networking wasn't ubiquitous.

      Yes it was by the time DOS became mainstream. A multitude of systems existed, with varying topologies and media, like for example a very popular then Arcnet. No revisionist history please.

      Memory protection didn't exist in the hardware.

      Some UNIX systems worked quite effectively on 286 hardware. I remember a shipping company using UNIX-based application with over 50 terminals off of a 286 host. But by then Microsoft has successfully screwed the marketplace to the point where it was near impossible to obtain mainstream applications and support on such platforms, crazy-ass PC-on-every-desktop-mania was full on by then.

      Processing power and memory were extremely limited. Storage was ridiculously expensive. The home market couldn't take advantage of these 'advanced technologies' because the power to do so simply wasn't there.

      See above. The home market, and its lopsided, ignorant gobbling up of whatever Microsoft dished out is right up there with the reasons for all these problems. The hardware was cheap and powerful enough, but Microsoft had no need, and the ignorant consumer no knowledge to take advantage of its features.

      Things evolved forward from that point

      You misspelled "devolved".

      the picture you paint is so revisionist it should be discarded

      I was there to see it all first hand, all the way from Altair and PDP-11 before that. So take your sanctimony and stuff it. "Revisionist" is the definition of what you are spouting.

      The reality is, you've bought into the "M$ EVIL" mindset, so you have to swallow it whole now.

      No, I learned that attitude by experience, unlike, it seems, you. I did not start with such a low opinion of Microsoft, in fact at the loong bygone early days of PCs, which we thought were funky overgrown game consoles and all sorts of cool hobby project platforms was also when we thought that DOS was adequate for games, simple hacker projects and one-time, throw-away business uses. Nothing serious. It was when suddenly pointy-haired bosses got serious about Microsoft mantra of "PC on every desktop" when shit hit the fan.

    55. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by some+damn+guy · · Score: 1

      Yes, there's nothing you can do. Make sure you don't waste any effort trying. Your individual contribution won't make any difference. So you always loose, oh well, at least you have the satisfaction in your own mind that you're in the right.

      You don't have to stop at a letter, son. But if you aren't willing to even do that, all I'm saying is don't complain. Just sit there and like it, and don't you dare blame other people because there are lots of people who think just like you who aren't doing anything either- enough that it COULD matter.

      BTW, you won't find that kind of sentiment on the religious right. They actually write a lot of letters. And they vote. But most importantly they get organized and speak with a single voice. I'm sure you aren't terribly fond of these people, but they have an influence far beyond their numbers because they are very effective at the kind of grassroots organizing that people like us are quite capable of engaging in but don't find it worth the trouble.

      Anyways, keep on not trying. You might not be 100% certain of getting your way after all. Oh, and enjoy the three more years of George W. Bush.

    56. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by Arker · · Score: 1

      Good to see *someone* got it.

      --
      =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
      Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
    57. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by xnixman · · Score: 1

      WOW! You have the most apt nick I have ever seen.

      Now you can hate Microsoft all you want. You can also hate any of their management team you want.

      However your "history" is still revisionist crap.

      When you get to the point where you Google things then think that you lived through them you should lay off the computer for awhile.

    58. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1
      When you get to the point where you Google things then think that you lived through them you should lay off the computer for awhile.

      You have no idea about my experience, and my career, and yet you venture to make an "opinion" of that sort. That whizzing sound you've just heard was your credibility departing.

    59. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by xnixman · · Score: 1

      >That whizzing sound you've just heard was your credibility departing.

      Rich...Hell, if it turns out that you are Dennis Ritchie, you're still an idiot.

    60. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I bet Bill Gates is rolling over in his coffin at the thought.

      He's dead?

    61. Re:There's something so wrong with this story by Arker · · Score: 1

      No, he's a bloodsucker.

      --
      =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
      Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
  4. Nationalization by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Times like this, I wonder if nationalization of communication industry may be net plus for the economy. I mean, Google, Microsoft, and Yahoo are the sort of enterprises that people actually *LIKE* (yeah, yeah evil MS, but what do people buy?). SBC ("AT&T" whatever) and Verizon!? They can rot in hell (and I sure hope they do for God/gods sake). Comcast and all them cable companies, too. Rot in fucking hell.

    1. Re:Nationalization by McGiraf · · Score: 1

      Nationalization? in the US? you must be kidding ...

    2. Re:Nationalization by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While this makes good sense in avoiding the current proposed quagmire before congress, it does present a problem of its own: what part of the govenment would be responsible for a top-to-botom nationalized communication infrastructure?

      That's right: the FCC. Do this, and then you have more rules and regulations imposed on the government's internet than before. And don't get me started about the issues regarding your privacy online - this would effectively eliminate it.

      Also, economists are usually quick to point out that doing so would eliminate the drive to compete, and hence innovate, as much as the telecom monopoly of days gone by. You'd effectively stall or even stagnate future advances in technology in that area because you've removed the economic incentive (namely, subsidies). For example, if this was done 10 years ago, you'd likely never see HD cable.

      IMO, this only makes sense for technologies that are already ubiquitious and fully exploited with no room for improvement, such that taking it away from the private sector doesn't change anything noticably; you e.g. you pay taxes for phone service instead of $TELCO. Sadly, telecom in all forms is the worst possible fit for this description and so a bad candidate for 'nationalization'.

  5. capitalism wins again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    once again, the free market prevails, allowing competition to grow against the current cable companies.

  6. Really? by ZoneGray · · Score: 1

    Ed Markey involved with telecom lobbyists? Say it ain't so!

  7. I'm so torn by deque_alpha · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The idea of giving the FCC more control over things they probably shouldn't control doesn't make me happy, but missing a chance to explicitly prohibit a tiered Internet is kind of a bummer... Oh well, in cases like this consumer always gets screwed one way or another, it's just a question of who's doing the screwing...

    As an aside, doesn't the whole "tiered Internet" concept that the telco's are trying to float violate the concept of "common carrier"? Anyone know?

    1. Re:I'm so torn by TX297 · · Score: 5, Informative
      As an aside, doesn't the whole "tiered Internet" concept that the telco's are trying to float violate the concept of "common carrier"? Anyone know?

      Networks not regulated as common carriers are referred to as Information Services or Enhanced Services, and are generally regulated under title I of the Communications Act. (Source)

    2. Re:I'm so torn by plasmacutter · · Score: 1

      The FCC reclassified them from telecommunications to "information service".

      all they need to do to enforce net neutrality is to reclassify them once again as telecommunictations.

      fat chance of that happening though.. guess who lobbied for that in the first place.

      --
      VLC FOR MAC IS DYING! IF YOU DEVELOP, PLEASE SAVE IT!!
    3. Re:I'm so torn by idesofmarch · · Score: 0

      A tiered Internet could be more efficient. Traffic that needs reliable speeds, like say VOIP, should be placed ahead of filesharing and email. Nobody cares if their email gets to the destination one second later, but a one second delay in voice communications can clearly be felt. Why not let the free market decide this?

    4. Re:I'm so torn by x102output · · Score: 2, Insightful

      what?

      The whole reason the Internet has been the way it has is because of the FCC regulation.

      This got voted down....THIS IS BAD.

      Companies like Barnes and Noble would have the cash to have their page served to you fast, while your local library would run slower then a 56k modem. (Analogy from http://www.savetheinternet.com/ This creates a Walmart effect!

    5. Re:I'm so torn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      In regards to market decisions, it is hard to call it free. The major telcos and other service providers have a strong monopoly on most local markets. In many of these markets, consumers have the option of getting either Cable (ie Comcast) or DSL (ie AT&T) Internet service. To begin with, the service providers can easily force out competing services (ie Vonage) by charging for higher priority service. This will in turn cause more overhead cost for providers such as Vonage. Then guess what? The huge service provider steps in and sells their own VoIP service (ie Comcast) at a discounted cost, or in the case of telcos, they are more easily able to compete using their existing phone service (ie AT&T) against VoIP providers.

    6. Re:I'm so torn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The free market is a wonderful thing, when there is actually a free market. How come I only have two ISP choices where I am? How come my father only has 1? How come my grandparents have about 7?

      We gave the telecos a regulated monopoly for decades, now they want to unregulate their monopoly service structure without actually disolving the monopoly. Free market? Nope.

    7. Re:I'm so torn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the FCC does not regulate the internet, FYI

    8. Re:I'm so torn by iamwahoo2 · · Score: 1
      Or maybe VOIP is just a crappy technology that is not ideal for the internet. It never fails to amaze me how short-sighted people can be when it comes to this. Unfortunately, that is what this debate is really about; Distribution of voice and video. We want to throw away the opportunity for future technology growth so that we can rot our brains with more television. Brilliant!

      A lot of people seem to have forgetten that multiple networks already exist which are optimized for distributing video and voice communication. Higher speed broadband can be used for so much more than this. Look at the things that Universities are doing with Internet 2. Now take that concept and imagine all of the innovative uses that could emerge if small businesses, large businesses, and home users all had internet speeds similar to what is achieved on Internet 2. If portions of the internet are allowed to be re-engineered, this will not happen. Other countries will realize an enormous technological and economical advantage over the US by not bastardizing their networks.

    9. Re:I'm so torn by NardofDoom · · Score: 1

      Don't be torn. The FCC shouldn't regulate content. That should be up to individuals. What content we view is a personal, private decision. The FCC should regulate business models. That is a public decision that affects everyone. The government should meddle in things that are public, like environmental laws, public health, and labor standards. They shouldn't meddle in things that are private, like gun ownership, abortion rights and marriage.

      --
      You have two hands and one brain, so always code twice as much as you think!
  8. Re:Hmm... Technicalities. by mattkinabrewmindspri · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It would depend on the wording of the bill, and given that Google, Yahoo, and Amazon know something about traffic over the internet, I would assume that the bill would be written well enough to get around those problems.

  9. Re:Hmm... Technicalities. by Firehed · · Score: 1

    Like that recent 'you must have a secure access point' bill in some county? Seeing that requires the AP owners to have a firewall and a sign that says "We're not liable", not something that in any way actually secures the connection, you can be pretty damned sure that the bill isn't the slightest bit well-written. Unless that was intended as funny...

    --
    How are sites slashdotted when nobody reads TFAs?
  10. Insights * 2 by Nom+du+Keyboard · · Score: 3, Funny
    The battlefield seems to be centered around which group has the better funded lobbyists,

    Shouldn't be which group has the most voters? And I mean in the country, not in Congress.

    with companies such as Google, Yahoo, Microsoft, and many others competing against the well funded Telecommunications lobbysts.

    Ah, yes. Your monopoly profits at work -- ON BOTH SIDES!

    --
    "It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
    1. Re:Insights * 2 by dvdave · · Score: 1

      Shouldn't be which group has the most voters? And I mean in the country, not in Congress.

      Only if we lived in a true democracy, which we don't. It's a representative one.

    2. Re:Insights * 2 by jrieth50 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      In fairness a plethora of consumer group's pleadings and petitions were filed into the official record - but the only 'man speaking for the people' at the hearing was a guy from Columbia Law.

      The only guy on the panel who felt net neutrality was unnecessary was the telco guy 'McCormick' who repeatedly assured the panel they would never 'limit, degrade, or block service' to anyone - all while agreeing that one congressman's analogy that suggested exactly that was 'apropos.' How bout that.

      Meanwhile republican bobble-heads were nodding in agreement nearly the entire time with the 4 other panelists who FAVORED net neutrality and seemed to understand the issue. Vote time comes - only one republican voted for it. Another 'gee, how bout that' moment. What I think surprised me the most is that they actually seemed to grasp the necessity of net neutrality throughout - but they're such whores they voted against it anyways when the attention was elsewhere (see gas prices.)

    3. Re:Insights * 2 by the_womble · · Score: 1
      Shouldn't be which group has the most voters?

      That deserves to be modded +5 funny.

    4. Re:Insights * 2 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mod parent up! Insightful/informative response to the ignorant grandparent poster.

    5. Re:Insights * 2 by miskatonic+alumnus · · Score: 1

      If by representative democracy you mean one which represents the people, we don't even live under THAT type of government. All governments are plutocracies.

    6. Re:Insights * 2 by bbdb · · Score: 0, Troll

      ...screeeeech....ihaterepubs ihaterepubs ihaterepubs ihaterepubs....screeech....

      --
      Python is nice quick and flexible... but it provides so much rope a monkey would hang the whole ecosystem with it. -- in
    7. Re:Insights * 2 by geoffspear · · Score: 1
      with companies such as Google, Yahoo, Microsoft, and many others competing against the well funded Telecommunications lobbysts.

      Ah, yes. Your monopoly profits at work -- ON BOTH SIDES!

      Neither Google, Yahoo, nor Microsoft has a monopoly in Internet services (and Microsoft's monopoly in the desktop OS market is completely irrelevant to their involvement with MSN). They didn't build their businesses by using taxpayer money and eminent domain.

      Even where Microsoft does have a monopoly, at least they achieved it in the free market rather than having the government mandate that only Windows could be installed on everyone's computer.

      --
      Don't blame me; I'm never given mod points.
    8. Re:Insights * 2 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      That's the best you can do? Not even a tired old excuse of "but the Democrats did it too" that comes from the people who lie awake at night and wish that the Republicans could have been as awesome as the Democrats? Not even a reasoned discussion about how our representatives are supposed to vote for what best represents their constituents interests, rather than whats right? Not even a lecture on trickle down economics where BigCompany's CEO getting an extra million dollars bonus this year means he'll be able to hire twice as many illegal immigrants to clean his new mansion? Not even a mention about how we're all commie terrorist lovers for wanting to get the service we paid for?

      Man no wonder Bush and the Republicans are sucking it so hard at the polls, you're all completely out of it. Come on, let's have some more of that fear and money grubbing that makes you all so popular!

    9. Re:Insights * 2 by bbdb · · Score: 1


      I'm a libertarian, Dear Coward. Not a conservative. There's quite a difference between the two. Esp. social conservative vs libertarian.

      And guess what - on top of not being conservative, I'm not even American.

      So there. I don't even have the dog in this fight. But what was there in the original post was simply hatred of Republicans illogically tortured out of completely inconsistent argument, well, story.

      I tend to believe that telco guy that he would not degrade the service to anyone - because it simply doesn't make business sense. The rest of clowns were there for a ride (representatives) or trying to parade their good intentions. It's sort of like Committee To Make Sure Water Evaporates. Completely unnecessary.

      So I bet brighter repubs were sitting there, smiling, nodding and thinking "God what a pure waste of time, but for political reasons I can't say that".

      And then this guy taking himself seriously tells the story in such a way that not so much "net neutrality" bullshit is the core of the story, but that lo and behold, repubs look bad. Amazing.

      It's just political guerilla marketing. And you take it for real. That's dumb.

      --
      Python is nice quick and flexible... but it provides so much rope a monkey would hang the whole ecosystem with it. -- in
    10. Re:Insights * 2 by jrieth50 · · Score: 1

      While I won't sit here and pretend that I like republican representatives - what I was saying is that it shocked me that they all seemed to be in agreement that it was something to be taken seriously. It surprised me that the people who seemed so convinced by the testimony of Dr. Wu and representatives from Amazon, etc. turned around the very next day and maimed it. I believe the final pro net neutrality vote was 23 - which means that not nearly 'all' dems voted for it either - and that disappoints me as well.

      The analogy in question: I build a road with private money (forgetting that broadband access was built at least 50/50 public/private) - I have the right to say who can drive on my road. I may favor small cars because they don't cost as much in repairs, but I would like to restrict 18-wheelers from galavanting up and down my road and may even charge them a toll for access to recover the costs associated with building roads large enough for them to travel on - as well as maintenance from the damage they cause.

      McCormick (Telco Lobby): "Thank you, I really think that analogy is apropos..."

      Representative: "So following that analogy you would seek to charge for access from those 18 wheeler companies (Amazon/MySpace/Google/YouTube,) and for those unwilling to pay the toll you would be forced to limit their access so as not to incur losses?

      McCormick: "We would not limit, degrade, or block access..."

      So I ask you (forgetting this comment is late and you'll probably never receive it,) how is it exactly that you believe that he finds this analogy both apropos yet maintains he would not limit/degrade/block access? How exactly then - will he 'maintain his private road' with non-toll-paying 18 wheelers driving all over it? Care to elaborate? Or did you just feel it was the wiser move to focus in on a couple of words regarding my disbelief with Republican Representatives - rather than have anything to say/add to the discussion of what actually took place.

      You called bullshit on a 'story' I was retelling for the 99.9% of people who likely didn't sit through the entirety of the 2 and a 1/2 hour hearing without having seen it yourself. That's dumb.

  11. Re:Hmm... Technicalities. by x2A · · Score: 5, Funny

    "Unless that was intended as funny"

    *lol* can see it now: breakdown of votes for new amendment was:
    60% funny
    20% troll
    20% overrated

    goddamn mods

    --
    The revolution will not be televised... but it will have a page on Wikipedia
  12. Re:Trolling On Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Begging for a moderator to use a point to rate your post down?

  13. I'd love to see this. by mattkinabrewmindspri · · Score: 5, Interesting
    I'd like to see companies like Google, Yahoo, Microsoft, et cetera, form some kind of coalition. For one week, I'd like them to choose a telecom, maybe Verizon one week and at&t the next.

    During that week, any requests for pages from those sites from the telecom's network would respond with a warning page saying

    WARNING:

    Your ISP ([Verizon]) is attempting to charge [Google] so that you can continue to access our site over the internet. If this happens, you will not be able to access [Google] using [Verizon]'s network. We assure you this is not our fault, and we hope you continue to use our site in the future.

    If [Verizon] begins charging sites, you will no longer be able to access any of these sites using [Verizon] internet access:

    • Google
    • Yahoo
    • ebay
    • et cetera

    [Verizon]'s customer service number is [1-877-483-5898].

    Continue on to the page you requested.

    Content providers' sites are one of the few reasons that Verizon and at&t can sell anything. Without sites like Google, Amazon, and Yahoo, Verizon and at&t's pipes are pretty much worthless. The content providers really should make this clear to Verizon and at&t.

    1. Re:I'd love to see this. by Joel+from+Sydney · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Without sites like Google, Amazon, and Yahoo
      You forgot Empornium and ThePirateBay ;-)
    2. Re:I'd love to see this. by Esion+Modnar · · Score: 1
      If the NFL and UPS can strike, so can Google. One day without Google, and the telecoms' customers will go apeshit and fucking melt their switchboard in India.

      We have a Congress whose only thought is to their lobbyists, not their constituents. So the rest of us are left to the law of the 800-lb. gorilla.

      Well, Google is the 800-lb gorilla. I look forward to when Google sees fit to serve up some attitude correction: "Sit down, shut up, and don't MAKE ME come back there."

      --

      They say the first thing to go is your penis. Well, it's either that or your brain. I forget which...
    3. Re:I'd love to see this. by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      As much as I like that idea, I don't think it will happen.

      Google doesn't want to burn thier bridges in case someday, it's their turn to fellate some prick in congress to get a custom-tailored law.

    4. Re:I'd love to see this. by From+A+Far+Away+Land · · Score: 4, Funny

      And with the government demand to hand over logs they don't want to give, the fellating might happen sooner rather than later in order to get out of that pickel Bush is putting them into.

      At least if they fellate Bush, then we can finally impeach him ;-)

    5. Re:I'd love to see this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hehe, just wait until Verizon (comcast, et al) get our invoice for all the spam comming from their network. These stupid fuckers obviously never heard the saying; don't cut off your nose to spite your face!

    6. Re:I'd love to see this. by aaronl · · Score: 1

      Would be nice, except nearly everyone in the US is sending data over ATT, Level3, or similar, lines. Those telecomms that were lobbying for this are the backbone providers, and that's where they could do QoS.

      For example, I have a cable modem through Charter. For me to get to Slashdot, I have to go through *at least* three ATT nodes. To get to Google, I'm going through Level3. Hell, I have to go through ATT nodes to get the MCI, Sprint, Cingular, and even Speakeasy.

      Blacklisting in that way would mean that it's very likely that *nobody* could get to the site, and switching ISP wouldn't fix it.

    7. Re:I'd love to see this. by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      While the telcos are also ISPs, its no so much the telcos-as-ISPs that are doing this as the telcos-as-backbone-providers. The end-user's ISP would have relatively little to do with whether or not the user experience is affected, as the idea is to charge the toll (or delay packets) for packets travelling over the telcos networks at any point.

    8. Re:I'd love to see this. by mattkinabrewmindspri · · Score: 1
      I'm not talking about blocking them somewhere on the network.

      If you have a website, you can generally look at the access logs to see where requests come from. Checking for people on Verizon's or at&t's network should be possible in the same way.

    9. Re:I'd love to see this. by _critic · · Score: 1

      That was my initial reaction to "tiered internet" proposals as well.

      ( my original comment on the issue)

      Ultimately, it's stooping to the telco's level and escalating the battle from the legal arena to the technological. Might happen . . . but in the end the public loses. Hopefully, Congressional bills supporting Network Neutrality will prevail.

      What I'd like to know is, who's up for re-election in November that can have an significant impact on the issue?! Anyone?

      mischa

  14. DEMAND your rights! by buss_error · · Score: 4, Insightful
    I see a lot of "Oh, well, we get screwed again!" kind of comments.

    The shame is that we (the voters) don't stand up and say "ENOUGH!" Is it because we don't think what we want is right, or is it because we expect political special interests to win despite what we, the voters want?

    The game is rigged, sure enough, just as long as we sit down, shut up, and don't vote. I don't care if you disagree with me, I just want you to vote.

    --
    Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants; it is the creed of slaves.
    1. Re:DEMAND your rights! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem is that I do vote for someone who I think will protect us, and then the bastards throw everything out the window once they are elected.

    2. Re:DEMAND your rights! by Sathias · · Score: 4, Insightful

      How exactly do you vote for the people who aren't politicians?

      --
      Blessed are the 1337, for they shall pwn the earth.
    3. Re:DEMAND your rights! by killjoe · · Score: 1

      Shhhh. You will wake up sheeple. Quick turn on friends, that Rachael sure is cute.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    4. Re:DEMAND your rights! by schneidafunk · · Score: 1

      Actually, the voters do not get to vote on subjects like this. Your REPRESENTATIVE votes for you. Sure I can vote for a democrat or republican, but in the end of the day they listen to wall street instead of me. Voting for a 3rd party (which I've done) seems to produce no results. Explain to me again why I should vote for someone else to make decisions for me? I think the better method is to aim to get rich and buy a politician... I wish I was misguided, but tell me a better strategy?

      --
      Some people die at 25 and aren't buried until 75. -Benjamin Franklin
    5. Re:DEMAND your rights! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      FOR WHO? Without an alternative voting system such as approval voting, the only two viable options are Republican and Democrat, both who have proven themselves no better than the other. Don't encourage people to vote; encourage people to push their Congressperson to push for approval voting so that their vote actually MEANS SOMETHING and isn't wasted if spent on a third party.

    6. Re:DEMAND your rights! by perrygeo · · Score: 1

      A better strategy.. speak out to your reps and senators. Send 'em letters, phone calls, emails and fruit cakes. Let them know you're here. If the special interests are the only ones who have the ears of our representitives, guess who they're going to listen to?

    7. Re:DEMAND your rights! by RLiegh · · Score: 1

      I DO vote, I have voted in every election since 1988.

      Hasn't done shit.

      Any other bright ideas, son? 'cos between you, me and /. that one was pretty craptacular.

    8. Re:DEMAND your rights! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The game is rigged, sure enough, just as long as we sit down, shut up, and don't shoot.

      There. Fixed that for ya.

    9. Re:DEMAND your rights! by QCompson · · Score: 1

      Question: How many voters does it take to change a lightbulb?

      Answer: It doesn't matter. Voters don't change anything.

    10. Re:DEMAND your rights! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People say to vote with your wallet, but that isn't too effective when all the sheeple don't care.
       
      I hear people with guns get noticed, though.

    11. Re:DEMAND your rights! by Random+Utinni · · Score: 1

      The problem as I see it is twofold:

      First, the system we have tends to a two-party system. The problem is that there are more than two issues. So in voting for any candidate, you are forced to prioritize the issues, and vote for the candidate that represents your viewpoint on the issues most important to you. The downside is that smaller issues, which may still be *very* important, will often fall by the wayside. With multi-party systems, there is enough choice and variation in candidates, that you can find someone who matches your views and priorities fairly closely, and that candidate will still have a decent chance of getting elected. In the U.S., we don't have that, and it's unlikely to change anytime soon.

      Second, we have the problem of interest groups. Normally, it's not a problem. The idea behind special interests is that you may have a group of people for whom a particular issue is *very* important. Since the group isn't large enough numerically to influence election outcomes (due to problem #1, above), they lobby the elected official to try and persuade that official of the merits of their cause. The problem is that the only people joining special interest groups are the small special interests. The vast majority of the population got left behind in the program. If you're an elected official, the only people talking to you are the special interest groups... so after awhile you begin to believe them; there's no one out there arguing the other side. It's the joy of what's called "the silent majority".

      So, what's to be done? Well, for starters, we need to provide an alternate viewpoint in government. The easiest way to do this is to contact your local representative or senator. They *do* respond. Even if it's only a form letter from a staffer. I know, I used to be one. Don't try email campaigns... they don't get any real respect (too easy to automate). Letters and phone calls do work; what's required is volume. If enough people show an interest, your rep's *will* listen.

      Second, we could try to start our own lobbying group. Give a concentrated voice to the technically literate population... someone to say "I represent 10^N voters in your state who all feel very strongly about X". Any takers? Let me know at mailto:voice@exapted.com.

    12. Re:DEMAND your rights! by rajafarian · · Score: 1

      The game is rigged, sure enough, just as long as we sit down, shut up, and don't vote. I don't care if you disagree with me, I just want you to vote.

      Here's why voting won't matter:

      The average person is "stupid." By stupid I mean that while the average person probably graduated out of high school, maybe college, can maintain a job and raise a family, they are unable to follow a logical argument. I personally think the education system is rigged to make sure this is true.

      The problem then arises because politicians, both the donkeys and the elephans, know this and also know that the since the average person can't follow a logical argument, they can then direct people to do things (i.e. vote for them) by appealing to their emotions, especially fear. They can then take advantage of the old dilemma of fear vs security, and promise security in return for their freedoms.

      In short, people like Rove are experts at manipulating people who can't follow a logical argument thus truth won't do any good against these experts of deceptions. Thus voting is a waste of my time.

  15. Well... by JimXugle · · Score: 0

    No matter how cute they are, and how good of pets they are, and how they've served us so loyaly in the past, I belevie that there is an overpopulation of congress critters. Some even have a genetic disorder known as 'stupidity' to the experts, which causes them extreme pain. Please stop the hurting and put these poor creatures out of their misery.

    As I look at my own congress critters with affection and pet them lovingly, I'm forced to conclude that they serve no purpose and that they're more trouble than they're worth, dispite thier cuddly fur.

    */end sarcasm.

    --
    -jX

    Don't you just love politics? It's like a comedy of errors.
    1. Re:Well... by bl00d6789 · · Score: 1

      Please stop the hurting and put these poor creatures out of their misery.

      Welcome to a lifetime of Secret Service surveillance. ;-)

    2. Re:Well... by JimXugle · · Score: 0

      eh... nothin new. Earlier this month my website was taken down by Iranians... I figured that put me on the watch list.

      --
      -jX

      Don't you just love politics? It's like a comedy of errors.
  16. Logic breakdown... by skiddie · · Score: 5, Funny
    It's the evil big telecom corporations vs. The Public and Microsoft.

    OMG!!1! We're on the same side as Microsoft!?!?! WTF?!?!?!11?!?//

    1. Re:Logic breakdown... by rmadmin · · Score: 1

      Just because microsoft's business practices suck, doesn't mean the company does as a whole. Microsoft/Gates donates a crap load of money to good causes all the time. I donate money too, thus I'm on the same side as them in that battle. On the other hand, I get your joke, made me laugh. But, when you're dealing with fighting the governement, wouldn't you want someone like Microsoft to be on your side? :)

    2. Re:Logic breakdown... by why-is-it · · Score: 1
      Microsoft/Gates donates a crap load of money to good causes all the time.

      Noblesse Oblige is expected, and should not admired.

      --
      *** Where are we going? And what's with this handbasket?
    3. Re:Logic breakdown... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Congratulations, sir. That's the stupidest thing I've ever read on Slashdot. Your mother would be proud.

    4. Re:Logic breakdown... by Serilkath_Montreal · · Score: 1
      OMG!!1! We're on the same side as Microsoft!?!?! WTF?!?!?!11?!?//

      Shit happens.
      --
      malheureusement la stupidité n'est ni curable, ni mortelle.
    5. Re:Logic breakdown... by fbg111 · · Score: 1

      You know you live in interesting times when the best golfer in the world is black, the best rapper in the world is white, the French are accusing the Americans of being arrogant, Germany is steadfastly refusing to go to war, and Microsoft is standing up for a level playing field and equal access for all internet businesses and users.

      --
      Flying is easy, just throw yourself at the ground and miss. -Douglas Adams
    6. Re:Logic breakdown... by bfizzle · · Score: 1

      Ha it is all perceptions.

      You'd have a hard time argueing Tiger is the best golfer in the world. He has no short game and hasn't been on top of his game for a while. Eminem is far from the best rapper in the world... bleh. Give me good ol' Too $hort and Easy E any day. French and Americans have always been arrogant and probably always will be. And Microsoft is just looking out for their best economic interest the easiest way they know how.

      Not a whole lot has changed.

    7. Re:Logic breakdown... by anotherzeb · · Score: 1

      You don't think the able should help the less able?

      --
      Good luck sometimes arrives disguised as bad
  17. End of Net Neutrality means what? by beoswulf · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I don't understand how telecos are going to throttle packets.

    It sounds as if the telecos are going to throttle the entire internet, especially the bigger content providers. Then only "paid", higher tiered content providers will be delivered with "premium" speeds? All the while the premium bandwith will be reserved for the telecos digital television over DSL and such.

    But how is a teleco operating one of the net backbones going to know what exactly is inside a packet, if the packet is coming from a paid tier source, and where it's destination is without opening it up and examining it? That sounds like a rather ominious intrusion.

    1. Re:End of Net Neutrality means what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess they could throttle based on ports? But it wouldn't be impossible to examine the contents of a packet, figure out what type of traffic it is, and throttle it accordingly. The challenge for the ISPs will be doing it without it costing more than they'd make forcing people to use their own piece of shit services. They'd need some serious infrastructure to handle that sort of load, and that costs money to both build and maintain.

    2. Re:End of Net Neutrality means what? by Allnighterking · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Most likely they won't open packets. Too difficult for them. What they will do IMHO however is to throttle at the point where the line that leaves the building enters the main flow of traffic. Then just run it like the old 3 Stoogies routine. Heres 1 for you and 2 for me, one for you and 3 for me.... Wonder how long it will take before people learn how to manipulate the system and we'll have the Telco's screaming to congress that mean old pirates are stealing their bandwidth and as a result they can't sell their crap content that nobody wants.

      --

      I'm sorry, I'm to tired to be witty at the moment so this message will have to do.

    3. Re:End of Net Neutrality means what? by flooey · · Score: 1

      But how is a teleco operating one of the net backbones going to know what exactly is inside a packet, if the packet is coming from a paid tier source, and where it's destination is without opening it up and examining it? That sounds like a rather ominious intrusion.

      They just need to look at the source and destination IPs on the packet to know where it's going and coming from. And they're already looking at the entire IP header, so it's not exactly an intrusion.

    4. Re:End of Net Neutrality means what? by DigiShaman · · Score: 4, Informative

      It's all about killing VOIP. It's real fucking easy to do now days. Not only can you sniff each packet, but you can tell what application that VOIP traffic is coming from. You can kiss Vonage, Lingo, and Skype good-bye. But don't worry; the local Telco's and cell phone industry would be more than happy to offer you an alternative...for a small fee of course.

      Remember, VOIP is still a new technology in the eyes of the public. They feel the need to crush it before it gains mass public support and thus political support to keep it alive.

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    5. Re:End of Net Neutrality means what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bullcrap.

      Skype would just move to SSL and that would be it.

      It's easier to conceal the traffic than to open it, obviously.

      Besides, all the morons on this site do not pay attention - deliberately, I think - that telcos SELL CONNECTIVITY. If I can't talk through Skype, fuck such provider, I'm moving to another one.

      They can only afford pissing on customer if they have a great deal of monopoly power. And even then the more they piss the customer off, the more they automatically create potential for competition to take over.

      Not even monopolists may charge whatever they want. Check it out, e.g. in Hal Varian's "Microeconomics".

    6. Re:End of Net Neutrality means what? by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

      Besides, all the morons on this site do not pay attention - deliberately, I think - that telcos SELL CONNECTIVITY. If I can't talk through Skype, fuck such provider, I'm moving to another one.

      You can't prevent what traffic is being blocked on their backbones. Basically, even if you have cable as your ISP, there is nothing they or you can do about preventing the filtration of traffic from point A to point B.

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    7. Re:End of Net Neutrality means what? by unboring · · Score: 1
      It's all about killing VOIP. It's real fucking easy to do now days.

      You know that's what I thought too. But as it turns out blocking Skype isnt that easy. My friend has been working on this problem for months and according to him its impossible to block it. Skype has specifically designed their (closed) protocol to prevent reverse-engineering and blocking...

    8. Re:End of Net Neutrality means what? by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

      You simply profile the binary in the packets and find patterns. Those patterns in the data will help identify future Skype packets. From here, you can create filters to block all data that matches the pattern.

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
  18. Free? How so? by Travoltus · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is a step towards an extortion economy. I've heard of right wingers playing Twister before but the logic behind that post makes a Pretzel look straight as a pencil.

    --
    --- Grow a pair, liberals... stop letting the Republicans bully you!
    1. Re:Free? How so? by CCFreak2K · · Score: 1

      Perhaps you've never seen one of THESE then!

      --
      "Beware of he who would deny you access to information, for in his heart he dreams himself your master."
    2. Re:Free? How so? by InsaneGeek · · Score: 1

      It's not a right/left wing thing, it's a past history. The best thing that happened to the internet was that the government DIDN'T get involved. When the government gets involved we get CDA, Son of CDA, clipper chip, DMCA, google-porn fiasco, etc. Those were things that for the most part had some original good little nugget and now looking back you can see how they were implemented.

      I have absolutely no belief that the government, filled with lawyers, traditional business ment, etc would be able to ever come close to drafting something technical that would be specific to deal with the issue properly. What's more, the whole start of this lately didn't come from anything in the US, it all came from foreign companies and quite often their government controlled/funded telcos; which wouldn't apply to them. We wouldn't fix the problem, and we'd basically let the FCC (which has proven to us time and time again that it works so well... not) wreck havoc all over that sector. Taking the power out of the consumers hands, giving it to the government, coupled with it's trackrecord of controlling technology and still being for giving this power to the government is insanity at it's best.

    3. Re:Free? How so? by Travoltus · · Score: 1

      "It's not a right/left wing thing, it's a past history. The best thing that happened to the internet was that the government DIDN'T get involved. "

      Two errors stand out right there.

      1) Government interference in the form of the CDA, DMCA, etc., does not mean corporate interference (see: Tiered internet, per-megabyte bandwidth charges, privacy violations, etc.) is any better. Government interference is why ISP's (especially Telcos-turned ISPs) don't have public records of your name and address for the world to look at even if you decline. The free market would have told you to bend over and grab your ankles for the marketers that they serve. And the stalkers, too.

      2) Government interference in the internet? Who do you think created the internet? None of this would be if it were not for a taxpayer funded (aka EVIL COMMUNIST) project called DARPA. Al Gore didn't invent the Internet, Josef Stalin did.

      Now for some less glaring logic errors.
      3) If it weren't for the FCC, all your base would belong to the telemarketers right now.

      4) The power is never out of the consumers' hands when the Government is involved. It is in your hands because you are a voter. Now, if you put the power into the private industry into the hands of those who will make money whether you like them or not (see: the regional cable/telco monopolies), you add not only corruption to the mix, but also a lack of accountability. What are you going to do to strike back at Time-Warner Cable? Not have cable modems anymore and go back to a dialup service through a telco or dialup ISP that's just as corrupt?

      5) The DMCA was not a Government thing as much as it was a private corporation thing. They bought and paid for your politicians to get that law. Religious extremist voters got (and lost) the CDA and the goggle porn fiasco. If the Government didn't get involved they'd have turned to buying up the ISPs and shutting down your porn anyway. Religious nuts have lots of money. And lots. And lots. Corporations like those behind the RIAA and MPAA have even more. You would be completely owned by TCPA, Palladium and there would be total Linux incompatibility right now, if they had no Government interference, or fear of it, looming over their heads. Allow me to simplify that: today you have Government-mandated laws against DRM circumvention; if it were not for the Government, however, you would have Sony launching rootkits galore against you, and RIAA hackers sending you deadly hard drive-crashing vigilante viruses over file sharing networks. I'd call that a step backwards.

      You cannot have a civilization without Government interference in things. Somalia's a great place to go if you think you can live without it.

      What we need is a balance between We the People, the Government and private industry. We do not have that today.

      --
      --- Grow a pair, liberals... stop letting the Republicans bully you!
    4. Re:Free? How so? by InsaneGeek · · Score: 1

      1) You haven't proved it is any worse, and what you are asking for: government mandated records keeping procedures... well how exactly do you think that will turn out? Again look at past history and tell me if you believe that the government will possibly be able to do anything at all better?

      2) You aren't so childish to understand the HUGE, MASSIVE difference between creating the internet and sending it on it's merry little way basically leaving it to the public. And going through and installing basillions of regulations on it after it's in widespread use don't you?

      3) And??? While we are just throwing out random complete strawman crap, let me play too. If it weren't for the FCC they wouldn't be in any position to try and argue that VOIP should be under government wiretap regulations. And in 2005 put in regulations to force VOIP providers to provide wire tapping capabilities upon request.

      4) This directly contradicts what you say in #5, in #5 you say that polititicians were bought overiding the will of the people, but in #4 you say the people allways have the power. Which is it?

      To respond to your contradicted point... The most power anyone has over a company is $$$, it has more power than even voting. You vote with your dollars, companies respond to $$$ walking; history has shown time and time again that the government doesn't understand technology and couldn't draft a bill to "protect" it's people under any circumstances. It just doesn't work that way, I just don't know why you seem to live in lala unicorn land, dancing with bunnies and the government can write properly crafted technology bills; but go back and look.

      5) Addressing your jumbled points: Again you seem to forget who put in against that stuff.... well it wasn't just crazy extremists. Well look it was Lieberman, Clinton (both of them), etc. Hillary Clinton and Tipper Gore have had a boner for regulation against violence and sex way before they were even thinking of being involved with campaigns for the presidential office. Where is the goverment regulation against palladium, list US the regulations against it, or please list the US goverment statements that they would get involved with it. In fact I'd say quite the contrary to what you are saying the government with it's horrible legislative skills is trying to regulate in palladium. Government mandated broadcast flag, it got turned down over a technicality and it's coming back. Broadcast flag only allowed certain equipment the capability to view signals... the only OS that has that capability is Windows with vista and it's secured hardware requirements (i.e. palladium). So instead of the government threatening Microsoft, they will put in legislation that shows how technically unaware that will lock Linux out of the market, because they want to try and "help".

      The government started a good thing, but almost always when the government trys to "help" in technology with regulation they only fuck it up much worse.

    5. Re:Free? How so? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1) If you believe that Telco's and ISPs posting your personal information publicly isn't right up there with the most God awful things the Government has ever done or thought to do, why don't you ask some gay rights activists or even some celebrities what happens when their carefully guarded personal information gets out. Government interference is quite beneficial to you in some ways, and harmful in others. Your rabid, "Government is always evil" spew is boring, wrong headed, and in all too many ways proven to be grossly inaccurate.

      2) Are you too stupid to realize that if private industry had been left to think of the Internet, we'd still be on BBS's right now, because the internet was not initially profitable and businesses only tackle things that are profitable?

      3) None of what I said was strawman crap. You brought up the silly kindergarten mentality that Government interference was evil. The FCC is a good example of you being wrong. VOIP wouldn't even be here at all without that evil Government interference you whine like a baby about so excessively. And the FCC mandating wiretaps for VOIP isn't just an FCC issue, it's a law enforcement issue. Going by your pathetic logic we should do away with law enforcement, too. Good luck with that, Clint Eastwood.

      4) Your reading comprehension is understandable for a typical free market droid. Your vote ultimately decides what the Government can and cannot do. You have no vote with private corporations. Ultimately the destruction of the DMCA will come down to the will of angry voters. All the corporate money in the world can't stop an electoral tidal wave. Your task is to get out the vote. If you take the Government out of it, however, your local monopolies will, as I said, hammer you with vigilante activity. Kiss your hard drive goodbye. Oh, wait, that evil Stalinist Government you keep whining about, won't let them. Sillyme.

      5) "Jumbled points" is your way of saying your reading comprehension is shot to hell and you couldn't understand or could not address the basic points which destroys all your pathetic juvenile attempts at reasoning.

      Let me remind you of the point that you read and then ran away from like the pitiful neo con coward you are. Today you have Government-mandated laws against DRM circumvention; if it were not for the Government, however, you would have Sony launching rootkits galore against you, and RIAA hackers sending you deadly hard drive-crashing vigilante viruses over file sharing networks.

      In short: Government interference is a hit and miss solution, but your way leads to far worse.

      Don't even bother replying to me unless you are willing to address the question of whether or not the DMCA is worse than the RIAA crashing your hard drive in a misguided vigilante hunt for illegal mp3's. Unless you've got the guts to address that, all you're doing is ducking, dodging, and hiding from the hard hitting points you know are killing your limp wristed excuse for an argument.

    6. Re:Free? How so? by InsaneGeek · · Score: 1

      1) Read what I posted, your quote has absolutely nothing to do with what I said. You are completely doing a strawman here.

      2) Again read what I posted than read it a second time, of course you obviously don't get it when I say that building is different than imposing restrictions. I've not wavered from that statement they are two different things; and you are trying to apply crazy-world linking to it that again doesn't work.

      3) Again read and again strawman, quote where I say evil. Print it, if not than you are doing an exageration. And a way insane one, this one is so blatently bad that I think you would even disagree with it if you read it a second time.

      4) Wow, just wow... why don't you re-read what you posted. Talk about grasping for a bunches of fallacy laced brass rings. There is no doubt that voting with votes or dollars makes change, there is no doubt of that. But the past has shown time and time again that in technology the freemarket responds to people much beter than government regulations. Government regulations DIDN'T stop sony, PEOPLE did (actually the media more than anything else). You keep saying it, but let's see where the goverment did about... any new legislation specific to that passed??? Sony did get a good slapping by the EFF, but there is NO statement about preventing them from using the DRM you mentioned the "government" is protecting you from (which again they aren't)

      5) I don't see why you are thinking those two have any relation two each other. Prove to me that they have a reasonable connection. You made the supposition from left field, now back it up that those two are interrelated. I don't really need to get out the dictionary and recite the definition of regulation do I? Because you keep on trying to add this left-field stuff into it, trying to put words into my mouth and trying to make crazed ties that have nothing to do with the topic of the government regulating technology. What's even better is that the goverment still hasn't outlawed Sony rootkits, they haven't put regulation in place preventing them at all.

      You still haven't proven to me that government regulation of technology has helped more than hindered the common person. Why don't you go ahead and start listing them, I'm fairly positive my list would be longer than yours.

      As to the whole crashing your hardware STRAWMAN, give it up, you'd have to be a three year old to fall for that. I don't fall for stupid fallacies and I'm tired of your high-school level of intelligence. Here why don't you look up the dozen or so (I actually stopped counting them, seriously you are that bad) of these you've broken over here and come back when you can put up and argument that is reasonable http://www.nizkor.org/features/fallacies/index.htm l#index

      Oh, and the whole neocon thing was a perfect example of the intellect level that you are playing at, so anybody and everbody can see the level of schooling you have.

    7. Re:Free? How so? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      InsaneGeek, your rampant fits of denial and pretzel logic are too pathetic and funny to do anything but sit and laugh at.

      It's no wonder looneytarians like you are so unpopular in America now. Why do you even bother? Every time you post tripe like this you alienate more voters. Oh nevermind, keep posting. We need animals like you around to remind future Americans of what a mess you have made of this country.

    8. Re:Free? How so? by InsaneGeek · · Score: 1

      Well, now you are going anonymous (come on now, a thread from days and days ago and someone "new" just happens to pop in, you are only fooling yourself here) and instead of addressing any points you go on a personal attack; true sign of a desparate person clinging onto an incorrect point who no longer has any reasonable recourse but to drop to kindergarten name calling.

      I again like the touch that last time you were calling me a neocon, now you are trying to call me a libertarian. I do have some feigning interest (purely comedic) in what are you going to try and call me next to try and divert from how truely incorrect you've been.

      Again I say the government just doesn't get it when it comes to creating reasonable technology regulation. They have been fairly inept at writing legislation that is "tight" enough, to prevent spillage outside of it's original intent.

    9. Re:Free? How so? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Neo cons, libertarians, what's the difference? You go round and round and round recycling the same disproven points over and over again. You haven't said anything different from when you jumped into this to begin with. You rant, get disproven, then rant the same thing from a different angle.

      The last time people like you ran this country was the 1920s. Liberals in the 1930s cleaned up after your mess and America saw 30 years of prosperity. Then you guys came back and ran the national debt to the stars and beyond, crashed a savings and loan industry, secured us permanently in abject dependency upon Al Qaeda-controlled oil, gave us Iran-Contra, Enron, and a whole boat load of convicted Republican pedophiles to boot. (www.armchairsubversive.com)

      Oh but Democrats screwed up with Whitewater and Clinton cut the deficit. Darn, what a bunch of evil America-hating liberals. Hang them all, I say!

      Before you froth at the mouth and re-imprint your keyboard on your forehead again, just answer me this. Why is the Republican party so unpopular now?

    10. Re:Free? How so? by InsaneGeek · · Score: 1

      Umm... again you are avoiding the topic, trying to make it some left/right thing; NEXT TIME AT LEAST TALK ABOUT THE TOPIC AT HAND.

      Look at the front page, your beloved FCC you've been praising is forcing VOIP forms to open up their networks for mandatory snooping. You still on their bandwagon? It looks like you jumped off the Sony/DRM bandwagon after I showed you how you were completely incorrect on legislation. You should just stop here, because all you've got left is left/right kindergarten namecalling. You are older than 3 aren't you?

    11. Re:Free? How so? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What part of "Life with the FCC is bad, life without it is worse" is your Republican home schooled brain not understanding?

      And you haven't proven anything.

      FACT: The private RIAA tried to hack into people's computers.
      FACT: Government legislation prevented that.
      FACT: I never jumped off the bandwagon - you are wrong, and that ends this debate. You have no facts. You have no logic. You have no case. FACT.

      You are going to shut up now because you're a flaming idiot. Got that?

  19. That's up to the constituents by Beryllium+Sphere(tm) · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If they ask questions and vote their interests, Congress will respond to their interests.

    If they spend their time watching TV and vote based on what they see in expensive TV campaign ads then Congress will respond to whoever donates money.

    1. Re:That's up to the constituents by The+Snowman · · Score: 1

      The problem here is that there are so many issues, well more than a hundred that various constituents would consider election-determining. Which issue are you voting on? Even if you can get that message through (unlikely), your voice is drowned in a sea of others. Rough calculation: 175 million voters in the USA (not accurate, just an estimate). 435 members of the House. That is roughly 400,000 constituents per Representative. Assuming you make the uphill battle and make your niche issue known, and only half the constituents vote, yours is one in 200,000 voices.

      A much better idea is to launch a grassroots PR campaign to educate the other voters on the issue. Tell them why they should care, and how to fix it. Be concise. Tell your Representative that you now have 50,000 supporters of this issue and be passionate about it. The world will end if you don't get a bill passed in support of your issue. Odds are if you can get this, you can get on his busy schedule and speak with him personally. Convince him, and if that doesn't work, start talking with his opposition in the election. Odds are one or the other will support you. Buy some time on local TV channels and air short 15 second or so commercials. Yes, it costs money, but not as much as you might think. Get the issue out there. Force the politicians to talk about it, and make sure the constituents know why it is important. I've seen this work before and I'm sure I'll see it again. It's little stuff like this that can unseat incumbants that have been sitting pretty for years, making their biennual gestures to the masses for reelection.

      --
      24 beers in a case, 24 hours in a day. Coincidence? I think not!
  20. Re:Good, the Internet will continue to be free by SQLz · · Score: 1

    Heh...umm, don't look now but the FCC regulates the internet.

  21. Net Neutrality: Three Questions by shalunov · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I don't think the net neutrality question---or, rather, questions---are so straightforward as some here make them appear. The topic, however, is extremely important: what connection do you want to have in 5 years---a 10-Mb/s one or a 1-Gb/s one?

  22. they'll probably argue its about competition by Jafafa+Hots · · Score: 3, Funny

    You know... if everyone is forced to deliver all net content unfettered, there's no competition on quality, whereas is they aren't required to, different carriers will be able to compete on how unrestricted their net access is... thereby helping consumers by driving prices... um... sideways or something.

    --
    This space available.
    1. Re:they'll probably argue its about competition by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, much like the record labels compete on the quality of their products and their prices.

    2. Re:they'll probably argue its about competition by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, it would suck if all one DSL companies in my area were exactly alike. How would I ever be able to choose between the one companies? Well, hopefully this won't go through and the one DSL company will provide a better internet connection at a lower price than the one DSL company.

  23. for what it's worth fill this out. by atarione · · Score: 2, Informative

    http://action.freepress.net/campaign/savethenet

    not sure how much it will do now...but worth a shot?

    --
    actually I am happy to see you, however that is in fact a banana in my pocket.
  24. How to accomplish that... by hackwrench · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The thing is, without the neutrality bill, the telecom could slow down the traffic of that download or email to nearly zero before building extra capacity to handle both the priority and nonpriority services.

  25. More draconian perhaps... by VValdo · · Score: 1

    Along the same lines, individual users and bloggers could join this coalition and blacklist any ISPs that are known to degrade or give preferential service to certain sites. Users attempting to hit a page would get a standardized page directing them to savetheinternet.com or some such location w/instructions on how to complain to their ISP.

    Users may not miss one or two sites, but when enough sites do this, if the coalation for a free Internet is large enough, maybe the ISP's own customers will start to complain.

    Would blacklisting ISPs that do not respect Net Neutrality in the same way that ISPs with open email relays are blacklisted work if enough content providers/blogs/online services/etc. banded together? I could see the argument that this would cut into your marketshare, but better to do it now with hopes of establishing Net Nuetrality than to wait until the net is balkanized and marketshare gets cut anyway.

    W

    --
    -------------------
    This is my SIG. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
  26. Forget Voting, It's time for the general strike! by hackwrench · · Score: 1

    It's time for the general strike. Thing is, it has to be coordinated so that there's a critical mass all at once or it won't work.

  27. OMFG! No way! by edunbar93 · · Score: 2, Funny

    The battlefield seems to be centered around which group has the better funded lobbyists

    Gee, I would *never* have thought! I mean, like, in this day and age, I would expect that buying off politicians was *impossible!*

    --
    "No problem. I have the capacity to do infinite work so long as you don't mind that my quality approaches zero."-Dilbert
  28. Re:Good, the Internet will continue to be free by frinsore · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The parent to this post is an idiot.

    The FCC is desperately needed to regulate the internet. The FCC needs to ensure a level playing field when it comes to net traffic, whether that traffic is for google or microsoft, or my own server. I don't want to access my mail at dial-up speeds because the provider between me and it decides to that their uncompressed HD content is more important then my 5k file. I don't want my connection to time out to an independant site because verizon decided to shift all their traffic onto "the internet" thus freeing up some of their private lines to save maintanance costs.

    Ensuring that the net stays neutral keeps the net more like a town hall and less like disney land. Allowing the telecoms to start charging prices ensures that they only peolpe who can truely serve content are those that have the money, not neccassarily the ones with the best content.

    I'm not a fan of regulation, but it's better that the FCC does it then the telecoms.

  29. Re:Hmm... Technicalities. by arivanov · · Score: 5, Informative
    Couldn't this, technically, also eliminate QoS/fair queue'ing and general firewall rules?

    First, yes it would. Thanks god I live in a slightly more sane country (only by a bit unfortunately). Otherwise I would have lost one of my primary pieces of daily bread. Been doing QoS for 7+ years now.

    Second, Amazon, MSFT and Co should have acted long ago when the Baby Bells and Bell Wannabies killed off the peering points circa Y2K. Instead of that, they went into a direct relationship with the Baby Bells and Bell Wannabies. As a result they simply do not have a leg to stand on regarding any such issues. They are already in contractual agreement with the ATT, Verizon, Level3, etc and if one of these decides to alter the contract there is little they could do.

    To put things in a perspective - in the US traffic from access goes across the telco backbone and goes to Amazon and the like via a private link. In this environment the content provider is at the mercy of the telco. In Europe the traffic goes from access across the telco backbone after that traverses a well maintained non-profit peering point like Lynx and hits the content provider after that. Technically, you can do QoS in both cases. Practically, while you can there is no way you can guarantee any QoS because you do not control the entire route. The Bells understood this more than 5 years ago and killed the US peering points like MAE by maintaining the infrastructure as bad as they could (they also owned most of them) and forcing everyone to go private. From there on the question of net neutrality is utterly pointless.

    --
    Baker's Law: Misery no longer loves company. Nowadays it insists on it
    http://www.sigsegv.cx/
  30. Re:Good, the Internet will continue to be free by flimflammer · · Score: 1

    Do you even know what you're talking about, parent, or did you read "FCC regulation" and "internet" in the same sentance, and come to the conclusion that the big bad FCC is trying to regulate things, even though they already have been for a very long time, and this particular regulation is in fact a very needed one? This getting voted down is actually a Bad Thing(tm)

  31. The miracle of IP addresses. by hackwrench · · Score: 1

    The higher tiered content providers will register a set of source IP's they want to send the data to be accelerated from. They can even ask that only data being sent from a given set of ports from those IP addresses be accelerated.

  32. Such Damage... by BlueStrat · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ..will be routed around. At least for the rest of the world that doesn't cripple itself. It could really suck for US internet customers and businesses for a long time unfortunately, if the major copper and fiber owners manage to roll this out.

    This may very well mean those content providers and other businesses will move operations outside the USA. Hopefully, this might (not sure on this) make it difficult for US-based major telecoms and ISPs to discriminate against foreign traffic because of international treaties and agreements.

    Combined with restrictive IP laws and high taxes, this could add significantly to pressure forcing innovative technologies and the corporations behind them to base themselves outside US control.

    As Princess Leia said about a possible future powergrab..

    "The more you tighten your grip, Tarkin, the more star systems will slip through your fingers."

    Once more, it seems (relatively) short-term profits win out over longer-term strategies that would benefit everyone in many ways, including even themselves, and to a much greater degree over time than this self-defeating quick cash grab.

    Seems they never learned the old adage about not crapping in ones' own nest.

    Cheers!

    Strat

    --
    Progressivism (aka US 'Liberalism'): Ideas so good they need a police/surveillance-state to enforce.
    1. Re:Such Damage... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, well, those international treaties and agreements work both ways.
      Look at what happened to the all-american DMCA. It's quite probable that there is going to be a much more repressive DMCA-like law in the EU. When at the beginning everybody thought that Europe would be spared that, they forgot that lobbyists (and their big bags of money) also operate in the EU.

      And that's not they only example. And "if you're not with us, you're against us". No DMCA means you are a cyber-terrorist. We're going to bomb the hell out of you, and then invade. You'll get 20 to life. Plus several billion in damages owed.

      Nice, level playing field, no?

    2. Re:Such Damage... by Beryllium+Sphere(tm) · · Score: 1

      There's one commentator who isn't too worried about net neutrality, precisely because he figures the worse the broadband duopoly gets the more room there will be for competition to route around the damage.

      Steve Stroh (http://www.bwia.com: financial disclosure, he's bought the coffee a couple of times) figures that wide-area wireless will take off even faster as the telephone and cable companies try to turn the Internet into television.

    3. Re:Such Damage... by Qzukk · · Score: 1

      figures that wide-area wireless will take off even faster as the telephone and cable companies try to turn the Internet into television.

      While I'm sure you and he thinks wlan will save the world, with ATT and bell south in on this, where is your wireless company going to get their bandwidth from if the other major bandwidth/backbone providers join in? Some other ISP that gets it from ATT?

      At this point, the only thing that can actually save us will be the rumored googlenet. As much as end-to-end control of the network by one company reeks of (maybe benign, maybe not) monopoly, at least companies can hook up to it without worrying that some petty fiefdom on the other side will be changing the rules and waylaying their packets en route to their customers.

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
  33. Re:Good. by eno2001 · · Score: 3, Informative

    In the words of our infamous veep: "Go fuck yourself". Now whaddaya say we go hunting next weekend and you stand in front of me? Kay? ;P

    --
    -"...bad old ideas look confusingly fresh when they are packaged as technology" - Jaron Lanier (Digital Maoism on Edge.o
  34. Re:Forget Voting, It's time for the general strike by Slithe · · Score: 1

    How would a general strike effect anything? We, at least most of us, are not working for the telecoms, so we would have little influence on their running. Do you mean that we should stop using the Internet?

    --
    ---- "XML is like violence. If it doesn't fix the problem, you aren't using enough."
  35. Getting a little sick of this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I swear, with all these moronic laws requiring DRM in things that shouldn't require it, cutting consumer rights left and right to help line those corporation silver pockets with gold instead, and crap like this I sometimes wonder if it isn't just time to move to another country. They don't seem to need us anyway. There's no way you can tell me it's actually in the best interest of the people to screw as many people over as possible so a few companies can have more money.

    1. Re:Getting a little sick of this. by RLiegh · · Score: 2, Insightful

      >I sometimes wonder if it isn't just time to move to another country.

      Ain't no other country want your lazy ass, and even if it did; name any that ain't already as corrupt and bought out as america is.

      Ain't no where to run to, so you might as well bite that pillow.

    2. Re:Getting a little sick of this. by dogmatixpsych · · Score: 1
      name any that ain't already as corrupt and bought out as america is.

      Venezuela?

      Kidding aside, your statement should have said, "name a country that is not more corrupt and bougth out than America is." I'm not just spouting blind patriotism, America is one of the least corrupt countries. That may be changing though.

  36. Interesting Question by jrieth50 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Another interesting question I think needs to be asked - if the United States validates AT&T Chairman's belief that those are 'his pipes' (forgetting its only the last mile,) how long before China decides that those are 'their pipes' and ditto for every connected country in the world.

    Doesn't it stand to reason that anyone providing last mile connectivity or even backbone suddenly declare themselves worthy of charging these tolls? So instead of Google/Yahoo/etc paying just SBC/Verizon/AT&T - now they're expected to pay every telco the world over to ensure they're competitive globally vs. local competition?

    Very dangerous precedent could potentially be set. (And FYI - Congresspeople are not completely oblivious to phone calls and snail mail. If it adds up on them they take that very seriously particularly if you are a constituent. Sending an e-mail though is completely useless (I know...)

  37. Correction: by jrieth50 · · Score: 1

    SOME Congresspeople are not completely oblivous to constituent outreach. Some are deeply entrenched in gerrymandered districts and couldn't give a rats ass if you all died a fiery death.

    But not all! Find one that thinks his seat might be in danger and flood his office with calls and you've got yourself your own personal demagogue.

  38. So, would you say this is right or wrong? by sentientbrendan · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Cynicism aside, what's the right thing to do in this situation?

    On the one hand, in seems like the people who own the pipes should be able to do whatever they want with them. If we say they can't prioritize traffic of people that pay them good money to do it, aren't we violating their right to property?

    On the other hand, if they start charging individual sites they could potentially hamper the economy, which would be against the public good. The problem is something like if all the roads in the country were privately owned and had toll booths everywhere...

    Maybe the answer is that bandwidth should become a public utility. The companies who own it should be granted a monopoly, but then should be severely regulated along the lines power is. Its obvious that internet connectivity is as important to the public good as water and power. We need uniform access to these services across the country. Any part of the country that doesn't have access because its not profitable for verizon to provide it, simply can't economically develop. Also, realistically speaking, this would be *vastly* easier to do than power.

    I'm sure that the existing bandwidth providers would have to be pulled into this kicking and screaming... but frankly the exact same thing happened with power providers. Originally, power companies didn't want to be forced to do things like run lines out to rural areas. This was unfortunate, because electric lighting is pretty important in agriculture. Eventually, when it was evident that the interest of the power companies came so strongly in conflict with the public interest, the regulations we have today were set up.

    I don't know if this is necessary for bandwidth. It hasn't really come up so far, primarily because its a new thing, and because it didn't take them that long to make the internet accessible from pretty much everywhere in the country, by some means or another. Of course, that's just my anecdotal impression. Are there some places where its impossible to get a T1 line at a reasonable price? Are even businesses stuck with satellite in many places? If that's the case, it would be a strong argument to regulate the ISPs in some ways.

    However, as far as I know aside from just generally failing to get home broadband to work on their first try, the ISPs seem to have done a pretty good job of getting everyone internet access. I think they must be somewhat aware of what could happen to them in terms of regulation if they abuse the public good too much. I'm sure they will follow a very fine line, but I'm happy to wait to see if they cross it before I consider regulation a good option. As a rule, its best to do nothing if you can. However, prioritized traffic is probably something we have to stop, depending on how strong the prioritization is. If they insure a certain level of quality for all traffic, it probably won't be an issue... but I suspect that they won't if they can get away with it.

    1. Re:So, would you say this is right or wrong? by geoffspear · · Score: 2, Insightful
      aren't we violating their right to property?

      Yes. But only in the same way we're violating the power companies' right to property when we tell them that they're not allowed to charge the telecomms and cable companies for all the traffic going through those wires they stuck up on all of the power companies' big, expensive, wooden poles.

      And the same way we're violating my property rights by not allowing me to charge the power companies rent for the parts of my property they've stuck those poles into.

      Oh wait, am I not buying into Ayn Rand's syphilitic delusion of corporate self-reliance?

      --
      Don't blame me; I'm never given mod points.
    2. Re:So, would you say this is right or wrong? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Look, this is all very simple. In economics, there is a concept called the natural monopoly. This means that some services are better served by one central economic unit rather than competing units.

      What is interesting is this: no single industry or idea begins as a natural monopoly. In 9th century England, with the feudal system blazing away, castles began building roads connecting to each other. These were built by each of the private "governments" (the lords of the castle), meeting halfway. When they would have a falling out, they would essentially build a huge stone wall on the road, and put up temporary armaments and what have you.In short, they "owned" the road, and they used their collective will (in this case, physical force) to preserve their ownership. So what happened?

      Well, what happened was in the long run, unreliable road service led to the ruin of castles. Castles who cut off their roads lost both their import *and* their export capabilities. And they would gain a reputation as being unreliable, and traders and salesmen would avoid those towns. Eventually the cost of restricting a road approached infinity, and the castle would wither and die.

      So eventually the people of the castle (the constituency, such as they were) would demand that the roads remain open and free - that they in essence become a public good, and absorbed as part of the castle's own infrastructure costs.

      The reasoning behind all of this is very simple: the cost of restricting the road is infinity, because what is important is not THE ROAD but what PASSES ALONG the road. In short, a road that nobody uses is not a road. And thus, roads became a natural monopoly, because they are no longer considered a good or service, but instead as a conduit for goods and services.

      AT&T was once, ironically, an "artificial" natural monopoly. Like the road, a silent telephone is just a rock - the difference was, of course, AT&T is a private company, and not a public institution.

      In the long run, all natural monopolies will become public utilities. The question then is whether or not a certain product or service is a public utility. It seems we are all (mostly) agreed that road transportation, aviation, water, and electricity qualify. Here are some products and services that are still up in the air - think about whether these should constitute natural monopolies or not (remember, a natural monopoly is something that is better governed by one entity than many competing entities):

      * oil acquisition and distribution
      * Internet infrastructure
      * health care
      * social security
      * postal services
      * education
      * higher education
      * sporting leagues
      * retail sales

      Some of these may be natural monopolies. Some may not. This isn't an easy yes/no question. But the implications of the answers (and our collective answer) can be very far-reaching indeed.

    3. Re:So, would you say this is right or wrong? by ratboy666 · · Score: 1

      These companies HAVE a monoply, and government backing. Specifically, the right to run wires and pipes through MY land. Do I receive fair compensation for this? Yes, IF the company is forced to provide access to all, and charges for the infrastructure.

      As an example -- my local Gas supplier does this. My gas bill is split into two parts: one for the infrastructure, the other for the gas itself.

      If there is NO fair access, I may get cranky. Backhoe cranky. I can see home renovations coming. And the legislation that I would be breaking? A local misdemeanor, maybe a $50 fine. Not bad that I can disrupt Internet and Phone service to several hundred customers for a measly $50.

      Remeber: the "right to property" extends exactely as far as control of the property.

      Ratboy

      --
      Just another "Cubible(sic) Joe" 2 17 3061
  39. QOS by john_uy · · Score: 1

    isn't this being implemented now? networks already have qos in place and they charge different rates for best effort, guaranteeed, bursting traffic, etc.

    but in any case, good thing i don't live in the usa. lately, there have been lots of crazy laws being made. it's the most exciting drama show on earth.

    but seriously, i hope that other countries will not get into this (this issue in particular.) right now, networks are being interconnected and not passing through usa anymore. i just hope that major providers will just diversify their systems to be hosted in major traffic points outside the usa for better traffic. they can use anycast.

    --
    Live your life each day as if it was your last.
  40. How did the committee vote on this? by cove209 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I wonder how the committee voted on this.

    Would it be so hard for the reporter to include that in the story?

    The official site of the committee hides their voting record on matters like this very well.

    I couldn't find it... Would it be that hard to have a quick link on the main page?

    http://energycommerce.house.gov/

    Business as usual within the beltway.

    1. Re:How did the committee vote on this? by LackThereof · · Score: 4, Informative

      I found the vote tally, but not on any .gov - I had to google for it. That link also contains the office phone numbers for every committee member - not that changing their minds will help at this point, but a scolding could be in order.

      Americans should probably look this list over and see if their rep is on it. Mine is not. The vote was pretty much along party lines, with 5 Dems crossing over and voting against the Markey amendment (Gonzalez - TX, Green - TX, Rush - IL, Towns - NY, Wynn - MD), and only 1 Republican voting for it (Wilson - NM)

      --
      Legalize recreational marijuana. Seriously.
  41. Downside of neutrality by 91degrees · · Score: 1

    Surely, this would prevent suppliers from offering me services that require high bandwidth for a short time. For example, a 10x normal speed connection with QoS for the purpose of watching HDTV video on Demand. If they offered this speed to the VoD suppliers for a cut of the download fee, they'd surely have to offer this speed to all services for free.

    1. Re:Downside of neutrality by Duhavid · · Score: 1

      Why is that?

      My understanding is that part of the net neutrality
      argument is that QoS should not be used to extort,
      not that all QoS is bad.

      I think there are some that conflate the two issues
      to muddy the waters.

      --
      emt 377 emt 4
    2. Re:Downside of neutrality by bbdb · · Score: 1

      Yes, you conflate commercial profit-making with extorsion. Probably not deliberately, but you still do.

      There is such a thing as Ricardian rent (using position privileged on market that was acquired via non-market means), look it up. The thing is, it applies only to land. Big landowners are in position collect Ricardian rent due to specifics of supply they control. Nobody else really.

      --
      Python is nice quick and flexible... but it provides so much rope a monkey would hang the whole ecosystem with it. -- in
    3. Re:Downside of neutrality by Duhavid · · Score: 1

      I have no problem with commercial profit making.

      If Ricardian rent has no application outside land, why bring it up?
      Or do you think it applies here?
      I'll assume you believe it applies, while recognizing I may be off beam.

      "In economics, Ricardian rent is a type of economic rent created by variation in resource quality."

      Variation in resource quality.....

      So, using the QoS to cause a variation in resource quality that
      you did not find naturally occuring in order to extract additional
      money.

      Close enough to extortion to me.

      How about I cause a "variation in resource quality" by
      standing on the road with a gun, pay and pass, or dont
      pay and get shot. It's just commercial profit making.

      --
      emt 377 emt 4
    4. Re:Downside of neutrality by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      Well, yes. But what's the difference between offering an inferior service to a third party internet company (e.g. iTunes) who refuses to pay extra, and offering a superior service to a third party internet company (e.g. my hypothetical VoD service) who wants to pay extra to get the required end to end bandwidth?

    5. Re:Downside of neutrality by Duhavid · · Score: 1

      The difference is in who choses ( and why ).

      If your hypothetical VoD company cant afford a bigger pipe,
      and they chose to buy a small one, that is one thing.

      If the carrier decides that your VoD service is profitable,
      and they use QoS to part you from your money, after taking
      money for the use of the pipe already, that is quite another.

      --
      emt 377 emt 4
    6. Re:Downside of neutrality by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      Okay, I see the moral distinction. The problem is that I see no way to word a law that would allow one of these and not the other. Whether you offer a faster connection to your end user for those who will pay, or a slower connection to the end user to those who don't, there isn't a way to distinguish between these case reliably.

    7. Re:Downside of neutrality by Duhavid · · Score: 1

      For clarity, I have no objection to ISP's offering
      different classes of service ( choice ), and
      pricing them accordingly. I.E. if I want to get
      the slow DSL or Cable option, then I should not
      expect the fast service. I would expect that the
      slow service would be priced at something, and faster
      options would be priced higher.

      I would have an objection ( and I would think that a law
      could be written to disallow ) the ISP's and any
      other interconnections/entities between the end user and
      a non-isp ( or isp, for that matter ) service provider
      doing anything to choke traffic. They should route
      and nothing else. First come, first served. No
      looking at the "from" or "to", except to route. No
      looking at the packet data. Like with most laws, it
      would still be possible for them to do it, but they
      would be liable for it if/when caught.

      --
      emt 377 emt 4
  42. The Atlantic ocean. by Polski+Radon · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Please remain on your side of the pond.

  43. A New Internet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I propose we geeks of the world unite to form a new internet, that requires a great deal of technical know-how to perform the same functions as the current one does. This will prevent non-geeks from seeing the benefits of transferring over, and so only people who read this shall know the truth - that we will return the internet to it's rightful owners - for did not Jesus say unto his disciples "Let the Geeks inherit (Middle) Earth (Online)"?

    1. Re:A New Internet by RLiegh · · Score: 1

      I propose we geeks of the world unite to form a new internet, that requires a great deal of technical know-how to perform the same functions as the current one does.

      Hope you plan on financing and laying down the fiber; I'm sure as shit not gonna.

  44. Re:Good, the Internet will continue to be free by troll+-1 · · Score: 1

    We don't need the FCC regulating the Internet. Not for "neutrality" or any other excuse someone can think of.

    Yeah, we need to allow the telcos, for example, to ban VOIP traffic so they can keep their prices artificially high. We also need to let the ISP for company X, restrict traffic for company X's competitor, Y. While we're at it, let's chuck out *all* antitrust legislation and allow the free market to sort everything out.

  45. Tech-Regulation Bills are *seldom* well written by billstewart · · Score: 4, Insightful
    There are some serious concerns, and there's not a chance in the world of Congress writing a good bill about it. Writing legislation about things you don't understand seldom helps problems - it just sometimes shifts the balance of power by doing favors for your friends in return for future favors.

    In most big technical companies, it's tough enough to get your *management* to understand the critical technical issues. (If you work in a small startup, there's a good chance that some of the main players do understand, but if you're big enough to have VC-funded management and an HR department, it's pretty likely that have the management aren't technical enough.) Getting *Congresscritters* to understand anything technical is much tougher, and the FCC are a variable set of political hacks, ranging from occasional people who are outstandingly good to other people who are more concerned about regulating TV coverage of Janet Jackson's boobs.

    The MoveOn.org petition-distributors don't understand the real issues, so the things they're telling the Democrat Congresscritters aren't helping their ignorance any. Some of the big customers understand some of the real issues. The telecom company managers have demonstrated that while they may understand some of the issues, they'd rather do a bone-headed arrogant "It's Our Money" regulatory play than try to talk technology to the public.

    --

    Bill Stewart
    New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
    1. Re:Tech-Regulation Bills are *seldom* well written by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      Congress writing a good bill about it.

      Congresscritters almost never write their own laws these days. Thats why so many laws are talked about as "sponsored by" a representative rather than "written by". The USA PATRIOT act for instance, was written by Ashcroft (or more likely, a group of people represented by Ashcroft, and put forth as the "Department of Justice")

    2. Re:Tech-Regulation Bills are *seldom* well written by IAmTheDave · · Score: 1
      Writing legislation about things you don't understand seldom helps problems - it just sometimes shifts the balance of power by doing favors for your friends in return for future favors.

      True that - let's give the FCC - the ultimate censors themselves - the right to regulate what's "fair" on the internet. I mean, I know the FCC is the defacto "communications" government agency, but couldn't they put the net neutrality monitoring responsibilities on someone else?

      Not that it matters, since more money was handed out against net neutrality.

      --
      Excuse my speling.
      Making The Bar Project
    3. Re:Tech-Regulation Bills are *seldom* well written by phlinn · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Given that the companies in question own the lines, I can't approve of legislation that would tell them what they could or couldn't do with it in principle. They should be held to their contracts, and little else. Unfortunately, principle is compromised because they've already been helped out by the government in all sorts of ways. (Right of Way, eminent domain, etc.) Amazing how government action creates more issues, which the goverment must then take further action on... However, the simplest solution may be revoke the common carrier protections of any telecom that chooses to discriminate. IIRC, they can't be prosecuted for illegal materials present on their network because of the common carrier status. I think it's likely that a telecom which started giving preferential treatment to some services would start losing customers, depending on how preferences were handled.

      --
      "Pulling together is the aim of despotism and tyranny! Free men pull in all sorts of directions" -- Havelock Vetinari
    4. Re:Tech-Regulation Bills are *seldom* well written by lgw · · Score: 1

      The USA PATRIOT act for instance, was written by Ashcroft

      At least one title in that USA-PATRIOT act was written by John Kerry, and he contributed to others. Some legislators write bills, some just review proposed bills handed to them. I'm not sure which is worse.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    5. Re:Tech-Regulation Bills are *seldom* well written by Grunschev · · Score: 1

      At least one title in that USA-PATRIOT act was written by John Kerry, and he contributed to others

      Silly me, I thought John Yoo wrote the act.

      http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1615418/p osts

  46. Cool idea! by Opportunist · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Reps and Dems are in this together, so all you gotta do is vote for some alterna... oh.

    Hmmm...

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  47. I want one that is MINE to configure by Opportunist · · Score: 2, Insightful

    10mb or 1Gb doesn't matter, as long as someone else dictates at what speeds you may go where.

    I don't care if I got 1GB speed when accessing a port 80 (http) server, when at the same time I get 50kbit for streaming content, P2P or secure copy.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  48. TelCos save $ with Fiber & copper sales! -Grok by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    From a comment on Groklaw:

    Note that the "children" comments that followed this comment covered much detail regarding some specifics to part of what was in the quotes taken from the comment below - to see those comments and children of those comments go to:

    http://www.groklaw.net/comment.php?mode=display&si d=2006042600285164&title=Net+Neutrality+is+equal+t o+Freedom+of+Speech...!&type=article&order=&hidean onymous=0&pid=434496#c434501

    "Verizon and the TelCo PAC say they need to be paid for the upgrades to fiber that they are making? Well, one union lineman that works for Verizon told me that as the TELCOs install more fiber to the house, they will end up saving HUGE amounts of money, as the TELCOs will more longer need to pay for the expensive labor that is required today to maintain the copper lines (corrosion, lightning damage due to copper getting hit then equipment blowing up), as copper costs them. The Union for Telco workers is looking at fiber optics to the business or house as the biggest pink slip creator ever in the history of the Telephone Industry. Copper costs the Telephone Companies in both labor (maintance) and equipment (Fiber equipment lasts longer and does not suffer from electrical surges that are caused by every lighting storm that happens in the US ever day. Fiber does not corrode, does not conduct lighting, and is even cheaper to produce with a lower cost per foot to buy than copper... FIber is just glass! Cheap to produce and cheap to maintain... all splices to fiber lines are perfect every time. A splice to a copper line is a future failure point due to the corrosion that can then occur at that point or break in the line.

    The Telephone and cable industry does NOT need to charge more! They don't need the right to OWN the internet and charge fees to those who USE is (other than the customer side where a customer can choose the speed they want and pay the fee for it's use)! The Telephone Companies and Cable Companies are looking for their own monopoly again (only this time in restricting free speech, freedom of commerce, and to restrict and own the freedoms of competition with their own a third party tax OR TOLL BOOTH ON THE PUBLIC INTERNET where the fees then become a barrier to it's use!

    IF the Republicans pass this bill through it will cause masses of internet users to vote them out of office in the next election. The US internet user wants their internet access on every side to remain free! This is an attack by an industry on the Freedoms of Internet Access and by doing this it is a direct attack on the Freedoms of Speech! What are YOU going to do about this TODAY?"

  49. Useless men... by not-admin · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Google's Quote of the Day two days ago hit the nail on the head:

    In my many years I have come to a conclusion that one useless man is a shame, two is a law firm, and three or more is a congress.
    - John Adams

  50. March on Washington & Wall of Shame web site! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who ever attacks the "freedom of the internet", and who also votes against freedom, and who votes to give rights of ownership of the internet, or interent bandwidth control ability, to any company, or group of companies, should have their names and faces posted on a web site for all to see who they are! We need to remain free! We don't need to be looking back and wishing for yesterday! We need to march NOW. What needs to be done to get a parade and rally permit in Washington (for the entire weekend)?

    "Freedom is just another word for nothing left to lose,

    Nothing don't mean nothing honey if it ain't free, now now."

    "But I'd trade all of my tomorrows for one single yesterday"

          from: Me and Bobby McGee, written by Kris Kristofferson and Fred Foster,
            http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Me_and_Bobby_McGee

    "Nothing don't mean nothing honey if it ain't free, now now."

    A WALL OF SHAME WEB SITE is needed, and if this is not an issue to March on Washington...?

    Anyone with suggested Marching Chants?
    examples:

    We want freedom!
    Kick them out!

  51. Perhaps... by Thrakkerzog · · Score: 1

    Perhaps we should lobby against those who voted against this. We already know where their interests are. Hit them at the next election.

  52. Do you want to subsidize Google? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    Everyone's belyaching, nobody here is thinking!

      http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/mar 2006/tc20060307_164289.htm

    Democrats are just constantly reinventing Econ 101 in the wrong way.

    Telcos can not cut off the traffic, because connectivity is the very thing
    they sell. Candy store refusing to sell candy situation.

    They obviously would like to prioritize and discriminate traffic on basis
    of profitability. The point is, if they can't do it, but are forced to
    essentially subsidize cheap bandwidth, they will cut it. It's the same
    situation as 'rolling blackouts' in California, where energy companies
    forced to provide energy below costs have been doing "maintenance" of
    their generators for 25% of operation time (right).

    Bandwidth is cheap, but not free. You can "overgraze" bandwidth, just like
    you can overuse energy. The years of overinvestment during dotcom mania
    and subsequent glut in the bandwidth have indeed created abundance of
    bandwidth, but simultaneously stopped investment and development of this
    market. The bandwidth and fiber will be utilized; but the moment will come
    when it will be necessary to invest further into it. If companies cannot
    increase their revenues dependent on who uses how much bandwidth,
    clearly discriminating depending on usage, we're going to find ourselves
    in situation of overcrowded public road. Being stuck in traffic jams is a
    pack of fun!

    Bandwidth hogs obviously love he situation - at expense of the rest of the
    users. Their traffic willget through - they are smart enough to arrange this
    to happen. The legislation intended to help start-up garage will eventually
    end up as a massive, politically forced subsidy from users to Google.

    Bandwidth becomes public good. And every half-witted economist is
    capable to demonstrate that scarce public goods that are used up tend to
    be overused and unverinvested (there are public goods like time signal
    or tech standard that do not get used up the more people use them, but
    bandwidth is not this type of a public good).

    The classic countermeasure against overgrazing such public goods is - you
    guessed it - subsidizing it from taxes.

    The half-witted wonkish instinct is to subsidize the public road while
    neglecting the cost of subsidy to the opportunity cost: ok, we took that
    much money on taxes for public roads; hmm, people are unable to pay the
    energy bills now; ok, we'll increase taxes and subsidize energy; hmm, for
    unclear reason now people somehow find it increasingly difficult to buy
    housing; ok, let's subsidize housing for the least wealthy by taxing ...

    You get the idea? The doogooder instinct of a wonk requires that at all
    times implementing the sum of his good intentions would have to cost, say,
    150% of GDP. The higher level of wealth and GDP, the more he exceeds it by
    more or less the same ratio.

    This, of course, is impossible in the long run: you can't sustainably
    spend more than 100% of GDP unless the foreign loaners are willing to
    subsidize you (something that current Bush administration should take into
    account - in spite of being formally conservative, they spend taxpayer's
    money like a drunk sailor).

    Our beloved Dems again demonstrate Reagan was right: if it moves, tax it;
    if it still moves, regulate it; if it stops moving, subsidize it.

    1. Re:Do you want to subsidize Google? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We don't spend anywhere near 100% of our GDP you liberal tool. We spend less now in terms of our GDP then we did in the 80's. Get the facts straight. Of course, you're a liberal, so facts and results don't matter to you. It's all about intentions.

    2. Re:Do you want to subsidize Google? by bbdb · · Score: 1

      We don't spend anywhere near 100% of our GDP you liberal tool. We spend less now in terms of our GDP then we did in the 80's. Get the facts straight. Of course, you're a liberal, so facts and results don't matter to you. It's all about intentions.

      1. To begin with, I'm a libertarian.

      2. Learn to read with comprehension: I said that the TOTAL OF COSTS that WOULD have been imposed by implementing THE SUM OF GOOD INTENTIONS would have to exceed 100% of GDP at all times - not that this is the case today. That is, what politicians and moochers at public teat would LIKE to see bought at taxpayers' expense simply has to be greater than available resources. And this is the case with "net neutrality" bullshit: they want to force telcos not to discriminate traffic at all and then expect that other things will not worsen, that is, the internet will either become overused because companies without enough profit will simply see no business sense to invest into expanding bandwidth and infrastructure, which will ultimately require subsidizing it from taxes, which again costs you somewhere else. But the proponents of "net neutrality" are either freeloaders or greedy fools.

      3. Re supposedly lower fraction of GDP taken over by all combined levels of govt, I would like to see your source - because none of my sources has indicated smth like that. Even during Reagan times that fraction just more or less stopped growing, not fell. Clinton was of no help. Bush certainly is no fiscal conservative either!

      Geez, what's the matter with people today, just shouting and not paying any attention to details. Politics has become pure shouting match it seems.

      --
      Python is nice quick and flexible... but it provides so much rope a monkey would hang the whole ecosystem with it. -- in
    3. Re:Do you want to subsidize Google? by dangermouse · · Score: 2, Insightful
      What the hell are you talking about?

      Everybody pays for their bandwidth already-- the price of connectivity is pegged to how much traffic you generate. If Google, Amazon, et al. create more traffic, they buy more bandwidth to carry it. Payment scales with use right now. There's no such thing as more or less profitable traffic, for a telco-- traffic is traffic-- and there's no reason there should be.

      This is not about making payment scale with use. This is a shakedown.

      The analogy you draw to the California energy companies is surprisingly apt-- that was a shakedown, too.

    4. Re:Do you want to subsidize Google? by bbdb · · Score: 1

      Yes, there are sound economic reasons to differentiate between various kinds of traffic - QoS is one of them for instance, buying USAGE of bandwidth (not top bandwidth) in bulk is another.

      I think the impossibility of buying end-to-end bandwidth in bulk or "retail", with different latency, bandwidth and reliability in the current model is the reason the truly massive internet TV is still not here (I'm talking smth on the scale competitive to regular TV networks).

      Check standard economics - bandwidth is a wide-area resource like many other resources.

      Telcos have this rule of thumb - the link can be only two of the following three: cheap, reliable, high-capacity. Honestly, it's true, it's not conspiracy or smth.

      The current internet model deluded the greedy fools into thinking you can have all three if you only force someone to offer it through "proper" legislation.

      The result is that your IP service alternates depending on traffic between either cheap and high-capacity, but without guaranteed QoS, and cheap and reliable but without really high bandwidth.

      When you pay the ISP here that me with various top bandwidth available (e.g. I have a choice between 160/320/1280/3270 kbps), but that obviously comes without end-to-end QoS. Which, honestly, I find more and more irritating. I would be more than happy to pay small amount of money for selected, QoS guaranteed access to e.g. selected internet TV stations, while the rest of my traffic would be regular service like we have now - no guarantee that IP packet will arrive, no info about latency, but it's OK for mail or Web.

      What we have now is the worst of both worlds of commercial, profit maximizing and traffic discrimination, but with lousy quality and reliability of public good. That's what you get when you try to stuff various services that could live with different tradeoffs re latency, bandwidth, reliability and cost into a single standardized traffic without QoS.

      ATM was supposed to solve this problem (it had built-in QoS), but it fell through.

      --
      Python is nice quick and flexible... but it provides so much rope a monkey would hang the whole ecosystem with it. -- in
    5. Re:Do you want to subsidize Google? by iamwahoo2 · · Score: 1

      You are short-sighted. You are willing to re-engineer the internet for better television. I prefer to imagine all of the innovative things that could come from providing increased bandwidth for all applications and allowing the users at the networks ends do whatever the heck they want with that bandwidth. The Internet 2 has brought an incredible amount of value to Universities and government agencies. It will be an enormous benefit to the economy when home-users, large businesses, and small businesses all have similar high-speed internet. It is sad that the only thing some people want is yet another way to distribute television.

  53. Re:Good, the Internet will continue to be free by livewire98801 · · Score: 2
    Throw out IP patents and software copyright with it, and you've got yourself a deal. Passing the 'Net Neutrality' laws will interfere with QoS and your 'level playing field' will never turn into a game worth playing. If these big ISPs start filtering access the way everyone is describing, it will push the customer base back to the local, private ISPs that have been dissapearing latley. How is that a bad thing for us?

    What we need is a (near) completley deregulated internet, and privacy on our home computers. If ATT and SBC start filtering Google and Amazon, then maybe ppl will sign up with companies like Speakeasy and other local providers.

    --
    "He may be mad, but there's method in his madness. [...] It's what drives men mad, being methodical." G.K.Chesterton
  54. Charging the consumer surplus by golodh · · Score: 4, Insightful
    What will happen in the absence of enforced net-neutrality can be understood using a smidgeon of economic theory. The point is that Telecoms companies will be free to charge users for what it's _worth_ to them to have their data sent, rather than what it _costs_ the Telecos to send it.

    When you think of Google, Amazon, Ebay etc. ... their whole business depends on telecommunication, so that what it's worth to them to have their data sent is basically their entire profit margin, which is non-zero. So ... at the moment they are enjoying a benefit which is known as "consumer surplus". Consumer surplus is the area between a demand curve and a given (fixed) price (see e.g. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consumer_surplus).

    Any marketeer knows that to get the maximum amount of money out of a market, you have to deal with each consumer individually, and price your goods to exactly what he's willing to pay. You can do that if his negotiation position is completely transparant to you, i.e. if you know his demand curve.

    Now that extreme is too bothersome, so what do you do? You segment the market into sections that have approximately the same willingness to pay. For each segment you then negotiate a price close to the minimum willingness to pay for that segment. You won't get all the revenue you would have if you were able to charge each consumer the maximum price they're willing to pay, but you're getting close.

    The trick is to identify the segments in the first place, and to gain a strong negotiating position. Identifying your customers is the basic step to figuring out their willingness to pay, and of late we have seen Cisco routers that do exactly that. So that's one hole plugged.

    The second issue is to gain a strong negotiating position. That's all taken care of because the telecom companies have ensured that all electronic traffic must pass through their infrastructure.

    The only remaining problem was that it wasn't legal for them to bluntly start pricing each individual customer what they would pay. Now with the removal of "net-neutrality" this is taken care of as well. Telecom companies can simply induce unacceptable delays as follows:

    - (1) allocate reserved bandwidth channels on their infrastructure for customers that are prepared to pay more (got to provide superior service if we're going to charge more, right?)

    - (2) route traffic in those channels with priority over existing infrastructure

    - (3) watch natural traffic growth of priority traffic squeeze the performance of the non-priority traffic

    - (4) politely but firmly negotiate large price increases with large customers such as Google, Ebay, Amazon who can't live with the now much reduced performance of their services

    All legal, all neat. Telcos increase their profits at the expense of the (large corporate) users of telecoms facilities. Of course it won't stop there. Individual consumers and small businesses are next. Not satisfied with your Internet performance? (hehehe) Subscribe to our Deluxe service!

    If you think I'm making any of this up, then see Cisco's pitch of its routers that can identify traffic here http://www.corecom.com/ftpdir/pub/corecom/iprev-bi lling.ppt. as powerpoint and here as html: http://66.249.93.104/search?q=cache:dt-ljUr4k5QJ:w ww.corecom.com/ftpdir/pub/corecom/iprev-billing.pp t+cisco+routers+identify+traffic+tiered+charge&hl= en&gl=uk&ct=clnk&cd=8

    The only cloud in the sky is the fact that the Telecoms companies don't create value in this way. They simply take away consumer surplus. Gi

    1. Re:Charging the consumer surplus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I see political warfare get to another level of idiocy and manipulation - simple, plain, old profit maximization is renamed into "consumer surplus", et voila, you have the bad, bad conspiracy! Get this, companies are for profit! They take it! WAAAA! We've never seen it before! WAAAAAAAA! They should be public utilities! WAAAAA! I want it free! WAAAAAA! It will work better! WAAAA!

      Either that or you've been paid by Google to produce this rubbish. Or possibly Democrat political strategists? Either have the money and brains and motivation to sway morons.

    2. Re:Charging the consumer surplus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
      ... The point is that Telecoms companies will be free to charge users for what it's _worth_ to them to have their data sent, rather than what it _costs_ the Telecos to send it.

      Prices are set by the market (generally) not "_costs_". A rational buyer will pay a price equal to or less than the worth of a good/service - preferably less even under cost if possible (ever buy a used car?).

      What is more amazing than that idiot, armchair economists is all the dumbshits here crying to congress to save them. Let the big companies act like asshats and the market will sort things out. It might be a _good_ thing if incentives, _strong_ incentives developed to route around them. P2P connectivity or whathaveyou. Encrypted, proxied networks by default so the telecos don't know what you are doing.

      As to VOIP. BFD, seriously. It is not "killer". V-traffic will continue to fall in price for the simple reason that most people don't want or need to talk to more than one person at once and seen that one person's ugly mug during the conversation is value-subtracted not value-added. V is dying as a profit center. Nevermind the death throlls.

      Why is it that now government is the answer to this non-existant "problem"? Good thing the whacko religious nuthats weren't pro-active in preventing all the porn "probs" you people enabled.

    3. Re:Charging the consumer surplus by golodh · · Score: 1
      "What is more amazing [...] is all the dumbshits here crying to congress to save them."
      I thought that we wanted the status quo (net neutrality) to be maintained. In fact we very much want Congress not to do anything at all in the matter.

      "Let the big companies act like asshats and the market will sort things out."
      Well by that reasoning we might as well do away with any fair-competition laws. The market will sort things out, right? The problem is that there are lots of markets that are skewed towards one of the market parties. As reflected in the prices. Given that we, the public, are in last instance the ones who have to live with what the markets come up with, I submit that we have evry right and reason to set some restrictions on what type of market we wish to see. The public have a legitimate interest too, which may at times set limits to what markets are allowed to do.
      "It might be a _good_ thing if incentives, _strong_ incentives developed to route around them. P2P connectivity or whathaveyou. Encrypted, proxied networks by default so the telecos don't know what you are doing."
      There are a few difficulties with the course of action you propose:

      - those "good strong incentives" you're talking about mean that the situation will have to get a whole lot worse before we all scramble to fix the mess and it gets any better. That sort of thing is technically known as "bang-bang control". Although I appreciate that precisely this may appeal to some, it's universally regarded as sub-optimal systems control. I'd rather not get into a mess in the first place. Why? Because telecommunication affects every individual and business ine the country. Every glitch and imperfaction in it will hurt us. And unreasonable prices will do so too.

      - for communication you need a network. Even P2P needs some physical infrastructure somewhere. And that's what we're talking about. Even if you meant to string physical point to point connections, you would in effect be duplicating the existing network ... just in order to get competition. Seems a gross waste of capital all around to build a network twice just to have competition. And who's to say that one of the two networks won't acquire the other and starts the whole game afresh?

      - it's legally prohibited to encrypt your telephone communications (the NSA and the FBI have to have access when they demand it)

      - the Telcos don't absolutely need to know the content of your traffic. They can refine their billing if they do, but even if they don't they can hold up Ebay, Amazon, and Google for the traffic they generate. The "who is talking to whom" information is part of the network routing information, and that's under the Telco's control.

      'Why is it that now government is the answer to this non-existant "problem"?'
      It's because network-bound markets (rail, telephone, water, electricity) are usually imperfect and flawed. That's a problem if you're dependent on the prices that this flawed market will generate. Government is the only way we've come up with to regulate markets so that even when they're flawed they aren't a nuisance.
    4. Re:Charging the consumer surplus by bbdb · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Well by that reasoning we might as well do away with any fair-competition laws. The market will sort things out, right?

      Right, true - market will sort it out - even if its solution is second-best, the parlament will come up with solution that in practice will be fifth-best. If not the worst of all possible outcomes.

      The problem is that there are lots of markets that are skewed towards one of the market parties.

      You're just amateurishly abusing economics of public goods and economics of welfare. This is bullshit. Look up Pareto or Pigou.

      As reflected in the prices. Given that we, the public, are in last instance the ones who have to live with what the markets come up with, I submit that we have evry right and reason to set some restrictions on what type of market we wish to see.

      Oh yes, let's have your and whacko's sentiments rule!

      Our intents are pure and the goal is good, hooray!

      Haven't we seen that before? Great Society? Stagflation? War on poverty that poverty won? Fuckups of New Deal? Breakup of Bretton Woods? Econ stagnation in Europe now?

      How do you know that your regulation will not produce effects that are WORSE than whatever market brings? Is politics SANE and RATIONAL and WELL INFORMED in your world? Maybe it's planet Zurgundia where you live?

      Your explanations are dandy in the mind of zealous, simpleton morons. That's the only place where they work.

      Yes, there is category of market formations known as oligopolies, vertical monopolies or things like "market failures". So what. Political volatility and systematic errors that are standard element of basically all policies are per saldo even worse from my point of view. The cure is worse than disease.

      The public have a legitimate interest too, which may at times set limits to what markets are allowed to do.

      The public doesn't understand a squat of it all, and the feeble-minded morons in parliaments understand even less.

      --
      Python is nice quick and flexible... but it provides so much rope a monkey would hang the whole ecosystem with it. -- in
    5. Re:Charging the consumer surplus by golodh · · Score: 1
      Yes, there is category of market formations known as oligopolies, vertical monopolies or things like "market failures". So what. Political volatility and systematic errors that are standard element of basically all policies are per saldo even worse from my point of view. The cure is worse than disease.
      Glad to see you agree with me on the existence of market failures at least ... it's so hard to argue with someone who is religious (even about markets) that you had me worried for a moment.

      Personally I wish to see the utility nature of telecommunications continued, and I don't see any reason why that would cripple us. Your claims of doom whenever government lifts a finger notwithstanding. So a continuation of the current legislation that enforces net-neutrality is fine by me.

      Now a market in which every Telco will charge according to what traffic you generate and with whom ... and who will put a tax on companies like Ebay, Amazon, Google, and Yahoo, now that's something I'd rather not have.

      Let the profits stay with with the companies that did something innovative to generate them, not companies that just sit there on their infrastructure (already paid for by their customers), prepare to profit by removing the consumer surplus, and abuse the fact that its infrastructure presents so high a barrier to entry so that they can overcharge their clients with impunity.

      Oh, and if you feel that my posts are unduly amateurish (consider this forum will you?), might I right cordially invite you to remedy this by presenting us with a short analysis of the impacts of a removal of the net-neutrality principle on current customers (both individuals and large service providers)? Your review should take account of the particularities of network-based services, with special attention to market imperfections. When including references to the literature, use the Harvard system of referencing. Please submit your paper by next week Friday. The use of profanity will be marked down.

    6. Re:Charging the consumer surplus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Well by that reasoning we might as well do away with any fair-competition laws.

      Riddle me this: Would you do without the federal MSFT case if it also did away with the DMCA? That is _not_ a false dichotomy. Once you invite a tinkerer into your engine, don't expect full control of what that wrench hits.

  55. It's good that this bill fell by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

    For once the public interest was served - you lot love to whine about telcos while misunderstanding that Google and others - say, P2P users - are FREELOADERS, basically using up what functions like a public good!

    There is no good and bad side to this story. The Democrats supporting "net neutrality" most probably know very well they are acting AGAINST PUBLIC INTEREST - there's enough of experts, as opposed to bug-eyed, shrill slashdotters, who understand how it works. Yes, there are advantages to flat rates, as papers by Andrew Odlyzko has shown. But this has been the result of customer demand, not heavy and dumb hand of the government!

    You are deeply mistaken if you think you can fix it or that Dems are honest enough to tell you how it works in cases when they happen to understand this issue.

    Follow the money.

    Who supported the bill? Bandwidth hogs. Who opposed it? Those in first line to subsidize. Who tried to exploit this issue to score political points? The lawmakers. There is no good and bad side here, there are only vested interests.

    1. Re:It's good that this bill fell by saltydogdesign · · Score: 1

      Uh, both Google and P2P users already pay for bandwidth.

      --
      // This is not a sig.
    2. Re:It's good that this bill fell by bbdb · · Score: 1

      Uh, both Google and P2P users already pay for bandwidth.

      Uh, they don't.

      They pay more like for AVAILABILITY of bandwidth, limited at the top.

      So they OVERUSE it, FREELOAD by using more than other users, say, granma whose only purpose of having DSL modem is accessing webmail page. Who incidentally simply don't mind up to a point thanks to consumer's psychology of flat rate.

      It's all fine and dandy as long as we talk not much bandwidth. But this keeps down applications that carry really, really huge bandwidth. Flat-rate consumers who use below average do not mind paying more for bandwidth that they did not use and that is subsequently abused by P2Pers and Googles being freeloaders. That's it, however, they don't want to subsidize more than that. So they don't. So high-bandwidth applications like massive internet TV can't get the foot in the door.

      You either troll or deliberately try to conflate various qualities of bandwidth together purposefully: used bandwidth or potential bandwidth?

      With QoS or without it? What latency, what band, what cost, what reliability?

      I suspect you're like trivial P2Per (hey, me too, I'm just not lying about it) who typically wants his habit subsidized and simply doesn't mind Google doing the same.

      Who's bad party - TELCOS! ME WANNA OVERUSE CAPACITY FOR FREE, WAAAA!

      Sure, telcos are selfish, cynical bastards. They definitely are.

      But all this brainless shouting seems designed to conceal that shouters are selfish, cynical bastards, too - just this time you want to be on the freeloading side.

      Uh, uh, uh. Hiding something behind the Uh?

      --
      Python is nice quick and flexible... but it provides so much rope a monkey would hang the whole ecosystem with it. -- in
    3. Re:It's good that this bill fell by saltydogdesign · · Score: 1

      That's horseshit. Show me the clause in any ISP agreement that defines "overuse." If I buy unlimited access, which is exactly what the majors have been hawking for years now, the company selling it to me hardly has cause to complain if I use it more than they'd prefer. Hope is not a business plan.

      --
      // This is not a sig.
    4. Re:It's good that this bill fell by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sorry, was there an argument in there somewhere? All I heard was whine whine whine whine whine whine whine whine whine. FREELOADERS!!!

      Get a life. If the ISPs' business model is really getting killed by this, let them raise the rates or charge for this alleged "overuse".

    5. Re:It's good that this bill fell by bbdb · · Score: 1

      No, you talk horseshit. And I can prove it:

      http://www.dtc.umn.edu/~odlyzko/doc/history.commun ications1b.pdf

      ("Internet pricing and the history of communications" by Andrew Odlyzko)

      In short, in earliest, old days of yore AOL (9600 bps phone modems were fun, I'm telling you. not. these days 38400 bps was broadband technology) and pretty much every ISP tried to get users to pay for bandwidth used or time spent on net.

      It DIDN'T WORK. The users stubbornly wanted flat rate and that's it, even if they were not using it all, agreeing to systematically pay more than if they went with typical "phone bill" model. Come to think of it, it's crazy. And so the businesses went with it: customers demanded flat rate, they got it.

      The standard economics has it that way:

      "Although flat-rate continues to be the predominant form in which Internet access is sold, that form of pricing is unviable. Flat-rate pricing encourages waste and requires 20 percent of users who account for 80 percent of the traffic to be subsidized by other users and other forms of revenue. Furthermore, flat-rate pricing is incompatible with quality-differentiated services."

      Something not entirely clearly understood in consumers' psychology makes us massively insist on flat rate for internet, though we still have little problem with traditional model of charging per minute for phone calls. It should be pretty obvious, shouldn't it? Flat rate, not paying for bandwidth used but only for available is exclusively an artifact of consumer's psyche. From standard economic viewpoint that works for water, electricity, phone calls and legal services, flat rate is wasteful and non-optimal.

      P2P and Google and the like are the ones who gorge on that bandwidth, paid for by guys who for some crazy Freudian reasons are willing to pay for more bandwidth than they actually use. Economically, it's like allowing your phone company to bill you for using phone by other people. That said, there are such things out there: like people who buy gym membership cards and use them less than they intended (which is exactly what gym owners count on, thus being able to oversell their resources).

      Now, Odlyzko has shown very convincingly why for complicated reasons peculiar to internet this is not the case for internet. Still, it doesn't have to mean that "stratifying" or "segmenting" the internet services could not help in its development. At worst we will fall back to the flat-rate, no-QoS, no bulk discounts model.

      Suppose you go to gas stations and you are forced to buy only one type of gasoline that is subsidized and poor quality. Happy with the picture? So far we have been putting up with exactly such situation on the internet. Well, I for one am sick of it. Why not try smth new? OHMYGOD THE TELCOS ARE GONNA EAT MY ASS!

      You're all a bunch of panicky sheep, pussies.

      My God, what is it with you people! The net grows exponentially dumb these days! This is supposed to be the place for people knowing a thing or two about technology, economics and the world in general?! Is it contagious knuckledraggia epidemics? WTF?!

      --
      Python is nice quick and flexible... but it provides so much rope a monkey would hang the whole ecosystem with it. -- in
    6. Re:It's good that this bill fell by saltydogdesign · · Score: 1

      Dude, you're insane. You talk about market forces like they're some quirk that businesses need to circumvent. Moreover, you're failing to distinguish between the subject at hand -- namely equality of packets, and schemes for buying volume. Capping bandwidth and offering levels of service to users is totally different than what everyone else here is talking about.

      And one more thing: you're also snotty and rude. Reading one mathematician's paper doesn't make you an expert. His opinions have value, but they're not "proof," they're an argument -- one which you weild like an eleven-year old with an AK-47. I'm done with this "conversation." Fact is, it would take me too long to iterate over the basic factual errors you make to even get to the core of what you're saying (e.g. You can easily get flat phone rates, you can pay a lawyer on retainer, and depending on where you live, flat water rates are also available).

      So the final word is yours. Take it and spew some more of the bilious crap you've been spewing. Better yet, put that "panicky pussies" bit in your business plan and see how it flies. Just don't have the nerve to tell us Google doesn't pay out the ass for bandwidth.

      --
      // This is not a sig.
    7. Re:It's good that this bill fell by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When they devise what their flat rate should be, I presume that they're not just making it up. I presume that they actually consider how much the average user will cost, and factor in some sort of prediction that x% of users will "over-use" and y% of users will "under-use", and so z$/mo becomes the rate based on x and y. It's probably not too hard to solve that problem and still churn in a profit.

  56. Re:March on Washington & Wall of Shame web sit by Ph33r+th3+g(O)at · · Score: 1

    Won't much matter--the ISPs on the Wall of Shame could just block it, and they'll have the FCC behind them thanks to the generosity of their lobbyists.

    --
    I too have felt the cold finger of injustice.
  57. Stop the local monopolies by jtwJGuevara · · Score: 1

    Ya know, I think making the net non-neutral in this case, inherently, is not a bad thing. I honestly would not be upset at all if the isp or carriers directed me to specific content if I subscribed to their service IF (and this is a big if) they did not possess local monopolies. As such, my only choice where I live for broadband is timewarner/road runner. Thus, if this bill passes, I'm subject to whatever content timewarner decides to push to me instead of me having a choice. Again, I don't think on the face of it this is a bad thing, but the current infrastucture makes it a bad thing. Remove local monopolies first before this is considered.

    1. Re:Stop the local monopolies by saltydogdesign · · Score: 1

      A couple problems with that:

      1) Let's say you have five local options. That means you're going to wind up with five versions of the Internet. One may throttle a sports site you like but they don't throttle a political site you like. So you switch, only to find the situation reversed. Imagine if electricity worked like this: go to one company and you can use your TV, but not your washing machine. Go to a different company and the washing machine works, but not the TV.

      2) Removal of local monopolies is pie in the sky. These companies own the copper, and the only people that can pry it out of their hands is Congress. How long has it been since Congress last had the cojones to split up a big monopoly? 24 years ago. There's not even any movement to split up the local monopolies -- quite the contrary: they just keep getting more and more monopolistic.

      --
      // This is not a sig.
    2. Re:Stop the local monopolies by saltydogdesign · · Score: 1

      A correction: I meant the Justice department, not Congress.

      --
      // This is not a sig.
  58. Save Me. Also, WTF?! by WCD_Thor · · Score: 0, Troll

    Please save me, there will be no freedom when companys own the net. Also, who the hell is to say that the United States government gets to decide what the internet can and cannot due, isn't the net supposed to be some kind of international world. Oh wait, we will only get that when the net is truely virtual, using no physical conections that can be blocked in any way. Also, f**k rich ass companies.

  59. Re:March on Washington & Wall of Shame web sit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Can't do the blocking. And this move by the Telcos is like the days when the Queen of England put a tax on the colony in America for Tea and Sugar. It was unfair and was to the benefit of the monopoly power at the expense of who?

    When things are unfair folks know it. This Telco proposal is unfair.

    For those in congress that support the Telco internet monopoly actions!

    We want Freedom!
    Kick them out.

    Let's go to Washington with a Freedom March, and get Millions to march both in Washington and on-line as well!

  60. Re:Trolling On Slashdot by SamSim · · Score: 1

    Fascinating. One question though: How do you know when your Karma has gone down to -4 or -5? Karma hasn't been a numerical value for YEARS.

    Here's how: you steal your material from the distant past.

    Also see this article on that very comment.

    YHL. HAND.

  61. Politicians Also Use the Net by ziny · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I wonder if anyone has pointed out to these astute members of Congress that without net neutrality it would be possible for well-funded opponents to pay for much better access of their campaign websites to voters? Also, moving beyond the Googles, Amazons and Yahoos, does all this mean that superchurches will have better access to me than my local Methodist church, that the Havards and Stanfords will have better access to my college-bound children than the nearby small four-year liberal arts college, that it will be easier to buy a ticket to a Broadway show than one to a local production by the hometown theater company? The net should be regulated in a manner similar to a common carrier. To expect the telcos and cable operators to play fair is like expecting someone who cheats at cards to play fair. Telcos and cable operators have routinely stacked the deck in the past. I expect them to continue to do so.

  62. U.S. netizens should take action for this by unity100 · · Score: 1

    Responsibility for holding the net's grounds lies now in u.s. citizens. You people should blow the ears off your senators.

  63. Instead of lobbying... by Mofaluna · · Score: 1

    companies like google, microsoft and amazon should simply setup their servers to have every goverment related ip address be blessed with an ultra low bandwith version of their service. The monkeys in congress would quickly figure out why net neutrality is so important...

    1. Re:Instead of lobbying... by beedle · · Score: 1

      Do you know what would really be funny? If all those web companies just straight blacklisted all of those government ip addresses. People seem to forget that the internet is only as useful as the information that you are able to find on it. No search engine support = no website visitors.

  64. meh by mark_jabroni · · Score: 1
    On one side, there are a few content providers and geeks who complain about how awful this will make things.

    On the other side, there are a bunch of businesses who claim they can make money, which boosts the economy and creates jobs.

    I'm all for net neutrality ... but, frankly, unless the geeks have a good economic case to make, I don't see why congress should listen to us.

    1. Re:meh by saltydogdesign · · Score: 1

      How about this: Repubs frequently harp on the importance of small businesses to the U.S. economy. But this would act like a massive tax on small businesses, who would have to pay or be throttled out of the market.

      Think about it: the Internet boom was a result of cheap access to a new medium. Take that away and you think it will do the economy good?

      --
      // This is not a sig.
    2. Re:meh by The+Cisco+Kid · · Score: 1

      It will be good for the large monopoly telecom providers who already post huge profits (while at the same time whining about competition and slashing jobs and pay)

      It will be bad for 'consumers', small businesses, start-ups, and entrepreneurs with lots of innovative new ideas but no huge buckets of capital.

      Telecom customers already pay for high speed access, and web service providers (eg google, etc), already pay for the high bandwidth connections. Why should they have to pay *again* to not be blocked or throttled?

  65. Re:Hmm... Technicalities/FCC by moeinvt · · Score: 1

    Even if the legislation had been approved, the wording from the article seems a little sketchy in terms of what it would actually accomplish. Giving the FCC "The Power" to enforce a net neutrality policy doesn't mean that they actually WILL. Have we already lost? If the telecoms have managed to twist the debate into a question of FCC power as opposed to a fundamental discussion on net neutrality, we've definitely been weakened. If my interpretation is correct, this would just shift the question from a corrupt legislature to a corrupt government agency.

  66. Not just geeks, Gun Owners, Libraries all mad too! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    The coalition against the Telcos is wide, and strong, and is both from the liberal and conservative end of the political spectrum. The only ones who really want this are the Telcos, the Cable providers, and their lobby firms, AND who they have paid off in Washington.

    http://www.savetheinternet.com/

    Coalition Sounds Off on Net Neutrality Legislation - 04.24.06
    http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,1895,1953085,00.as p

    "Vint Cerf, so-called "father" of the Internet, is among the big names and organizations that have come together to create the SavetheInternet.com Coalition, which hosted a national conference call today.

    Other members of the Coalition include Gun Owners of America, Craigslist.com, Public Knowledge, MoveOn.org, the American Library Association, Afro-Netizen.com, the Consumer Federation of America, the Consumers Union, and Free Press." ...and since this is an "old" article - more have signed on since it was published.

    Call to all geeks... "if you are a geek, then do something about it"!
    March on Washington. "We want freedom, kick them out"!

  67. Re:Good, the Internet will continue to be free by moeinvt · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I respectfully disagree. I'm inclined toward free market capitalism, but the model just doesn't work when public funding has entered the equation and there are institutionalized monopolies in that market. Your independent ISPs STILL have to go through networks owned by the big Telcos or cable companies. If the Internet is fully "de-regulated" as you suggest, those companies will be able to slow down the service you get from the little guys, and/or make it more expensive. Consumers will definitely gravitate toward whoever provides the best service for the money. "De-regulation" is a nice buzz word, but when the consumer is locked into a market where a monopoly dictates availability and price of the service, "free market" capitalism is broken.

  68. I'd rather subsidize Google than Iraq by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


       

  69. Committees, sigh by fnj · · Score: 1

    Interestingly, the word "committee" does not appear in the US Constitution (neither does the word "party" in the context of political party). I highly doubt the designers envisioned a bunch of committees having a stranglehold on the entire operation of the legislative branch of the government (nor but two rigidly disciplined political parties, disguising the fact that they are Tweedledum and Tweedledee, having unassailable joint rule of the entire nation for an eternity).

    1. Re:Committees, sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Say what you want about the parties being equal, but, you must admit: there would be no war with Iraq if Gore were in the White House in 2003. Sure, the dems in congress and the senate gave Bush a rubber stamp, but Gore was vehemently opposed to the invasion before it happened.

      So whenever people say that the party affiliation really doesn't matter, I jump right to: Iraq. Iraq Iraq Iraq. A huge collossal mistake resulting in thousands of deaths which boiled down to two men of differen party affiliation.

  70. Re:Hmm... Technicalities. by hackerb9 · · Score: 1

    Actually, no, net neutrality would not eliminate QoS, fair queueing or firewalls. The Telcos wouldn't be able to discriminate between customers, but they could still give interactive and video conferencing packets a higher priority than bulk file transfers.

    Basically, net neutrality is what we have now, just codified into law.

    Here's what Congressman Boucher, a supporter of net neutrality, said about QoS:

    Consistent with these rules, a broadband provider could prioritize a category of its own bits, such as video, if it also prioritized all video bits traveling over its pipes at no cost to other service providers. Internet providers could also take reasonable and nondiscriminatory steps to manage their networks for technical efficiency, to protect network security, and to prevent illegal activity.

    Net neutrality may have lost in the House, but it's not too late to stop this. If you're a US citizen, call your senators. Now.

    --b9

  71. Re:Anyone Suprised? call your senator ANYWAY... by oneluckystar · · Score: 5, Informative

    Call your senator.
    Tell them what you think this bill will do. And mostly why you won't vote for the again or contribuite to their campaigns.
    (It is the only thing you can do, unless you are a freelance lobbyist that wants to work pro-bono for slashdotters.)

    Here is their contact information.

    http://www.senate.gov/general/contact_information/ senators_cfm.cfm

  72. Do you know how to read? It appears not! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There are both Dems and Republicans who sided on the dark side of this issue (voting against Net Neutral)! Both are wrong. The interent was created to NOT BE OWNED BY ANYONE COMANY! If the Telcos and Cable companies want to own and internet then let them create their own (and guess what, no one would use it, and that is why they want to own ours)!

    For the facts: go to http://www.savetheinternet.com/

    The Telcos and Cable Companies are the Freeloaders and Theives, wanting to step in and take over all control of the internet and TCP/IP for themselves!

  73. Re:TelCos save $ with Fiber & copper sales! -G by Jimithing+DMB · · Score: 1
    IF the Republicans pass this bill through it will cause masses of internet users to vote them out of office in the next election. The US internet user wants their internet access on every side to remain free! This is an attack by an industry on the Freedoms of Internet Access and by doing this it is a direct attack on the Freedoms of Speech! What are YOU going to do about this TODAY?"

    The more I read about this the more I wish congress would not pass it with the net neutrality provisions. You see, we currently do NOT have any law that states providers must not give preferential treatment to packets. What we do have is a set of FCC guidelines which strongly suggest this.

    Yes, that's right. Nothing currently prevents a provider from not having net neutrality. Yet for the most part they all do although I hear Comcast already throttles non-HTTP traffic to make sure HTTP traffic has priority. The real question is if a net neutrality law (which we have not had) is really desirable. So far we've gotten along without one. Why pass one now?

    If we were to pass a law, who enforces it? I suppose the FCC. That's great. Then we'd have a bunch of government bureaucrats deciding what an internet provider can and can't do. That'll help ensure innovation. Just look at the government's track record.

    Rick Boucher may sincerely believe that the federal government must be the nanny watching out for the big evil internet providers. Maybe he doesn't realize that while this may ensure continued competition in the internet content market that this is going to stifle competition in the internet service provider market.

    This net neutrality thing smacks of socialism. A few telcos float the idea that they might think about prioritizing traffic based on contracts (which is as of now currently within their rights to do) and the socialists in congress immediately try to pass a provision to codify net neutrality into law.

    My take on this is that the internet is still young. Let's see what happens! See what happens if ISPs start prioritizing traffic. There may be advantages to it. Or there may not be. If it really turns out to be bunk I assure you that people will switch ISPs and/or complain loudly. Let's keep the government out of it for now.

  74. I say this is wrong! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    On the one hand, in seems like the people who own the pipes should be able to do whatever they want with them.

    The useful bits of the pipes (the local loop) were obtained by the use of the power of government to confiscate right of way (land) and then regulation to keep others out of the market.

    Without the power of the government, they would not HAVE a business, would they? The 'ownership' of parts of the pipes is BECAUSE or government power.

    So I'm gonna say NO to your idea that 'because they own them, they can do what they want'.

    Not to mention the courts have decided long ago that if your ownership represents a hazard/harm to others your rights to do 'whatever you want' become restricted.

    Nice try....but your claim ain't correct.

  75. Re:Anyone Suprised? call your senator ANYWAY... by geoffspear · · Score: 0
    Umm, the bill isn't to allow the telecomm companies to screw the people, it's to prevent them from doing so. The fact that the House defeated it means that it's dead, and we're screwed. Writing to your Senator, even if for the first time in history a Senator actually cares what the voters think, will have absolutely no effect whatsoever.

    This is not like a situation where the House approves some awful bill and we can hope the Senate defeats it.

    --
    Don't blame me; I'm never given mod points.
  76. Re:TelCos save $ with Fiber & copper sales! -G by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Fiber does not corrode, does not conduct lighting

    Actually, the whole point of fiber is that it does conduct light(ing).

  77. Re:Do you know how to read? It appears not! by bbdb · · Score: 1

    You must have been paid to produce this crap.

    savetheinternet.com = political guerilla marketing

    Geez, get better copywriters for crying out loud, that site is rubbish.

    --
    Python is nice quick and flexible... but it provides so much rope a monkey would hang the whole ecosystem with it. -- in
  78. Re:TelCos save $ with Fiber & copper sales! -G by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A few telcos float the idea that they might think about prioritizing traffic based on contracts (which is as of now currently within their rights to do)

    First off, you're wrong. The vast majority of these ISPs are engaged in peering contracts that forbid them from charging for access to their network. Especially the largest ones, which are the ones calling for tollbooths. Of course, what do you care, contract law is absolute, except when there's money to be made, then you're "within your rights" to break them, making contracts utterly useless.

    Secondly, these are contracts over third parties. If you're so hot for them, how happy will you be when I contract with your neighbor to park their truck at the end of your driveway? How is that different from MSN contracting with ATT to have them block Google in? Of course, if we have no right to be outraged over ATT providing this service, I think you have no right to be outraged over your neighbor parking you in.

  79. Fine if we cant do it with http then we use bitp2p by rahlquist · · Score: 1

    Thats fine, if they want to play games like this then get out your RFC template and write a new standard they cant block easily or legally.

    Just a wild @$$ idea, bitp2p. The new spec outlines a new DNS tag, say BD. Much like MX records this can point to multiple servers weighted. Each server supplies the information to connect to a p2p network running its own DNS and encrypted data transfer. Since the users on this p2p network would be connected to various ISP's each will have its own advantages and disadvantages. The client software would send a page request over this p2p network and the clients will begin feeding based on whomever answers first but will stripe the data much like a bittorent tranfer. So 30 clients could each provide you with 2k of the transfer in encrypted form (which its a DMCA violation to decrypt) since the data is coming in encrypted and from many differnet locations the ISP's cant legally decrypt it nor would decrypting it do them much good unless they decrypted everything to your IP.

    Now lets see Google and MS begin working on this together in an effort to show the Telcos that nomatter how many politicians they purchase, we will not be stifled!

    --
    Sick of stupidity? http://www.patentlystupid.com
  80. The bill has nothing to do with QoS in those terms by cybrthng · · Score: 1

    Neutrality of the network keeps your right to QoS. Basically the telcos want to ban/limit/block what you can route on your connection at there perogative. Net neutrality means that they can't do that.

    Telcos don't want you doing VoIP since that competes against there products. They don't want you doing IPtv since they think they own the network that can do such.

    When i buy internet i don't buy "comcast" i buy comcasts network access to the internet. Net neutrality agreement was meant to enforce that "open access" in the most simplest form. Because the law failed comcast can now deny/filter/block data as they see fit or throttle sites to my connection as well as from my connections (because i'm hosting data)..

    net neutrality has nothing to do with how you utilize the bandwidth/service YOU buy, its how the parent you are buying it from will CONTROL the service you buy by limiting what you can do with it.

  81. Google Dark Fibre by JpMaxMan · · Score: 1

    Could this be related to the past reports of Google buying up massive amounts of dark fibre?

  82. Net Neutrality can be protected locally as well - by tlabetti · · Score: 2, Interesting

    If Slashdot members in each community where Verizon is applying to get a cable TV franchise would speak up about Net Neutrality at their local town council meetings then we have a chance at kicking a leg out from under the telcos.

    The legislation that will allow for national cable TV franchises will not be passed into law for at least a year (if at all). That gives us time to approach small towns and tell them to make Verizon put provisions into their cable TV franchise agreement for Net Neutrality.

    I know it sounds like a crazy and far fetched idea but it can work.

    All we need is a few key towns to stick up for Net Neutrality and we will have the precedent needed at the national level.

    Verizon needs to roll out their TV service as fast as they can. Holding them up at the local level is, in my opinion, the best way to protect Net Neutrality.

    Check out what we are doing in my town: www.redbanktv.org
    Thanks -- Tom

  83. Re:Trolling On Slashdot by geoffspear · · Score: 1
    So, for successful trolling, ALWAYS log in.

    ... says the (apparently unsuccessfully) trolling AC.

    --
    Don't blame me; I'm never given mod points.
  84. and Gun Owners, Librarians, Star Trek fans too? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.savetheinternet.com/

    This movement *against* the congress giving a deed of "ownership of the internet" over to the Telcos and CableCos, is beyond the economic, the political, and the international boundries of old at this point.

    There are fundamental moral questions on the table about to become law at this point in history: Should we sell our freedom to these monopolist minded Telcos, CableCos, and their breed or brood? Or... Should the Internet be free?

    IS A FREE INTERNET WORTH FIGHTING FOR?

    The problem seems to boil down to one question.

    #1 - Who in Congess has been bought off (bribed) by the Telcos and CableCos?

    see the list of members:
    http://www.savetheinternet.com/=coalition ...this listing of members (growing larger every day) covers interests from all ends of the spectum of reality and unreality?

    I am waiting for some "Fan Club of Star Trek" to sign up as supporting members of SavetheInternet.com, and endorse *Net Neutral* as well.

    When is NASA going to join http://www.savetheinternet/ as well?
    Hey - The intergallitic interested might want to be for Net Neutral and against the selling off of the internet to the Telcos and CableCos, as well (NASA) as when we move to exploring beyond and living out in space, the internet should still be free!

    The Telcos and the CableCos, they want exclusive fee charging and taxation ability, aka 100% control, over all multi-media that travels the internet! They can't create content themselves so they want a cut of everyone elses! The entertainment value of the internet connection that they charge the user for now IS 100% FREE CONTENT NOW... and they profit by that content! The Cable Industry pays for CNN, ESPN, and other programming content, and FOX NEWS now wants $1.00 per month per subscriber for the CableCos to use their content! TODAY - they collect money from all the web site time and effort created content that travels the internet and they pay nothing for that content! BUT they happily collect their monthly fees from their customers! Now they want to charge the content creators and web sites for content that is free for them to provide to their customers? Something is very upside down with that math?

    The true fear of the Telcos and CableCos, and we should fear them at this point, is that they might, once they got the deed to the internet, and the control that comes with it, they might say that ALL free multi-media, and all free and legal P2P, since it is not profitable, then this FREE USE (that they charge their customers for each month anyway) is no longer allowed. Once they got the control then what is to stop them from just deciding to do this?

    The Telcos and CableCos should not be allowed one inch of ownership of the interent, because once they have that inch, nothing will be able to prevent them from taking the next mile!

    Where is NASA, and the industry that supports space exploration, on this issue... one would think that once we start to travel and live in space that the internet should still live in freedom there as well?

    Once the Telcos and CableCos get this right from Congress there is no way to reverse the damage.

  85. Re:TelCos save $ with Fiber & copper sales! -G by internic · · Score: 1

    The point of fiber is to be transparent to light with little dissipation. That's not the same thing as being conductive. Actually, the amount of dissipation grows with the conductivity of the medium, so being electrically conductive is bad if you want to pass light with little dissipation. This is because light is an electromagnetic wave, so in a conductive medium it drives currents that heat the medium, taking energy away from the wave itself. Optical fibers are typically made of some sort of glass (perhaps some are made of plastics) and air, both of which are good electrical insulators.

    There may be fibers with, say, a conducting sheath or something. I'm not saying lightning might not be a problem for some reason, I'm only saying that a material that's good at passing light is generally not good at passing electricity.

    --
    "You call it a new way of thinking; I call it regression to ignorance!" -- Operation Ivy
  86. Re:Hmm... Technicalities. by Cylix · · Score: 1

    He who controls the spice, controls the universe!

    --
    "You should always go to other people's funerals; otherwise, they won't come to yours." -- Yogi Berra
  87. Start Wars Quote? by ginbot462 · · Score: 1

    While, I thought your comment was well crafted, I am slashdot user. I wonder how an exchange using a Star Wars quote would have gone in another context, say Iraq on O'Reilly (of course, you can't have a sensiable conversation on there, so why bother).

    "Great warrior. Wars not make one great."

    --
    Atlas Shrugged : Thematic Story :: Battlefield Earth : Organized Religion
  88. Ballmer's going to fucking kill Verizon! by FhnuZoag · · Score: 1

    Really though, what can these big companies do now?

    Would it be possible/profitable for them to enter into the telecoms market themselves to safeguard their business? Can Microsoft buy Verizon?

  89. Not just politicians.... by ministerprime · · Score: 1

    This is not just about politicians being on the payroll at telcos. This is a matter of collusion at the highest levels of big business that has gone unchecked by the justice department and the courts. They may be in competition with one another, but if they are the only 3 telcos in town (as is true in many urban areas) then it really doesn't matter. You can't just get pissed and cancel service with one, because the other has the same restrictions.

  90. WHAT!? by ByteGuerrilla · · Score: 0

    The U.S. Congress supported American corporations over public interest?

    You just blew my mind.

    --

    A block of code, sufficiently well-written, is indistinguishable from magick.

  91. Sad stat of US politics by AndyG314 · · Score: 0
    The battlefield seems to be centered around which group has the better funded lobbyists
    That is a sad commentary on the stat of US politics.
    --
    If it's dead, you killed it.
  92. The essence of your comment by golodh · · Score: 1
    As I understand it, the essence of your comment is as follows:

    (a) commercial entities are profit maximisers

    (b) commercial companies are in charge of our telecommunication networks

    (c) therefore we have to sit tight and watch them charge whatever they like for the use of their telecommunication networks

    More to the point: if I follow your thinking, we have no moral right whatsoever to either protest or act against any measure they come up with to charge for their services. In fact, they should be allowed to charge whatever they like to whomever they like.

    Now all this sounds reasonable. After all, what are free markets for? (Well I do seem to hear strange rumblings about putative "price gouging" with gasoline. Now how can that be? Gasoline markets are free, aren't they? Charge whatever the market will bear. Surely nothing that Government should stick its nose in, right?) But here is the rub: the market in which the Telcos work isn't free, and hasn't ever been free.

    Why not?

    (a) all companies like water, electricity, and telecoms are network-based. You can't just sell someone water, electricity, or communication out of thin air (well ... lets not drag cellular phones / WiFi into it here, we're talking fixed lines). You need to have a network in place first. And that's expensive. Very expensive. In fact ... it's an entry barrier. And supposing you start offering network services, your (bigger) competitors can usually crush you by reducing their tarifs where your network overlaps their, and recoup this loss elsewhere.

    (b)regulations (lots of regulations you have to comply with, not everyone can start his own phone company tomorrow

    (c) telephone was a great big monopoly until the forced split of AT&T into "baby bells", but now the de facto monopolies have reappeared (Verizon and AT&T)

    I think this can be summed up as saying: the market for telecommunication is not free, and should not be confused with a free market, and should therefore not be treated as one.

    Further considering the fact that

    - the fact that telecommunication is absolutely vital to modern society

    - that the current situation is that Telcos are required by law (well by FTC) to provide neutral access to their network

    - it is now technically feasible for Telcos to collect enough information from their networks to render all their users completely transparant

    In summary I think we can see that

    - the negotiating field between Telcos and their clients is anything but level (no competition)

    - Telcos have a unilateral information information advantage over their clients

    - therefore the market that we will see emerge is totally skewed

    - as a result the prices we will see at market equilibrium will be sorely inflated

    - therefore the question is justified whether it makes sense to lift the current neutrality requirement on todays monopolists. I personally think it isn't.

    I'm not against free markets. In fact I'm in favour of them. What I'm against is people mistakenly applying free-market arguments to a market that isn't free, and on top of that to a very important market.

  93. Re:TelCos save $ with Fiber & copper sales! -G by Generic+Guy · · Score: 1
    Fiber does not corrode, does not conduct lighting, and is even cheaper to produce with a lower cost per foot to buy than copper... FIber is just glass! Cheap to produce and cheap to maintain... all splices to fiber lines are perfect every time. A splice to a copper line is a future failure point due to the corrosion that can then occur at that point or break in the line.

    I've also talked with telco techs who do line repair. Fiber doesn't corrode, but it does break. And repairing a Fiber break is 100 times harder to fix. You need a specialized truck with special plasma cutter to shear the ends perfectly flat and then bond the patch perfectly into place. Often it doesn't take perfectly on the first try. It is a long, involved process which usually leaves long coils of patch near the break. For underground feeds this is okay, but for overhead lines or lines into homes/businesses you don't want loops of optical cable hanging dangling around. The good news is that fiber repair is not the crappy slaptastic re-coupling type repair they often do on copper lines.

    The plastic cable jackets can potentially dry out too or more probably the end boots, especially as cost-cutting gets involved, but it may be too early in the life of fiber for this to be a problem. Any crack or break in the sheathing can allow exterior light into the cable, which will be bad for transmissions. Perhaps not as prominently as copper, but there will still be jobs for at least some guys in line maintenance work.

    --
    { - Generic Guy - }
  94. Want = opportunity by jfengel · · Score: 1

    And you'll get it. Really, I think you will. If your ISP doesn't give you the rate you want, somebody else will step up to the plate and sell it to you. ISPs already compete with each other on bandwidth, and I'm certain that the instant they start throttling one site ads will appear on TV showing a sad middle-age couple watching a picture of a new grandchild come in line by line next to a smiling couple sharing a video-chat with theirs.

    You may not like the price at which they want to sell it to you, but the price is a function of how much you're willing to pay. Always. This net non-neutrality bit is a way for them to raise prices; they're just trying to do it with a finer grain than just jacking up your rates.

    They think they can charge Google, and then Google will charge you, but since Google is free that's just not gonna happen. They think of that as Google's problem. And when it's Google's problem... well, Google is pretty good at solving problems. Anything from a parallel backbone to an ad campaign to convince users to switch to less pricey ISPs.

    The internet routes around damage. Even brain damage on the part of ISPs.

    (None of this applies if you find yourself stuck in the middle of nowhere with only one ISP who has a contract with the town. Those guys are kinda hosed.)

  95. Yes, we do by tacokill · · Score: 1

    In fact, we send them BACK to Congress more often than the Soviet politburo

    Now that's an eye-opening stat. (and yes, I know its the LA City beat, but the numbers are verified on a ton of other sites/news services. And its a pretty easy fact to fact check)

  96. Re:TelCos save $ with Fiber & copper sales! -G by Jimithing+DMB · · Score: 1

    As you have pointed out the ISPs currently have peering agreement contracts which already ensure network neutrality. So why do we need congress to pass a law to do it? I should point out (in case you didn't gather it from my last post) that the proposed law isn't removing an already existing net neutrality law but is actually creating a new law for net neutrality where one didn't exist before.

    The large ones that are calling for tollbooths are not going to get them simply because no one is going to want to peer with them if they are throttling traffic. The current system of peering agreements works well and will continue to work well.

    Also, your truck parking analogy is flawed. Or maybe it's halfway reasonable but you don't understand what really prevents someone from parking a truck in front of my driveway. You see, the roads are public land and so the rules of the road are defined by the public (i.e. the government).

    The net is not public land. Sure, the wires are indeed running through public land but this is a local issue and not a federal issue. The worst part of this bill has nothing to do with net neutrality but rather the portions which dictate the federal government decides who gets to operate cable companies on local land.

    <p style=cynical> You see, both the democrats and the republicans took money from all kinds of lobbyists. The main purpose of this bill is to remove control from localities of local cable contracts. I believe this was something the republicans introduced. However, the democrats have now gone off on this tirade of saving net neutrality and so they want to codify the net neutrality rules as law. Believe me, the cable companies won't care because they still win as they don't have to deal with those pesky localities when running cables through their land. The net neutrality issue is a smoke screen to get people worked up about what amounts to a meaningless issue. The real issue here is the removal of more state and local rights and the addition of more socialist federal government bureaucracy. <p>

  97. Tel&CableCos wish chg$ for muni-wireless o- RA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Once they Tel&CableCos can charge for tiers, then they will bill the muni-wireless, and other wireless carriers, prohibitive fees for use of the wireless network's "on and off" ramps to the wired and Tel&CableCos monopoly controled TCP/IP internet! There is no way that anyone should support the Tel&CableCos requests for power. The only way they can gain this power is by gift of a corrupt and dishonest congress!

    This action by the Tel&CableCos goes well beyond the obvious. For example: when they say they will need to charge Google for content? Well, FYI - Google is buying large amounts of dark fiber to build their own national internet backbone to put in local sub-nets in order to provide for a local advertising search ability! And they still need to connect to the Tel&CableCos controled internet at some point or place! The Tel&CableCos will want to charge Google, or anyone else building a 2nd major back-bone, or little wireless or wired sub-nets via their own ISP business plans, in order to access the major Tel&CableCos customers and their own backbones to the internet! Access points of control are key to the part of the internet! The Tel&CableCos via their extensive, and subscriber supported, "back-bone" will treat not only multi-media volume traffic with fees... but they will not hesitate to use their virtual and thus moveable TOLL BOOTHs in order to control and restrict any traffic that they want! And thus they will be able to declare an ownership interest of all traffic that thus travels the internet, because at some point it has to travel through their gateway. Ca-ching, Ca-ching, and if you don't pay, then you can't play!

    Guess who owns the yellow pages books in your Telephone Directory book that most likely sits very close by to your TelCo "land line phone" right now? Is it a threat to their yellow pages revenue if google does pull off this dark fiber connected backbone plan of theirs that will enable national and local ad placement search tools to allow for easier local search by internet users looking for local retail offerings and services? If Google does this, then will businesses buy yellow page ads (or will they buy google local ads)? Hey even the local ISP or newspaper could put build a local server and do the same local network ad search as well! This all competes with the phone companies and their monopoly of yellow pages. They hate that!

    The phone company has had a monopoly on yellow pages and a monopoly on local telephone service, for a long time because they owned the wires! They now want ownership of TCP/IP traffic because it threatens their multiples of long held local monopolies and they HATE competition.

    The Tel&CableCos are very much wanting to think of the internet as a super highway that they own and control, and can charge what they want to charge for (at the on ramps, the off ramps, the consumer ramps, the content creator ramps, etc...), and they want to have a toll booth at every RAMP that looks like an on or an off ramp to that highway (Hollywood, Google, Yahoo, the local sewing club, the NRA, you name it and the Tel&CableCos will want to have them paying again for access to "the TelCableCos" superhighway).

    The Tel&CableCos need to be stopped now. And whoever is in office that supports this wild gold field mass claims jumping by virtue of paying off congress, well this nonsense NEEDS TO BE STOPPED NOW.

    This is starting to look as obvious as a huge infected Zit that has turned into a coin size infection on the forhead of a co-worker... no matter how much they try to hide the ugly fact, it just is too full of white gooy dripping stuff to hide it for too long. If Congress does not wake up and see what is happening, then their is only one reason... they got paid off!

    For more news and help on contacting your representative..
    go to http://www.savetheinternet.com/ and please don't delay.

    This is not a political sides issue... it is a next 100 years issue, the next generation issue, and more, it is about freedom!

  98. I smell a Google/Amazon/IBM/MSFT/ebay backbone by WhiteWolf666 · · Score: 1

    These companies (and Google in particular) have been buying quite a bit of dark fiber. Maybe tell light it up, and start selling bandwidth to ISPs, or setup their own wireless ISPs.

    When you get fucked by the middle man, and you have plenty of money, the best response is to cut the middle man out.

    Google seems to plan ahead. I'm guessing that even if they loose this current "neutrality" battle with the telecos, they'll have an alternate system in place. Of course, they'd prefer it if everyone could "neutrally" access their service, but I'm guessing that smaller providers like Speakeasy, Wide Open West, and the smatter of medium ISPs and wireless ISPs out there will get the option of buying bandwidth from a coallition of internet companies.....

    These guys have more than enough money to build such a thing, and some of these companies have already started to purchase the necessary fiber lines.

    --
    WhiteWolf666 an exBush supporter. All you new-school,compassionate,save the children Republicans can rot in hell
  99. Who's Ed Markey? by Petskull · · Score: 0

    For those wondering who Ed Markey is- he is a Representative (D- 7th district,MASS) who was going to run for Kerry's seat in the Senate until Kerry lost. He is the ranking Democrat on the House Subcommittee on Telecommunications and the Internet.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_J._Markey
    http://markey.house.gov/
    http://www.issues2000.org/MA/Ed_Markey.htm

  100. A thought by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, if SBC and their kin actually start charging content providers for "preferred" service (better QOS
    delivery to SBC customers), then I hope that Google
    and their kin respond by charging for indexing:
    charging to index web sites hosted by SBC or web
    sites on IP addresses leased out by SBC or otherwise
    from SBC IP address pools.

  101. Big Brother by Nitroryder · · Score: 1

    Doesn't this all really come back to Big Brother?

    A. Google doesn't release records to Big Brother.
    B. ISP's don't have authority to give the gov't Google's records.
    soo....
    C. The Gov't gets closer to giving ISP's the power to inspect customers packets by shooting down Net Neutrality.
    D. Big Brother get's what it wanted all along because instead of going to Google, they now go to their buddies down at AT&T and Verizon for EVERYTHING they need.

    Of course this is all in the name of National Security, so we are all to accept this as good for 'everyone' and wave our flags and eat apple pie. The shift of power is going to be huge in the next few years if the Reps keep this crap up.

  102. Re:Tel&CableCos wish chg$ for muni-wireless o- by Jimithing+DMB · · Score: 1
    Once they Tel&CableCos can charge for tiers, then they will bill the muni-wireless, and other wireless carriers, prohibitive fees for use of the wireless network's "on and off" ramps to the wired and Tel&CableCos monopoly controled TCP/IP internet! There is no way that anyone should support the Tel&CableCos requests for power. The only way they can gain this power is by gift of a corrupt and dishonest congress!

    There is currently NO network neutrality law. NONE. It does not exist. The whole "savetheinternet.com" website is BULL SHIT. What keeps the net neutral is the peering agreements between ISPs. That is all. There are also some FCC guidlines (note: NOT laws) that encourage neutral peering agreements.

    What's really happening here is that a bunch of socialists want the federal government to be the nanny of the internet. They want to pass a law making network neutrality mandatory so that the federal government can have oversight. This increases the feds ability to control the internet.

    Peering agreements are working FINE. The private sector has and can deal with this issue without government intervention. This is the same "save the children" crap we see all the time. Writing a network neutrality law won't save the internet. What it will do is put control into the federal government's hands so the next round of lobbyists can lobby for exceptions to the neutrality law. This is the next move by the telcos. They _want_ the net neutrality law but want to make you think they don't. A net neutrality law that they can get an exception to means that while their competitors won't have an exception, they will. That means they'll get government sponsored competitive advantage.

    By keeping the status quo (no net neutrality law, only guidelines) we keep the government out of it and the private companies will work out what is best for themselves. Currently the best thing for an internet company to do is peer with everyone they can because not doing so means they'll have displeased customers when "_____.com" doesn't work.

    But you go right ahead, continue to be deluded into thinking that we must "save the internet" by giving the federal government more control over it. Because you know more federal government control has always improved things.

  103. Re:Do you know how to read? It appears not! by Jimithing+DMB · · Score: 1

    The bill wasn't about net neutrality. The bill was primarily about creating federal cable/telco franchises and removing control from the localities. In order to drum up support FOR this abomination of a bill some legislators decided to add "Net Neutrality" provisions to it. Basically you get fucked up the ass (federal cable/telco franchises) but they give you a little vaseline (codifying into law the concept of net neutrality).

    Note that net neutrality is NOT the current law. There is no law governing net neutrality. Hear that? It's all currently based on peering agreements which work well because the federal government is NOT involved. Get your head out of your ass!

    Essentially, anyone who wants this bill to pass is saying "Please use vaseline while you fuck me up the ass".

  104. Re:Anyone Suprised? call your senator ANYWAY... by good+soldier+svejk · · Score: 1
    The fact that the House defeated it means that it's dead, and we're screwed.
    The House didn't defeat it. It hasn't even seen the bill yet. What happened was that the House Committee on Energy & Commerce voted for the bill but against my Representative Ed Markey's amendment protecting net neutrality. The bill will proceed to the floor where Ed will once again tack on his courageous little amendment and the telecom whores will once again strip it off.
    --
    It is cowardly, and a betrayal of whatever it means to be a Jew, to act as a white man

    -James Baldwin
  105. Heinlein by Beryllium+Sphere(tm) · · Score: 1

    >On the one hand, in seems like the people who own the pipes should be able to do whatever they want with them

    Remember, in _Citizen of the Galaxy_, a judge gives the hero a lecture about property rights? He said the bigger something is, the less any one man actually owns it.

  106. Re:Anyone Suprised? call your senator ANYWAY... by bbdb · · Score: 1

    Umm, the bill isn't to allow the telecomm companies to screw the people, it's to prevent them from doing so.

    Rest assured they would find the way of doing precisely that. They have money = brains of lawyers and economists that can figure out how to do it.

    You're not going to painstakingly study every detail of telecom law and systematically sue the telecoms if they do smth wrong, are you?

    They will study every detail and design their solutions around the idiocies of lawmakers who most of the time don't EVEN READ the laws they vote on. In most cases the talking dog sez senator votes yea, senator votes yea. There were some mixups, where they mistakenly voted opposite to intent of talking dogs. Apparently many lawmakers can't even understand their own dogs.

    Yes, it might be you will prevent some abuse, though in most cases that abuse is just a figment of imagination of a twat not understanding detailed interests and detailed actions of dominant oligopolists, who don't rape pets and steal candy from babies not because they have warm hearts, but because such particular actions don't make sense for them. But at the cost of introducing other market distortions and costs.

    Gawd, I hate this time of arrogant, loud and brainless good intentions. And I thought we were done with it. Silly me.

    --
    Python is nice quick and flexible... but it provides so much rope a monkey would hang the whole ecosystem with it. -- in
  107. Re:TelCos save $ with Fiber & copper sales! -G by Beryllium+Sphere(tm) · · Score: 1

    >cheaper to produce with a lower cost per foot to buy than copper... FIber is just glass!

    Glass produced to purity standards and manufacturing tolerances that were impossible until the last century.

  108. Telecom suits vs. Internet hackers by Bushido+Hacks · · Score: 2, Insightful
    The Big Telecom industry is fighting to keep their dominance and their reign of status quo. To continue their oppression, they are now vying to take over the Internet industry for their own personal gain.

    A fact that the general public does not realize that if oil wasn't so high that the government is now taking action against the Big Oil companies (who have anally raped consumers at the gas pump while raking in record profits), the government would be taking action against Big Telecom (which has been leaving dirty messages in our voice mail like a drunken Pat O'Brien).

    Given that the House Committee on Energy & Commerce has done little to stop Big Oil from buttf*cking us, it is more than certain that they will allow Big Telecom to do the same.

    Big Telecom's arguments for wanting to make the Internet it's b*tch.

    First, they tell us that they "want to provide more services to consumers" and "are woking hard to bring it to consumers." For those who were not born yesterday, this is BS. The telecom industry generally says these things because they are also trying to take over the entire cable industry, not just part of it which they already own. They don't want a slice of pie, they want to whole thing.

    Secondly, they tell us that they "want to help the government apprehend online predators". It sounds like a noble objective, but what Big Telecom doesn't tell the goverment is that this goal is at the bottom of thier list of things to do, which probably looks like this:

    Big Telecom's To Do List

    • Lie to the goverment (if in trouble call George.)
    • Screw consumers
    • Distribute educational propoganda to children to gain influnece

    When I was in the kindergarden and first grade, AT&T and some energy gave the school these fliers to pass out to children to teach children about energy conservation and tell children about some of the technology that is out there that AT&T used to help others especially the disabled and the deaf. In retrospect, this is nothing more than corporate propoganda. If you have children who come home with this sort of materal, file a complaint against the school board for allowing major corporations to sell out your children!

    Big Telecom's To Do List (continued)

    • Take over the cable industry (by force if necessary)
    • Take over the internet industry (by force if neccessary)
    • Provide wireless phone service to thrid world countries even though they could be used to trigger incidenary devices. (Terrorists are very bad people, but atleast they pay their phone bill on time.)
    • Deny any corporate accountability (who need it?)
    • Torture the world by giving Joan Cusak.
    • Regret hiring Joan Cusak.
    • Hire Catherine Zeta Jones. (Mrs. Jones is one of the highest paid actresses in her industry, but we don't care cause we aren't paying for these expensive 30 second commericals, our customers do!)
    • Market phones to teenager. (Teenagers are stupid! They'll buy anything.)
    • Market phones to children. (Parents are stupid! They'll buy anything for their children)
    • Cut Lucent Technologies' budget (New techonolgy? Who needs it!)
    • ... (dozens of other stupid tasks) ...
    • ???
    • Profit
    • Help government apprehend online predators. (Pray that they don't find our own stash of illict content.)

    Generally, Big Telecom does not report any records of predators who work for Big Telecom. They also won't report anyone who works for any government agency in order to influence the government, at the right price no less. They will also hide any evidence that they themselves are engaging in these illict acts. Industries often use altrusism to coverup any corruption they are currently engaging in (see Big Tobacco).

    Finaly, Big telecom also tells us that they "want to pr

    --
    The Rapture is NOT an exit strategy.
  109. Re:Hmm... Technicalities. by cogitophobia · · Score: 1

    Yes, rise up my Fremen brethren! Let us make our own network, forever vanquishing the power of the House of Telco.

  110. Re:TelCos save $ with Fiber & copper sales! -G by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >cheaper to produce with a lower cost per foot to buy than copper... FIber is just glass!

    Glass produced to purity standards and manufacturing tolerances that were impossible until the last century.


    That's completely irrelevant. We are not installing this stuff via a time machine for the Victorians.

  111. Ummmmmm by BLKMGK · · Score: 1

    I'm *not* stuck in the middle of nowhere. However I have but two choices - 144K IDSL via a 3rd party (COVAD) or Comcast. As it happens I have both because one is used for hosting but probably not for much longer. FIOS is a pipedream but it's coming in areas near me. SAT is a joke since 500+ms Ping kills my gaming and THEY throttle like mad anyway.

    So, while you may think there's competition out in the world it doesn't seem to be occuring anywhere near me. I'd bet that lots of others are in the same boat too. I live in a populated suburb of Washington D.C. so it's not some backwater.

    P.S. GTE aka Verizon "promised" me DSL multiple times. I actually signed up for it three times but they could never get me a connection. In the end they couldn't provide but COVAD did and GTE still screwed around and dragged their feet providing the circuit. Felt good to dump them for Vonage! 2 days after the switch they called me up to offer me something but before starting the woman asked, rather smugly, if I was a Verizon customer. When I said no you'd have thought I kicked her puppy. I've not heard back from them since!

    --
    Build it, Drive it, Improve it! Hybridz.org
  112. Re:Good, the Internet will continue to be free by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And the folks that run the FCC are appointed by George Bush.
    Everything the man touches turns into a turd.

  113. Re:Forget Voting, It's time for the general strike by hackwrench · · Score: 1

    A general strike affects everything, even more so than voting. It cuts across all sectors of commerce. The point is to fix our entire system of government and not just attempt to hire one person in the hopes that he'll slap band-aids on a leaking dike.

  114. Re:Anyone Suprised? call your senator ANYWAY... by geoffspear · · Score: 1
    My point remains the same. The House (through their committee) defeated the idea of net neutrality, not the bill it was being attached to. They will continue to defeat the concept of net neutrality being made into law. There's absolutely nothing the Senate can do about it, so writing to your Senator is a waste of time. The way our legislature works, neither chamber can pass a law the other one absolutely refuses to accept.

    In any case, from what I've heard there's not much support in the Senate for net neutrality, either, and if you think Senators are more likely than Representatives to switch their positions based on public opinion when Senate races require a lot more money from special interests to run, you're probably way too naive about the political process in this country. Unless Microsoft decides they care enough about this issue to outbribe the telecomms (err, sorry "out-lobby"), there's about 0 chance of this passing.

    --
    Don't blame me; I'm never given mod points.
  115. Re:TelCos save $ with Fiber & copper sales! -G by jafac · · Score: 1

    Unfortunately, there are a significant amount of telcom-financed Dems who will just as happily whore out your rights to the highest bidder.

    This is NOT a Republican/Democrat issue. This is a campaign-finance/bribery issue.

    Remember; Clinton enthusiastically supported and signed the DMCA.

    --

    These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
  116. CALL YOUR SENATOR! (link inside) by SaDan · · Score: 1

    http://www.savetheinternet.com/

    You can look up how your representative voted, and they provide phone numbers to their offices so you can thank them or berate them (depending how they voted).

    Please, people, pick up the phones. I'm calling during my lunch break to chew out the asshole I voted for for not supporting net neutrality.

  117. perC-SPAN, TelCableCos want to chg for content too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Interesting point! You are right, and hands off, of course. But, TelCableCos are angling for more! And there is indeed the danger that any law that comes into being could be changed more easily in the future vs having no law in the first place (maybe a difficult to change US constitutional ammendment for network neutrality is the way to go... vs a easily changed law)!

    Anyway, C-SPAN - you should view this (maybe you have, as well as seen the others that the likes of Lawrence Lessig have testify at where the TelCableCos were angling for the freedom to charge anyone they choose at the web site or content source)! I think you do understand why why the debate is so heated as of this point. How do we stop the TelCableCos?

    rtsp://video.c-span.org/15days/e042506_network.rm
    copy and paste into Real Player (File->Open Location)

    House Judiciary Cmte. on Network Neutrality
    The Telecom & Antitrust Task Force of the House Judiciary Cmte., chaired by Rep. James Sensenbrenner (R-WI), will hold a hearing titled "Network Neutrality: Competition, Innovation & Non-Discriminatory Access." Witnesses include Walter McCormick, U.S. Telecom Assn.; Earl Comstock, COMPTEL; & others.
    4/25/2006: WASHINGTON, DC: 2 hr. 20 min.: CSPAN3

    There are inside the beltway "think tanks" (in this case TelCableCos lobby groups) that are recommending a tiering of the internet in order to allow the TelCableCos to recover money spent on upgrades and to allow more for fee services that require higher bandwidth.

    There have been other hearings where the TelCableCos witnesses have be more obvious with their intent to charge content providers for their retail ISP customer use of the provider (google, yahoo, streaming, etc) content!

  118. Re:Hmm... Technicalities. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    ... if one of these decides to alter the contract there is little they could do ...

    Telcos: I am altering the deal. Pray I don't alter it any further. ... Amazon, MSFT, and others must never leave this backbone.
  119. Re:Hmm... Technicalities. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You blasphemer. Everyone knows that private industry always gives us the best result in the open market.

    I mean Jeezus, look at what we have going on in the United States with gasoline. All those efficient private refineries are spitting out gasoline at $3+ per gallon (which, for our European friends is an almost 33% increase over the last 6 months ... imagine if your gas went from $6 to $8 per US gallon in 6 months), but all those inefficient government-owned refineries in Venezuela are selling gasoline for 14 cents a gallon.

  120. War by bbdb · · Score: 1

    It simply doesn't make sense to run war on your customers. All of you here got into paranoid mode. Probably because the broadly defined lefties are getting desperate: they're running out of real problems, so they try to invent imaginary ones and scare us all with them.

    --
    Python is nice quick and flexible... but it provides so much rope a monkey would hang the whole ecosystem with it. -- in
  121. is this event good or bad? by bzipitidoo · · Score: 2, Insightful
    > we very much want Congress not to do anything at all in the matter.

    I really can't tell if this is a good thing or a bad thing. We can agree that it's bad if the telcos achieve a monopoly. But does this laissez faire move on Congress' part help, hinder, or neither? If the markets work, then I feel hands off is best. I think the markets are working currently. Even that Whitacre character of SBC has conceded that forcing discriminatory service on customers would be economic suicide.

    If the market doesn't work, then it seems to me Congress' best move is whatever is required to allow the market to function. It may be as simple as a requiring a little daylight, so the telcos cannot hide things and customers can inform themselves. That's how sales tax is done in the US on everything except gas. A store must mark items with the price _before_ taxes are added, so that when we get to the cash register, we see exactly how heavily we are being taxed. A bad law has many edges and unintended consequences. Think "chilling effects". It would be the height of irony if we passed a law intended to preserve net neutrality, but which had the opposite effect by perhaps unwittingly raising the barriers so high there is no competition because only the biggest can afford to comply with all the regulations. Think SOX.

    --
    Intellectual Property is a monopolistic, selfish, and defective concept. It is "tyranny over the mind of man"
  122. Sorry, can't fellate Bush! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That would be cunnilingus, instead.

  123. Boz Scaggs on the Internet:: by Philip+K+Dickhead · · Score: 1

    Levelling the Internet

    Why can't you just
    Get it through your head
    It's over, it's over now
    Yes, you heard me clearly now
    I said it's over, it's over now

    I'm not really over you
    You might say that
    I can't take it
    I can't take it
    Lord, I swear I just
    Can't take it no more

    (Go away) go away
    (Far away) so far away
    It's too late to turn back now
    And it don't matter anyhow

    --
    "Speaking the Truth in times of universal deceit is a revolutionary act." -- George Orwell
  124. Not Prostitution - Rape and Assault are the Crimes by Philip+K+Dickhead · · Score: 1
    American Samizdat 04/24/2006 @ 2:57 am Filed by John Steinberg - Raw Story Columnist

    Raw Story is in danger. Your right to read news stories and writing that disrupt the government/Big Media symbiosis is under attack. And you probably don't even know it.

    There has been so much going on lately, what with plans to nuke Iran and the rolling mutiny among the top brass that you may well have missed another growing menace to all that we have built here.

    The Internet phenomenon - the dizzying evolution from Netscape to Yahoo to Google to the new world of blogs and wikis - is the result of an essential structural attribute of the medium: the content-neutrality of the pipes we use to connect to it. It is the natural tendency of the powerful to silence and hinder anything that threatens their dominance, but the phone companies could not stop AOL, AOL could not stop Yahoo, and Yahoo could not stop Google, because the folks who owned the pipes used to carry all those ones and zeroes to and from your computer were not permitted to discriminate against bits they didn't like. (The concept of the "common carrier" dates back at least to the earliest regulation of railroads more than a hundred years ago.) That level field has also resulted in the current flowering of our participatory democracy. But that flower is about to pruned or even torn out by the roots.

    The Orwellian "Communications Opportunity, Promotion, and Enhancement Act of 2006," sponsored by Congressman Joe Barton (R, Texas), will, if it becomes law, allow your Internet provider to charge you extra to read this column. It will allow your provider to block this column entirely. Congressman Ed Markey (D, Mass), who sponsored a defeated amendment that would have explicitly preserved neutrality, explains:

    The Joe Barton (R-TX) sponsored telecommunications bill that is moving through the Energy & Commerce Committee in the House would fundamentally change the way the Internet works. ... In short, the Barton bill opens the door for the Bells and other ISPs to throw out a key principle of net neutrality and enact a new era of telecom taxes and tolls, roadblocks that would shut down the avenues of innovation that have allowed the Internet to become what it is today.

    That bill took a big step toward being enacted into law last week.

    A House subcommittee handed phone companies a victory Wednesday by voting 27-4 to advance a bill that would make it easier for them to deliver television service over the Internet and clearing the way for all Internet carriers to charge more for speedier delivery. ...

    Earlier in the day, the subcommittee voted 23-8 to reject an amendment by Rep. Ed Markey, D-Mass., that would have inserted specific language designed to enforce network neutrality and prevent the feared creation of fast and slow lanes on the Internet.

    "Members from both sides of the aisle endorsed a plan which will permit cable and phone companies to construct 'pay as you surf, pay as you post' toll booths for the Internet" said Jeff Chester, executive director of the Center for Digital Democracy in Washington.

    But Sonia Arrison, director of technology studies for the Pacific Research Institute in San Francisco, dismissed concerns that the proposed bill would lead to a two-tiered Internet.

    "There's plenty of competition," Arrison said. "The market will

    --
    "Speaking the Truth in times of universal deceit is a revolutionary act." -- George Orwell
  125. Web Companies Should Just Set Up Their Own ISP by beedle · · Score: 1

    They are all worth collectively hundreds of billions of dollars. Granted to set up a nationwide ISP is not cheap, but they could do it without question since the only alternative is to give in to the telcos and play russian roulette with their companies' futures.

    But look at it like this...if all of the companies that use the web as a means to generate revenue just bit the bullet and formed their own ISP, sure they would have to shell out many billions of dollars, but in return they would be the ONLY ISP in the US that would offer completely neutral access to any website, and probably charge less for doing so. I dont know about the rest of you but if I were a telco consumer pissed about my web access being throttled to my favorite sites and there was another option available to me that allowed me to A) access the sites that I want and B) was cheaper or at least the same price, I would switch.

    Just think of all the consumers that would just cancel their current internet access arrangement with their telco and switch...the telcos would lose EVERY internet customer they ever had. The service is better and its the same price or cheaper than what I was paying before. More for less (or at least the same as what I was paying before)...the only true way to catch the eye of the average North Amercian consumer. Plus from the web companies' standpoint, they would now be turning in MASSIVE revenue from this new venture...they essentially just stole every internet customer in the United States so Im sure the initial cost of setting up that ISP would be offset in a reasonable amount of time.

    I mean the telcos have to see this coming...these companies are worth BILLIONS...and you are trying to take that away from them. Are you crazy?!?!? Because its not like they are directly attacking small business here where literally almost all of them would have to ban together in order to compete on this monsterous finanacial level. Really there only needs to be about 10 or 15 large tech companies to make this viable.

    The telcos are still trying to play this Business in the 1990's game by using the traditional tactics to ensure that your industry is well looked after by the powers that be in government. They fail to realize that they may own the pipes...but those pipes would be worthless without the content that flows through them. And just think...once this supermassive ISP is up and running and serving web connections, whats next, VOIP and IPTV, why not, they have the backbone to do it. These would be the only remaining revenue streams that the telcos/cable companies would have left if they arent serving up internet connections, and since they no longer have any internet customers Im sure the marketing geniuses at this new supermassive ISP would be able to think of some way to offer some discounted "package deals" for people wanting phone and television as well as their internet.

    The internet is free and the telcos will find that out whether they like it or not.

  126. Google buying dark fibre by alucinor · · Score: 1

    Now it makes better sense why Google was buying up all that dark fibre optic lines a year or two back. Why fight with legislation what you can fight with tech?

    Now, if only all entrepreneurs could afford that sort of thing, haha.

    --
    random underscore blankspace at ya know hoo dot comedy.
    1. Re:Google buying dark fibre by jibjibjib · · Score: 1

      Surely Google will use their dark fibre to become an ISP and sell us all cheap non-QoS-crippled connections, as part of their Don't be Evil policy.

  127. Internet works because it's dumb, by bbdb · · Score: 1

    ...basic and rudimentary. That's what makes it flexible. Making it smart and dandy would have killed it, just like overcomplication and elitism killed ATM. Bastardizing the network is precisely the best thing that can happen to the network. That's what it is built for: ruthless exploitation.

    Regarding the existing networks for voice and video - they're held by incumbents. Moving to internet TV, radio/ podcasting / whatevercasting is more important for economic and political than technological reasons. And it's not going to be more TV, it's going to be something different, at the expense of existing MSM, bless their hopefully fiery deaths.

    --
    Python is nice quick and flexible... but it provides so much rope a monkey would hang the whole ecosystem with it. -- in
    1. Re:Internet works because it's dumb, by iamwahoo2 · · Score: 1

      Held by incumbents? Of course they are held by incumbents. I am not sure how it could be held by non-incumbents or how they could be incumbents without holding it.

  128. Re:Hmm... Technicalities. by MadUndergrad · · Score: 1

    Thank god I bought up some Axlotl tanks during the .com bust. I'll be selling delicious, delicious Amal in no time.

  129. Re:Good, the Internet will continue to be free by bbdb · · Score: 1

    If they could squeeze small ISPs and consumers they would have already bloody done that.

    You assume - correctly - that in future they will have no sentiments towards whoever from whom they can squeeze their profits.

    Why assume this is the case now or it was in the past?

    --
    Python is nice quick and flexible... but it provides so much rope a monkey would hang the whole ecosystem with it. -- in
  130. Re:Anyone Suprised? call your senator ANYWAY... by good+soldier+svejk · · Score: 1

    My point was that you should write your Rep and say this issue decides your vote in the next election. The House has not killed the amendment yet and Reps are theoretically more afraid of the electorate than Senators anyway. It is at least worth a shot. I would call my Rep but he wrote the amendment, so it would be pointless.

    --
    It is cowardly, and a betrayal of whatever it means to be a Jew, to act as a white man

    -James Baldwin
  131. could be a good thing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    if the telcoms charge more money for content comming from certain providers, might that not be a reason for them to go toward something bittorrent like?

  132. Re:Hmm... Technicalities. by arivanov · · Score: 1

    Indeed...

    And on the Internet he who controls the peering controls the Internet.

    A large ISP or Telco without a good peering manager is like a guild vessel whose navigator has had its Spice withdrawn.

    --
    Baker's Law: Misery no longer loves company. Nowadays it insists on it
    http://www.sigsegv.cx/
  133. Re:perC-SPAN, TelCableCos want to chg for content by Jimithing+DMB · · Score: 1

    The easiest way to keep the Telephone/Cable companies from getting a tiered internet is to keep the government the hell out of it. Don't pass any bills which supplant local control with federal control. Don't pass any bills which supplant peering agreements (simple contract law) with federal laws.

    In short, congress should keep its hands off the internet! Seriously, it should just stay the hell away from it. As soon as congress starts passing laws regulating what can and cannot be done it's all over. The first step will be a net neutrality law that will be championed by some as a victory for the internet. Of course, it won't be because it will either have riders or will be attached as a rider to a bill that is not at all a victory for the internet. The next step is for companies to start lobbying for exceptions to the law.

    It's analogous to our tax code. As a congress critter you can add more taxes so you have a bone to throw to the lobbyists in the form of tax breaks. Anytime we try to "tax the rich" we wind up screwing the middle class one way or another. The federal government needs to get out of this socialist mindset. It's not just the Democrats either. The Republicans are getting real bad about this; I believe they introduced this whole federalization of the telephone and cable companies in the first place.

    The only way I see this happening is if we all take part in policing ourselves. This will remove the need for the government nanny. This is currently how the Internet works. Everyone makes a gentleman's agreement to peer with one another. Occasionally you have little spats about how one company's traffic is worth more than another's and sometimes a peering agreement is terminated. After a few days it's all back up though because no one can afford to lose that business.

    To put my points of view into perspective, I am an avid sailboat racer (no, I don't own my own boat but I do crew on one). Sailboat racing is a gentleman's sport. There are a set of well defined rules but there are no referees to enforce them. If someone fouls you then you protest them (which is actually done by flying a red flag and yelling the word "PROTEST"). The protested party can then do one of two things. If he realizes he screwed up he can do two complete turns as a penalty to acknowledge your protest. When you have seen him complete his second turn you may elect to take down your red flag (if you can still see him). If he thinks you are totally wrong he can ignore you and arrange to meet you in the protest room after the race (often times days after the race). Perhaps after the race but before the protest meeting he has a chat with you. And perhaps he consults a rulebook or someone else to see if he really was in the wrong so he can just withdraw and save face.

    If the race isn't particularly important or if there is a question on whether he truly fouled you then perhaps you don't protest him at all. Perhaps you give him some slack. You might meet him in the bar after the race and say, hey, you fouled me out there buddy, don't do it again.

    This works well because pretty much everyone knows everyone. The point I'm making here is that smaller groups of people can much more effectively police themselves. In the internet provider case it's a reasonable number of companies all in it for themselves and highly concerned about maintaining at least a working relationship with their peers. This is what capitalism is supposed to be. A gentleman's agreement to do the best for yourself while maintaining your relationships with others.

    The internet is this form of capitalism. The more socialism we impose on it, the more screwed up it's going to get just like nearly everything else in this country. You make one little socialist change and someone finds a way to take advantage of it. So you make another one, and someone takes advantage of that. Then another, and another. Pretty soon you're more locked down than China because for the socialist system to wor

  134. Re:perC-SPAN, TelCableCos want to chg for content by Qzukk · · Score: 1

    Not the AC, but I just wanted to point out that it's simply not possible for people to expect employees to police their managers. Sure, at some level some boss orders a guy to stick his hand in a running machine, this can be dealt with. But above that, how many Enron employees could have been expected to know that their maintenance schedule in power generation plants across California was carefully crafted to make sure too many separate plants were taken offline for maintenance?

    At some point, you eventually reach a place where the only way to continue is to use the powers of government to compel evidence. What's needed at this point is to get rid of the "corporate veil" so that the "evil people" are dealt with by the criminal system (rather than the civil tort system), so that the government's involvement isn't wasted on some lawyer a 50% cut of the settlement.

    --
    If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
  135. Really - Call your senator ANYWAY... by deimtee · · Score: 1

    I would call my Rep but he wrote the amendment, so it would be pointless.

    Call or write to him anyway.

    It is as important to encourage good actions by politicians as it is to discourage bad actions. Letting him know that he has grass roots support is important, and allows him to demonstrate that support to colleagues.

    Also, a letter/message supporting a politician probably receives more notice than one opposing for two reasons -
    1. it is much easier to get people to complain than to support
    2. The natural human tendency for people to believe people who agree with them.

    --
    I'm guessing that wasn't on their radar screen...
  136. Please don't impeach President Bush by hicksw · · Score: 1

    If you get rid of Bush, who replaces him?

    Is that your idea of an improvement?
    --
    There's always another windmill.

  137. some are already throttling by Stu+Charlton · · Score: 1

    Rogers in Canada, for example, throttles BitTorrent traffic by detecting how many hosts you're connecting to. It's also screwing up iTMS. Fortunately, there's a known workaround (using well-known VoIP ports), because I don't think they're ready to handle thousands of screaming Vonage customers affected by this shit policy...

    --
    -Stu
  138. There's something so wrong with your intelligence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, he didn't, dipshit. He should of used "affect". Your a moran. Di'nt no one learn you no English? Cunt.

    --
    I'm not the Pumpkin King, but I play one on TV.

  139. heinlen's worldview is moronic by sentientbrendan · · Score: 1

    He's entertaining sometimes, but his worlview is pretty moronic. The best way to some up heinlein is that he's a fascist who thinks that humor is immoral.

    Also, the physical size of something is not the limiting factor in property rights... the issue is a bit more complicted than that.