US Lawmakers Propose New Net Neutrality Bill
An anonymous reader brings news that Net Neutrality legislation is making another comeback. A new bill, sponsored by Rep. John Conyers (D-MI), would make ISPs who fail to provide service in a non-discriminatory manner subject to anti-trust violations. From the NYTimes:
"'The bill squarely addresses the issue of the enormous market power of the telephone and cable companies as the providers of 98 percent of the broadband service in the country,' said Gigi Sohn, president of Public Knowledge. But broadband providers and some congressional Republicans have argued that net neutrality legislation isn't necessary. The broadband market is becoming more competitive and net neutrality regulations could hamper investment in broadband networks, some Republicans said during a hearing this week."
If you think a law isn't necessary, and a bunch of other people do, then why wouldn't you just approve it? From your perspective, the law would have no effect, positive or negative. To the other people, you look like you agree with them. Win-Win.
Therefore I conclude, that large companies and congressional Republicans are lying. Of course, that was really my thought before I read this article.
Whats wrong with "Net Equality"? Oh, i know....
That's just from a quick read-through. This is the New York Times?
<xml><I><am><so><damn>Web 2.0</damn></so></am></I></xml>
I don't know about their dream world, but I live in a metropolitan area with 1.1 million people. When I got broadband 8 years ago, Road Runner was the only option.
There's DSL now, but it costs the same price for much lower speed. I'd like to have options, and I'm moving across the country to Tempe soon. Hopefully things are better there.
WEe're currently experiencing the same issues up here in Canada. You guys have Comcast, we have Rogers and Bell. Also, I have to argue that Net Neutrality would hamper ISPs....if anything, it would promote MORE freedom do to whatever it is you do on the Net without having to worry about how much money is needed to guarantee that people can actually reliably access your website. In the US, the Gov't is by the people, for the people and of the people....who the hell in the US from the people want to give Telecorps more power? We, in Canada, are dealing with the same shite... http://www.michaelgeist.ca/content/view/2463/125/
So Jesus, Mohammed and Abraham walk into a Bar....
And I guess they're being rewarded richly enough by their corporate masters that they are able to say things like "hamper investment in broadband networks".
It's just like when the GOP say that "additional regulations will stop businesses from growing or adding jobs". The periods in our history when we had the most stringent regulations (and the highest taxes) also happened to be periods of greatest economic and job growth, as well as the strongest and most wealthy middle class.
We have to face that the Republicans, and their "small government Conservativism" have been nothing but a mouthpiece for greedy corporatists who want to make a fast buck at the expense of the rest of us and at the expense of America's well-being.
You are welcome on my lawn.
Even if this passes, it wont necessarily help. The lawyers for the big telcos/cable companies will spend the next decade in courtrooms coast to coast trying to argue for their interpretation of what "provide service in a non-discriminatory manner" actually means.
They're trying to get it passed by a bunch of conservatives. "Net Equality" reminds them of communism and sharing, which they don't like. "Net Neutrality" on the other hand, reminds them of Swiss bankers, which every rich conservative likes. Neutrality is a much easier sell than equality.
-1 Uncomfortable Truth
"If you aren't [planning on] doing anything wrong, then you have nothing to fear from this net neutrality law."
But ultimately the problem as I see it is that the telecoms don't think it's wrong to do what they have been doing and/or what they plan to do... especially since there is no law that identifies it as such.
Competition is supposed to bring down the prices of products.. yet all I have seen in the last 6 months is 3 rate hikes (verizon fios)... and I have plenty of options..... oh wait, no I don't.. I have Cable (Comcast can go F themselves into oblivion so thats not an option), and Fios (if I was to include TV then I also have DTV or Dish as an option)..
A duopoly is not competitive, and I have no options for DSL or any other landline based solution other then dialup. Sat internet is not an option, too much latency
I came, I conquered, I coredumped
That's just the biggest crock of shit ever. Customers will demand service that doesn't completely suck, and that's going to drive broadband investment more than anything else.
What does his race have to do with his position as Chairman of the Judiciary Committee?
From the TFA, which you apparantly didn't read:
'Conyers and Lofgren were cosponsors of a similar bill introduced in 2006, when Republicans held a majority in the House. With significant Republican opposition, the 2006 bill died, but Democrats were elected to the majority late that year.
"Americans have come to expect the Internet to be open to everyone," Conyers said in a statement. "The Internet was designed without centralized control, without gatekeepers for content and services. If we allow companies with monopoly or duopoly power to control how the Internet operates, network providers could have the power to choose what content is available."'
While Conyers has at times made efforts in Congress that reflect his consituency, he appears to be acting as the Chairman of the Judiciary Committee should be acting. I am actually not a fan of his (I tend to be far more conservative than he), but your vaguely racist comment made me scratch my head and say 'Huh?'.
I'll reserve further judgement until I've had a chance to read the text of the bill.
For most markets, you have either cable or DSL. In large markets, you probably have both. In some VERY major markets (Bos-Wash metroplex, California, etc), you may have fiber-optic and cable.
Outside of that last group, you really don't have a choice of providers, so you're stuck with whatever crappy TOS they give you. Just look at the recent news about Comcast throttling P2P, and now talking about monthly traffic caps. Guess how long that would last if they actually *DID* have competition for customers?
Sadly, the prospects of this bill getting anywhere in the current whores-for-corporations Congress is about nil, but it probably looks good for Conyers' re-election campaign.
Wha? This law would actually PREVENT that, not encourage it. Selective blocking of trackers is treating some sites differently than others. That's a no-no under a net neutral mentality.
Worded less politely, net neutrality boils down to the customer saying to the ISP:
"I pay you for bandwidth. Nothing more. Shut the fuck up and let me spend that bandwidth how and where I please.".
I can't believe it's even an issue in people's minds. If Comcast built a huge toll road that lead to a dead end, nobody would drive on it and their stockholders would throw mad fits. It would be a blessing if the Google Sushi Bar opened next to the road serving up the best sushi in the state for low prices. People would actually pay to use their road now. You'd think they'd be happy, but no Comcast wants to charge the travelers AND charge the Google Sushi Bar every time someone wants to turn into their restaurant. Or, if they don't pay up, they'll still let people go there, but only 3 cars every hour. You're welcome to go to the brand new Comcast Sushi Bar across the street though.
That's pretty much the situation that we're looking at, and it needs to be stopped, by law if necessary (and I've heard enough rumblings from the telecoms to believe it is now necessary). Claiming it'll "hinder investment" is just asinine. Of course companies would build more networks if they could unfairly extort money from people. That doesn't make it right.
"People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
You know, the ones repealed and/or not passed in the late 80's and 90's in order to help the economy grow...which then led to shady banking practices that begat our current 'credit crunch'.
Yeah, I've heard this story before. I like the regulations, they are necessary for capitalism to work in the real world.
Blar.
Show me one time in American history where conservatism (economic laissez-faire, in particular) has served us well.
We de-regulated banks and got the Great Depression - that is, that whole economic collapse thing from unstable banks long before your Smoot-Hawley boogeyman ever came along. Oh and how was that Soviet grain production going around the 1970s? Compared to socialist America, I mean.
Tell us, what ruin came of America from the New Deal? Oh noes, that preceded a nice long run of American prosperity. Which ironically ended with unregulated corporatism.
How's that de-regulation doing for the airlines and energy industries? Oh, my.
http://finance.yahoo.com/family-home/article/105023/Expect-a-Jolt-When-Opening-the-Electric-Bill
And what about those S&L's?
Oh yeah, we're doing great with de-regulation.
Okay now name me one successful first world country on the planet that uses laissez-faire economics. Show me one. Just one. I'm waiting.
--- Grow a pair, liberals... stop letting the Republicans bully you!
... and spill my coffee.
Oh really. In my town we have all of two options for "broadband": Comcast and At&T. Want a business class line from either of those? Prepare to pay through the nose. And I haven't checked out whether this is true with Comcast because, well, they're Comcast, but from AT&T a business class line is no indication that you'll be able to run servers on your broadband connection. You just get to pay more.
These two have a captive market so they have little to no incentive to make a better offereing. Heck, from what I understand the area that we moved away from nearly eight years ago still doesn't even offer ADSL. And when we moved it was two years past its supposedly scheduled installation in the local office. So that is ten years for that area. So just how would net neutrality keep AT&T from installing updated equipment in their local office?
There was a promising alternative to those two: a wireless provider that included a plan for small businesses for a pretty decent connection -- same bandwidth for upload and download -- for a price much lower than either of the two biggies. The catch? Well it turns out all that inbound bandwidth I'd get with a business class connection would be wasted since the local manager decided to prohibit businesses from running their own servers. I'll try again in a year and hope that their management has gotten smarter. Until then, we'll struggle along with our IDSL connection from Covad.
I never thought I'd wind up living in a country that's turning out to be such a technological backwater.
CUR ALLOC 20195.....5804M
What makes a man turn neutral? Lust for gold? Power? Or were you just born with a heart full of neutrality?
Well, competing on the free market was supposed to bring the prices down, _but_ only as long as certain preconditions are met. The whole free-market theory is based on the assumption that the market situation has:
1. well informed buyers making the choices, from
2. a choice of perfectly interchangeable products, from
3. many suppliers for each product
Basically it's like the market for, I don't know, almost anything in the 18'th and most of 19 century. Or like the market for sliced bread or orange juice nowadays.
Unfortunately, much as the some try to pretend that if they ignore reality it will go away, all three are trivially easy to subvert by a monopoly nowadays. E.g., by making products depend on each other, it's trivial for a monopolist to subvert point 2, and thus raise the entry barriers to the point where point 3 collapses too. Add a helping of FUD, and you've subverted point 1 too. That was Microsoft's recipe for example.
The recipe used by ISPs may differ in the details, but it's still at best a mockery of what "free market" was supposed to mean. E.g., to take point 1 alone, when was the last time you knew exactly what you're getting for your money from your ISP? They fight tooth and nail even against telling you what the usage caps are, and it took a massive effort to even find out that they're throttling stuff. They simply refuse to say what they sold you, even after you bought it. Any pretense that the customers can make an informed comparison dies right there. E.g., point 3, doesn't seem to be the case in most of America.
So, unsurprisingly, a sad mockery of the free market doesn't produce the same results as the real thing. Same as if I were to run around with my arms stretched pretending I'm an airplane, I wouldn't actually fly.
So, well, it was kinda predictable in this time and age. A market abstraction which actually worked like that two centuries ago, now needs government intervention to stay anyhere near the status where those self-balancing mechanisms work at all. Otherwise, if you let corporations have it their way, eventually they'll find a way to subvert and pervert the whole thing into a non-functional carricature of its former self.
A polar bear is a cartesian bear after a coordinate transform.
The proper function of government is not to pick market winners and losers, but to look out for the common interests of the people. Most can agree that an open, freely competitive environment has a better chance at meeting our common interests than a closed, noncompetitive environment. (The catastrophic history of communism, alone, should be evidence enough of the truth of this proposition.)
Do we have an open, freely competitive market for telecommunications services in the US? The answer is clearly, no. We have a marginally competitive market composed of government-granted monopolies.
The problem isn't that we have "too much" government regulation. Without a grant of monopoly -- a government regulation -- the network operators wouldn't have a network to operate in the first place. The problem is we have the wrong kind of regulations. The government shouldn't be granting monopolies in the first place. Rather, it should be setting interoperability standards and requirements that keep the market as open and freely competitive as possible.
Seen in this light, then, these bills are a welcome addition. They at least set a standard for openness and nondiscrimination, which is a good thing for a government to be doing.
"We receive as friendly that which agrees with, we resist with dislike that which opposes us" - Faraday
holey run on batman....
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