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Net Neutrality Vets Join Obama FCC Transition Team

circleid writes "The Obama-Biden transition team on Friday named two long-time net neutrality advocates to head up its Federal Communications Commission Review team. Susan Crawford, a professor at the University of Michigan Law School, member of the board of directors of ICANN, and OneWebDay founder, as well as Kevin Werbach, former FCC staffer, organizer of the annual Supernova technology conference, and a Wharton professor, will lead the Obama-Biden transition team's review of the FCC. 'Both are highly-regarded outside-the-Beltway experts in telecom policy, and they've both been pretty harsh critics of the Bush administration's telecom policies in the past year.' The choice of the duo strongly signals an entirely different approach to the incumbent-friendly telecom policy-making that's characterized most of the past eight-years at the FCC." Reuters has a related story about Senator Byron Dorgan (D-ND), who plans to introduce net neutrality legislation in January.

179 comments

  1. So... by liquidMONKEY · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    ...does this mean you'll be able to hear a random "fuck" on free-to-air television in the U.S. now without a hefty fine?

    I suppose it still depends on how many people are complaining.

    1. Re:So... by Davemania · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Considering that 90% of all complaints were filed by one religious group (can't remember the exact year and name), I don't think the morale police is at the FCC.

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

      ...does this mean you'll be able to hear a random "fuck" on free-to-air television in the U.S. now without a hefty fine?

      I suppose it still depends on how many people are complaining.

      yea I got little kids that don't need to be hearing certain things. Its called adult responsibility. It's bad enough some of the shows in certain time blocks are letting in certain topics. Let kids be kids while they are kids. For fucks sake !

    3. Re:So... by txoof · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I hope we can find a better way to "regulate" OTA TV and radio. I prefer a more libertarian approach here. If CBS wants to show boobies after a reasonable time, say, 9:00 (the internationally accepted "Boobie Hour), have swear words and show people's heads exploding like a melon, let them. The market will sort things out. People will either watch and support CBS' decision and CBS will show more boobies. If people don't watch, CBS will move away from that type of programing, or go out of business. Little kids that are up at 9:00 watching porn are already suffering from parenting fail and no amount of FCC nanying is going to save them.

      If all the OTA networks paid say .5% (or some other equally made up number) of their advertising revenue into a PBS fund that focused on education, solid news and community events, that could satisfy everybody. Anybody who wants to watch TV at the boobie hour, without seeing boobies still has an option and the rest of us can see our boobies and hear fill of swear words. Problem solved. Next?

      Besides, I think that seeing a flaming and charred body fly out of an exploding meth-lab-camper on Bones this week is way more scarring to me and just about any kid than hearing an occasional "fuck".

      --
      This one's tricky. You have to use imaginary numbers, like eleventeen... --Hobbes
    4. Re:So... by txoof · · Score: 5, Insightful

      yea I got little kids that don't need to be hearing certain things. Its called adult responsibility.

      Exactly! It's your adult responsibility to make sure your kids are not watching smut. If you leave your 5 year-old unattended in front of the TV with the remote, then that's your parenting fail. If you can't trust your 12 year-old to not watch smut when you're not around, then again, that's your [NSFW] parenting fail. Expecting the government to instill and uphold morality in your family is ridiculous. That is your job.

      There has always been opportunity for kids to make poor moral choices and be exposed to media and events that were outside the parents' moral-comfort zone. If you lived in 18th century Paris, you had the choice to go to the guillotine, or you could keep your kids home. It has and always will be up to the parents. If you let your kids run wild and don't take the time to set expectations, they're going to do wrong. Expecting some hand in the sky, or white-house, or capital hill to come in and do it for you is just plain crazy.

      Spend time with your kids. Talk to them. Explain why you make choices and how you feel about their choices. No amount of legislation will substitute that.

      --
      This one's tricky. You have to use imaginary numbers, like eleventeen... --Hobbes
    5. Re:So... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If all the OTA networks paid say .5% (or some other equally made up number) of their advertising revenue into a PBS fund that focused on education, solid news and community events, that could satisfy everybody.

      Well, it would satisfy liberals at least. They would get the informational benefits of both public broadcasting and a free media.

      But what about conservatives? They want obscene content blocked and have little interest in public broadcasting. They would rally against your plan.

    6. Re:So... by txoof · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It is true that the morally conservative would rally against smut on TV, but perhaps we can move past the vocal minority and allow the market to sort this one out. When one group is allowed to dictate what is and is not obscene, constitutional rights start to get trampled. My art becomes your porn; your ideas become my dangerous propaganda. Clearly, the slippery slope theory isn't very accurate, and we're not going to slip into a 15th century age of repression, but the idea of a minority advocating for the majority is troublesome.

      Perhaps using that logic, and the logic of a free market, we can push past the social conservatives and move on to something a bit more free.

      --
      This one's tricky. You have to use imaginary numbers, like eleventeen... --Hobbes
    7. Re:So... by Grimbleton · · Score: 1

      No, conservatives just wouldn't want private corporations to have to pay for someone else's broadcasting costs.

    8. Re:So... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      yea I got little kids that don't need to be hearing certain things. Its called adult responsibility.

      Exactly! It's your adult responsibility to make sure your kids are not watching smut. If you leave your 5 year-old unattended in front of the TV with the remote, then that's your parenting fail. If you can't trust your 12 year-old to not watch smut when you're not around, then again, that's your [NSFW] parenting fail. Expecting the government to instill and uphold morality in your family is ridiculous. That is your job.

      There has always been opportunity for kids to make poor moral choices and be exposed to media and events that were outside the parents' moral-comfort zone. If you lived in 18th century Paris, you had the choice to go to the guillotine, or you could keep your kids home. It has and always will be up to the parents. If you let your kids run wild and don't take the time to set expectations, they're going to do wrong. Expecting some hand in the sky, or white-house, or capital hill to come in and do it for you is just plain crazy.

      Spend time with your kids. Talk to them. Explain why you make choices and how you feel about their choices. No amount of legislation will substitute that.

      no kidding. But it takes a village to raise an idiot. As a society we have a responsibility to take care of our offspring whether its our child or our neighbor's that will grow up to be the next rapist, thief etc. Parents can't be everywhere all the time.

      Not swearing out in public in front of children is common adult decency. Public TV that gets piped in. Ya know not too long ago I remember being able to watch certain action shows with my dad. They were tailored quite well for age appropriate things. Now, The same time slots I can't watch the action shows with my sons because they throw in some things that at their age they should not be exposed to.

      And generally speaking if you start swearing in front of a father's children, you might get politely asked to stop. If you keep on being rude, the father might get a little rude back, along with all the other parents nearby. Maybe even call the cops.

      I have 4 of the best behaved kids. Ya know the kind that parents want their kids to play with because they are so well behaved while not around their parents. And they don't live with their heads in the sand. I have a beautiful 16 year old daughter, that is STILL daddy's girl even as she grabs her independence. She still has chosen to stay away from the guys, and she has the choice. And like I said she if beautiful. Grades? Oh don't even get my started on how wonderful in all areas my children are. So I know about, parent responsibility.

      It takes a village to raise an idiot. We all have a responsibility to teach the young ones proper behavior. We all should respect other's children. Do you like hearing little kids swear?

    9. Re:So... by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 2, Interesting

      but perhaps we can move past the vocal minority and allow the market to sort this one out.

      Such an interesting phrase, in a discussion of net neutrality.

      Note that it applies just as well to net neutrality as it does to smut on TV. Or do you really think the people screaming about net neutrality are anything other than a vocal minority? Hint: most people neither know nor care about net neutrality.

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    10. Re:So... by Jerry+Beasters · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      What bullshit. I have no responsibility to anyone's kid. And yes, in fact, I do seriously like hearing little kids swear. It's hilarious and as an adult I see nothing wrong with it. Take your morality elsewhere. And if I'm cursing near someone's kids and the father calls the cops I would hope he gets arrested for wasting police time. I have every right to curse in public, we have a thing called freedom of speech. We don't run the world for fucking children. We are the adults, we rule, not them.

    11. Re:So... by Tikkun · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "Boobies" are always reasonable. They are quite easy to find on the Internet. The Internet is in most every community. Hence based on the standards of the community in your area, boobies are indeed acceptable.

      This being said (with as much tongue in check as possible), just stop telling people what they can broadcast. It's none of your business, even if you did license them the airwaves they're using.

    12. Re:So... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      While I believe cursing and harsh language aren't protected under the First Amendment (I'm told, though maybe it's just cursing AT people that isn't), I grew up in a household where everyone dropped F-bombs constantly. I, however, did not. It was explained to me by my family . . .

      *YES. FAMILIES CAN EXPLAIN THINGS TO CHILDREN.*

      . . . that these aren't things little children should say. So I didn't.

      I also was basically raised by television, and instead of turning into a violent psychopath, I LEARNED THINGS. So I mean, call me crazy, but I think if you teach your children on your own time right from wrong, in whatever terms you see fit, you can expose them to whatever and they'll understand what you do and don't want them to do.

    13. Re:So... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The biggest problem I have with OTA TV today is the extemely rediculous amount of advertising. More than half of every hour is comercials! How is this "serving the public interest"? How about this...the FCC goes back to limiting the amount of cpomercial time per hour...say 10 minutes per hour.

      Also, how about someone bringung back QUALITY CONTENT to the TV shows! What we got now is wall to wall "realoty" shows, and way too many sitcoms that fall into the catagory of "meet the new sitcom, same as ALL THE OTHER sitcoms"

      Can you guess why I either buy DVDs of all my favorite TV shows and movies, or rent them from Netflix?

    14. Re:So... by aliquis · · Score: 1

      The question is if kids really gets corrupted of seeing sex? And why that would be so?

      I think a harsh stressful world with to little time for the kids is much worse than a TV showing porn when they is asleep anyway.

    15. Re:So... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If it takes a village, stop telling us about how great your children are and tell us how great your neighbors' children are because of your stellar parenting.

    16. Re:So... by kipin · · Score: 4, Informative

      I think you're looking for the Parents Television Council and some would place the number closer to 99% of all complaints.

      This is the same organization that had form letter email campaigns that encouraged people who didn't even watch the damn shoes to report them as "indecent".

      I guess you could say they figured out how to DDoS the FCC with complaints.

      --
      If I can not smoke in heaven, then I shall not go. -- Mark Twain
    17. Re:So... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hint: most people neither know nor care about net neutrality.

      That's not accurate. Take a look at this poll, which finds that 54% not only agree with the principle of net neutrality but think that congress should pass a law upholding it.

    18. Re:So... by antifoidulus · · Score: 1

      encouraged people who didn't even watch the damn shoes to report them as "indecent".

      Yeah, Reeboks "Nipple Pump" basketball shoes have just gone too far!

    19. Re:So... by SchrodingersRoot · · Score: 1

      Where do you watch TV? The hour long broadcast shows I watch are 40-45 minutes long, sans commercials. More commercials than I'd prefer there to be, but substantially less than "more than half of every hour"

    20. Re:So... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Net Neutrality and OTA content monitoring are two VERY different issues.

      How many religious groups are complaining about a tiered internet, or "kill packets", or throttled torrents?

    21. Re:So... by Neoprofin · · Score: 1

      I learned about war, rape, and murder from the evening news. The real world is just as bad as any fictional one, no sense in trying to keep children blind.

    22. Re:So... by Captain+Splendid · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You're technically right, but with all the overlays and shit they put right over the shows these days, you could easily find many OTA and cable networks who realistically push over 30 minutes of advertising per hour.

      --
      Linux, you magnificent bastard, I read the fucking manual!
    23. Re:So... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah, the Parents Television Council, a bastion of free speech for the good old USA.
      This ridiculous group's website basically consists of a "Type exactly what we tell you to type, regardless of whether or not you actually saw and/or were offended by it" webform to send complaints directly to the FCC.
      Most of the time, the forms are even already filled in (for convenience of course) and just need you to type your name and click "Send".

    24. Re:So... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bad form to reply to one's self (but how do you know I'm the same AC?) but here are some of those pre-filled FCC complaints:
      ..."The two men's bare torsos can be seen, and Tom is seen loosening the straps of her halter dress, exposing her bare back to TV viewers."...
      ..."It is implied that all three are naked in bed together covered only by a bedsheet."...
      ..."Randy: "Get your boobs off my brother!""...
      ..."Paris Hilton stands in the background and says "That's hot." "...
      ..."She is shown on screen posing in the nude at length with her breasts, crotch, and buttocks exposed but partially pixilated or barely obscured by a bed sheet or her arm."...

      These were all pre-typed, add-your-name-and-send webforms to make "formal" complaints with the FCC - all that the website wants to know is if you live in the particular area that these shows may have been broadcast in - not whether you actually saw, or were offended by, the scenes in question.

      This is why there is nothing good on TV anymore.

    25. Re:So... by kayditty · · Score: 0

      uh, yes, they are. we allow them to dictate what can and can't be done over private communications. the police police are the police, but they don't pass laws.

    26. Re:So... by kayditty · · Score: 0

      I forgot to mention that you probably also meant "morality."

    27. Re:So... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      their advertising revenue into a PBS fund that focused on education, solid news and community events, that could satisfy everybody. Anybody who wants to watch TV at the boobie hour, without seeing boobies still has an option

      What are you talking about? PBS already shows boobs now and then as well as some swearing. It's conservatives who are forcing the FCC to take such a hard line, not liberals. You know, the party of family values. What do you think family values means? I doubt it means free markets and minding your own business.

    28. Re:So... by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

      Parents can't be everywhere all the time.

      Nor can the government.

      Immunize, don't insulate. Raise a child who, when exposed to the garbage of the world, will make the right choice.

      Not swearing out in public in front of children is common adult decency.

      Why? Children will hear these words anyway, and they will grow up to swear.

      Maybe even call the cops.

      And if the cops can put me away for swearing, I am fucking done with this so-called "land of the free". If you insist on protecting your child from me, take your child away from me, and tell them to stay away -- because it is ultimately your responsibility, not mine.

      I have 4 of the best behaved kids... So I know about, parent responsibility.

      And you should take the credit for that. I had nothing to do with it.

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    29. Re:So... by txoof · · Score: 1

      Such an interesting phrase, in a discussion of net neutrality.

      While I veered FAR off topic of net neutrality, free speech is very different. Net neutrality falls into the category of things that should be regulated by the government in one way or another. It's not unlike RF spectrum. If the government doesn't regulate it, then only those who can shout loudest (most powerful transmitters) or have the best gear will be able to get anything whatever done. Ever.

      Free speech is much less dependent on technology, and rather is a concept. For free speech to work, a minority can never have control over what is permissible. For the internet to work, an informed and necessarily small group of people have to agree on one standard or another.

      Net neutrality should be discussed and decided on by an informed group of people; that group will probably necessarily be small and not represent everyone. Just like those that should regulate RF spectrum should be engineers and technicians.

      --
      This one's tricky. You have to use imaginary numbers, like eleventeen... --Hobbes
    30. Re:So... by Dan541 · · Score: 1

      I find it amusing when people get offended by words.

      The word "cunt" seems to get the most reaction, especially from women.

      Why? Are people that lame they had to decide "ok, I think im going to start being upset by, *list of everyday words*"

      Its kinda sad.

      --
      An SQL query goes to a bar, walks up to a table and asks, "Mind if I join you?"
    31. Re:So... by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Yawn.. The point isn't really that it was said or something was shown. It was that an otherwise non vulgar or none racy show was supposed to be playing. Take Bones for instance, people expect bones to be gorry and so on and they will not let their kids watch it if it violates their morals. But take a rewards show on OTA broadcasts and then out of the blue, fuck or tits or whatever. Your basically saying that if anyone wants to watch TV free of that stuff, like maybe those with your kids or deep views, they have to be confined to a certain state at a certain time.

      The reality of it would be that if Ms Jackson warned that there would be potential nudity in her performance or if Fox warned us that profanity might be used, no one would have cared because the people watching would have changed the channels if it offended them. What turned it into an insult is when they don't expect it and all the sudden it is there without warning on a medium that traditionally prohibited it.

      Now seriously, think about that. Would you want to watch a movie or TV show that said Kill all niggers, destroy the jews, fuck the president in the ass, Bring whitey down, kill the crackers, send the wetbacks home, purge the society of the plague that is those dirty and nasty illegal immigrants, all women should put out like sluts, or something along those lines? And no, it isn't all the much different other then "you might find it offensive" and don't think it is appropriate for your 7 year old son or daughter to be watching on over the air TV before going to bed. Now, you might hear every one of those at some point in time on HBO or one of the pay channels. You might even hear it on one of the cable stations after a certain time and with a warning presented before the show aired. The difference is that you have to take steps to get that programing into the house and should know that your children are able to be exposed to it. Hell, I remember watching soft porn on skinomax as a teen when my parent weren't home, they didn't seem to mind too much but I had friends who weren't allowed over because their parrents did mind.

      So the issue isn't really what was said or done, it is that people aren't expecting it and they can't take the appropriate actions to avoid it if that is their choice. Just like all the bad shit I just wrote above, even if you don't mind hearing it or seeing it, other might and they deserve a warning of some sort for when it would be there. IF we can agree on a certain time, or a certain type of channel, or even a warning that it might exist would probably end the entire problem. I mean hell, even Oprah gives a warning so parents can remove kids or change the channels when she is going to talk about sensitive material. She calls her cunt a Va-jay-jay just to avoid awkward moments on her show when they are talking about sexuality or reproductive health or something. I don't think anyone has ever complained to the FCC about Oprah's content (and they get pretty graphical like talking about the necessity of a douche and so on) because she gives them a warning. That's all people want.

    32. Re:So... by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      The government doesn't need to regulate net neutrality. All they need to do is ensure that you get what you pay for. It really is as simple as that. If your paying for 3 meg DSL and google is paying for a t3 or DS3, then the ISP on either side should not be able to limit you accesses to either on the bases of an extra payment. Now there is no reason why they can't ask google to pay more so you get access to their site at 4 or 6 megs when your only paying for the 3 meg package which net neutrality would limit.

      All we need for net neutrality is to ensure that people are getting what they paid for, nothing more. There should be enough consumer protections laws on the books to allow that enforcement already.

    33. Re:So... by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      *YES. FAMILIES CAN EXPLAIN THINGS TO CHILDREN.*

      That's sort of the problem here. There was no warning so you don't know if the child saw it and needs some explanation or not. When nudity is shown without warning or cusswords and so on at times when children would be watching TV normally, you don't know that they were exposed to it or that they need something explained until after it becomes an issue.

      Pay channels and cable channels are one thing, but over the air broadcasting during an awards show or the Superbowl or during the time kids would be watching TV at night really does need a warning before it happens and the warning needs to be apparent enough that the parents and families can take actions they deem appropriate for their children. And sure, each child is different, some will be perfectly fine, some might not be, some might repeat the words at the worst possible times, some might even get into legal troubles over it and so on. Here is a story about a girl who's family obviously didn't explain things to her. Of course there are others.

      You would be surprised at how many like this should have had things explained to them. I'm betting their parents had no idea before the cops made them aware. I'm not saying that the TV put them in that position, it could have influenced them a lot, a little, or not at all. But I am saying that if they had parent explain things to them, there is a good chance that things would be different for them. OF course they could of also had shitty parents who did explain things to them and didn't come off right, but you shouldn't have that opportunity removed because someone else doesn't care.

    34. Re:So... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The question is if kids really gets corrupted of seeing sex? And why that would be so?

      I think a harsh stressful world with to little time for the kids is much worse than a TV showing porn when they is asleep anyway.

      No, TV today is just a symptom, not a disease.

    35. Re:So... by Strange+Ranger · · Score: 1

      There is NOTHING you can do to keep a healthy 12 year old boy from looking at sex.

      I remember when there were 13 channels...total. They were 2 through 13 + UHF. You could severely mess with the tuner dial to get HBO to come in monochrome, and fuzzy, with no sound.
      Let me tell you, back then, at that age, it was AWESOME! The programming guide came in the mail back then. I saw grainy black & white boobies. Often.

      Healthy kids ARE going to look
      . In addition to the excellent last line of your post, your job as a parent is to keep them from finding S&M orgies with horses, or "2 Girls 1 Cup".
      If you think your job as a parent is to keep them from looking you're going to create some messed up kids.

      --

      Operator, give me the number for 911!
    36. Re:So... by Weedlekin · · Score: 1

      "If CBS wants to show boobies after a reasonable time, say, 9:00 (the internationally accepted "Boobie Hour)"

      21:00 isn't internationally accepted as a watershed hour, and it's certainly not accepted as a boobie hour by countries who don't share the Anglo-Saxon terror of children catching a glimpse of something that most of them spent their infancy looking at, squeezing, and sucking.

      --
      I'm not going to change your sheets again, Mr. Hastings.
    37. Re:So... by badkarmadayaccount · · Score: 1
      Is it parenting fail if kids actualy get to see the the human body in its natural state, possibly with some love and affection? I know that some porn can (and will) be brutal, but as a long time viewer I can say if you're not out for something specific, you aren't getting beyond soft-core. So, what adverse effects does porn have on "children" (based on the legal definition), regardless of brutality, simply the depiction of a sexual act? I'd like some research to be quoted.

      This is OT, but meth lab explosions are usualy due to the solvents used, which can be avoided by reduction of (pseudo)ephedrine, but unavailabilty of the substrate is problematic, even with electro-organic reduction. Check for Uncle Fester's ebooks. Cheers!

      --
      I know tobacco is bad for you, so I smoke weed with crack.
    38. Re:So... by Fred_A · · Score: 1

      If CBS wants to show boobies after a reasonable time, say, 9:00 (the internationally accepted "Boobie Hour), have swear words and show people's heads exploding like a melon, let them. [ ... ]
      Little kids that are up at 9:00 watching porn are already suffering from parenting fail and no amount of FCC nanying is going to save them.

      Sorry but boobies != porn. Go to any beach in a non religiously run country. (Or just go to Flickr - may be NSFW depending on your views on watching perfectly natural stuff)

      --

      May contain traces of nut.
      Made from the freshest electrons.
    39. Re:So... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      so... given your assumptions, all cable channels should be like this?

  2. Why do "net neutrality" advocates by GreedyCapitalist · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Why do "net neutrality" advocates ridicule politicians for comparing the Internet to a "series of tubes," and then trust them to regulate it?

    1. Re:Why do "net neutrality" advocates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, Al Gore did invent the thing, so obviously not all politicians are clueless...

      But seriously, why would anyone want the government involved in regulating the Internet? As another post mentioned, the government got involved in regulating the airwaves, and now you can't say "fuck" on TV. I'd hate to see the same rules applied to the Internet.

    2. Re:Why do "net neutrality" advocates by LuxMaker · · Score: 1

      Well the government is akin to prune juice. Do you trust prune juice to regulate your series of tubes when needed?

      --
      I regret that I only have one mod point to give per post.
    3. Re:Why do "net neutrality" advocates by joocemann · · Score: 1

      The article is not about Obama choosing Ted Stevens, so I'm not quite onboard with your analysis here....

    4. Re:Why do "net neutrality" advocates by InsertCleverUsername · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      More importantly, why do we mark as "Insightful" dishonest (or perhaps just inept) attempts to make others think that the ignorance of some Republican politicians proves that all politicians are idiots? One might also point out that the smart, qualified people, from outside Washington, being tapped to re-examine policy are NOT politicians, but experts on the subject.

      --
      Ask me about my sig!
    5. Re:Why do "net neutrality" advocates by Jawn98685 · · Score: 1

      Because we are not talking about the same "politicians"?
      Comparing the names mentioned in TFA to fuckwit (and convicted felon) Ted Stevens is more than a bit of a stretch, don't you think?

      I see that list of names and think, "My god. For the first time since the Internet has been a genuine public utility, the FCC just might get some talent that understands that utility and can apply the knowledgeable leadership that has been so sorely lacking at that level."
      Or maybe you haven't noticed how far behind some other parts of the world we are when it comes to affordable broadband technology. Then again, you probably still think that the U.S. has a first rate health care system too.

    6. Re:Why do "net neutrality" advocates by Gruff1002 · · Score: 0

      Why do "net neutrality" advocates ridicule politicians for comparing the Internet to a "series of tubes," and then trust them to regulate it?

      That is exactly the point. We don't trust senators like Stevens who make stupid comparisons and show entire lack of knowledge about any technological issues to make decisions regarding usage of the internet. Why would you trust somebody that has their house essentially rebuilt, doesn't know how it happened or who did it or how it was paid for?

    7. Re:Why do "net neutrality" advocates by PPH · · Score: 1

      Because the set of politicians who believe that the Internet is a series of tubes and the set of politicians who are competent to regulate the Internet are disjoint.

      --
      Have gnu, will travel.
    8. Re:Why do "net neutrality" advocates by amRadioHed · · Score: 1

      No ridiculed politicians for comparing the Internet to a "series of tubes". We ridicule Ted Stevens for comparing the Internet to a "series of tubes".

      And it looks like Ted Stevens isn't going to win his bid for re-election, so there goes your theory about people trusting him.

      --
      We hope your rules and wisdom choke you / Now we are one in everlasting peace
    9. Re:Why do "net neutrality" advocates by Lally+Singh · · Score: 1

      How many politicians actually used the "series of tubes" analogy?

      One, and he's a felon now.

      --
      Care about electronic freedom? Consider donating to the EFF!
    10. Re:Why do "net neutrality" advocates by Baricom · · Score: 1

      Worf does. That's good enough for me.

    11. Re:Why do "net neutrality" advocates by theodicey · · Score: 1

      Because Obama seems to understand the issue and is designating responsibility to qualified professionals--

      Not to a 75 year old, internet illiterate convicted felon like Ted "Tubes" Stevens?

    12. Re:Why do "net neutrality" advocates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They only ridiculed one politician about that. LOL.

  3. So, what was the MAIN criteria? by mi · · Score: 1, Insightful
    So, what was the main criteria for choosing them?

    Both are highly-regarded outside-the-Beltway experts in telecom policy

    or

    they've both been pretty harsh critics of the Bush administration's telecom policies in the past year.'

    ?

    --
    In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    1. Re:So, what was the MAIN criteria? by dachshund · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So, what was the main criteria for choosing them? Both are highly-regarded outside-the-Beltway experts in telecom policy or they've both been pretty harsh critics of the Bush administration's telecom policies in the past year.'

      You act like these are two distinct, unrelated issues--- when in fact, they're deeply interdependent.

    2. Re:So, what was the MAIN criteria? by Abreu · · Score: 1

      Both seem good qualifications to me [ducks]

      --
      No sig for the moment.
    3. Re:So, what was the MAIN criteria? by Keeper+Of+Keys · · Score: 1

      Nice point except that here on Slashdot we do not *act* at all, we just witter.

    4. Re:So, what was the MAIN criteria? by timeOday · · Score: 1

      I voted. There's really nothing else you can do to effect who winds up on an FCC review team.

    5. Re:So, what was the MAIN criteria? by mi · · Score: 1

      when in fact, they're deeply interdependent.

      Then listing both would've been "deeply" redundant, wouldn't it?

      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    6. Re:So, what was the MAIN criteria? by Urza9814 · · Score: 1

      Are there any outside-the-Beltway experts who _aren't_ harsh critics of the Bush administration's telecom policies?

    7. Re:So, what was the MAIN criteria? by mi · · Score: 1

      Are there any outside-the-Beltway experts who _aren't_ harsh critics of the Bush administration's telecom policies?

      Of course, there are. None of the major telecommunication companies have headquarters inside the Beltway... And, surprise-surprise, a real expert is more likely to work in their field, than be a college professor (in the field). And not all of them hate Bush with Academia's passion.

      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    8. Re:So, what was the MAIN criteria? by gyrogeerloose · · Score: 1

      here on Slashdot we do not *act* at all

      I not only voted for the opposition candidate who's views on telecommunications were diametrically opposed to that of the current administration, I donated to his campaign. If that's not acting, I don't know what is.

      --
      This ain't rocket surgery.
    9. Re:So, what was the MAIN criteria? by gyrogeerloose · · Score: 1

      a real expert is more likely to work in their field, than be a college professor

      True enough. But, of course, then they're not as likely to be able to make an unbiased decision either.

      For example, many of the Bush administration appointees to various regulatory agencies were experts who worked in the fields they were expected to regulate and the results were often less than satisfactory to anyone outside those particular industries.

      --
      This ain't rocket surgery.
    10. Re:So, what was the MAIN criteria? by amRadioHed · · Score: 1

      First of all, no.

      Secondly, their description as "highly-regarded outside-the-Beltway experts" who have "both been pretty harsh critics of the Bush administration's telecom policies in the past year" was written by the reporter, not the people who made the selection. For all we know neither of those are related to the official selection criteria.

      --
      We hope your rules and wisdom choke you / Now we are one in everlasting peace
    11. Re:So, what was the MAIN criteria? by SleepingWaterBear · · Score: 1

      Well, at least if you rule out bribery, blackmail, and assassination. Actually, a sufficiently large mailing campaign might sway Obama's decisions too, so I suppose there are actually quite a few things you could do.

      Not that I'm saying you should do these things, but voting isn't the only tool for change in a democracy, just the easiest.

    12. Re:So, what was the MAIN criteria? by mi · · Score: 1

      True enough. But, of course, then they're not as likely to be able to make an unbiased decision either.

      No one is fully unbiased. Hence my original question, now moderated down into the stone age: was the new people's expertise the main criteria, or their past criticism of Bush's policies?

      the results were often less than satisfactory to anyone outside those particular industries.

      You know, it depends on the priorities of the people... Here is an example of the much smaller government, a lot closer to its subjects: a town's building inspector. I'm trying to renovate a house we just bought, and the permit application has been pending for over 6 weeks (twice the State's legal limit, BTW), as the inspectors keep finding little flaws in our plans. I truly hate these people — with passion. In my long-held Libertarian opinion, what people do with their own houses (and other property) is no less their own business, than the kind of sex they engage in in their own bedrooms, or the kind of substances they smoke.

      But one can not do anything without a permit, and those are issued by the Executive branch's bureaucrats, who — in a college professor's opinion — is, likely, doing an excellent job enforcing the building code to the letter.

      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
  4. Better than the alternative. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Because trusting the phone companies to regulate it has worked even less for us in the past ten years.

    1. Re:Better than the alternative. by MindlessAutomata · · Score: 1

      Considering that instances of true net neutrality issues have been extremely far and few between (basically, nonexistant)... hmmm.

    2. Re:Better than the alternative. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What problems are there with the phone companies and "regulating" the Internet (IP transit)?

      Bitching about last mile issues is one thing (cable DSL, etc.) but that isn't the "Internet" these folks are looking to "regulate".

    3. Re:Better than the alternative. by slysithesuperspy · · Score: 1

      But these corporations do not operate under a proper market, they are big, subsidised creations of government. Why not fix the problem for once, not the symptom?

  5. Refreshing by txoof · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It is refreshing to see that Obama is pulling from academia and groups such as ICANN, rather than just from industry to populate his cabinet. I believe that those that have served in industry can offer some of the best insight into policy, but choosing a significant number of executives definitely skews policy in the wrong direction. For that matter, having too many of any one group leads to problems.

    I hope that Obama can see beyond what his party wants, and make decisions based on advice from all sides. Lincoln and Kennedy were both known for filling their cabinets with diverse members from a wide political and social background. After the fiasco at the Bay of Pigs Kennedy sought to limit group think - where all dissenting opinions are squashed by excessive group homogeneity - Kennedy specifically divided up similar advisors and brought in outside experts to help successfully diffuse the Cuban Missile Crisis. He had the political savvy to understand that difficult decisions have no right answer, just answers that are more or less positive for everyone.

    Hopefully Obama will balance his cabinet appointments in a similar way. Drawing from universities is a good start, but some industry experts mixed into the bunch is an excellent step in the right direction as well. As L. B. Johnson said of Hoover, "I'd rather have him inside the tent pissing out than outside pissing in." It's better to have dissenting opinions inside helping you make positive choices, rather than showering you from outside and making your life more difficult.

    --
    This one's tricky. You have to use imaginary numbers, like eleventeen... --Hobbes
    1. Re:Refreshing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      They are part of his transition team. Nobody said anything about cabinet appointments yet.

    2. Re:Refreshing by eggnoglatte · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Look, I was all out supporting Obama, especially considering the alternatives. But can we PLEASE stop comparing him to Kennedy and Lincoln before he has even started?

    3. Re:Refreshing by psyberman · · Score: 1

      It is refreshing to see that Obama is pulling from academia and groups such as ICANN ....

      I'd feel better if the people from ICANN were left out - what with their recent and ongoing attempts to ruin the internet.

      In brief, their plan to allow unlimited top level domains is a horrible idea ie there could/would be ".microsoft", ".help", ".newyork", etc.

      Secondly they seem to be getting ready to allow tiered pricing on .coms (gTLDs) - you can imagine how it would feel to have the price of the renewal fee for your domain to be set at 25,000 (or whatever) per year if they feel like it.

      Some info concerning that last can be found at Domain Name Journal.

      I'm not sure exactly what Susan Crawford (from ICANN) thinks about it but I don't think that ICANN is looking out for the public too much - they seem to want to be rich and powerful instead.

    4. Re:Refreshing by tsm_sf · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Gah, better than comparing him at the end. Nice choice of presidents =(

      --
      Literalism isn't a form of humor, it's you being irritating.
    5. Re:Refreshing by Neoprofin · · Score: 1

      The funny thing is that both are very beloved presidents who made some very questionable choices in office and ended up dead. If I were Obama I'd be first in line to tell people not to draw those comparisons.

    6. Re:Refreshing by Captain+Splendid · · Score: 1

      But can we PLEASE stop comparing him to Kennedy and Lincoln before he has even started?

      Sure, but you're going to have to tell the right-wing 'tards to stop hyperventilating about him being the antichrist. while you're at it.

      --
      Linux, you magnificent bastard, I read the fucking manual!
    7. Re:Refreshing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, the comparisons themselves aren't a bad thing, in fact, they could be something of an inspiration not only to the population, but also to Obama himself. If he feels like he has high expectations to live up to, it may help him push himself to meet them.
      I mean, what's the point in having iconic figures if they're sanctified to the point that we never draw parallels to them? I'd rather let people's renewed interest in government policy and bureaucracy take its course, than to squelch it before it's begun.

      I'm on a hope train, baby, and it's never derailing!

    8. Re:Refreshing by seriesrover · · Score: 2, Interesting

      oh please...there are "tards" (as you so eloquently put it) on both extremes. I don't paint left wingers with the same brush as Stalin just as I shouldn't be painted with some racist overtone. The point the picture [terribly] put it is that most on my side of the aisle are wondering what exactly is going to change and how? The message of "change" has come from just about every candidate if it was popular - Reagan, Clinton, Bush (2), Kerry and now Obama. Have they changed in the way they promised? And as the Obama appointees are shaping up its looking more like the Clintons are back in so not much change there. The point the GP is making is right on - lets not start the accomplishment celebrations until they've actually happened...2 months before he's actually started is a tad premature. And besides, there is precedence for this - Labour (UK) in '97 - almost identical to the Obama campaign in so many respects...and that administration is now loathed and renegaded on so many of their promises.

    9. Re:Refreshing by slysithesuperspy · · Score: 1

      What, the same Lincoln who killed hundreds of thousands of your fellow countrymen and suppressed free speech and tortured? I don't have a high opinion of Obama but I would never ever compare him to Lincoln, even if it was on the topic of how they filled their cabinets and not the number of people they plan to kill.

  6. WHAAAAAARGAABBBL by Nicolas+MONNET · · Score: 1

    What does this have to do with that?
    And I'm not aware of politicianS doing this stupid comparison; only of one, who has just been convicted of corruption and lost his bid for reelection.

  7. AT&T's flawed reasoning... by Pollux · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The public would not pay for its Internet services if AT&T discriminated against content, [Jim Cicconi, AT&T executive vice president for regulatory affairs] added. "We'd be shooting ourselves in the foot."

    But, if the public only had a choice between DSL w/ AT&T, cable w/ Comcast, or no internet at all, and both companies throttled content, then the public is really left without a choice. It used to be that consumers had a choice between their internet provider. Nowadays, many major cities and municipalities only have one or two choices, usually both of them major players. And when regional monopolies exist, regulation has to exist to ensure that the monopolies aren't abused.

    1. Re:AT&T's flawed reasoning... by Fieryphoenix · · Score: 1

      It's a phrase that works both ways. A monopoly can be both the monopoly itself, and the company that holds it. The OP's sentence is correct.

    2. Re:AT&T's flawed reasoning... by Urza9814 · · Score: 1

      Exactly. Where I live, my choices are Comcast, or satellite. And we all know how bad satellite is. It would probably be cheaper to rent out a tiny house somewhere where I could get un-filtered access, and then buy Comcast and route everything through a VPN to there or something. Seriously. Satellite costs twice as much as Comcast and the service is _horrible_. I actually know people that have switched _back to dial-up_ because satellite was so bad.

    3. Re:AT&T's flawed reasoning... by pashdown · · Score: 1

      The key to the monopoly problem is municipal fiber for transport, allowing large and small data providers to compete on a level playing field for customers.

  8. Regulation is bad mmm'kay by Nicolas+MONNET · · Score: 5, Funny

    Deregulating Wall Street has done wonders for the US economy, unleashing the creative powers of the investor class unto the world. Deregulating the telecom industry is working just as well!

    1. Re:Regulation is bad mmm'kay by MobyDisk · · Score: 2, Interesting

      When and how was the telecom industry de-regulated?

      In every state I am familiar with, there is one company that has a government granted monopoly to maintain the phone lines and to provide service over them. That's not deregulation to me.

      I know that some states have laws that force that company to lease the lines to other providers, but it usually doesn't work since they aren't required to lease them at a fair price, and nobody can compete with the company that maintains the lines any way.

    2. Re:Regulation is bad mmm'kay by aliquis · · Score: 1

      Over here in Sweden the telephone system was made by the government of course, social democratic as we are. In the 90:s it was sold out however and since quite a few years it has been a free market for the providers.

      The lines does obviously still belong to a single owner, I don't know who sets the price but usually you pay one fee for subscription and then you pay another one for the calls you actually make. Same for electricity where you pay one net fee and one power fee.

      There is various companies to select from when it comes to the phone call fee but they are quite similar but I don't think the original company has an advantage when it comes to the price for the phone calls.

      Also if you get ADSL I think you can pay for ADSL + phone (don't know if it's SIP or old analogue) and get around the regular land based phone line cost.

      Personally I wish the government had decided to dig down fibre to everyone five years ago and killed the old telephone network and never built the DVB-T bullshit and just delivered Internet, phone and TV over IP instead.

      (And then the fibre would, once again, be owned by the government but any company would be free to put end to end equipment and try to get costumers for whatever price.)

      Some people probably think it's stupid to dig such things down to people who live in areas where it cost a lot and that one should let the market handle it and people pay for themself. But I guess scale of economics kicks in somewhat and eventually makes somewhat cheaper to do it for everyone to (more expensive to dig your own one for 2 km than if your four neighbours will get it at the same time to.)

      Though I don't think electricity become cheaper by opening up the market, I don't know about telephone but there is no warranty I guess ..

    3. Re:Regulation is bad mmm'kay by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know that some states have laws that force that company to lease the lines to other providers, but it usually doesn't work since they aren't required to lease them at a fair price, and nobody can compete with the company that maintains the lines any way.

      That turns out not to be quite the case...
      The Telecommunications Act of 1996 required ILECs to lease access to pretty much anything ("unbundled network elements")to CLECs at wholesale prices, to encourage competition. There's been some changes over the past few years in this area--I believe ILECs are no longer required to lease things like local switching, for example--which I haven't completely kept up with, but AFAIK, requirement for leasing colo and local loop stuff (at least for copper) is still solid. In any case, point is, while the merged RBOCs are still the dominant carriers, the theory is that they don't have a monopoly. But you are correct--there're regulations six ways from Sunday.

    4. Re:Regulation is bad mmm'kay by mattwarden · · Score: 1, Troll

      I am really getting sick of people propagating the myth that Wall Street was deregulated. The US Government intervenes every single day in the financial markets. The Federal Reserve sets the cost of capital in a committed effort to manipulate the cost/benefit analysis of businesses deciding how and when to grow. The government has a very heavy hand on the financial markets, especially when it comes to encouraging individuals and companies to spend when they wouldn't otherwise spend, and yet when a bubble (which by definition is unnatural valuation) bursts and companies fail because they have inadequate savings (since they spent too much), no one asks whether the existing government regulation was to blame for any of it?

      (Well, that is not entirely true. There are actually a few individuals in Congress who are asking these questions. But most of the public is not asking them, because they do not understand the market.)

    5. Re:Regulation is bad mmm'kay by MobyDisk · · Score: 1

      Thank you, that was awesome to know. That is exactly how I want it to be done here in the US, but nobody seems to understand. In my state, they did this with power and it works great. You pay one company a fixed fee for the power lines, then per-usage fee to the power company of your choosing.

    6. Re:Regulation is bad mmm'kay by MobyDisk · · Score: 1

      Okay, thanks. That gives me a lot to Google on. The ILECs maintain the lines + provide local phone service right? If so, seems like it won't ever be truly competitive until we separate those two functions.

      Back when everyone was on dial-up that is the way it was. Your local phone company had nothing to do with your internet access. They just provided end-to-end communications to your ISP. There were gzillions of ISPs, each offering different quality of service, rates, features, etc. We need to get that back.

    7. Re:Regulation is bad mmm'kay by aliquis · · Score: 1

      I think the reason the later part doesn't work that good over here is because the electricity is sold on a scandinavian/nordic "market place" anyway, so someone have already bought the electricity for the best price I believe and therefor they remain quite similar.

      I can't do shit to change the fixed fee but I can pick any company in the country for the energy bill. Most often you can lock the cost for 1, 2 or 3 years which give both them and you more safety in what you know what the price is but it usually cost somewhat more than getting "the market price" if you use around the same electricty amount each month.

      If you let the price vary the whole time you pay the price for the electricity on that "electricity market" + a small markup and this is the one you can affect by switching between companies. But we are talking like 5% or something so it's no huge difference.

      Generally swinging price works better for appartments and locked up prices for houses because a house with electrical heating will use most electricity during winter and because the demands is higher then so is the price.

    8. Re:Regulation is bad mmm'kay by rebelcan · · Score: 1

      That's happening right now in British Columbia, Canada with the natural gas. The pipes are still owned by a company called Terasen, and the price of gas is set by the but you can choose to get the gas from one of many providers or stick with the company that owns the pipes.

      However, Terasen is profit-neutral on the gas. They buy their gas in three month intervals from the suppliers, which means that if the price of gas goes up, they have to charge more to stay profit-neutral. The other companies however, can buy gas in bulk, and you can get 1 to 5 year fixed price agreements.

      As an aside, I worked as a gas marketer for a few months last summer. It was kind of sad how many people just didn't see the benifit, even when I was able to show them how their natural gas costs have gone up a ridiculous amount in the past few years. From a pdf found through Google: "In 1995, the average annual price of natural gas at Sumas/Huntingdon and Station 2 was under $2.00/GJ; by 2003 the price was over $6.00/GJ, a threefold increase". And the price is just going to keep climbing over the next few years, thanks to natural gas being a non-renewable resource. It would have been nice to get a fixed rate contract back when natural gas was less than $2/GJ!

      What I thought was really sad though, was how people 'had heard from a friend that works for Terasen' that the gas marketers were charging more than Terasen. But that's how a fixed rate plan works. The gas marketer gets a deal for several years, and fixes the price. Yes, for the first year, you might be paying more -- as much as $2 or $3 per gigajoule more -- but after that first year, you're saving lots of money. When I was out going door-to-door last summer, the price of gas from Terasen was about $5/GJ. Now ( as of October 1, 2008 ) the price is $7.536/GJ. The 3-year plan my company offered was something like $9/GJ. Now they have five year plans too. Next year, the price will probably be a few bucks more ( gas prices tend to fall a bit in the summer, then jump to a few bucks higher than the previous winter -- non-renewable resource and all that ).

      And a lot of companies do this thing where at the end of your contract, if you choose to stay with them, your new contract will be the median between what you were paying and the current price of gas. So if you were on a contract for $10/GJ, and the price of gas had gone up to $16/GJ, you'd only pay $13/GJ on the new contract. Well, the company I worked for did anyways.

      And yes, I know. I'm a horrible human being for working as a door-to-door salesman. I was paid on commission only though, and I had to quit after two months because I barely made enough money to pay for gas ( car gas, not natural gas ). So that job didn't totally corrupt my soul. That's what the internet is for!

      --
      God is dead -- Nietzsche
      Nietzsche is dead -- God
      Zombie Nietzsche lives! -- Zombie Nietzsche
    9. Re:Regulation is bad mmm'kay by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't believe you understand the relationship between "Deregulating Wall Street" and Government Operation of the Federal Reserve.

  9. Re:I don't know if it's too late, BUT by txoof · · Score: 0, Troll

    You just made my day! I was wondering when the faithful 1999 game of Doom would come to light. We probably need to start impeachment hearings before Obama is even sworn into office due to his affiliation with such a dangerous person as Kevin Mitnick.

    After all, we no longer need to FREE KEVIN because KEVIN FREE . He is free to point out security holes and run his security consulting firm. What ever are we going to do?

    Hehe, I had an old Subaru that had a FREE KEVIN sticker on it. People used to pull up along side me on city streets, parking lots, stop lights, even the highway and ask, "WHO'S KEVIN!?". It was a special challenge to explain that at a 60 second stop light, or 75 mph.

    --
    This one's tricky. You have to use imaginary numbers, like eleventeen... --Hobbes
  10. Re:I don't know if it's too late, BUT by nyu2 · · Score: 1

    Hm. Internet terrorist? o.O http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kevin_mitnik You know he runs a security consulting company, right? No doubt another leftist conspiracy, helping people keep their computers and networks safe.

  11. Net Neutrality is the least of our concerns. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    My fellow Americans, let me be the last to retail slanderous rumors. I have great respect for Mr. Obama and his family. But when our nation and our GOD-given rights are at risk, no patriot can remain silent. It has coem to my attention that our worst fears have been confirmed. "Barack Obama," whose real name is Giuseppe Franconi, is an agent of the sinister Italian power! Americans, imagine the not-so-far future: government agents violating the sanctity of our TV-rooms, our base ball parks, and our children's schools and churches, confiscating our GOD-given hot dogs and replacing them with salamies! Is this the "change" you believe in? Is this your "hope" for the future? I for one will not remain silent as nefarious Italian agents use the cover of the freedoms that we love to spirit their nefarious ices into our Democratic sanctuary.

    Now let me say I have nothing against the Italian people, who are a peace-loving people with a noble and historic culture. Their language, Mexican, is shared by many proud, upstanding hispanic citizens of this great land. But the hot-dog conspiracy is war, by a small secret cabal of Italians who hate freedom and our GOD-given meat products, and our freedom to eat hot dogs in our tv rooms must be defended. As long as I am the president, this administration will take the fight to the enemy and defeat the Italian menace. Thank you and GOD BLESS AMERICA.

  12. Re:I don't know if it's too late, BUT by hal9000(jr) · · Score: 1

    What are you babbling about and what does this have to do with net neutrality? Please, wipe the drool off your chin and go back to quietly reminiscing how cool you used to be.

    On topic now, it's good to see that net neutrality is getting some serious consideration. Like the GP said, when you only have 1-2 choices and they are both behaving the same way, well, you have no choice. I will say, however, that there has never really been much choice for broadband outside of bit metro areas. When there was choice for Internet access, that was mostly dial-up. It was/is cheaper to terminate a butt-load of phone lines to a modem than roll out your own cable infrastructure.

  13. Diffuse Missiles? by Keeper+Of+Keys · · Score: 1

    "successfully diffuse the Cuban Missile Crisis"? I think you mean "defuse". In the context of missiles, diffuse has pretty much exactly the opposite meaning.

    1. Re:Diffuse Missiles? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The correct word is always defuse. Although I agree the mistake is more amusing in the context of something like missiles which have literal fuses. The problem is that many people pronounce defuse and diffuse the same way, which leads to confusion.

    2. Re:Diffuse Missiles? by Keeper+Of+Keys · · Score: 1

      from dictionary.com:

      - verb (used with object)
      1. to pour out and spread, as a fluid.
      2. to spread or scatter widely or thinly; disseminate.
      3. Physics. to spread by diffusion.

      It was meaning 2 I had in mind, as missiles can also literally "scatter things widely".

  14. How it should be done by dachshund · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I've said this before, but why not say it again :)

    The basic issue with Net Neutrality is not how the service should be offered, or anything to do with the technology. It's fundamentally just an issue of who pays. Telecoms would like to collect subscriber revenue from their customers, then turn around and collect more revenue from content providers as well.

    The important thing to understand here is that as bad as the current ISP situation is, under the current model a customer theoretically has the option to respond to price signals by changing their service options, e.g., switching to another provider, or --- if none is available --- simply reducing their consumption. That keeps costs under control to some extent.

    Under the proposed model, it's the content provider who pays. Since a content provider is not a direct "customer" of the ISP, they have very little leverage with the ISP. If, say, Google wants to reach a given class of customers (e.g., the tens millions of customers served by Comcast), they have no choice but to deal with Comcast on whatever terms it chooses--- or give up a huge percentage of the market.

    Now on the surface this seems like a fine deal to Comcast's customers, since they get enhanced network services without any additional service charges. But this leads to a problem: without any price signals, there's no strong incentive on Comcast to moderate their prices. Anything they charge will ultimately be passed along to the customers by the content providers, in the form of higher service charges, reduced quality, and/or dramatically increased advertising. But customers won't see this directly and link it to the ISP, so there will be very little incentive to control costs (no doubt Comcast will mandate that content providers distribute these costs equally, and not single out their customers for additional surcharges). It imposes a huge tax on a very dynamic and growing part of our economy, and it's certainly one we don't need now.

    (Larger providers, incidentally, will have some leverage in this model--- since who wants to be the ISP to cut off iTunes service? But their leverage will come at the cost of squeezing smaller providers for more revenue, dramatically increasing barriers to entering the market. Goodbye new ideas.)

    There are various solutions to this problem, all of which require the ISP to bill their enhanced services to the customer. In the end this gives the same set of enhanced services, but also allows customers to make a decision as to whether they want to pay the ISP, cut down on service, or switch to another provider. Done correctly this should encourage ISPs to open up their networks to many providers, since their revenue will be driven by customer interest and not self-interest.

    1. Re:How it should be done by MobyDisk · · Score: 1

      Under the proposed model, it's the content provider who pays.

      Link please? That's not mentioned in the reuters article about the bill. If that is what this law says, then it has nothing to do with net neutrality. Net neutrality is not about who pays. It is about the pipes that deliver the content being neutral to what the content is. The pricing model should stay the way it is.

    2. Re:How it should be done by Urza9814 · · Score: 1

      No, because the content providers already pay. They already pay quite a bit actually. What the issue is is an attempt to charge them again - many, many times. They pay for their connection already. Why should they now have to pay extra so that they can actually use it? Why should they have to pay every ISP separately to carry their content?

    3. Re:How it should be done by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If, say, Google wants to reach a given class of customers (e.g., the tens millions of customers served by Comcast), they have no choice but to deal with Comcast on whatever terms it chooses--- or give up a huge percentage of the market.

      Now on the surface this seems like a fine deal to Comcast's customers, since they get enhanced network services without any additional service charges.

      That in no way seems like a fine deal for customers. Under this logic, Comcast's mafia division can deny their customers access to any web site they can't extort for protection money.

      It is not and should not ever be up to Comcast or any other ISP to decide which web sites their customers can use. Comcast gets their money when the customer, who probably has no other options for service, pays their monthly fee. Google is not a Comcast customer and they are not trying to reach people who are. The customers themselves are trying to reach Google and have already paid for access to the internet to do it.

    4. Re:How it should be done by PPH · · Score: 1

      The important thing to understand here is that as bad as the current ISP situation is, under the current model a customer theoretically has the option to respond to price signals by changing their service options, e.g., switching to another provider, or --- if none is available --- simply reducing their consumption. That keeps costs under control to some extent.

      So, if Comcast partners with Google and Verizon does so with MSN (these are the only two service providers in my neighborhood) and I want to use Yahoo!, I'm screwed. Either provider is free to block non-partner services (not likely) or tack on a surcharge (like the ex-CEO of AT&T stated he has the right to do). The latter will make the use of services that compete with my telecommunications provider partners group uneconomical.

      And what if I'd like to start my own competing search engine. I've got to cut a telecommunications provider in on my business or I'm screwed. If there are eight competing search engines, we are going to need eight telecoms serving my neighborhood. And if one day, I'd like to switch search engines (there are things that Yahoo does better than Google), I've either got to pay the extra service fee or switch broadband providers. Not likely with their lock-in contracts. Pretty soon, we'll be back to the days of Compuserve, AOL, MSN and other private networks. Or worse yet, the way trucking companies used to operate with the mob. While it may be possible to interoperate between the systems, the 'out of partner network' fees will essentially prohibit that. Goodbye Internet. Hello organized crime.

      We need to separate telecommonications services (the people who run the routers and the fiber) from the information services (the people who run the SMTP, web, NNTP, etc. services) and regulate telecommunications as common carriers.

      --
      Have gnu, will travel.
    5. Re:How it should be done by cduffy · · Score: 1

      Net neutrality is not about who pays. It is about the pipes that deliver the content being neutral to what the content is. The pricing model should stay the way it is.

      Sure, it's about who pays -- almost everything is in the end, after all.

      The reason there's a reason for legislation to stop the pipes from favoring certain content providers is that some of the folks who own those pipes have stated (very publicly) that they believe they're owed some of the profits being made by service providers (like Google) "using their network".

      So -- the "proposed model" isn't what the bill would do, it's what the content providers are trying to do but which net neutrality legislation is attempting to prevent.

    6. Re:How it should be done by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

      The basic issue with Net Neutrality is not how the service should be offered, or anything to do with the technology. It's fundamentally just an issue of who pays.

      Who pays is certainly relevant, but the technology is important. Consider...

      Telecoms would like to collect subscriber revenue from their customers, then turn around and collect more revenue from content providers as well.

      And, in the process, also destroy any protocol or network which can't pay -- like, say, BitTorrent.

      It would also considerably reverse the democratization of the Internet -- as you say:

      Larger providers, incidentally, will have some leverage in this model

      And smaller providers will have less leverage. It'll increase the barrier of entry, and effectively kill real innovation on the Internet.

      "Who pays" can't be separated from the issue, and price is the reason this is being made such an issue -- Google's support certainly helps the net neutrality campaign. But "who pays" is not the core issue.

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
  15. Bizarro World by timeOday · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The new President is appointing knowledgeable experts to important government posts instead of industry cronies? Pinch me.

    1. Re:Bizarro World by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What crazy mod flamebaited this? It's insightful.

    2. Re:Bizarro World by hanshotfirst · · Score: 2, Informative

      Sorry to pinch you, but he named people to a review team which is advising a transition team, not exactly an important government post. He still has time to put doofuses there.

      --
      Why, oh why, didn't I take the Blue Pill?
    3. Re:Bizarro World by SleepingWaterBear · · Score: 1

      The new President is appointing knowledgeable experts to important government posts instead of industry cronies? Pinch me.

      Well, sort of. These aren't permanent positions - just his transition team. He could still choose to appoint industry cronies to the actual important government posts. That said, this is still surprisingly good news.

      And how do you end up with a (Score:2, Troll) anyway?

    4. Re:Bizarro World by G-Man · · Score: 1

      Umm, in this one instance maybe, but don't get too excited.

  16. Serious question? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Why do Linux advocates ridicule operating systems for being closed-source and bloated, and then trust an operating system to run their computers?

    Why do vegetarians ridicule food for being immoral and unhealthy, but still eat food?

    Why do voters criticize candidates for holding positions they don't like, and then vote for a candidate?

    1. Re:Serious question? by lysergic.acid · · Score: 5, Insightful

      exactly. the gp's question is just silly (or poorly thought out).

      if people want to call America a free and democratic nation, then we need to start acting like one. stop thinking of the government as this separate ruling entity that you have no power or influence over. yes, it's convenient to disassociate yourself from the policy makers of our nation as that makes it easier to wash your hands of the government's actions and their consequences (like war, encroachment of civil liberties, corruption, etc.). but if that's the attitude you're gonna take then what is the point of having a democratic republic?

      if you don't trust a small group of political elite to regulate the internet and other public infrastructure, then why would you trust a small group of corporate elite to do so. at least the public has a say in government policies, thus we have the right to demand changes to the government regulates the internet if we're unhappy with it. however, the public has no say in corporate policies and have no right to dictate how a private corporation operates.

      being a natural monopoly and a vital service with inelastic demand, communications networks like telecoms/ISPs cannot be boycotted effectively by consumers. so even if you believe in having the invisible hand of the Free Market make everything alright, that will not work in this case. but the social apparatus constituting a democratic government exists precisely for situations like these where it provides the only mechanism for carrying out the will of the people in protecting public interest.

    2. Re:Serious question? by aliquis · · Score: 1

      For the same reason that you write your post: It feels nice to complain.

    3. Re:Serious question? by MindlessAutomata · · Score: 1

      When you disagree with the vast majority of people in the country there's no reason to bother. Might as well just do something actually productive while the rest of the people in the country get to tell you how to live.

    4. Re:Serious question? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Didnt the govt still go on a war when a large number of people disagreed?

      The reason why govt regulation is not good is that they have no idea about the technology involved and the specific workings of the industry. It is not about trust. Even if we trust them to be working for us, we cannot trust them to do what is best for consumers.

      Plus, it is very difficult to correct mistakes and misdirections with the govt. The regulatory process is always extremely slow. Look at the amount of time it is taking to correct interconnection charges in the phone network.

    5. Re:Serious question? by ar32h · · Score: 1

      being a natural monopoly and a vital service with inelastic demand, communications networks like telecoms/ISPs cannot be boycotted effectively by consumers. so even if you believe in having the invisible hand of the Free Market make everything alright, that will not work in this case. but the social apparatus constituting a democratic government exists precisely for situations like these where it provides the only mechanism for carrying out the will of the people in protecting public interest.

      Telecommunications may have been a natural monopoly 100 years ago when Theodore Vale used it to argue that AT&T should be the one American telephone company. It certainly is not one now. Why would a government telco be any better than the heavily regulated monopoly system we tried in the past?

      At the last mile level there are many competing technologies (DSL, Cable, EVDO, Fixed-wireless) from completing companies with their own pros and cons. If you are not happy with one provider you are free to switch to another provider.

      Indeed, AT&T provides wholesale access to the DSL system through ASI at very reasonable rates. In any area where AT&T DSL is available there are several alternate IP carriers available should you not like AT&T's stance on Network Neutrality, etc.

      The real tragedy of access is not that consumer choice is limited, rather its that consumers do not look beyond big Phone and big Cable.

    6. Re:Serious question? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The analysis of communication networks as natural monopolies, vital service, and inelastic demand is arguable but, nevertheless, missing the point. The correct view of the situation isn't whether we, the government/the people, can/should/are able to regulate, but by what right do I have to tell someone what to do with thier property.

      These communication networks that are so vital, so valuable that no matter what price they charge the consumer is willing to pay, so expensive that there are seldom overlapping networks, so dear to us all are still not our property and would in all likelyhood never even exist without the expectation that the owner/builder/designer/entrepreneur would be able to profit from thier hard work, knowledge, insight, and calculated risks. We owe a debt of gratitude for the endeavors of those with the aptitude to create, with the will to take on these risks, with the foresight to provide value.

      If you pour your life, your money, your mind into a great new invention, rest assured that I will advocate for your property rights, no matter how vital it is, no matter how rare it is, and no matter how much consumers are willing to pay. I hope that you would do the same for me.

  17. Vets? by nih · · Score: 0

    at last we can stop worrying about the welfare of the creatures that live in the tubes.

    --
    I'm a rabbit startled by the headlights of life :(
  18. Re:I don't know if it's too late, BUT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You appear to have responded to the wrong thread. Now apologize for your unkind comment about txoof!

    (Yeah, this thread is really off-topic, but it's funny so what the hey.)

  19. Net Neutrality Vets by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Vets?

    As in Veterinarians ? (I guess they are losing business, since people are going to 1-800-PETMEDS and saving a trip to the Vet's office.)

    Or as in Veterans - (former) members of the military services, that have served overseas, usually in some war or a peacekeeping role.

    1. Re:Net Neutrality Vets by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As in 'someone who vets/examines carefully'.

  20. because of AT&T CEO opened his mouth w/o think by freedom_india · · Score: 1

    All this noise about net neutrality, supporters and against'sers would not have come at all had AT&T CEO kept his trap shut that fateful day.
    By showing his greed for double-dipping and charging websites AND ISP consumers for directing traffic, he showed the face of corporate greed prematurely. This resulted in congress and Obama forcing ISPs to agree to neutrality.
    AT&T CEO must be cursing himself for opening his mouth that day...

    --
    "Doing what i can, with what i have." ~ Burt Gummer
  21. Anonymous Coward by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    AntiHero says: Net Nuetrality?! Really? They are smart and freedom-loving enough to take net nuetrality seriously and ensure that it happens and appoint people at the head of stuff that are nuetral and stuff?! Could it be?! Awesome! Hope!

    Yes we can! Yes We Can! Go Obama

  22. Apples and oranges by Dachannien · · Score: 0, Troll

    I'd just like to point out that the OP is subtly conflating two issues here: warrantless wiretapping and network neutrality. The headline claims that Obama's supposed genius is in nominating advocates of network neutrality, but then goes on to say how they're reputed as outspoken opponents of Bush's telecom policy.

    The thing is, network neutrality hasn't become a ripe enough issue for the current administration to need to take a stance on it. Bush's telecom policy has really just revolved around warrantless wiretapping and immunity to lawsuits brought concerning said wiretapping.

    On a side note, the OP's attitude toward Obama's supposed genius is just another example of why Congress hasn't done something concerning network neutrality yet. Far-left groups like MoveOn.org picked up network neutrality for some bizarre reason, making the concept untouchable by conservatives, even those who understand that the regional Internet duopolies need at least a few rules to keep them from abusing the consumer. OP obviously subscribes to the MoveOn.org school of thought, as evidenced by linking election rhetoric buzzwords like "past eight years" to the FCC, even though the commissioners serve five-year terms, and the Commission can have no more than three of its five members from the same political party.

    On another side note, Obama's early interest in the FCC suggests that the Fairness Doctrine might rear its head again with his support.

  23. Sounds Good, But Won't Work by JoeSixpack00 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I prefer a more libertarian approach here. If CBS wants to show boobies after a reasonable time, say, 9:00 (the internationally accepted "Boobie Hour), have swear words and show people's heads exploding like a melon, let them. The market will sort things out. People will either watch and support CBS' decision and CBS will show more boobies.

    And you know what will happen? Ratings will skyrocket, resulting in 3 dozen copycat stations - and virtually none for those people who don't want to see nudity and violence all the time (like the reality show trend). Market numbers will always look good for that type of trash, because a large percentage of people who don't like smut 24/7 have already given up on TV anyways (prime example: the book readers). So realistically, you would have to bring those people back to TV to even know what audience you're missing. It's similar to the American Idol effect: ratings went through he roof, because people you didn't even know existed tuned in because it wasn't tabloid TV.

    I'm 26 years old, I don't have any kids, I'm not a very religious person, and I don't have a college degree. I don't belong in any of the groups that would typically go for this sort of thing - yet I feel TV is complete garbage. Entirely too much shock value, and not enough substance.

    Look, I'm a "Full Blooded American", but I'm honest enough to know that American citizens are neither smart enough or responsible enough to decide what's good for TV. We'd sell our souls and our youth for good entertainment, and we'd do it without hesitation. We're prisoners of the moment, and we never understand - or even care about - the big picture.

    1. Re:Sounds Good, But Won't Work by ImOnlySleeping · · Score: 4, Funny

      I don't think the idea is to turn tv into porno central. Up north in Canada, stations are allowed to show nudity at certain hours. What it allows is for stations to chose to not censor tv shows or movies from the creators original vision. I can only think of two stations (showcase & citytv) in my area that show any sort of blue movies and that's usually one day a week. It allows us to watch the sopranos as it was filmed. It also goes for the radio as well. I remember listing in the car while I was driving my mom somewhere and Closer by NIN came on. Awkward.

      --
      Everybody seems to think I'm lazy I don't mind, I think they're crazy
    2. Re:Sounds Good, But Won't Work by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

      And you know what will happen? Ratings will skyrocket, resulting in 3 dozen copycat stations - and virtually none for those people who don't want to see nudity and violence all the time

      It's an interesting idea, but ultimately wrong -- look at the Internet.

      Certainly, there is a ton of sex out there. There is also a ton of stuff out there that is not sex.

      Signal-to-noise ratio with spam vs email is pretty bad -- but there is still more legitimate, interesting email than any one person could ever read, even if we only count public mailing lists.

      90% of everything is crap -- but 10% of everything still adds up to a huge amount of stuff that isn't crap.

      If you were right, I'd say, bring it on -- we'll get exactly the TV we deserve, not necessarily the TV we want.

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    3. Re:Sounds Good, But Won't Work by Luscious868 · · Score: 1

      The big picture is that the networks should be free to do whatever they want and if you as a parent don't like it then don't let your kids watch. Go buy a ton of kid friendly DVD's and unhook the cable. The vast majority of the market shouldn't be kept from the kind of programming they want because some parents are too lazy to do their job. It's nonsense.

    4. Re:Sounds Good, But Won't Work by 4D6963 · · Score: 1

      Impending doom! More seriously, I'm French, and here, we see boobies anytime of the day. Mainly in commercials. All types of commercials that is. Also in movies, I mean, it's like French actresses really HAVE to show their boobies. It's almost irritating. I don't want to see your boobies at incongruous times, Eva Green.

      Anyways, it's not smut, it's not garbage, it's just boobs. It's not alienating anyone. You get used to them. I mean babies don't only stand the sight of boobies, they SUCK on boobies. So if you can't stand the sight of boobs, you know what to compare yourself to.

      --
      You just got troll'd!
    5. Re:Sounds Good, But Won't Work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm 26 years old, I don't have any kids, I'm not a very religious person, and I don't have a college degree.

      Loser! You forgot to mention your mother's basements, and how you connect to the internetz by connecting to a neighbor's wifi hotspot, which isn't always on.

    6. Re:Sounds Good, But Won't Work by trytoguess · · Score: 1

      Well maybe for a few years perhaps a decade, but eventually boobies will simply be a basic part of television, and the it'll be what the masses expect not what the masses desire. I'd say inching towards a bit less puritanical T.V is a good thing even with the setback you mentioned.

    7. Re:Sounds Good, But Won't Work by DinDaddy · · Score: 1

      Not directly comparable. The entry barrier (profit required to make maintaining a channel/programming feasible) is far higher for TV, especially if you get into trying to persuade cable/satellite to carry your channel, where there is most certainly limited capacity available.

      I think gp is more right than wrong. The proliferation of reality shows bears it out.

    8. Re:Sounds Good, But Won't Work by pwinkeler · · Score: 1

      Click...
      My point being that you are 100% correct so why not fleece the morons a bit and use the proceeds to start chipping away at educating the next generation?

      --
      PaulW, IT Consultant
    9. Re:Sounds Good, But Won't Work by JoeSixpack00 · · Score: 1

      The big picture is that the networks should be free to do whatever they want and if you as a parent don't like it then don't let your kids watch. Go buy a ton of kid friendly DVD's and unhook the cable. The vast majority of the market shouldn't be kept from the kind of programming they want because some parents are too lazy to do their job. It's nonsense.

      That very logic is the reason my mother can't even ride public transportation anymore. A bunch of idiots cursing and acting ignorant, with the mentality "she should have gotten on another rail car". So the people who don't want to indulge in wrong doing should be forced to hide in a freaking cave? NO!!! You should be forced to enjoy your bad habits privately.

      Do I listen to Hip-Hop? Absolutely. Do I feel that most of it should be played on the radio? Absolutely not. I know quite a few church going people, and even more that don't attend service at all. When we're around them we don't force them to hide in the back room so we can tell dirty jokes and curse our asses off - we just put the bullshit on pause until it's just us again. Of course you don't understand that, because people nowadays over-indulge into everything to the point where nothing is considered to be wrong. You get so caught up in fighting censorship you forget that overly sexual content is morally wrong. Senseless violence is morally wrong. Excessive profanity and fornication is morally wrong. I enjoy all of the above, in addition to my numerous other vices. The point is that I'm realistic enough to acknowledge that they are just that - vices. So why the hell would I waste my time fighting to promote openness of something that I shouldn't be doing anyways?

      Just like they can "Go buy a ton of kid friendly DVD's" you can go buy a ton of dirty ones, because that's exactly what I do.

    10. Re:Sounds Good, But Won't Work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      here here.

      We've already had, what, ten, fifteen years of lowest-common-denominator Jerry Springer / COPS / Faux News / Rush Limbaugh. Our culture is not the better for it.

      And as far as 'the market sorting it out'? Maybe Obama's election is the 'market's way of saying something.

    11. Re:Sounds Good, But Won't Work by slysithesuperspy · · Score: 1

      I thought I was a bit elitist thinking that the people who watch TV have the most trivial conversations, I never thought for one second that I knew what was best for them and considered throwing the idea of free speech away simply so they couldn't see too many boobies or hear too many naughty words.

    12. Re:Sounds Good, But Won't Work by LS · · Score: 1

      Wow, when did arguments for censorship start getting modded insightful?

      The reason Americans are "prisoners of the moment, and we never understand - or even care about - the big picture" is precisely because we are constantly shielded from the big picture. Do you think that TV executives want you to know the "big picture"?

      By constantly censoring a certain type of content, it becomes special and thus more lusted after. Other countries show nudity on TV without a problem, and even have it on their beaches. Once you get exposed to something enough, even sex, it becomes common place. You get your fill and move on, instead of leaving the potential to charge everything, including advertisements and jingoist calls for war, with sexual energy.

      LS

      --
      There is a fine line between being a cultivated citizen and being someone else's crop. - A. J. Patrick Liszkie
    13. Re:Sounds Good, But Won't Work by lsatenstein · · Score: 1

      I am 68 and I concur with you Joe. TV-NEWS, other then for the BBC(I don't trust ABC, NBC, or CNN as they are badly biased is geared to grade 7 mentality and grade 6 vocabulary), is the only news that tells me more truthfully, what is going on in the world. Another frustration I have with TV is the eight minutes of program, broken by two minutes of commercials. (6 times per hour). Thats why we are all channel flippers -- it drives my wife nuts when I flip between PBS and Holmes on Holmes (or other home renovation program).

      --
      Leslie Satenstein Montreal Quebec Canada
    14. Re:Sounds Good, But Won't Work by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

      And I think that the Internet is also going to make that distinction irrelevant -- I don't actually have a TV in my house anymore.

      But again, 90% of everything is crap, but there's still the 10% that's not. Firefly was canceled, but if reality was as bad as you imply, it would never have been made. I never saw the second season of Heros, but the first season was good. Fox News is atrocious, but there are other networks. And there's always PBS.

      The essential problem is finding the signal in the noise, and TV is notoriously bad for that, compared to the Internet. But I don't think it's actually going to push out good content -- if anything, it'll give us nudity instead of reality TV, or nudity in our reality TV, and I think that can only be an improvement.

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
  24. Because there's no other choice. by Xenographic · · Score: 1

    > Why do "net neutrality" advocates ridicule politicians for comparing the Internet to a "series of tubes," and then trust them to regulate it?

    A) Ted "Tubes" Stevens is a convicted felon who won't be in the Senate much longer (even if that count goes the other way, he'll get expelled by the Republicans and replaced by Gov. Sarah Palin).

    B) There's no true competition among ISPs. If a backbone provider does this, we're screwed. Period. Full stop. You can't just stop using the backbones. That's why they're backbones. The only way we can force them to listen is with regulation.

    So it's not like we want regulation per se, it's more like regulation is the only way to keep them honest. Unless you know of some other way to control the behavior of natural monopolies that doesn't require duplicating billions of dollars of infrastructure when we've already paid for it once?

    But you're right. Regulation is a responsibility. We can't just let the rules grow into a huge morass. We have to be careful to come up with clear, simple restrictions like "You cannot throttle traffic based on its destination unless it's part of a DoS attack." Let customers do their own QoS. They know better than the ISP what they want to prioritize, anyhow.

    1. Re:Because there's no other choice. by ptbarnett · · Score: 1

      (even if that count goes the other way, he'll get expelled by the Republicans [washingtonmonthly.com] and replaced by Gov. Sarah Palin)

      A correction: if Ted Stevens wins the election and subsequently vacates the office, Palin will not appoint his replacement.

      After former Alaska Governor Frank Murkowski appointed his daughter to a vacant US Senate seat, the Alaska state law was changed. A special election will be held to fill the position.

  25. First thing the Bush admin did by Nicolas+MONNET · · Score: 5, Informative

    The Clinton FCC had forced phone companies and cable companies to lease their lines to competitors at fair prices.
    One of the first things the Bush FCC did was to undo this.
    (The exact opposite happened in France around the same time; the EU forced phone line unbundling to the former state monopoly. Result? Cheap, abundant broadband)

    1. Re:First thing the Bush admin did by spiritraveller · · Score: 3, Informative

      "Clinton FCC" and "Bush FCC" are sort of misnomers. The FCC is an independent Federal agency that does not fall under the Executive branch.

      Commissioners are appointed to five year terms by the President, with approval of the Senate. Once appointed, they are similar to Federal judges in that they may only be removed by impeachment (or the expiration of a term). The President has influence over who gets onto the Commission, but he cannot fire them or tell them what policy to make.

      There is an additional check on the influence of the President in that no more than 3 of the 5 commissioners may be of the same political party. So the President can have some influence in who he appoints over time, but even if he gets two terms, he cannot completely alter the partisan make-up of the Commission.

  26. Deregulate the spectrum! by stevejsmith · · Score: 1

    Net neutrality would be an irrelevant issue if we'd just deregulate the spectrum, giving people access to a plethora of competitive wireless carriers (as opposed to now, where we auction off what in reality is infinitely divisible). As it is now people worry about what companies will do without net neutrality laws because our telecom regulation regime is such that it creates a few big heavyweights and doesn't allow much competition. But all you have to do is open the spectrum to use by anyone, and pretty soon Comcast and Verizon will lose their awesome market power.

    1. Re:Deregulate the spectrum! by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

      Net neutrality would be an irrelevant issue if we'd just deregulate the spectrum, giving people access to a plethora of competitive wireless carriers

      What about interference? Seems to me Comcast might have an interest in simply jamming as much wireless as they can, to force people to use wired (cable) connections.

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    2. Re:Deregulate the spectrum! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can engineer your way around interference, and the rewards for being able to do it are so huge that somebody would. Given what we used to think was possible to put in the spectrum compared to what we know now is possible, I'd bet that the spectrum is even more versatile than we realize today.

  27. Define Net Neutrality first by MacDork · · Score: 1

    But, if the public only had a choice between DSL w/ AT&T, cable w/ Comcast, or no internet at all, and both companies throttled content, then the public is really left without a choice.

    Most complaints about throttling are not net neutrality issues. Net neutrality is about making sure ISPs don't try to extort money from websites like Google and Yahoo to deliver their content without throttling, redirects, or other shenanigans.

    Net neutrality is not about making sure you are allowed to use 98% of the bandwidth on your block using bittorrent while others who share the same line suffer the consequences of your actions. If you are using a significant portion of the ISP's resources, as a subscriber you should expect to pay more than others. If you have a beef with being sold 'unlimited' internet and then being throttled/capped, that is a false advertising claim. That is not a net neutrality issue.

  28. Yes, it was deregulated by Nicolas+MONNET · · Score: 0, Troll

    I am really getting sick of people propagating the myth that Wall Street was deregulated.

    Wall Street WAS deregulated. You nice little straw man is that they weren't FULLY de-regulated; they were still not allowed to feed on babies.

    1. Re:Yes, it was deregulated by mattwarden · · Score: 0, Troll

      Um, no. Sorry. Please cite the deregulation you are talking about instead of blindly propagating unsubstantiated talking points of the Congresspeople responsible for this mess.

    2. Re:Yes, it was deregulated by Nicolas+MONNET · · Score: 2, Informative

      The Glass-Steagal act, which was a regulation; was mostly repealed. That's a DEregulation.

    3. Re:Yes, it was deregulated by mattwarden · · Score: 1

      An argument can be made that the repeal of Glass-Steagal made the effects of the crisis ripple further through the market, but it certainly did not cause the crisis itself.

      Want to give it another shot?

    4. Re:Yes, it was deregulated by Nicolas+MONNET · · Score: 1

      So now you admit this was a regulation.
      But it appears you have changed the question, and therefore my answer isn't appropriate anymore. What is it you want this time?

    5. Re:Yes, it was deregulated by mattwarden · · Score: 1

      The purpose of my question was in the context of the implication that deregulation is at fault for this financial crisis. Does that help clarify?

  29. On Deregulation by DesScorp · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Deregulating Wall Street has done wonders for the US economy, unleashing the creative powers of the investor class unto the world. Deregulating the telecom industry is working just as well!

    And what deregulation caused this financial crash? Be specific, and how it did. The repeal of Glass-Steagall? How did that cause the subprime crisis, the root of all of the problems? Oh that's right, it didn't. What did? One of your beloved regulations, the Community Reinvestment Act. I'll also remind you that many politicians tried to enact new regulations on Fannie and Freddie to keep the subprime mess from exploding. The same politicians that claim this came from lack of regulation, among others, your buddy Barney Frank, are the same people that blocked and killed the Fannie/Freddie reforms.

    And tell me, what kind of economic model are you in favor of? Free markets are too mean and unfair for you? Well, there's that system where the state owns all large industry, or favors private firms with a monopoly. What's the track record for those kind of systems? The US, in a bad recession, has 6.5 percent unemployement. But that's better than Europe during the good times. So how about a little perspective, eh? The awful, bad free market system is what allowed you to buy that computer that you post stupid things on Slashdot with. Free markets aren't all fun and games, but to paraphrase Winston Churchill, capitalism is the worst economic system in the world... except for all the others.

    --
    Life is hard, and the world is cruel
    1. Re:On Deregulation by gutter · · Score: 1

      Conservatives love to point fingers at the CRA, because then they can blame liberals and poor people instead of the rich assholes on Wall Street, but the fact is that it had almost nothing to do with the current crisis. Here's what BusinessWeek has to say about it:

      From http://www.businessweek.com/investing/insights/blog/archives/2008/09/community_reinv.html

      Fresh off the false and politicized attack on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, today we're hearing the know-nothings blame the subprime crisis on the Community Reinvestment Act -- a 30-year-old law that was actually weakened by the Bush administration just as the worst lending wave began. This is even more ridiculous than blaming Freddie and Fannie.

      --
      Check out DRM-free movies at http://www.bside.com
    2. Re:On Deregulation by DesScorp · · Score: 1, Insightful

      "Conservatives love to point fingers at the CRA, because then they can blame liberals and poor people instead of the rich assholes on Wall Street, but the fact is that it had almost nothing to do with the current crisis.

      And liberals love to cover their asses, when they were at fault of the core of the greatest economic collapse since stagflation in the 70's. BTW, you guys were responsible for that one too. The rich did trade the toxic paper, but Democrats in Congress covered for them because it suited their political goals. But if there are no subprime loans, then there is no subprime crisis. Subprime loans were the product of your beloved CRA. In order to open bank branches in poorer neighborhoods, the CRA mandated that those banks had to give a percentage of home loans regardless of creditworthiness. You may think that's great social policy, but it's horrible economics.

      And your BusinessWeek quote is from a commentary, not an analysis. It was his opinion. His opinion is flatly wrong, and I'll get you one hundred more qualified opinions saying so. Deep down, you know it. Even Barney Frank now admits those loans shouldn't have been made, though he denies any personal culpability. Just like the rest of you, apparently.

      --
      Life is hard, and the world is cruel
    3. Re:On Deregulation by mattwarden · · Score: 1

      It has nothing to do with a Democrat vs Republican thing. Both parties have been obsessed with encouraging home ownership for decades. "Encouraging home ownership" is a euphemism for intervening in the market such that people who would otherwise not purchase homes due to normal market forces end up purchasing homes. This has been done in a lot of ways, one of which certainly is the CRA. Others are: cutting interest rates below what the market would have it, allowing the interest on a first home purchase to be deducted from taxes, allowing penalty free withdrawals from tax sheltered accounts if used to purchase a home, etc. All of these things inflate the housing market beyond where it should be.

      It was a fatal mistake for government to encourage home ownership. It's one of those things that plays well with voters who don't understand market economics.

      Now, aside from that issue, there is the credit default swaps issue. This is a problem because the government intervenes all over the place in the financial markets, but this one area was not regulated like equivalent financial products with a different classification were regulated. The problem isn't really that credit default swaps need regulation. The problem is that everything else was regulated. Consider two identical products A and B. A is encumbered by government regulation. B is classified differently and is not regulated. The market for A will shrink to an unnaturally small size and the market for B will balloon to an unnaturally large size. This is exactly what happened with credit default swaps. Whether you think there needs to be more regulation of CDS or less regulation of everything else is really a matter of opinion, not fact.

  30. was, yes we can!, now, yes icann by arbitraryaardvark · · Score: 4, Funny

    was, yes we can!, now, yes icann

    in too late to get mod points

  31. Re:I don't know if it's too late, BUT by txoof · · Score: 1

    Don't you love the whoosing sound jokes make when they fly over people's heads? I do.

    --
    This one's tricky. You have to use imaginary numbers, like eleventeen... --Hobbes
  32. Free markets need regulation by Nicolas+MONNET · · Score: 1

    That's where you and libertarians are ideologically out of touch. Markets can't be free without the proper regulation. Even 'bubbles' Greenspan admits it now. But there are still fanatics of the cult long after the comet has passed.

    1. Re:Free markets need regulation by DesScorp · · Score: 1

      That's where you and libertarians are ideologically out of touch. Markets can't be free without the proper regulation. Even 'bubbles' Greenspan admits it now. But there are still fanatics of the cult long after the comet has passed.

      There are none so blind that will not see.

      And you honestly think Bush was the end of regulation? Are you kidding me? Do you know how many pages are in the Federal Code of Regulations now? Do you think it's actually less?

      There's still miles of regulation on the financial sector. And the Glass Stegall repeal played no part in this... it wouldn't have stopped the subprime loans, and it wouldn't have stopped the fraudulent securities ratings that the toxic paper got because of political pressure.

      BTW, markets aren't "cults". They're simply an efficient way to determine what people want to pay for a good or service. Period. We should worry more about the real cult... the one where people think government is the answer to all our problems.

      --
      Life is hard, and the world is cruel
    2. Re:Free markets need regulation by mattwarden · · Score: 1, Troll

      > Markets can't be free without the proper regulation

      I was going to respond to your comment, but I can't make any sense at all of this part of it. Maybe you should read up a little on what a free market is.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_market

      Here, I'll even quote a bit of it since you probably won't bother clicking the link:

      Free markets contrast sharply with controlled markets or regulated markets, in which governments directly or indirectly regulate prices or supplies

      Got it???

  33. Allow me... by Hooya · · Score: 1

    > "Boobies" are always reasonable. They are quite easy to find [snip]. The "Boobies" are in most every community. Hence based on the standards of the community in your area, boobies are indeed acceptable.

    There, fixed that for ya.

  34. A needed change..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The current model of channel selection/availability needs to change. Currently the providers offer a "package" of channels, most of which you will never watch. There is no ala-cart channel buying. If ala-cart was available then this issue would be less of one because parents would not buy the garbage channels or stop subscribing to a channel that starts showing garbage. Parents would not have to worry about their kids hacking the parental controls or other ways of finding tv garbage. As it is it is an all or nothing system, with no possibility for the consumer to shape the market. The FCC complaints is one of the only outlets for keeping the garbage out.

    This will probably never happen, because then cable companies could not support the wealth of garbage and propaganda currently flooding the tube. It would be nice to see the next administration change this, but with the Democrats continued push for "fairness doctrine", which will be used to control and stifle conservative talk radio, I don't see this happening.

  35. Regulation != regulated market by Nicolas+MONNET · · Score: 1

    An example of regulation would be: "you can not lie on your IPO advertisement"
    An example of regulated market would be: "copper will now have to be traded at $10 a kg"

    1. Re:Regulation != regulated market by mattwarden · · Score: 1

      Your first example is fraud protection an the government absolutely 100% has that responsibility. Even the most crazy free market proponent will agree with you there. I asked for an example of regulation that a "free market libertarian" would object to, but which is needed for a free market to function.

      Care to give it another shot?

    2. Re:Regulation != regulated market by Nicolas+MONNET · · Score: 1

      I was replying to your misinterpretation of the meaning of "regulated market."

      To answer your moving target, I mean your newest question, I can give you the example of anti-monopoly regulations. There were quite a few libertarians objecting to the MS trial back in '00.

      Obviously that will not be enough of an answer for you since you will point out that not all libertarians objected this.

    3. Re:Regulation != regulated market by mattwarden · · Score: 1

      So, just so I get this right, the only regulation you believe is needed in a free market is anti-fraud and anti-monopoly regulations? In that case, I think we can rest in agreement.

  36. Oh-oh; we're in trouble. by Brett+Glass · · Score: 1

    Susan Crawford doesn't "get" the Internet. It was intentionally designed NOT to be a "utility," but rather a loosely federated collection of independent networks bound together by a common protocol. In fact, its original designers made much of the fact that it was to be very different from the Bell System -- in other words, not a public utility with big monopolies and regulators (who would then be subject to "regulatory capture"). No one could "own" the entire Internet, but anyone could own a piece of it -- and impose acceptable use policies for that piece as he or she saw fit (just as the universities and companies that were first on the Internet did at the beginning and still do today).

    But Crawford isn't a technologist; she's a lawyer. And lawyers are ensured of full employment by regulation, because they can make millions representing clients before regulatory bodies, interpreting regulations, filing lawsuits based on regulation, etc. -- and so, naturally enough, they are biased toward it, even if it's very bad for the public.

    The regulation that Crawford favors (and she has argued for it by making false statements to Congress) would be horrible for the Internet. It would ensure that no independent ISP could survive; everyone would HAVE to get Internet from a telephone company or a cable company. You couldn't pay more for more bandwidth if you needed it (even though it's natural, because more bandwidth costs the provider more money)... somehow, that's not egalitarian enough. Crawford isn't a realist; she's a lobbyists. And woe betide us if we give lobbyists control of our country....