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Is Net Neutrality Really Needed?

darrad writes "An opinion piece over at the Wall Street Journal lays out an alternate theory on why we have new regulations from the FCC on Net Neutrality. There is a lot of talk about this subject, particularly among the tech sector. Most of the talk centers around preventing companies from charging more for traffic or black holing other traffic. However, the question should be asked, is granting control over the Internet to political appointees the way to go? Regardless of your political point of view shouldn't the Internet remain free from regulation?"

705 comments

  1. Still too vague and too poorly defined by seebs · · Score: 5, Insightful

    We all know what we want: We want Comcast to be unable to charge Google extra for the service of letting customers access Youtube. But it's really hard to phrase this well enough and clearly enough that it lets network admins do the kinds of QoS and traffic shaping things they need to do in order to provide good service, or for that matter, block unwanted traffic entirely.

    I am not at all convinced that getting the government involved will improve my life.

    --
    My blog: http://www.seebs.net/log/ --- My iPhone/iPad app: http://www.seebs.net/seebsfrac/
    1. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by ubergeek65536 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      But it's my job to say what type of traffic is unwanted. If I wanted to live in China I'd move there.
      It's difficult to decide who I trust less the government or big business; maybe that's because there isn't much difference between the two.

    2. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Moryath · · Score: 5, Interesting

      "block unwanted traffic entirely."

      If Comcrap defines Youtube and Hulu as "unwanted" because their video offerings conflict with Comcrap's crappy, underfilled, looks-like-crap streaming video and extortionately-priced cable tv "services", your statement makes no sense at all.

      And that's pretty much what Comcrap and TW have been setting up to do.

    3. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by C_amiga_fan · · Score: 0

      it's really hard to phrase this well enough and clearly enough that it lets network admins do the kinds of QoS and traffic shaping things they need to do

      I'd prefer they not traffic shape, or block traffic (such as usenet), but I guess the wires can only handle so much load. Here is what the FCC press release says: Rule 1 Transparency: "service shall publicly disclose accurate information regarding the network management practices, performance, and commercial terms of its broadband Internet access services sufficient for consumers to make informed choices "

      Rule 2 No Blocking: ", shall not block lawful content, applications, services, or non-harmful devices, subject to reasonable network management." Makes note that video services should not be blocked just because they compete with ISP's video service (i.e. Comcast).

      Rule 3 No Unreasonable Discrimination: "Reasonable network management shall not constitute unreasonable discrimination..... (ensuring network security and integrity, including by addressing traffic that is harmful to the network; addressing traffic that is unwanted by users (including by premise operators), such as by providing services or capabilities consistent with a user's choices regarding parental controls or security capabilities; and by reducing or mitigating the effects of congestion on the network.)" "Pay for Priority Unlikely to Satisfy "No Unreasonable Discrimination" Rule"

      Mobile Broadband

      "most consumers have more choices for mobile broadband than for fixed broadband. Mobile broadband speeds, capacity, and penetration are typically much lower than for fixed broadband, though some providers have begun offering 4G service that will enable offerings with higher speeds and capacity and lower latency than previous generations of mobile service. In addition, existing mobile networks present operational constraints that fixed broadband networks do not typically encounter. This puts greater pressure on the concept of "reasonable network management" for mobile providers, and creates additional challenges in applying a broader set of rules to mobile at this time. Further, we recognize that there have been meaningful recent moves toward openness, including the introduction of open operating systems like Android. In addition, we anticipate soon seeing the effects on the market of the openness conditions we imposed on mobile providers that operate on upper 700 MHz C-Block spectrum, which includes Verizon Wireless, one of the largest mobile wireless carriers in the U.S.

      "In light of these considerations, we conclude it is appropriate to take measured steps at this time to protect the openness of the Internet when accessed through mobile broadband"

      --
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    4. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by davester666 · · Score: 2

      No.

      We have to wait until the ISP's do something so egregious that there is a huge public uprising, and then Congress and the Senate can get together to prevent that specific thing.

      Then lather, rinse, and repeat.

      --
      Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
    5. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 0

      Then the answer is simple :

      Either you trust the government : no choice of provider (that much, history should prove)
      Or you trust business : you can choose (for a little more money probably, yes, deal with it) a better provider, additionally you can build something yourself

      Big business has a huge advantage over the government, even if both are total assholes : one business, no matter how big, is not the only big business. Is there really that much of a contest ?

    6. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by jimmy_dean · · Score: 1

      I completely agree with you. What does the government even know about a complex issue? This seems like it will only begin to hamper the innovation that is capable on the Internet without being crushed by regulation. I think the politicians are just trying to do another power grab.

      --
      -> Sometimes, you just gotta break free from the shackles of proprietary code.
    7. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by cpu6502 · · Score: 1

      Mobile Broadband

      "most consumers have more choices for mobile broadband than for fixed broadband."

      I agree on this part of the US FCC's decision. In my area I have a Duopoly of fixed internet providers, but 10+ choices for wireless internet. That's almost as many choices as we had back in the 1990s Dialup days.

      In addition, we anticipate soon seeing the effects on the market of the openness conditions we imposed on mobile providers that operate on upper 700 MHz C-Block spectrum, which includes Verizon Wireless, one of the largest mobile wireless carriers in the U.S.

      This is the old TV Band (channels 52-69). I wonder what the FCC's talking about? Openness conditions "imposed" on this range? Wonder what that means?

        - - - Also wonder if the FCC is still planning to take the 500 and 600 MHz band (TV channels 25 and up). I'd prefer they took the noisy VHF band instead. It works very poorly for Digital TV reception.

      --
      My AC stalker: " I personally agree with your posts most of the time, but that won't keep me from modding you troll"
    8. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      It's not your job. You seriously think your YouPornTube wanking session should never be managed such that it doesn't interfere with your neighbors' VOIP or VPN session to work?

      You actually may, but nobody reasonable agrees with you.

    9. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by PopeRatzo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      But it's really hard to phrase this well enough and clearly enough that it lets network admins do the kinds of QoS and traffic shaping things they need to do in order to provide good service, or for that matter, block unwanted traffic entirely.

      More important, it's really hard to phrase it well enough so that your average member of congress or Fox News viewer can understand.

      I am not at all convinced that getting the government involved will improve my life.

      I'm equally unconvinced that getting AT&T or Comcast more involved will improve my life.

      There was a time before the telcos ruled the Internet, when it was almost entirely a government-funded project. And it did just fine thank you very much.

      And if you think there's any part of the anti-net neutrality forces that are concerned about "providing good service" you are delusional. I'm not confident that the "unwanted traffic" that the telcos want to block isn't the stuff that's best about the Internet.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    10. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by PopeRatzo · · Score: 4, Interesting

      We have to wait until the ISP's do something so egregious that there is a huge public uprising

      By the time that happens, there won't be any going back. There will be fines all around which will be paid out of an increase in broadband prices.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    11. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by PopeRatzo · · Score: 5, Interesting

      you can choose

      Is that what you think? The whole point of the anti-net neutrality agenda is to make sure we can't choose.

      We've got a lot more influence over government than we do over the top two telcos.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    12. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Moryath · · Score: 4, Informative

      Or you trust business : you can choose (for a little more money probably, yes, deal with it) a better provider, additionally you can build something yourself

      Obviously you live in an alternate reality or on another continent.

      Here in the Americas, 90% of the populace is royally fucked for any sort of competition. We live in areas where even if there used to be competition, all the ISP's have gotten into little collusion agreements. My area used to have Verizon, Time Warner, and Comcast all competing for cable service: TW and Comcrap both went into "charge under cost" to drive Verizon out, then entered into an agreement where TW agreed to pull out of half my state in exchange for Comcrap pulling out of the other half. End result: now TW and Comcrap, each in the other half of the state, rape the consumer up the ass with monopoly-level pricing.

    13. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'll make a bet with you.

      You open your ISP which has QoS, traffic shaping, and "blocks unwanted traffic" in order to provide good service.

      I'll open my ISP which provides plain broadband Internet.

      We'll let the customers decide who they want to use as their ISP.
      In a "competitive market" the customers would toss you to the curb just like they did with AOL.

    14. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Moryath · · Score: 1

      This is the kind of argument the religious fundies love to make all the time right before they shut down any speech they don't like - such as someone pointing out the ugly truths about $cientology, or the Mormon Cult, or the Pedoprophet Mohammed, or the Catholics, or the Baptists, or any other group like that.

      Let the Baptists get control of your area and see what kind of crap they come up with for blue laws and the banning of dance clubs. Then remember how you got there.

      If you let someone censor speech, they WILL censor speech. The point is to stop that from happening. In an arena where the government has either created, or allowed, monopolies to develop, we then need net-neutrality regulation to prevent speech from being squelched.

    15. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Xaedalus · · Score: 1

      If they're working at 11 PM on Saturday night while I'm enjoying one of my *rare* wankering session, then gawddamn right I want my connection unmanaged and full streaming enabled! I pay a high price for being married already, I better damn well have FULL streaming capability when I finally get some lonely monkey time.

      On the other hand, during the daytime I could see a valid argument... nah, anyone who works from home one or two days a week on VPN is a douche and deserves throttling. More pr0n for everyone!

      --
      Here's to hot beer, cold women, and Glaswegian kisses for all.
    16. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Haeleth · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Either you trust the government : no choice of provider (that much, history should prove)
      Or you trust business : you can choose (for a little more money probably, yes, deal with it) a better provider

      ...but you are trusting them to do different things.

      I trust businesses to provide me with internet service. That's their job. The government isn't going to do it, nor should it.

      I trust the government to regulate businesses to the extent necessary to make sure there is fair competition and the free market keeps on working. That's their job. If you believe the businesses will do it themselves -- will take actions specifically designed to ensure that new competitors can emerge and take customers away from them! -- then you are a fool.

      I don't want the Internet to be regulated. It's a wonderful resource full of free speech and free information, and the government should keep its hands off it and not try to tell me which sites I can visit. But that's a different thing from wanting internet service to be regulated. I have absolutely no problem with the government telling Comcast to keep its hands off and not try to tell me which sites I can visit, either.

      tl;dr: leave the web alone, but regulate the pipes.

    17. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      We all know what we want: We want Comcast to be unable to charge Google extra for the service of letting customers access Youtube. But it's really hard to phrase this well enough and clearly enough that it lets network admins do the kinds of QoS and traffic shaping things they need to do in order to provide good service, or for that matter, block unwanted traffic entirely.

      The text of the non-blocking and non-discrimination rules in the Report and Order are available, as is the discussion from the Report and Order of how the non-discrimination rule applies to paid prioritization (including prioritization of the ISPs own services.) This includes an explicit definition of "reasonable network management."

      Please clarify exactly what in the rules and definitions that have been published you find "too vague and poorly defined".

      I am not at all convinced that getting the government involved will improve my life.

      The government -- indeed, the FCC -- is already involved in this area. In fact, they've been enforce network neutrality principles on a case-by-case, complaint-based, reactive manner for quite some time.

      The real question is: will having clear, published rules that set standards in advance, improve your life compared to the reactive, case-by-case approach previously taken in this area?

    18. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Bartles · · Score: 1

      There is a huge difference. You can escape the wrath of one by the way you choose to exercise your power as a consumer. The other is inescapable.

    19. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by grcumb · · Score: 1

      I am not at all convinced that getting the government involved will improve my life.

      Fair enough. But it's possible to state categorically that leaving the incumbents entirely alone will make it worse. The Level3 spat, a number of other pronouncements and lobbying efforts all make that perfectly clear.

      So unless you can suggest another means of imposing some sort of limitations on their abusive behaviour, this is the least worst alternative. Don't like the way it's going right now? There are mechanisms to address that. Rusted, creaking, archaic and inefficient mechanisms, yes. But mechanisms nonetheless.

      --
      Crumb's Corollary: Never bring a knife to a bun fight.
    20. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by icebraining · · Score: 1

      But that's not the problem with network neutrality. The problem is you not getting a connection to your SIP provider because Skype paid the ISP and they didn't.

    21. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by DragonWriter · · Score: 2

      We have to wait until the ISP's do something so egregious that there is a huge public uprising, and then Congress and the Senate can get together to prevent that specific thing.

      First, the Congress includes the House of Representatives and the Senate, so saying the Congress and the Senate can get together is incoherent.

      Second, the Congress already has granted the FCC regulatory authority with regard to promoting broadband access, promoting broadband competition, promoting telecommunication competition, providing terms that serve the public interest for licenses to fixed and mobile wireless broadband providers, and promoting competition in the video market.

    22. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by DragonWriter · · Score: 2

      Either you trust the government : no choice of provider (that much, history should prove)
      Or you trust business : you can choose (for a little more money probably, yes, deal with it) a better provider, additionally you can build something yourself

      Actually, monopolies in unregulated markets are actually fairly common, so history shows that you are wrong. Its quite possible to trust neither government nor industry, but to seek -- in a regime of government of, by, and for the people -- to establish a regime where government has the powers necessary to promote competition and prevent harmful monopoly (either by preventing monopolies or by limiting the harms therefrom, or both) while relying on private business to actually provide services within the regulatory regime thus established.

      Not only are the effects you attribute to each position inconsistent with the historical evidence, the idea that the polar extremes are the only choice is clearly false on its face.

    23. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      I guess you don't understand the meaning of the word "monopoly".

    24. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by cpu6502 · · Score: 1

      Quoted for those who can't see (Score:0) posters:

      Here is what the FCC press release says: Rule 1 Transparency: "service shall publicly disclose accurate information regarding the network management practices, performance, and commercial terms of its broadband Internet access services sufficient for consumers to make informed choices "

      Rule 2 No Blocking: "shall not block lawful content, applications, services, or non-harmful devices, subject to reasonable network management." Rule 3 No Unreasonable Discrimination: "Reasonable network management shall not constitute unreasonable discrimination..... (ensuring network security and integrity, including by addressing traffic that is harmful to the network; addressing traffic that is unwanted by users (including by premise operators), such as by providing services or capabilities consistent with a user's choices regarding parental controls or security capabilities; and by reducing or mitigating the effects of congestion on the network.)" "Pay for Priority Unlikely to Satisfy "No Unreasonable Discrimination" Rule"

      Mobile Broadband

      "most consumers have more choices for mobile broadband than for fixed broadband. Mobile broadband speeds, capacity, and penetration are typically much lower than for fixed broadband, though some providers have begun offering 4G service that will enable offerings with higher speeds and capacity and lower latency than previous generations of mobile service. In addition, existing mobile networks present operational constraints that fixed broadband networks do not typically encounter. This puts greater pressure on the concept of "reasonable network management" for mobile providers, and creates additional challenges in applying a broader set of rules to mobile at this time. Further, we recognize that there have been meaningful recent moves toward openness, including the introduction of open operating systems like Android. In addition, we anticipate soon seeing the effects on the market of the openness conditions we imposed on mobile providers that operate on upper 700 MHz C-Block spectrum, which includes Verizon Wireless, one of the largest mobile wireless carriers in the U.S.

      "In light of these considerations, we conclude it is appropriate to take measured steps at this time to protect the openness of the Internet when accessed through mobile broadband"

      --
      My AC stalker: " I personally agree with your posts most of the time, but that won't keep me from modding you troll"
    25. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by cdrguru · · Score: 1

      Why do you not want Google to be charged? Do you not believe it is a choice between charging Google and charging you? It is, and assuming that ISPs are successfully blocked from charging Google, Netflix, ESPN, and so on and so forth they will most certainly be charging the customers.

      All of the large ISPs have been in a market-share building mode where they were willing to take a few losses that may or may not have been made up for in other areas simply to gather in more customers. The result is of course to drive others from the market which has pretty much been done 100% now.

      So with market-building at an end they are looking to make up revenue that has been ignored and even actively left behind. End result is that they are going to be getting more money from somewhere. One possibility is to charge big feeders into their network. The other option is to charge customers more with the sure knowledge that some of them will drop the service. But most of them will stay because there aren't really any alternatives left.

      Personally, I think I would rather Google and anyone else with deep pockets pay for the next round of network buildout rather than having it coming from my wallet.

    26. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by vlm · · Score: 1

      I am not at all convinced that getting the government involved will improve my life.

      The government and the corporations have merged. There are some interdepartmental budget squabbles, but by in large, one happy family out to get us. After accepting that, your last line no longer contains any meaning.

      --
      "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
    27. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by mirix · · Score: 1

      In general (more free) cases business has some responsibility, or lose customers, for sure.

      But in monopolies (be they natural, govn't granted, or if they sprung up through collusion between carriers splitting regions, etc) this not the case. In large swaths of the US, the only 'competitor' you change ship to is satellite, or perhaps wireless, which can't compete due to obvious factors...

      If the last mile was municipal, and it went to a headend where any ISP could lease your line, sure. change providers. Unfortunately that simply isn't the case.

      Even with that vastly improved setup, I'm sure the big guys would try and squish new upstarts on the backhaul side... They'll try to crush competition by hook or by crook - and the customers are the losers.

      --
      Sent from my PDP-11
    28. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by uigrad_2000 · · Score: 1

      We all know what we want: We want Comcast to be unable to charge Google extra for the service of letting customers access Youtube.

      But, I honestly believe that scenario is a scare tactic. Sure, Comcast did say that they were looking into giving priority to some sites over others, but anyone in the biz knows this will never happen. If their concern is video sites and P2P using too much bandwidth, they'd be better off making tiered packages. The only other reason for throttling is content (ie pr0n and file sharing), but they are already protected against lawsuits by the Safe Harbor provision (aka OCILLA or DMCA512).

      Personally, I'd love to see Comcast start throttling video sites, or making Google pay "protection money" for their services. If they did, within months some competition would spring up, and within a year, Comcast would finally be laid to rest. But alas, it will never happen -- it is merely a scare tactic.

      --
      Free unix account: freeshell.org
    29. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by jkxx · · Score: 1

      What "most" of the people here want, and forgive me if I'm bringing in anyone who disagrees, is to make sure neither Comcast nor the govt gets to filter traffic or somehow tamper with any data passing a network.

      QoS has been brought into this and it is a legitimate issue but there is a difference between QoS for VoIP vs other traffic, and QoS for sites who pay up vs those who don't. QoS wouldn't be an issue if last-mile ISPs had the bandwidth they purport to have where all users get to max out their connection if they want or need to.

      On the other side there is the concern that government will create rules allowing them to censor content. A well-founded concern, given the ICE's recent takeover of various sites and the pressures applied against several news organizations and banks.

      So, again, net neutrality is needed, and all proponents are asking for is that neither the govt nor the ISPs get to mess with the bits on the wire.

    30. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by TheEyes · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Mod parent up. This is the most insightful thing I've read all day on NN.

      I'm a little annoyed by conservatives treating regulation as some sort of sin. Regulation prevents corporations from putting melanine in our milk, or floor sweepings in our sausages (both have happened in the past). Regulation (in theory) keeps companies from ripping us off left and right, and encourages competition.

      Before government regulation began with Teddy Roosevelt in the twentieth century, we lived in what was known as the Gilded Age, where massive corporations stiffed competition and milked customers for money while giving little or nothing in return... sound familiar? We've been deregulating for thirty years, so it should come as little surprise we're entering a Second Gilded Age. We should have remembered that corporations can't regulate themselves; now we'll have to learn that lesson anew, or face the consequences.

    31. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by 10101001+10101001 · · Score: 1

      If Comcrap defines Youtube and Hulu as "unwanted" because their video offerings conflict with Comcrap's crappy, underfilled, looks-like-crap streaming video and extortionately-priced cable tv "services", your statement makes no sense at all.

      And, of course, that's the absurdity of it. Inherently Comcast is in a much better position to offer high-quality streaming to its customers because the distance is much shorter in hops and they can offer very high last-mile speeds even if it doesn't translate into fast general internet speeds. But, of course, as you point out, they don't want to compete against themselves.

      That doesn't explain why Verizon hasn't setup its own local Hulu-like enterprise (presumably if Hulu makes money, Verizon could too) in areas where it competes against Comcast, but then I guess they don't want to undercut themselves either for whatever cut they're getting from bundling TV service with their own internet offering.

      Yep, it's the free market at work. Or, more precisely, an oligarchy/monopoly at work. Why compete on price and mow your competitor into the ground when your competition refuses to drop a high-priced service (phone for Verizon, TV for Comcast) when you can both optimize your costs for the service you provide and take in that extra cash for the service you have to outsource (Verizon might as well outsource their TV to Comcast and Comcast their phone to Verizon). It's a thing of beauty.

      --
      Eurohacker European paranoia, gun rights, and h
    32. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Bartles · · Score: 0

      The monopoly created by your friendly government? Even in those areas you still usually have more than one choice. And even if you only have one choice you can still boycott, or vote with your feet and move. Neither of those options is available with the federal government. With uniform government regulations we lose the ability to exercise our power as consumers. Corporations lose the incentive to improve as a result.

    33. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by wonkavader · · Score: 1

      Mod parent up. This is the second most insightful thing I've read all day on NN.

    34. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Bartles · · Score: 1

      I challenge you to name one current unregulated market, or one company with a complete monopoly that isn't created by government regulation.

    35. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      Lol, settle down Sparky. I'm an atheist and I don't give a shit about anyone wanking to porn. The point wasn't that it's porn, it's that it's low-value entertainment that takes a shitload of bandwidth.

    36. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by wordsnyc · · Score: 1

      "...so egregious that there is a huge public uprising...."

      Are we still talking about the US? If so, don't hold your breath.

      --
      Sent from the iPad I found in your car.
    37. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      You sound like an idiot Republican. "Mopopoly" means one, so obviously there's only one choice. Boycott? Have you tried going without electric power or running water? Move? Maybe you haven't noticed, but moving out-of-state is very expensive, and more than lower-class people can afford to do on a whim.

      There IS no incentive for a monopoly to improve without government regulation. That's why it's needed for utilities like water, power, and communications.

    38. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      Sure, but how do you cleanly separate the two? If you leave an exemption for bandwidth congestion, maybe your ISP (since they're evil and out to get you, naturally) will just degrade your SIP data to your provider a little - for bandwidth management's sake, of course.

      If you don't let them do _any_ such management, then how do they do the legitimate stuff?

      You could just expect them to be reasonable, but I wouldn't be if the FCC was making demands on me that cost me money.

    39. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      But why shouldn't the government provide internet access?

      Internet access *is* infrastructure -- it is what we have governments for. The internet is like power, water, sewage, roads, and the post.

    40. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by seebs · · Score: 1

      Once I've decided that traffic is unwanted, can my ISP block it for me, or do I still have to block it myself? If they block it for me, aren't they no longer net-neutral?

      --
      My blog: http://www.seebs.net/log/ --- My iPhone/iPad app: http://www.seebs.net/seebsfrac/
    41. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      I challenge you to name one current unregulated market, or one company with a complete monopoly that isn't created by government regulation.

      Given that the response to monopolies in un- or lightly-regulated markets experienced throughout the capitalist world was generally applicable regulation to prevent and break up monopolies (even before they became "absolute" monopolies) that are found in, various forms, in all modern advanced economies, there are no current examples, at least in the developed world. You might be able to find some elsewhere, if you really wanted to.

      OTOH, just because a problem has been successfully addressed several generations ago doesn't mean that we should disregard it.

    42. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by seebs · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I don't think it's rational for you to accuse me of being delusional. Since I'm arguing against "net neutrality", I am by definition "part of the anti-net neutrality forces". Since I am telling you exactly what I am concerned with, the only way I could be deluded about this would be if I were totally wrong about what my arguments or interests were, and that seems pretty unlikely.

      I want the ability to block unwanted traffic. I ran a small ISP for a while (heck, technically I still have a few people using my server for their internet stuff), and we block a LOT of traffic. We use two or three blacklists for spammers, we have a local blacklist, we greylist... And you know what? It was a popular feature. People did occasionally want to be outside the filters... often, they'd ask for this, thinking they wanted it, then a week later tell us to put the filters back on their stream.

      That's us, a network provider, blocking traffic because we know that if we don't block it, we can't provide good service.

      That said, I do agree that there's a serious issue with phrasing it well enough that people in Congress can understand, because if they don't understand it, the law we'll get will be a Bad Thing.

      You're telling me that the people who thought the DMCA would improve my life as a writer and programmer ought to be in charge of my life as a network admin. I'm telling you that's batshit insane.

      --
      My blog: http://www.seebs.net/log/ --- My iPhone/iPad app: http://www.seebs.net/seebsfrac/
    43. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      Why do you not want Google to be charged? Do you not believe it is a choice between charging Google and charging you? It is, and assuming that ISPs are successfully blocked from charging Google, Netflix, ESPN, and so on and so forth they will most certainly be charging the customers.

      The hell it is. If you think Comcast et al are going to pass up a chance to charge Google AND the end user, you're living in a delusion.

    44. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by reboot246 · · Score: 1

      "leave the web alone, but regulate the pipes."

      But it won't stop there. Despite their claims to the contrary, government bureaucrats will not stop until they're regulating content. Then when the left is in charge, they will try to silence the right and when the right is in charge, they will try to silence the left. That's what they do. It justifies (if only in their minds) their high salaries, great retirement benefits and perks out the ass.

      The U.S. government has forgotten the reason for its existence, namely to protect our rights. All it exists for now is to grow government size and power. We need to stop it eventually and this is as good a time as any.

      Mark my words. You're about to see the end of the internet as we all love it.

    45. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Bartles · · Score: 1

      You sound like you can't make an argument without insulting your opponent. Moving out of state can be expensive, but it can also save money. Many people are moving to Texas from the northeast and the west coast for precisely that reason.

      Since most power and water companies are government created moNopolies, what incentive is there for them to improve?

    46. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We've got a lot more influence over government than we do over the top two telcos.

      Bullshit. I can choose to switch to Verizon from AT&T. I can't choose to switch to some other government from the FCC. Companies can be boycotted. Companies can be ignored. You can say "no" to a company and not end up in a prison cell or a death camp.

      At best, the government is incompetent. At worst, it is tyrannical. You brain-dead twits with your mindless worship of government are going to be the death of us all. The very fact that the FCC obtained this powers illegally (they have no legislative nor constitutional mandate for such regulation) is proof that they will not use their powers legitimately.

      Sure, there are issues with competition in many areas of the United States and the world, but even in those cases it is almost always due to government grants of "natural" monopolies (that are "natural" only due to government rules and regulation) or similar government actions or restrictions. If it weren't for government (and the FCC), the price of entry for wimax based commercial networks would be so low that anyone with a credit card and undergraduate level RF engineering skills could compete.

      The government is not your savior; it is your jailer; you boot-licking weasel.

    47. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Bartles · · Score: 1

      So basically your argument went from, "monopolies in unregulated markets are fairly common" to "in all modern advanced economies, there are no current examples, at least in the developed world. You might be able to find some elsewhere, if you really wanted to."

      Heckuva job, Brownie.

    48. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      I think the point YOU are missing with your little analogy is this: If the duopolies weren't massively overselling bandwidth while at the same time refusing to spend squat on upgrades? Well the BOTH would run just fine. Want a good example of how fucked the big corps have been treating us? You know how they say every time anyone complains lines similar to "Well the USA is a big country, not like Japan, yada yada yada"? Well explain the fact that bumfuck Romania has better pipes than you can get in NYC or LA, two of the most populous urban centers on the planet.

      If they ran their business like a normal business, and not an eternal money printing press, then at the very least our large population centers would have decent pipes, and maybe those of us in the flyover states might actually get a little love occasionally as well. Instead thanks to lack of competition you get like what my area has, where neither the teleco or the cableco have moved an inch in any direction in well over a decade, instead of actually upgrading the lines so they can give the customers what they were promised you instead get caps, in my area the BEST residential plan you get is 36GB!, and instead of long term planning the only thing you can count on is ever climbing prices, which in my area have gotten bad enough ($60 for the cheapest DSL plan) that the poor simply can't even afford to get on at all.

      Frankly it is just shameful. While the rest of the world moves into a fiber optic future we here in the USA will be left behind on a badly capped short bus to the information superhighway, while the "corporation yay!" types act like you murdered their kitten if you even dare try to regulate the mess. I say either they give us decent service or we should take the last mile back and open it to competition. Want your monopoly back? We'll be happy to give you a decade for every place you run fiber to, 2 decades if that place currently isn't being served by at least 5MBs broadband. Then if they want a monopoly they'll have to get off their fat asses and start laying lines again. Otherwise they can sit there among a dozen plus different choices like we had during the old dialup days and take their chances.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    49. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      I am not at all convinced that getting the government involved will improve my life.

      Unfortunately, leaving corporate America unregulated, and leaving the current state of regulatory capture intact is untenable.

      Regardless of your political point of view shouldn't the Internet remain free from regulation?

      There's a dichotomy here that I don't think most people understand. Yes, the Internet should remain free of regulation, however the companies that provide Internet connectivity should not. The two are not the same, and regulating one is not the same as regulating the other. In fact, properly regulating one (the ISPs) is very likely to keep the other (the Internet) more free than it is now. Take AT&T, for example. Since it was originally chartered, it was a heavily-regulated State-instituted monopoly, and the regulations under which it labored were there to guarantee that all Americans had quality phone service. Yet, at the same time, the law (specifically, the Communications Act of 1934) had little to say about how We the People actually used the phone system we were paying for, just as the law should not dictate how we use the Internet.

      Besides, it's pretty clear from recent events that allowing major American corporations (and it doesn't matter if it's a bank, an ISP, or an automobile maker) free reign over their alleged customers is a bad idea. The people that run these outfits are sociopaths (and I'm being generous there) and either we boot their collective ass out, or we have to control them, and the government is the only entity capable of doing that.

      Ultimately, history is shown us that we need the institution of government. The question is what do we actually want it to do for us. Nothing is no longer an option.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    50. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      Regulation prevents corporations from putting melanine in our milk

      They used to put chalk in it, once upon a time, in order to whiten it.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    51. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by dave562 · · Score: 1

      They do not need to improve. They need to do one thing and do that one thing well. I want my water company and my power company to have a regulated environment in which they can plan on having a fixed rate structure. With that structure they can then develop long term plans to keep the lights on and the water running. They do not need to be inventing new ways to deliver water.

      The growth of society forces them to improve. Water is a finite resource. Power is finite as well. Population growth seems to be expanding despite any efforts to curb it. They have to improve, or society will falter and stumble. Do you want one agency planning your highways, or would you prefer dozens, each with their own way of doing things and own ideas about building codes. Maybe we should just dump the building codes. After all, those come from an evil government monopoly too.

    52. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      You sound like you can't make an argument without insulting your opponent.

      Well if you're going to say stupid things, such as spouting idiotic Libertarian dogma, then expect to be insulted.

      Since most power and water companies are government created moNopolies, what incentive is there for them to improve?

      And your alternative is what, exactly? Have 100 sets of water pipes and power lines going to every house?

      Their incentive to improve is to improve profitability. If they reduce costs through improvements, they get to keep more money. Since the government sets their prices, they can't just pass on increased costs to their customers, so they have to find other ways of reducing costs which don't adversely affect service (because that will also get the regulators on their backs).

    53. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are there any restrictions on the internet service your trusted company is providing? Such as blocking port 25. If you believe there are no such restrictions, how do you know? Where are they published for you to see them?

    54. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by rtb61 · · Score: 1

      Really, Really dumb. This is about reality, you pay top dollar for access and still get crappy service, why you don't know. bad modem, bad software, your ISP suck, some in between ISP sucks, the sites you access ISP sucks, the site has bad servers and can not handle the traffic.

      Basically all of them can bullshit you all of the time and no matter how much you pay sell you bugger for years, until their systems are independently audited. Far simpler to set rules and make them adhere to those rules. No monitoring other than for occasional and only as required quality of service. No alteration of data in either direction. You sell the bandwidth, then you provide the bandwidth.

      The alternate is content distribution monopolies based around ISP's. Want to distribute direct forget it, they will put you out of business by slowing down or even blocking your traffic, you will be required to use a digital publisher (see same middle men arseholes back again).

      As for VOIP as long as it is all on their network fine, off their network cripple the traffic to make competing ISPs look bad, do it intermittently to get away with it. How about intercepting all traffic and I mean all traffic including VOIP to inserts ads. How about monitoring and data mining all traffic to sell the data to marketing firms. How about monitoring all traffic and cutting of any complaint traffic.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    55. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Kpau · · Score: 1

      But Google ALREADY pays for their connections and usage. What the telco/comcast/etc lot want to do is charge them twice, basically a penalty for uploading (i.e. pushing content).

    56. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Pfhorrest · · Score: 1

      Monopolies in unregulated markets are fairly common.

      Unregulated markets in the modern world are fairly uncommon (because monopolies were common in them and we took steps to address that problem).

      You asked for examples of current unregulated markets, in response to his talk of unregulated market monopolies. He said that there are few unregulated markets currently; but that that is irrelevant to whether there are often monopolies in unregulated markets.

      Mathematically (for m = some market, U() = unregulated and M() = monopolized, and C = the set of current markets), he said that "for most m, U(m) -> M(m)". You asked "show me some U(m) in C", and he said "there are few U(m) in C"; but what does that have to do with his first statement? We're not just talking about C, we're talking about markets in general.

      --
      -Forrest Cameranesi, Geek of all Trades
      "I am Sam. Sam I am. I do not like trolls, flames, or spam."
    57. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by StupidKatz · · Score: 0

      Actually, regulation does not do anything to prevent a company from putting melanine or floor sweepings in their products - such activities have occurred while government regulations were in place to prevent such things.

      The behavior of participants within a free market will not prevent such happenings, either, but the resulting consequences can destroy such a company, through lawsuits to cover poisoned customers and loss of business from new and previous customers, and rightly so. As it currently stands, if a company is caught defrauding its customers, perhaps by poisoning its products, the government forces it to pay a small fine (relative to the costs of the gains made by the fraud) and recall existing poisoned product. That's no solution - that's viewed as a cost of business!

      The biggest obstacle preventing such free market behavior is the government itself, at various levels, that grant and enforce monopolies that have no good reason to exist. This sort of meddling is becoming ever more prevalent, most recently with the passage of US Senate bill S-510 (and potentially its House counterpart) that raises the barrier for food production to such heights that only a small handful of mega companies can afford to meet them, thus in essence granting and enforcing yet another monopoly at the expense of a voluntary and free market.

      Government still is the problem.

    58. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Anthony+Mouse · · Score: 1

      If you don't let them do _any_ such management, then how do they do the legitimate stuff?

      I think you're overstating to what degree the "legitimate stuff" actually exists. I don't think anyone is objecting if they drop packets based on current bandwidth consumption, i.e. if the shared link is full and one user (across all their connections) is transferring at 1000Kbps and the other who pays for the same plan is transferring at 100Kbps, they drop up to 900Kbps of the first user's packets before you drop any of the second user's. That solves all your problems related to one user using BitTorrent or watching HD lolcats on YouTube while their neighbor is trying to make a VOIP call -- the VOIP user doesn't transfer many packets, so none of them get dropped. And if that user wants to do VOIP at the same time as they use BitTorrent, they themselves should use a gateway/router that does QoS, so that the user is the one saying application A is more important than application B.

      Then you only run into the "problem" where one neighbor is sucking up a lot of bandwidth on some allegedly low value endeavor while the neighbor needs to suck up a lot of bandwidth on some allegedly high value endeavor. But screw that kind of prioritization -- if both users are paying the same amount for their connections, they should get the same speed. If you want to get 200Kbps with no packet loss when your neighbor is losing packets above 100Kbps then you should pay extra for the higher speed plan. Get the 10Mbps service instead of the 5Mbps service or whatever.

      That works better for everyone. The people who want high bandwidth with low packet loss get it, but pay for it, regardless of what they want it for. The people who want to do things that require high bandwidth and low packet loss can buy a more expensive plan which has sufficient bandwidth to do everything they want even during heavy traffic hours, or can buy the cheaper plan and not be able to use that application during certain hours. The people doing bulk transfers can buy the cheap plan but end up with the lowest speeds when the network gets congested, or can buy the expensive plan if they want their bulk transfers to go faster. It's called paying for what you get and getting what you pay for.

      With what you seem to be suggesting, i.e. ISPs prioritizing based on application, what happens to the person who is willing to pay a little extra to make their bulk transfers go faster? More importantly, what happens to the novel application which your ISP has never heard of, which they therefore have to classify as ultra-low priority to prevent the applications they want at ultra-low priority from altering their signatures to fool the QoS equipment?

    59. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Veggiesama · · Score: 1

      I am not at all convinced that getting the government involved will improve my life.

      Are you convinced that letting corporations dictate the terms will improve your life then?

    60. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by davecb · · Score: 1

      seebs wrote:

      We all know what we want: We want Comcast to be unable to charge Google extra for the service of letting customers access Youtube. But it's really hard to phrase this well enough ...

      We need someone to police these folks. I really wish we could use the criminal code to do more than "regulate" their misbehavior.

      Methinks we're in the same position as the merchants of the middle ages, who made the case to the Kings of the day that "the king's peace" was as much threatened by the scammers and fraudsters as it was by the highwaymen of the era. They got the first "Statute of Frauds" passed, making fraud an actual crime, not just something you could try to sue someone over.

      --dave

      --
      davecb@spamcop.net
    61. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      You're telling me that the people who thought the DMCA would improve my life as a writer and programmer ought to be in charge of my life as a network admin.

      You believe the DMCA was created by the government? That elected officials came up with the DMCA and decided it should become law? Do you recall any politician running on a DMCA platform? Any politician putting the passage of the DMCA in a campaign advertisement?

      You blame "the government" for the DMCA.

      I'm betting you believe that there's "too much government regulation" on business too.

      Delusional.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    62. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by jadavis · · Score: 1

      We've got a lot more influence over government than we do over the top two telcos.

      That's not how I look at it, at all.

      Even if the ISPs/Telcos have a monopoly and collude to raise the price of communication, they still want that communication to happen (to some degree), because that's how they get paid. Ok, so let's say that prices and quality start to vary more, and that they rise in general (big assumption, considering that we haven't seen any evidence of a general rise in prices).

      Is that really so horrible? Are we so cheap that we are willing to risk it all by involving the government? Even before there's a real problem? I mean, the internet has been a shining success story, with relatively little involvement by the government, and now it's suddenly urgent that we involve the government?

      I see nothing urgent about this. Let's give it a few more years, and see what kinds of horrible abuses happen.

      --
      Social scientists are inspired by theories; scientists are humbled by facts.
    63. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Anthony+Mouse · · Score: 1

      I can choose to switch to Verizon from AT&T. I can't choose to switch to some other government from the FCC.

      Well, first of all, people are talking about moving to avoid a local monopoly telco anyway. Did you know that you can move to other countries?

      But more than that, tell me: Which one of AT&T or Verizon has pledged to adhere to network neutrality in the absence of any regulations, so that I may vote with my wallet? Neither of them, you say?

      And boycotting is a joke. The whole point of a boycott is that you cost them more than it's costing you, because you can get your goods or services from somewhere else but they can only get your money from you. You can't effectively boycott a cartel, because you know and they know that it costs you more to not have phone service than it costs them to not have you as a customer, so they can just wait you out.

      At best, the government is incompetent. At worst, it is tyrannical.

      Wow, the more you write the dumber you sound. I'm going to quote Washington for you: "Government is not reason; it is not eloquent; it is force. Like fire, it is a dangerous servant and a fearful master."

      Now notice the difference between what he said and what you said. Government is dangerous, not useless. You have to use care not to get burned, but you can't be so afraid of it that you're willing to freeze to death.

    64. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by martin-boundary · · Score: 1

      Government still is the problem.

      Not in China, where business owners who poison their customers tend to swiftly get the death penalty.

      The real problem in America is lack of political will to reign in the corps. But it's an order of magnitude easier to replace a single politician with someone who'll vote for laws with teeth than it is to expect all the customers in a market to simultaneously act in a way that will cumulatively cause serious trouble to a large company's management and the several levels of corporate veil, andthen repeat this every time it is needed.

      So you've got a handle on the problem, but your solution is backwards.

    65. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In regulated industries, massive corporations still stifle competition, they just have another tool to do it with... regulatory capture.

    66. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by letherial · · Score: 1

      what would most likely happen is the public would rise up FOR the telcos, cause its not the government....lol, we like our masters making money

    67. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by BoberFett · · Score: 0

      Regulation doesn't prevent those things any more than criminal law prevents murder. At best it can punish wrongdoers. At worst it creates market capture for existing players and eliminates competition.

      I get a little tired of "liberals"* thinking that if some regulation is good, then more regulation is better, and regulating everything is the best. Try fixing existing regulation before blanketing more bad regulation on top.

      Net neutrality is a bad solution and will simply make things worse. First, how about separating the ownership of the physical medium from the service provider? Too many liberals ask the wrong questions and come to the wrong conclusions.

      * I put the term liberals in quotes because modern American liberals are anything but. Modern American liberals want nearly every aspect of human interaction regulated by the government.

    68. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No. There's a difference between regulation, which reduces freedom, and preventing people from hurting and defrauding each other, which enhances freedom. Learn it!

    69. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      Even if the ISPs/Telcos have a monopoly and collude to raise the price of communication, they still want that communication to happen (to some degree), because that's how they get paid.

      Is that why they make you sign a multi-year contract?

      If they "get paid" by providing communications, they would keep your business by providing good, reasonably priced communications, not by threatening to make you pay exorbitant penalties for changing.

      Even before there's a real problem?

      I give you credit, friend, for having a rosy view of the direction that consolidation in the telecommunications sector is taking the Internet. I get that kind of charitable view sometimes, but it usually requires a few glasses of slivovitz and a half a bag of weed.

      The problem with saying "Everything's fine now, let's not do anything until there is a crisis" is that by the time a crisis happens, there's usually no going back. Like the man falling from the 75th floor, who upon passing the 50th floor says "So far so good!"
       

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    70. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      It would be easier for the ISPs to just charge by peak bandwidth and by the GB. So you get a plan that's $19.95 a month with 5Mb guaranteed speed with 25GB data included, $.25 per gigabyte over - that kind of thing.

      The thing is we'll have whiners coming out of the woodwork because people want their cake and they want to eat it too. "Whaaaa - where's my unlimited data and 20Mb connection for $35 a month?! Whaaaaa, we need the FCC to step in and get me what I want!".

    71. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by dcavanaugh · · Score: 1

      We've got a lot more influence over government than we do over the top two telcos.

      I wish that were true. The telcos have a lot more influence over government than citizens do.

      I can think of some interesting vigilante options, but that discussion can wait until the tactics are needed.

    72. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Ichijo · · Score: 1

      We all know what we want: We want Comcast to be unable to charge Google extra for the service of letting customers access Youtube.

      I thought what we want is Internet access and services for the lowest overall cost possible?

      Sometimes a la carte pricing saves money. But Net Neutrality supporters want to take that freedom away from me.

      --
      Any sufficiently unpopular but cohesive argument is indistinguishable from trolling.
    73. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The article is mainly about the idea that 'net-neutrality' was birthed in marxist circles, with the explicit intent of destroying the capitalist media. Of course I had to read the article to find that out.

    74. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Anthony+Mouse · · Score: 1

      It would be easier for the ISPs to just charge by peak bandwidth and by the GB. So you get a plan that's $19.95 a month with 5Mb guaranteed speed with 25GB data included, $.25 per gigabyte over - that kind of thing.

      Charging by guaranteed bandwidth is basically what I'm talking about. So for example you get a connection which is "up to" 10Mbps with 256kbps guaranteed or whatever you like. Then they provision you at 256kbps but if your neighbors aren't using their allocations at any given time, and most generally aren't, then you can have theirs too and get up to 10Mbps.

      But I don't see the point of monthly allocations. If you're going to "guarantee" some minimum amount of bandwidth, there is going to be a day when they're streaming the Superbowl or something and you end up needing some very large fraction of that "guaranteed" bandwidth to actually be available unless you want your phone lines explode with pissed off customers wanting to cancel their service and sue you for not providing the bandwidth you promised. And if the guaranteed bandwidth is actually available, it's available all the time, so what's the point of rationing it? All the ISP would be doing is suppressing consumption of the "surplus" bandwidth of one's neighbors that one is allowed to use when the neighbor who paid for it is not using it, and in so doing reducing demand for higher guaranteed rates (and an associated proportionality on whose packets get dropped first) since paying for higher guarantees is unnecessary if you can effectively mooch off your neighbors.

      The thing is we'll have whiners coming out of the woodwork because people want their cake and they want to eat it too. "Whaaaa - where's my unlimited data and 20Mb connection for $35 a month?! Whaaaaa, we need the FCC to step in and get me what I want!".

      If people want unlimited 20Mb connections for $35/month, either the government is going to be subsidizing them or they're going to be disappointed. One way or the other, I don't see what it has to do with what I've laid out.

    75. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by burnin1965 · · Score: 1

      I logged in to post basically the same thing.

      It cannot be stressed enough, in the age of the 'greed is good' 'privatize everything' crowd demanding the rise of a plutocracy, the government is a democratically elected representative republic, your vote is your say, you don't get to vote for corporations and as history shows us over and over again they are very good at circumventing any perceived control anyone believes they may have with their wallet.

      It is not even necessary to go back to the history of Standard Oil to understand how regulation is in fact necessary to keep the free market from self destruction, the deregulation and privatization of electrical power generation in California and the rise and fall of Enron is a clear sign of the absolute and total corruption and deception that results from unchecked greed.

      The full blazing glory of unregulated capitalism is exactly what Enron exuded while conspiring with power generating companies to create fake power shortages and manipulation of market orders to create fake excessive demand on distribution systems.

      When free market capitalism morphs into an organized criminal system that avoids any semblance of competition or free market pricing the only thing stopping the fleecing of the population is the elected government that must kick these assholes in the balls or find themselves kicked out of office.

    76. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by oztiks · · Score: 1

      Here is a scenario. Taking the car analogy to new hights which i think people often forget to consider.

      The roads (and not saying this is perfect but here's the process behind it all). You pay to have your car registered for use on public roads. That money then gets spent on providing better transport conditions. Tolls are implemented on highways because of their constant need of servicing. Certainly people complain about registration and tolls all the time but the truth is, its better than dirt and gravel so the ends justify the means.

      The internet. Its broken and outdated; grossly over populated (running out of IPs); it's full of hijackers (e-theft); people advertise anything they want (spam everywhere); and most of it is vigilante run (ISP's, Google, anyone with the clout runs their bit of it the way they want). Put in regulation, it all gets tidied up, still can drive your car wherever you want even hot the thing up any which way you can but at least its far better than this atrocious mess we're having to deal with now.

    77. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First, how about separating the ownership of the physical medium from the service provider?

      How? Obviously it can't be the government regulating that (sinvce that is obviously EEEVVVIILLLLL)

      I know - free market! - I'm sure that Verizon, Comcast and AT&T will spontaneously decide to give
      up bundling and lock-in to become simple infrastructure providers who will need to actually compete
      on price and quality.

    78. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Simply put:

      As an ISP you have the right to charge your customers for x speed connection, so long as you provide x speed connection and nothing LESS, more is fine, but less is not.

      As an ISP you do NOT have the right to set usage caps, you cannot alter flow of traffic to slower links or fuller pipes for any reason.
      As an ISP you may NOT oversell your bandwidth, for every gigabit of bandwidth you sell, you must have a gigabit and a half of capacity.
      As an ISP you may NOT touch any traffic whatsover flowing over the lines, you must carry it without recording it, duplicating it, reading it or modifying it in any way shape or form.
      As an ISP you may NOT store IP addresses of source or destination for traffic.
      As an ISP you will NOT be held accountable for the traffic flowing over your lines.
      As an ISP you do NOT have to respond to requests from any of the big media companies or MPAA, RIAAs or any of the other MAFIAs.

      There. That ought to do it.

    79. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by pipelayerification · · Score: 1

      It's difficult to decide who I trust less the government or big business; maybe that's because there isn't much difference between the two.

      Wow. After reading this article, it looks like you need to be very worried about the government. Socialist and Marxist lobbying groups seem to be having free reign under current management. Its starting to look like energy regulation under the previous administration. If you cant get the laws you want, just send someone that works for you to work for the government to make a new law. At least with big business, you know where their motivation comes from ($$$$). Some of these groups seem to have a totally different view, than the majority of the population, of where our country should be headed.

    80. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Safer to trust corrupt business than corrupt government.

    81. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean, more involved. It's the government's involvement that led to you having the choice between Comcast and IP over Avian Carriers.

    82. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think this would be a perfectly acceptable outcome (pipes are regulated, content isn't). However, it's really unlikely to come about. Everyone's frustrated with FCC regulations, so an NN solution would almost certainly end up being a bill in Congress; and of course, J. Random Congressperson is going to get some political points by seeking to give government the authority to force a site off the Web for hosting child porn, or pirated material, or whatever. And then five years down the road there's some crisis involving terrorism, and then J. Random Congressperson (not necessarily the same one) will amend the previous bill to allow the blacklisting of a site for hosting terroristic messages. And right there, you've got about 50% of libertarian/conservative blogs and sites vulnerable (the ones that point out that yes, the Second Amendment was originally written in order to ensure the citizenry's right of rebellion). There are certainly similar scenarios that would enable other politically-motivated censorship. And poof, there goes freedom of speech. I trust big business quite a bit more than I trust government; they may attempt to screw their customers, et cetera, but they don't have a proclaimed right to the licit first use of force, either.

    83. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by scamper_22 · · Score: 1

      William F. Buckley Jr. once said "that he would rather be governed by the first 100 names in the Boston phone directory than by the entire faculty of Harvard University."

      I know this is slashdot and everyone worships the alter of experts... but experts derive their power from political bodies... who are ultimately corrupted by special interests.

      Maybe an enlightened expert could come up with the optimal policy, but finding and empowering only that expert is an impossible task.

      I would honestly settle for a panel of 100 RANDOM citizens (yes even Joe the plumber) to sit down, write some guidelines of the things 'we all know', and then rule on how companies implement them. Regular people are able to understand 'fairness' better than any politician.

      Basically... do the job of the FCC or another governing body. Maybe keep a few of the FCC experts to 'explain' some of the technical details to the citizen panel. But the citizen panel must write and approve every single rule.

      Yes, the citizen panel won't be perfect. It might not give the optimal solution. But I talk to regular people of all stripes everyday... and I think they could come up with a reasonable and fair policy... much better than a political body could.

    84. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But hey, it's the Free Market at work. Your post probably gave some Libertarian an orgasm.

    85. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We all know what we want: We want Comcast to be unable to charge Google extra for the service of letting customers access Youtube.

      Nope. I don't want that. What I want is community-owned last-mile fiber that gives hundreds of other companies equal access to residential customers that Comcast has.

      Once that's in place, I want Comcast to have the freedom to charge whatever to whomever wishes to use their network. Others can offer consumers neutral networks and we can see whether customers care enough about the issue to choose the neutral providers.

      Net Neutrality treats the symptom of the problem rather than the real issue. The real issue is the monopoly/duopoly that exists almost everywhere in this country. It's what keeps us from catching up with the rest of the world in broadband access speeds and it's what keeps the prices we pay for internet access so high. And I don't want any laws that will get in the way of changing this situation. Network Neutrality laws/regulations will only help us live with the current situation. Letting the broadband providers do whatever they want will piss people off to the point where they push for real change.

    86. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Homburg · · Score: 1

      I can't choose to switch to some other government.

      You've never heard of "elections"?

    87. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by rdnetto · · Score: 1

      We all know what we want: We want Comcast to be unable to charge Google extra for the service of letting customers access Youtube. But it's really hard to phrase this well enough and clearly enough that it lets network admins do the kinds of QoS and traffic shaping things they need to do in order to provide good service, or for that matter, block unwanted traffic entirely.

      You may not prioritize any form of traffic over any other form of traffic, except as required by law.
      The obvious reply to this is that they'll push for laws to shape/block torrents, but if they're passing those kind of laws your screwed either way.

      --
      Most human behaviour can be explained in terms of identity.
    88. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No.

      We have to wait until the ISP's do something so egregious that there is a huge public uprising, [...]

      If stealing 200 billions $ of taxpayer money wasn't enough, what will?

    89. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Tjebbe · · Score: 1

      You know, every time this comes up, ISPs talking about charging content providers for use of bandwidth, I wonder what would happen if the content providers turned it around, and start talking about charging ISPs for delivering *their* content.

      How much would Google suffer if Comcast users can't reach their servers anymore?
      How much would Comcast suffer if their users can't reach Google anymore?

      Not even talking about regulation, but this would seem like a dangerous game for all involved.

    90. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Jawnn · · Score: 1

      We all know what we want: We want Comcast to be unable to charge Google extra for the service of letting customers access Youtube. But it's really hard to phrase this well enough and clearly enough that it lets network admins do the kinds of QoS and traffic shaping things they need to do in order to provide good service, or for that matter, block unwanted traffic entirely.

      I am not at all convinced that getting the government involved will improve my life.

      Bullshit. It is not at all "hard" to say such a thing. You simply point out that delivering YouTube traffic (or Netflix, etc.) uses far more bandwidth than most other applications, build your network to handle it, and price your bandwidth accordingly. I pay the same for my DSL as the guy down the street. He downloads/streams 20-50 times what I do on an average day. Charge, a reasonable amount, by the byte. Problem solved. The FCC, those who appoint them, Congress, and most of all the carriers need to be made to understand that the carriers are just that, carriers. They absolutely should not be allowed to define a market and then, by virtue of their highly advantageous position, play in that market, competing with those to whom they sell connectivity.

    91. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by ultranova · · Score: 1

      We all know what we want: We want Comcast to be unable to charge Google extra for the service of letting customers access Youtube. But it's really hard to phrase this well enough and clearly enough that it lets network admins do the kinds of QoS and traffic shaping things they need to do in order to provide good service, or for that matter, block unwanted traffic entirely.

      That's because the whole point of Net Neutrality is that there is no unwanted traffic unless the end user blocks it. It's not up to a carrier to block, shape, or in any other way interfere with traffic; his only concern is getting each packet to its destination as fast as possible.

      After all, why the heck should your video conferencing take precedence over my torrents? If the carrier oversubscribed too much, it's their problem, not mine.

      I am not at all convinced that getting the government involved will improve my life.

      However, I am utterly convinced that no matter how corrupt a government may be, it is still a shining pillar of ethical perfection compared to the types that write on Wall Street Journal. Even Hitler, Stalin and Mao had some goals other than filling their own pockets, but corporate types have repeatedly killed people just to save a few dimes.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    92. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >>Not in China, where business owners who poison their customers tend to swiftly get the death penalty.

      Not in China, where dumping Benzene into the water supply or using rags from hospital sheets to stuff mattresses swiftly give a bribe to government officials and... nothing happens.

      Oh, sure, they'll kill *someone*. But it's very unlikely it's actually the guy who killed off all the babies by replacing baby formula with poison.

    93. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by juasko · · Score: 0

      Living in a country that fought for their freedom from communist Russia and gained independence in 1917 from Russia. Lived neighbour with Russia during their Sovjet era and now "democratic" era. But also seen and been in USA.

      I can't stop marvel that how so different countries. One with total liberty, the other with no liberty, still are so indifferent. The people in US, are not free, they are very similar to the people of Sovjet. Totally tied up. Yes they are so by totally different means or ways, but the end result is the same.

      When it comes to technology a lot of stuff has been develop in USA, and the same is true for Sovjet. And still the people in US and former Sovjet literally live in a technological stone age.

      Just look at the banking systems in USA, when you go there it feels like your ended up in 1800 AD. And not in a modern system of 2010. The same thing goes for mobile devices. Here I believe Russia is more developed today. Both in the banking world and with mobile technology. Estonia has by far the most modern government, and utilizes technology well. That is an other former Sovjet state.

      So in the end the communistic way, and the highly liberal democratic way has brought their people to the very same end results. People who are not free. Either tied up by corporations and other wealthy organizations or even wealthy individuals, or tied up by the government.

      Well communism did this in much more cruel way so this is not a comparison of the two political systems. But an comparison in how free the people ended up.

      What is the reason behind? Well corporations have a very similar power structure as countries have that are not democratic. And there is no fault with that, so it should be. But someone need to put regulations on how and what corporations are allowed to control, and how you are allowed to do bisness.

      USA is in this respect a warning example how too liberal law and politics when it comes the corporate world, destroys all that what democracy once wanted to acomplish, a government by the people for the people.

    94. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by sac13 · · Score: 1

      We've got a lot more influence over government than we do over the top two telcos.

      Really? How? Elections? Is that how we get rid of Bush and get to have Obama do the same thing? How about last month's election? Is that the influence you're talking about?

      I'm not saying we've got that much influence over the telcos, but the more the government "regulates" anything, the more power the large companies in those industries seem to get. Regulation is just another word for reducing the amount of people that need to be bought off to do whatever you want. Just take a look at the rule the FCC proposed. It didn't address the real potential problems, but made the big telco's harder to compete with for anyone that might want to try.

      We bitch a lot about businesses being hard to deal with and unethical around here. But, all the industries that everyone bitches about tend to be the most regulated. Off the top of my head, I can't think of one that people consistently bitch about that isn't regulated. Coincidence?

    95. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by sac13 · · Score: 1

      Here in the Americas, 90% of the populace is royally fucked for any sort of competition. We live in areas where even if there used to be competition, all the ISP's have gotten into little collusion agreements. My area used to have Verizon, Time Warner, and Comcast all competing for cable service: TW and Comcrap both went into "charge under cost" to drive Verizon out, then entered into an agreement where TW agreed to pull out of half my state in exchange for Comcrap pulling out of the other half. End result: now TW and Comcrap, each in the other half of the state, rape the consumer up the ass with monopoly-level pricing.

      I know around where I am the competition is limited because of government granted monopoly status to the telcos. Anyone that wants to try to do something better can't because the government won't allow it. And, since the regulations are so extensive, you need a team of lawyers to figure out what you must do to stay out of trouble. I suppose the answer is more government involvement... since it's done so much to improve the situation so far.

    96. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      It's difficult to decide who I trust less the government or big business; maybe that's because there isn't much difference between the two.

      There is a huge difference. The corporations collectively employ the federal government. Oddly, they do it with our money.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    97. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by gnapster · · Score: 1

      Hear, hear! It is one thing to provide quality of service filtering to make sure that all users have reasonable access. It is quite another thing for one user to have different qualities of service based on content.

      The article mentioned in the summary is the first non-vested-interest opinion against net neutrality which I have ever read. I was surprised when I read of his opposition to the Internet being treated "like a public utility." I was under the impression that the motivation behind net neutrality is one which parallels phone services' requirements in performing duties as a common carrier. I don't understand why this is a bad thing, or how it is supposed to chill innovation and investment.

      Makes me wonder if there is some side of the debate that I am missing.

    98. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by sac13 · · Score: 1

      I trust the government to regulate businesses to the extent necessary to make sure there is fair competition and the free market keeps on working. That's their job. If you believe the businesses will do it themselves -- will take actions specifically designed to ensure that new competitors can emerge and take customers away from them! -- then you are a fool.

      What's a real world example that illustrates that happening? What industry has become regulated and more competition has emerged rather than power getting more concentrated into a handful of big players?

      Of course businesses are going to try to eliminate the possibility of competition... That's why they're often the one's supporting regulation.

      Name an industry that you have problems with that isn't regulated. Why is it the industries that people continuously complain about are the one's that are the most regulated? Is that just a coincidence?

    99. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by hey! · · Score: 1

      I trust businesses to provide me with internet service. That's their job. The government isn't going to do it, nor should it.

      Can we examine that assumption for a moment?

      Let's say we take the bottom line, non-negotiable assumptions on both sides of this question seriously:

      (1) Private companies should not be told what to do with their private property.

      (2) Citizens need infrastructure that gives them fair and unbiased access to information sources.

      These two propositions only become irreconcilable if we add *your* proposition, that the government should not provide information infrastructure. Well, before we curb private property rights or freedom of access to information, why not examine that assumption critically?

      Sure, building national and local networks is a complex and costly undertaking. But so is building transportation networks, and governments manage to do that. Maybe it's not with perfect efficiency, but it's good enough to be justifiable in most citizens' opinion. All the bureaucracy and contracting shenanigans involved with pubic road building are offset to by the benefit of free and unfettered access to transport for personal use and commerce. Well, a lot of the personal uses and commerce that once was conducted over the highway system is now conducted over the Internet.

      If we *did* examine this question seriously, I think we'd find from the reactions of Internet providers is that the real sticking point for them isn't the civil libertarian position that the government shouldn't regulate the use of private property. What they're really protecting is a dream of a reliable cash cow that produces a steady stream of revenue without requiring much inventiveness or originality on their part. Well, I feel sorry for them if that dream doesn't pan out, but it's not *my* problem.

      There's lots of government services that would be fine cash cows for private vendors. If there were no public fire protection, the very futility of protecting your home while your neighbor's unprotected home burns makes private fire insurance a wonderful cash cow. Think of all those vendors whose right to make a profit is harmed by the public service! Even so, it's fair to say that nearly every service that the government provides is *also* a splendid opportunity businesses that add value to those services. For the public police, you have security firms and private investigators. For fire protection, you have risk managers who tell you how to protect your property. For Medicare, you have supplemental insurance that doesn't have to cover the hard luck cases.

      You can make the argument that public Internet service would just be lousy. But that too would be a business opportunity for the vendors. Public transit doesn't kill the market for private cars or taxi service after all. It takes cars off the road, making life better for the middle class and affluent people who'd rather sit comfortably in their SUVs than rub shoulders with the teeming masses. So let the masses have the free, lousy Internet, supporting new businesses and uses. Then sell your premium service to the affluent at profitable prices.

      But of course, that's not the scenario Internet providers are afraid of, because premium service is not a niche they occupy. They're afraid of the government taking over the niche they *do* occupy: crummy service that most people can manage to live with.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    100. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by sac13 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I'm a little annoyed by conservatives treating regulation as some sort of sin. Regulation prevents corporations from putting melanine in our milk, or floor sweepings in our sausages (both have happened in the past). Regulation (in theory) keeps companies from ripping us off left and right, and encourages competition.

      Regulation prevents oil spills? Regulation prevents big bank misdeeds? Regulation of food keeps us from getting tainted food that never needs to be recalled?

      What industry has been regulated and competition increased? Name an industry that you have problems with that isn't regulated. Why is it the industries that people continuously complain about are the one's that are the most regulated? Is that just a coincidence?

      Before government regulation began with Teddy Roosevelt in the twentieth century, we lived in what was known as the Gilded Age, where massive corporations stiffed competition and milked customers for money while giving little or nothing in return... sound familiar? We've been deregulating for thirty years, so it should come as little surprise we're entering a Second Gilded Age. We should have remembered that corporations can't regulate themselves; now we'll have to learn that lesson anew, or face the consequences.

      It does sound familiar. It's not historically accurate, though. During that period, the standard of living for common people increased immensely. Of course, that doesn't stop the populist revisionism from claiming that a handful improved their lot at the expense of others. Did some get rich? Of course. Did some work hard for little in return? Relative to today, yes. But, relative to the squalor and frequent starvation of a completely agrarian society, they were much better off.

      You can't compare people to people in different classes to determine how well they're doing. The richer have always been better off. They always will be. You have to look at their standard of living compared to someone of an equivalent social level prior to the time you're observing.

      If someone has more resources, options and thus stability than before, they've benefitted. Sure, it'd be nice if everyone could have mansions and a Mercedes, but it's not practical or possible. So, unless we just want to bitch for the sake of bitching, we have to concentrate on improving people's lives at each level. And, as much as we might not like it, the rich are going to improve as well... and they will ahead of everyone else. But, history has demonstrated that over time everyone rises.

      20 years ago, it was mostly people that were "rich" that had cell phones. If you saw someone with one, you thought of them as someone of means. Do you think the same thing when you see someone with a cell phone today?

    101. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by sac13 · · Score: 1

      I am not at all convinced that getting the government involved will improve my life.

      I'm equally unconvinced that getting AT&T or Comcast more involved will improve my life.

      So, you'd rather have them working together?

      I'm not aware of any regulation that doesn't end up with big companies gaining more power and politicians getting a bigger piece of that pie. Are you?

    102. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by gryf · · Score: 1
      That's like saying it's okay for the government to regulate the highways but not the cars. Because, you know, THAT way the government can't control where the on-ramps and off-ramps are. This is not a realistic description of how the internet works.

      Once the government can tell service providers how to operate their private property, the pipes, and how to manage traffic flows in order to protect consumers, we will have accepted the premise that allows the government to restrict or block traffic to destinations that the government considers 'dangerous' to consumers.

      Imagine a federal black list of websites and domains. Imagine the No Labels crowd have the power to block web traffic to MSNBC and FNC. Imagine the government requiring all service providers to block traffic to known wikileaks sites. The government doesn't need to regulate the content anymore if it can block the destination. It won't happen today, but invariably regulation grows increasingly restrictive once in place.

      The FCC has just arrogated itself the authority to create a Great Firewall of America, and THAT is what concerns net neutrality opponents.

      --

      #-#
      Ad Astra Per Aspera
      A rough road leads to the stars
    103. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can vote out the government anytime you want. You cannot do the same for big business.

      The difference is voting out the government takes effort on your part, and you are not motivated enough to do so.

      Big business is motivated to support government, so you get a corporate vetted representative making decisions in your name.

    104. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Jay+L · · Score: 2

      I can choose to switch to Verizon from AT&T.

      Is there actually a part of the US where this is true? I thought AT&T's local phone service was only in the old SBC region, while Verizon comes from East Coast origins.

    105. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Jay+L · · Score: 1

      wait until the ISP's do something so egregious that there is a huge public uprising

      What do you call Comcast forging NAKs to limit BitTorrent?

    106. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by gryf · · Score: 1
      Speaking of delusional, can you imagine or recall how well web video worked "when [the internet] was almost entirely a government-funded project"? It's the commercial internet that provides with WiFi hot spots, multi-megabit internet, cloud computing, World of Warcraft and internet video. If you'd prefer to go back to text mode MUDs, fine, don't ask the rest of us to go back.

      Any time you don't want AT&T or Comcast involved in your life, drop them. You don't have that choice at all when it comes to federal regulation.

      --

      #-#
      Ad Astra Per Aspera
      A rough road leads to the stars
    107. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Miseph · · Score: 1

      No, he just thinks that a rational choice can consist of "have or not have". We're all free to tell our monopoly telcos and ISPs to shove their crap service and rape pricing where the sun don't shine whenever we like... provided we're willing to stop having internet connections.

      --
      Try not to take me more seriously than I take myself.
    108. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      can you imagine or recall how well web video worked "when [the internet] was almost entirely a government-funded project"?

      So you admit that the main thing private industry has brought to the Internet is to make it cable television.

      That is not progress, but if it makes you happy...

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    109. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      So, you'd rather have them working together?

      No, I'd rather have them both out of the Internet business as long as they're in the telephone business.

      I'm not aware of any regulation that doesn't end up with big companies gaining more power and politicians getting a bigger piece of that pie. Are you?

      The Sherman Anti-trust Act of 1890 is the big one, but it requires a Justice Department willing to use it.

      The main thing is to not just throw up our hands and say, "Oh well, big business is just going to continue to do what they're doing so we might as well just go along with it." Instead, we need to be aware of which candidates, which bills in congress, are going to make it worse and which will make it better. Then, we do what people have been doing for centuries: get up in the politicians' faces and let them know we support them if they do right or will work to defeat them if they do wrong. If a bunch of half-bright crackers with teabags stapled to their meshback caps can scare the shit out of the Republican Party, my guess is that the rest of us can also bring a little pressure to bear.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    110. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by sac13 · · Score: 1

      The Sherman Anti-trust Act of 1890 is the big one, but it requires a Justice Department willing to use it.

      The FED also had the power to back the Bank of the United States to keep it from failing, but it didn't. And, then we ended up with runs on banks at the Great Depression. So, what good is giving government power when it never uses it when or in the way that it should?

      We can have the best laws there could be, but government also has to execute. The record seems to indicate that's a big part of the problem. So, it doesn't matter if we've got the law right. That's just the beginning. And, the end seems to always be big companies with more power and politicians getting their share of the pie.

      The main thing is to not just throw up our hands and say, "Oh well, big business is just going to continue to do what they're doing so we might as well just go along with it." Instead, we need to be aware of which candidates, which bills in congress, are going to make it worse and which will make it better. Then, we do what people have been doing for centuries: get up in the politicians' faces and let them know we support them if they do right or will work to defeat them if they do wrong. If a bunch of half-bright crackers with teabags stapled to their meshback caps can scare the shit out of the Republican Party, my guess is that the rest of us can also bring a little pressure to bear.

      I'm not throwing up my hands and giving up. I'm just taking an honest look at the history of government regulation. The record is full of examples of government gaining more regulatory power and big business benefiting disproportionately. I honestly am not aware of any situation where that hasn't been the case.

      But, we still have a quasi-religious fervor when it comes to praying for the government to protect us. Never mind that corporations are a creation of government. Never mind that the industries we complain about and have the most problems with are the most regulated. Never mind that government involvement always ends up being the tool of the corporations instead of the little guys.

      And, I'd love to think that politicians could be kept in check, but the facts don't seem to bear that out. Over 90% of incumbents are reelected to congress. And, people for the most part are too apathetic to pay attention enough to make good choices. Other than the occasional temper tantrum, voters only care about the appearance of something happening.

      Government doesn't get held accountable.

    111. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by StupidKatz · · Score: 1

      it's an order of magnitude easier to replace a single politician with someone who'll vote for laws with teeth than it is to expect [the voluntary market forces to work]

      In theory, I could agree with the above. In practice, the politicians in the US are bought and paid for, largely with corporate money. (How else does one explain the DMCA?) Laws on the books, with teeth or otherwise, are no guarantee against wrongdoing by companies - see the ongoing ForclosureGate crap as an example of fraud and felonies of all stripes, with nary a cop in sight.

      To the extent that US commerce remains free and voluntary, customers made aware of undesirable business practices divert their business away from the company in question to one extent or another. Absent government-granted and enforced monopolies, competitors will spring up to capture the alienated customers' business.

      History is replete with examples of government's failure to replace free markets with government control/regulation.

    112. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      So, what good is giving government power when it never uses it when or in the way that it should?

      Never?

      But, we still have a quasi-religious fervor when it comes to praying for the government to protect us.

      Is it anything like the "religious fervor" of those that believe in the "invisible hand" of the free market and its ability to guide society? I would say that the free market fundamentalists are much more inclined toward utopianism than those that believe in the necessity for government to limit the most egregious excesses of the private sector.

      Government doesn't get held accountable.

      Government always gets held accountable. I would say that government is under much greater scrutiny and attack than transnational corporations.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    113. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Bartles · · Score: 1

      Do you want one agency planning our internet? Or would you rather have hundreds of companies and entrepreneurs constantly working to evolve and improve it? Telephone technology was stagnant for 70 years and it was heavily regulated. Then alternatives such as wireless and ip based communications were developed and we have seen huge advances in the last 25 years. Let's not ruin a good thing.

    114. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Abcd1234 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Regulation prevents oil spills? Regulation prevents big bank misdeeds? Regulation of food keeps us from getting tainted food that never needs to be recalled?

      Uhhh... yes, yes, and fuck yes.

      Talk about epic logic fail. You look at a bunch of incidents, and conclude that *all* government regulation has failed. But it doesn't occur to you that far *worse* would've happened if regulation wasn't in place.

      Hell, one need only look at the US before and after the Clean Air Act. Last I checked, I haven't seen any fucking rivers bursting into flames. Have you?

      What industry has been regulated and competition increased? Name an industry that you have problems with that isn't regulated. Why is it the industries that people continuously complain about are the one's that are the most regulated? Is that just a coincidence?

      1. ISPs are a great example. Here in Canada, there are a number of DSL providers that wouldn't exist if regulations weren't in place to force the local telco to lease out their lines.

      2. Dumbass, the industries that aren't regulated are the ones that *don't need regulation in the first place*.

      3. This is the converse of 2. Industries that *are* regulated are the most likely to try and work around those regulations in order to stifle competition or take advantage of consumers.

      But, relative to the squalor and frequent starvation of a completely agrarian society, they were much better off.

      And therefore everything was hunky fucking dory?

      No.

      They were relatively better off, yes. But they were still buying patent medicines that didn't work, suffering in unsafe workplaces, and generally being fucked by businesses.

      Of course, that doesn't stop the populist revisionism from claiming that a handful improved their lot at the expense of others.

      Uh, who claimed that?

      The simple fact is that a few got rich, everyone else got a little better off, and the serfs still got gangraped by the robber barons. They just got to work in a factory while it was happening, instead of subsisting on a farm. Government regulation combined with organized labour allowed the serfs to fight back.

    115. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by lsatenstein · · Score: 1

      To my mind, the internet is an electronic highway. Every highway has posted speeds, that are state or federally imposed. Therefore, net neutrality to me means that all those on the same highway, are allowed to go to the maximum legal speed. I-xxx highway is more than interstate, it is intercontinent, and we must not discriminate. Also, I have not made up my mind about a tax, that is, the governments charge a tax for Internet use, and use the money to subsidize an increase of bandwidth, and to bring the internet speeds to rural areas. As highways are public, the Internet must be backbone and government owned. The government can contract out support. As for bytes transferred, and charging for it, to some extent I agree. In today's world, I would allow 100gig per month per user as a base, and a small fee, perhaps $0.01 (1 cent) per gig for the excess. Later on, we could reduce prices to 1 cent per 2 gigs for the excesses over 100gigs. And like our electric company with intelligent meters, the 7am to 9am and 5pm to 10 pm are high rate hours and lower rates outside of those times.

      --
      Leslie Satenstein Montreal Quebec Canada
    116. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by lsatenstein · · Score: 1

      Perhaps in the future you will buy your internet service from a remote provider, just as you can buy your electricity from a remote (out of regional area) provider. The provider pumps in the amount of electricity you pull out, the net result is your domestic provider does not have to burn fuel to provide you with electricity. There must be something like that in the USA. We have it in Canada. I can buy internet services from a Toronto ISP, and Bell Canada is required to provide me with a dry loop for $8.00. I have 800kb DSL with unlimited DL for $20/mo. I also do VOIP with that ISP on the same DSL line. Quality is great.

      --
      Leslie Satenstein Montreal Quebec Canada
    117. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by gorillazilla · · Score: 1

      To the contrary, I am fully convinced that getting The Government involved will degrade my life.

    118. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by rapierian · · Score: 1

      I take it you're happy with the way government agencies are currently running? And with the political leadership we've had these past, oh, however back you wish to go? Well, congratulations on being one of the few. Pretty much 90% of the country disapproves of congress, and just about every government agency you can grant initials to, or at least how they're performing their job.

    119. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hell, one need only look at the US before and after the Clean Air Act. Last I checked, I haven't seen any fucking rivers bursting into flames. Have you?

      The one good example you give where regulation could be necessary, but...

      Talk about epic logic fail. You look at a bunch of incidents, and conclude that *all* government regulation has failed. But it doesn't occur to you that far *worse* would've happened if regulation wasn't in place.

      Despite what you may think, you've provided no evidence for your conclusion. Economies are complex entities, if you take away regulation, the individual actors will respond differently in that scenario.

      They were relatively better off, yes

      You admit you're wrong at the core, but you insist on surrounding the rest of your post with meaningless words.

      What your ideas boil down to is stealing from wealth generated by corporations, and that this will somehow generate more prosperity for everyone. Nevermind that regulation decreases competition by increasing the costs of starting up a business. Here's your argument:

      1. Steal from Corporations
      2. ???
      3. Profit

      So, you're logic isn't different from that of any other criminal, except because your means are democratic and your intended target is supposedly morally debased that lets you feel justified.

  2. False Dichotomy by goombah99 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's not a choice: one is not "handing it over control to political appointees". It is simply saying not packet dicrimination. So yes there will be regulators but they do not have fiat control, just enforcement responsibilities.

    Thus this discussion is starting out on a false premise.

    --
    Some drink at the fountain of knowledge. Others just gargle.
    1. Re:False Dichotomy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, the Wall Street Journal said that some guy who's a communist supports net neutrality, so it's clearly a communist plot. Are you a commie? Goombah99 is a commie!

    2. Re:False Dichotomy by oh_my_080980980 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The FCC has been regulating the air waves for over 76 years! Never had a problem with that.

      So where the fuck is this coming from???

      Sure you want some government appointee to handle the patent office but god forbid they oversee the internet to make sure that CONSUMERS don't get screwed out of what they are PAYING FOR!

      Look it's the Wall Street Journal. SO it's a hatchet job.

    3. Re:False Dichotomy by rudy_wayne · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Thus this discussion is starting out on a false premise.

      The claim that Net Neutrality is "government regulation of the Internet" is a lie perpetuated by politicians acting on behalf of the cable and telephone monopolies. The purpose of Net Neutrality is to prevent the cable and telephone monopolies from shutting out competitors (or people they don't like).

    4. Re:False Dichotomy by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      It is simply saying not packet dicrimination. So yes there will be regulators but they do not have fiat control, just enforcement responsibilities.

      However, the regulation that no packet shall be discriminated against based on its origin requires fiat control. The trick here is that the initial fiat control gives way to only enforcement responsibilities. It's unlikely to be that way, but then again: "The price of freedom is eternal vigilance." The price for a near-free Internet will be eternal vigilance for people who will seek permanent fiat control.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    5. Re:False Dichotomy by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1, Insightful

      No, the claim that the government will limit itself to what you call Net Neutrality is the lie. Yes, most of the people who argue for Net Neutrality are arguing for something that would prevent the ISP big players from shutting out competitors, but all of the proposed government "net neutrality" plans are about regulating content. Just because you mean the obvious by a term, doesn't mean that's what the politicians and bureaucrats mean when they use the same term.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    6. Re:False Dichotomy by Fritzed · · Score: 1

      The fact that this opinion which is based completely off of an anti-neutrality talking point (read: lie) made it onto the slashdot main page made me very sad.

      Comments like this one make me feel a lot better.

      Thanks.

      --
      Spooooon!!!!!
    7. Re:False Dichotomy by LaissezFaire · · Score: 1

      The claim that Net Neutrality is "government regulation of the Internet" is a lie perpetuated by politicians acting on behalf of the cable and telephone monopolies.

      Correct. The FCC instituting new rules on Internet providers is in no way, shape, or form the government regulating the Internet. The FCC is now a separate business headquartered in the Conch Republic

    8. Re:False Dichotomy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      With Government endorsed monopolies on Cable/Internet service areas, the politics are already in the system.

    9. Re:False Dichotomy by Caerdwyn · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The FCC has been regulating the air waves for over 76 years! Never had a problem with that.

      I have a lot of problems with how the FCC regulates the air waves.

      The Fairness Doctrine is being leveraged to ensure that there are only two viable political parties. It ensconces in law that there are two, AND ONLY TWO, political viewpoints which are eligible for "fairness" enforcement. If there is an issue in which a particular viewpoint is expressed over broadcast media, the burden on the broadcaster is to provide equal time for "the opposing viewpoint"... as if there is just one. As far as the Fairness Doctrine is concerned, there are no Libertarians, no Greens, no Peace&Freedom, no John Birch, no Tea Party, no American Communists... only "conservatives" (Republicans) and "liberals" (Democrats). This is part of how the two main parties ensure that they're the only ones who get to play. And there has even been talk of using the law to shut down conservative talk radio altogether, to reduce the number of broadcast viewpoints to exactly one.

      Ham radio operators are very familiar with the shortcomings of the FCC, and how the biggest political contributors get the frequency bands. The FCC is also deliberately ignoring the fact that one of its darlings, Bandwidth Over Power Lines, generates significant radio noise in amateur bands which would actually make the US non-compliant with treaties and international law concerning radio noise that interferes with the internationally agreed-upon ham bands.

      The FCC also is empowered to enforce the ability of homeowners to deploy antennas, for reception and transmission. Court cases have held, time and time again, that homeowners' associations, municipalities and other mind-your-neighbors'-business groups cannot bar people from deploying antennas for legal use which meet building code and federal standards. However, the FCC has consistently shirked that duty for private users, concentrating entirely upon commercial operations.

      The FCC, as it currently stands, is not someone you want to have any sort of power over your Internet connection, either directly or through your ISP. It is politicized, bought-and-paid-for by lobbyists, and is utterly unresponsive to public needs and concerns.

      It's about big money and big government, nothing else.

      --
      Everybody gets what the majority deserves.
    10. Re:False Dichotomy by lseltzer · · Score: 1

      But now they get to decide what is "reasonable" and "legitimate" in network management policy. For instance, what about CDNs like Akamai and Level3? Clearly these networks pay ISPs more to prioritize the packets they are carrying rather than just connecting through conventional peering. Is this packet discrimination? I'm sure the FCC will say no, but in order to do so they have to open up holes in their definitions which will allow just about anything ISPs are inclined to do anyway.

    11. Re:False Dichotomy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The FCC has been regulating the air waves for over 76 years! Never had a problem with that.

      Seriously?

      You don't remember all the censorship? The stifling of political speech? The granting of monopolies to highest bidders? Cripes. Those who forget history...

    12. Re:False Dichotomy by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      However, the regulation that no packet shall be discriminated against based on its origin requires fiat control.

      No, it doesn't. It requires some discretion within a particular set of policy objectives and constraints, which the FCC has -- and has exercised -- for quite some time.

      What people forget is that the FCC has already been enforcing 'net neutrality' -- or, perhaps more correctly, the 'open internet' principles it articulated in 2005 -- via case-by-case reactive rulings.

      The recent action isn't the assumption of new authorities which it has not previously exercised, it is prospectively announcing more specific rules than the broad principles previously announced, which provide more certainty for consumers and ISPs as to what the rules are that the FCC will apply.

      Its actually a step back from arbitrary control.

      The price for a near-free Internet will be eternal vigilance for people who will seek permanent fiat control.

      Since that's the price for any freedom at all in a system which involves a government with any role at all, that amounts to a zero marginal cost for internet freedom. So I'd say internet freedom would be a bargain at twice the price.

    13. Re:False Dichotomy by cpu6502 · · Score: 1

      The FCC has been regulating the air waves for over 76 years! Never had a problem with that.

      The Artists and Songwriters Guilds disagree. To briefly quote: "As a songwriter I have a problem wrapping my mind around the concept that the FCC is going out of the Censorship business and into the protection of free speech. Wasn't it the FCC that banned Billy Holiday's wonderful recording of "Love for Sale" and Cole Porter's "I Get a Kick Out of You?" Wasn't it the FCC that agreed with Vice President Spiro Agnew that the recording industry was promoting 'drug culture' with songs like "Puff the Magic Dragon" and "A Little Help From My Friends?"

      "Isn't it the FCC that gave us Janet Jackson's 'Nipple Gate' and drove Howard Stern off the air and onto Satellite radio? Didn't they ban Ice-T for Cop Killer? Fine Bono for cursing at an awards show? I could go on, but I hope this short list demonstrates the controversial history of the FCC's role in censoring free expression in music."

      "The Electronic Freedom Foundation a strong proponent of Net Neutrality, has also expressed concern: "While we're big fans of net neutrality, we worry that the FCC may want to build its net neutrality regulations on a rotten legal foundation,"Title I 'ancillary authority' which is both discredited and unbounded. As we've said before, if ancillary jurisdiction is enough for net neutrality regulations (something we might like) today, the FCC could just as easily invoke it tomorrow for any other Internet regulation that the commission dreams up (including things we won't like, like decency rules and copyright filtering)." - - - So even some of the most fervent Net Neutrality supporters understand that turning over the internet to the FCC may be a problem for people who want free expression to survive and thrive in the wonderful new information medium that is the Internet."

      LINK to full article: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rick-carnes/net-neutrality--can-we-tr_b_609392.html

      --
      My AC stalker: " I personally agree with your posts most of the time, but that won't keep me from modding you troll"
    14. Re:False Dichotomy by sjames · · Score: 1

      The fiat already happened. Your ISP reaches you only through right of way granted by government and obtained through an exercise in imminent domain. The only question now is do we just give it to them or do we attach strings like they must run the service in a manner that is consistent with the public good?

      ICE has just proven they don't need a net neutrality law to get their foot in the door, it's already there and they will happily kick that door down if necessary.

    15. Re:False Dichotomy by zeroshade · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Except none of the government plans are about regulating content...so your argument just kinda falls flat.

    16. Re:False Dichotomy by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      It's coming from the fact that the WSJ is packed full of evil greedy bastards in the pockets of evil greedy bastards running Telcos.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    17. Re:False Dichotomy by TimSSG · · Score: 1

      Have you heard of the FCC fairness doctrine. The Democrats keep bringing the idea back up. If the FCC has internet regulatory rights; why do you think the FCC will not in the future apply an "fairness doctrine" to the internet? Tim S

    18. Re:False Dichotomy by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      No, the claim that the government will limit itself to what you call Net Neutrality is the lie.

      If and when the FCC proposes regulations outside of that scope, feel free to make an argument against those regulations on their own merits. However, that is not an argument against the Report and Order the FCC has recently adopted within that scope.

      Yes, most of the people who argue for Net Neutrality are arguing for something that would prevent the ISP big players from shutting out competitors, but all of the proposed government "net neutrality" plans are about regulating content.

      There are no "proposed government 'net neutrality' plans". There is the Report and Order that has recently been adopted. That's it -- there is no other proposal currently active.

      You are free to point out anything in the part of the excerpts from the Report and Order that has been published that constitutes "regulating content", or to, when the final Report and Order is published in full to point to the specific provisions that are "regulating content", but waving your hand at unspecified and irrelevant proposals and asserting without evidence that they "all" are about "regulating content" is nonsense.

      Just because you mean the obvious by a term, doesn't mean that's what the politicians and bureaucrats mean when they use the same term.

      And the fact that someone else could conceivably mean something other than what a term means when they use a term is not an argument against a specific regulatory enactment.

    19. Re:False Dichotomy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You clearly have looked at the loopholes in this ruling, and you don't understand how cable companies and telcos will use this to their advantage to screw customers and there will be nothing the public can do about it.

    20. Re:False Dichotomy by protektor · · Score: 1

      Big ISPs already shut out other players. Just look at the fact that most Internet users are using 1 of 10 different ISPs. That is hardly competition.

    21. Re:False Dichotomy by zeroshade · · Score: 2

      The only people I have heard bring up the fairness doctrine are Republicans shouting "see? that's like the fairness doctrine." and "what if they reinstitute the fairness doctrine for the internet?"

      After being alarmist about something that doesn't exist, hasn't been talked about, and isn't even the same thing: you turn around and say that Net Neutrality backers are fighting against a problem that "doesn't exist". Oh hypocrisy, thou art a cruel mistress.

      Notwithstanding that enforcing any kind of "fairness doctrine" for the internet would be logistically impossible without infringing on free speech, the concept of net neutrality is to not discriminate based on content. In fact, other than saying that they can't discriminate based on content, content shouldn't be mentioned at all when talking about net neutrality. Once again, the point here is not regulating the internet, it's regulating the ISPs. The ISPs have outright stated that they want to do all the things that Net Neutrality activists have stated are the problems Net Neutrality is supposed to prevent, yet people still say it's a "solution without a problem" or claim that allowing the FCC to pass a Net Neutrality bill gives them a precedent for whatever they want to do on the internet. Both are bullshit.

      Since outside of stating that they cannot discriminate based on content, not a single government plan for Net Neutrality (or at least calling itself that) was about regulating content at all, the argument falls flat.

      This is not to say that I like the crap that the FCC passed. What is actually in there is worse than doing nothing because it codifies allowing a lot of things that Net Neutrality was specifically supposed to disallow (such as paid prioritization). In addition it exempts wireless providers from most regulations. The problem isn't that they are going to far, the problem is that they gave way too many loopholes. However, it's still not "government regulation of the internet".

    22. Re:False Dichotomy by protektor · · Score: 1

      And every time the FCC tries to rule over the Internet it gets struck down by the courts or by Congress. Yea their track record for the Internet is so awesome.

    23. Re:False Dichotomy by lwsimon · · Score: 1

      It's not a lie, but it is certainly misleading.

      --
      Learn about Photography Basics.
    24. Re:False Dichotomy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Best example of this is the Fairness Doctrine which sought to control the content of the airwaves rather than allowing stations to play whatever they felt would build an audience. It's not a stretch to think that in 5, 10 or 15 years we'll have politicians trying to influence the results of search engines, or who can get a domain. Freedom is only preserved by tying the hands of politicians whenever possible. Trusting them to fix things rarely ends well.

    25. Re:False Dichotomy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The claim that Net Neutrality is "government regulation of the Internet" is a lie perpetuated by politicians acting on behalf of the cable and telephone monopolies. The purpose of Net Neutrality is to prevent the cable and telephone monopolies from shutting out competitors (or people they don't like).

      Net neutrality is an example of the governement regulating the internet. Why do you lie about that? It may be good or it may be bad but it is unquestionably an example of government regulation of the internet. It does not necessarily mean an end to boobies but line has yet to be drawn.

      The purpose of Net Neutrality is to prevent the cable and telephone monopolies from shutting out competitors (or people they don't like).

      Is your noble purpose the reason you feel it is OK to make fucking lies up? You further pin that lie on other people, "a lie perpetuated by politicians acting on behalf of the cable and telephone monopolies". Wow. Talk about assuming there are no sides to this issue. If you don't want government regulation, then don't bitch to Uncle Sam to fix something. "Regulation" is one of the few tools in the box. Evidently, the pussies out there like yourself will not wait to use the courts. No, you must be pre-emptive with regulation and lie about it not being regulation. Why? Why all the lies?

    26. Re:False Dichotomy by HeckRuler · · Score: 1

      It's deeper then that. Anyone that thinks NN is strictly about regulation had it explained to them by someone with bad intentions.
      We have network neutrality (mostly). It's in production. It's live. It's been the de facto standard. The Internet was created on the premise of NN. People develop for the Internet and use the Internet with the expectation that it is neutral.

      Network neutrality regulation would enforce ISPs to keep it that way.

    27. Re:False Dichotomy by Requiem18th · · Score: 1

      It really isn't hard, you don't even need to give government access to any of the ISP's infrastructure, nor do you need any complex legislations.

      a) Have a department with the minimum amount of people and authority to wonder around, grab a connection test connection speed of mayor competing services as well as a few minor test ones. Then charge fines if an ISP is shown discriminating packages.

      b) Have a phone/email contact office where people can complain about such instances.

      It's more complicated than that of course, but the "(Inter)Net Neutrality Agency" NNA or INA simply doesn't need to have any more power than, that, and there is no logical reason why that can't be the case.

      --
      But... the future refused to change.
    28. Re:False Dichotomy by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      And every time the FCC tries to rule over the Internet it gets struck down by the courts or by Congress.

      This is only true if "every" means "a small minority of the".

    29. Re:False Dichotomy by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      For instance, what about CDNs like Akamai and Level3? Clearly these networks pay ISPs more to prioritize the packets they are carrying rather than just connecting through conventional peering. Is this packet discrimination?

      My understanding is that what CDNs do is not paid prioritization, they just have servers distributed (in network topology more than strict geography) so as to provide redundancy and close access to users. To the extent that it is paid prioritization, it would probably run afoul of the non-discrimination provisions of the recent Report and Order, which discusses paid prioritization at length and addresses why it would generally be prohibited by the no-unreasonable-discrimination rule.

    30. Re:False Dichotomy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yea, the Fairness Doctrine. Like the one that doesn't exist anymore? The FCC blows goats but not because of the Fairness Doctrine.

    31. Re:False Dichotomy by Bill_the_Engineer · · Score: 1

      The Fairness Doctrine is being leveraged to ensure that there are only two viable political parties. It ensconces in law that there are two, AND ONLY TWO, political viewpoints which are eligible for "fairness" enforcement. If there is an issue in which a particular viewpoint is expressed over broadcast media, the burden on the broadcaster is to provide equal time for "the opposing viewpoint"... as if there is just one. As far as the Fairness Doctrine is concerned, there are no Libertarians, no Greens, no Peace&Freedom, no John Birch, no Tea Party, no American Communists... only "conservatives" (Republicans) and "liberals" (Democrats). This is part of how the two main parties ensure that they're the only ones who get to play. And there has even been talk of using the law to shut down conservative talk radio altogether, to reduce the number of broadcast viewpoints to exactly one.

      The Fairness Doctrine was abolished by the FCC in August 1987. This is why partisan talk shows like Rush Limbaugh and Glen Beck exists.

      One of the reasons the other parties don't do well on radio is because an over whelming majority of the nation consider the examples that you gave as fringe groups. I could comment on your poor choice of examples, but it would be more diplomatic to point out the main reason radical ideas don't do well on radio is age. People who listen to non-music radio tend to be older, and the vast number of those older individuals are already set in their political leanings. When they were in their impressionable 20's the current two parties were firmly in power and to consider yourself as someone other than a Democrat or Republican was considered unpatriotic.

      FYI the other reasons are lack of organization, money, and clear message that wins the hearts of minds of the average american. The 20-something adults that associate themselves with these groups (that I met) do it to be fashionable and to rebel against the establishment. The few that are sincere members of these groups soon realize that the group isn't really compatible with their beliefs and either join another party or more often just become an apathetic slashdot commenter.

      --
      These comments are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of my employer or colleagues...
    32. Re:False Dichotomy by Rockoon · · Score: 1, Informative

      The FCC originally didnt censor broadcasting, either.

      The FCC has limited free speech my entire life.

      ITS WHAT THEY DO.
      THIS IS HOW THEY DO IT.
      IT LEADS TO THINK-OF-THE-CHILDREN MANDATORY HARDWARE ON ALL DEVICES

      I'll take a throttled torrent over censorship EVERY FUCKING DAY OF THE FUCKING WEEK.

      WAKE THE FUCK UP. THE FCC IS FUCKING BAD FOR THE INTERNET.

      "They who would give up an essential liberty for temporary security, deserve neither liberty or security." - Franklin

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    33. Re:False Dichotomy by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      Anyone that thinks NN is strictly about regulation had it explained to them by someone with bad intentions.

      Anyone who thinks the FCC gives a fuck about Net Neutrality had it explained to them by someone that fucking doesnt know the history of the FCC.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    34. Re:False Dichotomy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Fairness Doctrine is being leveraged to ensure that there are only two viable political parties.

      Huh? The fairness doctrine hasn't been in place since 1987, though there are limited efforts to get it reinstated.

    35. Re:False Dichotomy by poppycock · · Score: 1

      Prop that strawman up.

      From Wikipedia on the Fairness docrine: "In August 1987, the FCC abolished the doctrine by a 4-0 vote, in the Syracuse Peace Council decision, which was upheld by a different panel of the Appeals Court for the D.C. Circuit in February 1989.[14] The FCC also suggested that because of the many media voices in the marketplace, the doctrine be deemed unconstitutional..."

      I agree that the fairness doctrine was bad, for many of the reasons you say and others. But its been dead for 23 years. This particular bogeyman is not out to get you.

    36. Re:False Dichotomy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You do realize that the Fairness Doctrine is no longer in force (as of 1987), don't you?

      Bringing it up is very much a red herring...

    37. Re:False Dichotomy by Gorlash · · Score: 1

      Dude, the Fairness Doctrine was abolished over twenty years ago. Maybe a clue before you rant would be a good idea.

    38. Re:False Dichotomy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Talk about false dichotomy, First the Fairness Doctrine is about providing some level playing field for political discourse, yes there are two sides, but two sides are better than one we have now. Most of talk radio is run by right leaning corporations. Hell when Reagan repealed the fairness doctrine there was a visible and immediate shift to the right in America, that was the birth of Limbaugh and friends giving their spin on what was happening. So yea I prefer a working Fairness Doctrine with it's flaws than the clusterfuck we have now. And yea you're beating on a straw man as well. The debate here is about regulating th pipes not control of the content of the internet. If you want to see the "free market" at work on a deregulated commodity like the internet I give you Enron and their destruction of the California economy. Go watch the smartest guys in the room. And so what if gov't regulation is slow and unwieldy, it's the best we got to protect us from the wolves.

    39. Re:False Dichotomy by zeroshade · · Score: 1

      Except the only reason the FCC can censor broadcasting is because congress expressly gave them the right to censor broadcasting. Therefore since right now the FCC only has regulatory authority for how the pipes are used and on the ISPs but do NOT have regulatory authority for any kind of content of the internet, Congress would have to pass a new law in order for any censorship of the internet to come out of the FCC.

      In fact, the only reason that the FCC has those obscenity rules for broadcasting is due to think-of-the-children right-wing conservatives who think that the government needs to protect the children from anything "indecent" rather than actually, ya know, parent their fucking kids. So crying that Net Neutrality will lead directly to censorship is ridiculous.

      "They who would give up an essential liberty for temporary security, deserve neither liberty or security." - Franklin

      Except that quote doesn't apply since Net Neutrality is attempting to secure LIBERTY for the consumers. This has nothing to do with security. Good try.

    40. Re:False Dichotomy by sac13 · · Score: 1

      It's not a choice: one is not "handing it over control to political appointees". It is simply saying not packet dicrimination. So yes there will be regulators but they do not have fiat control, just enforcement responsibilities.

      Thus this discussion is starting out on a false premise.

      It may just be a simple rule now, but how is that rule not arbitrary? What is the limiting principle to keep the government from shutting down things it doesn't like?

    41. Re:False Dichotomy by sac13 · · Score: 1

      Except none of the government plans are about regulating content...so your argument just kinda falls flat.

      Simply stating that telcos can't treat content differently is regulating content. And, it gives them an important precedent when they want to.

      Do you honestly believe the government won't push further later? Name one industry that has been lightly regulated and the regulations didn't expand for some "common good" or "for the children." It's pollyannaish to think it ends here.

    42. Re:False Dichotomy by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      Yes, they do, thanks to already exisitng government regulations.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    43. Re:False Dichotomy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You need to come out from under your rock more often. The Fairness Doctrine was abolished in 1987.

      And this still doesn't have anything to do with network neutrality. Network Neutrality is what the FCC should do by requiring ISPs to be content-blind. It has nothing to do with shutting down websites or the internet. Those are powers congress wants to give itself and have never been on the table for the FCC.

    44. Re:False Dichotomy by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      Except that quote doesn't apply since Net Neutrality is attempting to secure LIBERTY for the consumers.

      The FCC ins't attempting to secure LIBERTY for the consumers.

      Why do you continue to equate the FCC with Net Neutrality? Are you fucking stupid?

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    45. Re:False Dichotomy by zeroshade · · Score: 1

      I don't equate the FCC with Net Neutrality. Especially considering that the "rules" they passed are not net Neutrality. However, if Net Neutrality ever does happen, it is the FCC which would enforce it.

      Not to mention that, at least right now, it's much more likely that we'll be able to get the FCC to fix it's rules into real Net Neutrality than the possibility of Congress actually passing any Net Neutrality law.

    46. Re:False Dichotomy by JoeZeppy · · Score: 1

      Since the Fairness Doctrine was aboloished in 1989 I can only assume this post came from the past through some sort of time vortex.

  3. Answers. by BenFenner · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Regardless of your political point of view shouldn't the Internet remain free from regulation?"

    Yes.

    Should ISPs be free from regulation?
    No.

    1. Re:Answers. by Mashiki · · Score: 4, Informative

      The real problem with government regulation is it can screw you in the face. Take Canada for example where the CRTC has decided that UBB is just fine, oh and we get to charge more. And you can only use 60gb/mo even if you're on another ISP. The SS Fail Train has set sail for the bottom of the Atlantic.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    2. Re:Answers. by by+(1706743) · · Score: 1

      While I in large part agree with this, I could imagine a "specialty" ISP (targeted at, say, hardcore gamers) with robust traffic shaping being a Good Thing. This fictitious ISP would throttle http/ftp/ssh/smb/etc. traffic, with the trade-off of better throughput and lower latency for gamers. Were I a no-holds-barred gamer, I could see myself electing to sacrifice some speed on YouTube or what have you, if it meant a better gaming experience.

      Of course, this is an entirely hypothetical situation, wherein the Big Corporations have our best interest in mind (will that get me a +1 Funny?)...

    3. Re:Answers. by oh_my_080980980 · · Score: 0

      In case you haven't been watching ISPs want to charge users for crappy internet access and double charge you for accessing content you are already paying for but because it goes through someone else backbone they want to charge you for the privileged of allowing those bits to go through their cables that was paid for by tax payer dollars.

      Seriously dude, go watch hockey night in canada.

    4. Re:Answers. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They aren't free from regulation now, hence the [potential] problem. This is a recurring theme: government creates a problem, more regulation is called for to 'fix' it. ISP's SHOULD be from regulation. Mom and Dad who don't use torrents, youtube, or streaming media in general shouldn't have to subsidize those who do. Traffic SHOULD be subject to 'discrimination', and those who want certain types of traffic should pay for it. ISP's SHOULD be able to filter content - in an unregulated market of providers people who wanted unfiltered content would patronize ISP's who didn't filter. Decent summary of these ideas:

      http://blog.mises.org/15068/against-net-neutrality/

      You see these sorts of issues anywhere there is a monopoly *granted by the government* - medicine, utilities, etc. I really wish people would think about 'monopoly' beyond the typical nonsense. If there is even the *threat* of competition then a provider of a service is compelled to improve it (see, for example, the NFL). The only real monopolies are those that are granted by the government, where it creates artificial scarcity or barriers to entry - besides the above examples see taxi cabs, lawyers, barbers, etc, etc. It doesn't require much thought to realize that these barriers to entry have little to do with the public welfare and everything to do with political back scratching.

    5. Re:Answers. by somersault · · Score: 1

      (will that get me a +1 Funny?)

      Probably not, but your epic username fail is worth a chuckle :p

      --
      which is totally what she said
    6. Re:Answers. by Moryath · · Score: 5, Insightful

      But the problem with NOT having government regulation is that the monopolies fuck the consumer just as hard then.

      Look at all the places in the US where cable companies have a monopoly, simply because they managed to raise the barrier to entry high and entered into collusion agreements with other companies to pull out (my area used to have TW, Comcast, and Verizon for cable TV options, now we're stuck with Comcrap only because they ran Verizon out by running under cost and then TW "traded" us away by promising to pull out of our city if Comcrap pulled out of another city on the other side of the state).

      Now look at what precisely Comcrap has been trying to do: block off streaming video from Youtube, Hulu, and Netflix to force people in their monopoly-areas to pay more for Comcrap's crappy shitty "video on demand" cable service instead.

      No. In this case, we need government regulation. The trick is making sure it's the *right* regulation and properly enforced.

    7. Re:Answers. by omnichad · · Score: 1

      Traffic shaping on the last mile is only going to have limited benefit. Unless you're suggesting a complete fiber GamerNet backbone - it still goes over the same backbones as the other ISP's are sharing already.

    8. Re:Answers. by TubeSteak · · Score: 2

      The original question isn't even a correct one.
      One way or another the internet is going to be regulated.

      The real question is whether you want private companies setting the rules,
      or a government agency that at least pretends to care about the consumer.

      And consider that if the Feds don't regulate, the States will.
      With the end result being inconsistent rules across the nation.

      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    9. Re:Answers. by MobyDisk · · Score: 1

      If you are making a point, I recommend defining CRTC and UBB. Or better yet, just explain your point instead of making a vague reference to some event that most Americans won't recognize.

      Nobody is saying all regulation is good. But network neutrality regulation is good. Lets not compare it to other dissimilar regulation. Lets look at this regulation, which boils down to "do what you've been doing for the past decade and don't try to defraud people in subtle, complicated ways."

    10. Re:Answers. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lol, you said screw you in the face

    11. Re:Answers. by DubThree · · Score: 1

      But the problem with having regulation is that, eventually, the "keeper of the net" will become corrupt and find ways to control the flow of data and get rich doing so or worse yet be controlled by the government.

    12. Re:Answers. by natehoy · · Score: 1

      Great. Then the government needs to open up the rights-of-way so anyone who wants to can hang wires on any pole they want to.

      The problem with freeing ISPs from regulation is that they are a natural monopoly. It takes an assload of money to run wires to a lot of houses. It also takes a lot of power in the form of eminent domain to access all the land necessary to run those wires. The government only got the wires to your house by using eminent domain and subsidizing someone to run the wires there, and granting them a monopoly to use those wires and a guarantee that no one else can run wires that compete with theirs. But the power and communications infrastructure was considered a "greater good".

      If you want to be free of regulation, you need to be free of monopoly/oligopoly so the free market can take its place. We're not anywhere close to that.

      --
      "This post contains words, known to the State of California to cause thought. Wash brain thoroughly after reading."
    13. Re:Answers. by jmikelittle · · Score: 1

      Without government regulations Canada wouldn't even have had 3rd party ISPs, and UBB would have been implemented long ago. The CRTC largely matched 3rd party DSL policy with 3rd party cable policy which was quite unregulated. The government forced a low price on Bell for 3rd party internet and are now largely retracting it. Regulation is what enabled something of a free marketplace (at least to the consumer) up until now.

    14. Re:Answers. by uniquename72 · · Score: 1

      Thank you for saying this. The question TFA poses is propaganda, and not worth addressing. The issue it's geared to gain traction against -- Net Neutrality -- is a real one, and worth addressing.

      You've summed up the whole thing nicely. Who do we trust more: Those we can kick out of office, or those whose monopoly we have no choice but to bow down to (if we want broadband)?

    15. Re:Answers. by purpledinoz · · Score: 1

      The real problem is monopolies. If there was real competition between service providers, regulation wouldn't be needed. But since the FCC allowed all the mergers to happen, the opportunity for the monopolies to fuck over the people now exists. For some reason Canada loves to allow monopolies. This is why Canada has a low rate of mobile phone usage, it's just too expensive.

    16. Re:Answers. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      -The government only got the wires to your house by using eminent domain and subsidizing someone to run the wires there, and granting them a monopoly to use those wires and a guarantee that no one else can run wires that compete with theirs.

      That implies there was no alternative to 'the government getting wires to my house.' A similar example was the railroads - which ones were profitable, which were boondoggles? Yes, it was possible to create a profitable rail without state granted monopolies. Furthermore, they were more efficient because they weren't getting subsidized based on the freaking number of railroad spikes used. That should contain a clue to address the rest of your comments.

    17. Re:Answers. by Cidolfas · · Score: 1

      So what we're really all saying is that the problem with net neutrality regulations are that humans who seek power and control for personal gain will inevitably use any kind of leverage they can to drive value from this control, and the only kinds of people able to gain this leverage are those who are willing to play in the game of seeking personal power.

      The only way out of this cycle is to refresh the technological underpinnings of information and materials transfer in society more quickly than the overarching power structure of policy-as-leverage can adapt to it.

      I'm pretty sure both Adam Smith and Karl Marx came to that conclusion, in different ways.

      --
      I am become /dev/null, destroyer of data.
    18. Re:Answers. by steve6534 · · Score: 1

      Do you have some citation to back up the assertion that Comcast has tried to block off streaming video ? I don't remember ever hearing this.

    19. Re:Answers. by Moryath · · Score: 1

      See also: you're an idiot.

    20. Re:Answers. by vlm · · Score: 1

      Traffic shaping on the last mile is only going to have limited benefit. Unless you're suggesting a complete fiber GamerNet backbone - it still goes over the same backbones as the other ISP's are sharing already.

      Another solution is to force the MTU to a minimum value at the endpoints. Small MTU means low latency and great interleaving of packets. It also means hideous packet per second results, but theoretically "GamerNet" can afford gear that laughs at hideous packet per second counts.

      Small packets also increase overhead lowering overall thruput. No problemo, give them more bandwidth to make up for the losses in small packets, after all "GamerNet" is a premium service.

      None of these GamerNet features would require backbone cooperation, although the PPS problem might piss off their provider (but, GamerNet has the cash to convince them its OK)

      Its not as crazy or +1 funny as you might think, as GamerNet would make a great 9-5 business videoconferencing and voip service, and you can charge the heck out of those guys. Then 5-9 you sell the same capacity to gamers. Maybe market it as a premium service for work at homers during the day and WOWers during the night. It could happen.

      --
      "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
    21. Re:Answers. by vlm · · Score: 1

      But the problem with having regulation is that, eventually, the "keeper of the net" will become corrupt and find ways to control the flow of data and get rich doing so or worse yet be controlled by the government.

      And the end result of no regulation would be different ... how exactly? Same corruption just a little less transparent about how its done?

      --
      "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
    22. Re:Answers. by natehoy · · Score: 1

      No, it states that we are where we are. It doesn't imply anything. We did what we did, and we are where we are.

      I don't know about you, but my time machine is in the shop, so changing the state of things requires moving forward from where we currently are. Not where we might be had the infrastructure somehow developed in a different manner.

      Right now, the only practical wireline alternative is the poles we've got, because no one is going to be able to plant new poles without frightening eminent domain powers.

      Wireless has a similar problem in terms of getting towers in, and the government-enforced monopoly on the frequencies available.

      --
      "This post contains words, known to the State of California to cause thought. Wash brain thoroughly after reading."
    23. Re:Answers. by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      No shit. In the meantime, you are stuck with two choices: one that is guaranteed to fuck you now, or one that has a chance to fuck you later. What do you do?

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    24. Re:Answers. by protektor · · Score: 1

      This monopoly protection for the telcos was done by the federal government a 100+ years ago. The cable companies got their monopolies from city governments about 40+ years ago. So both are long term monopolies that have absolutely no intentions of allowing the last mile to be open to real competition. Thus the issue of like 10 ISPs that like 90% of the US use. Yes there was suppose to be competition at the last mile a number of years back, but both telcos and cable companies lobbied hard to the states and cities to shut that down, and created fake grassroots groups to leave them alone. They basically told the cities and states that the independent ISPs had no clue what they were doing and if they opened up the last mile it would be a completely nightmare and nothing would ever work right again. They then dumped tons of money in to campaign funds, and the story quietly went away.

    25. Re:Answers. by protektor · · Score: 1

      If the city and state governments would actually really seriously and honesty open up the last mile to real competition, and keep long term monopolies from leveraging their status to run everyone else out of business, like they already have. Then absolutely I would prefer companies control the Internet rather than the government. Government control is just asking for it be screwed up. True free markets that aren't influenced by monopoly companies, and all information about the product is revealed to consumers before purchase, are the best way to run things. This lets companies compete against each other and the consumer to choose who they want to support with their money.

    26. Re:Answers. by steve6534 · · Score: 1

      So a peering disagreement somehow constitutes "blocking all streaming video" ? Enough said.

    27. Re:Answers. by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      But the problem with having regulation is that, eventually, the "keeper of the net" will become corrupt and find ways to control the flow of data and get rich doing so or worse yet be controlled by the government.

      That's a good argument for having clear up-front rules in the regulatory regime, rather than reactive, case-by-case decisions without up-front rules. And, therefore, a good idea for the new Report and Order as compared to the previous mechanisms by which the FCC has exercised the same existing authority with regard to controlling the behavior of ISPs.

      Clear up-front rules mitigate the risk of arbitrary action, and make course changes more clearly visible.

    28. Re:Answers. by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      If you've been reading /. for the last year and half(which by your UID I'd say you have). You'd know what the CRTC is, what UBB is and why there's been so much shit written about it both in Canada and in the US. Actually it's not my problem if you haven't been paying attention to anything beyond your own special little world.

      You can start by going here:
      http://www.dslreports.com/
      Then use the search function, I also suggest looking at the Cdn. broadband, Teksavvy forums.

      See even living in Canada, I pay attention to what's going on in the US. And Europe, and Asia. Because the insular 'me' world, went bye-bye 10 years ago.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    29. Re:Answers. by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      No I agree. The problem is getting government to create the proper legislation that's fair and just for all parties involved is damn near impossible right now because of special interest groups. Government as a whole has some serious problems that need to be fixed.

      And even when the regulations are properly enforced, there's a good chance someone is going to screw you over. A regulation is just that, you mess up. You might get a fine, you might get a slap on the wrist. But the chances of the government coming along and baring you from doing service in an area? Nil. And I really don't want to get started on the courts, and their interpretations of regulations.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    30. Re:Answers. by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      The CRTC was meant to ensure that things were fair. This is also the same organization that states that 60% of your content must be Canadian, even if it's on an american station. If there wasn't this level of regulation, we would have had competitors years ago. Now all depending you may or maynot remember the 90's when the CRTC decided that bell's government monopoly was no longer legal, and forced the CRTC too force bell to open their circuts(paid with public money on loan), to competitors.

      This meant that for the first time ever, Canadians across the country could have a telephone provider other than Bell. Regulation is what enabled bell in Canada to have 130 years of monopoly. It's also what is stifling the internet in Canada, by ensuring that caps are absurdly low. 60gb? A family of 4 can go through that in 3 weeks. A person watching Netflix can go through it in a weekend.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    31. Re:Answers. by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      But the problem with NOT having government regulation is that the monopolies fuck the consumer just as hard then.

      Lets stick the the facts. Americans, who are stuck with monopolies, are not getting fucked in the face as hard as Canadians who are also stuck with monopolies.

      The difference is that In Canada's case, the monopoly is explicitly regulated by the government.

      In effect, its TWO monopolies doing the face fucking in Canada.. UBB and the Government.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    32. Re:Answers. by snookums · · Score: 1

      The "right" regulation is to have the underlying infrastructure, most importantly the "last mile" distribution network, owned and maintained by the government -- just like the roads. Local, state, or federal government it really doesn't matter. I believe in the USA the regional governments are probably the more appropriate, although here in Australia we're planning on having the federal government* do it.

      By selling access to the consumers on an equal basis to any ISP, the threat of monopoly is removed. This could open up real choice in the market. Only use the Internet for email? Buy a cheaper service that throttles video and bittorrent to a trickle, or has a monthly data cap. Want the lowest game ping? Choose the ISP with the best game servers, optimised routing to battle.net and Xbox Live, and QoS that pushes your game packets ahead of your torrents.

      * This is actually a bit of a worry, because there's every possibility that they'll screw it up, and leave everyone with bad or expensive connections. With local governments in charge, you've always got the option of moving, or voting in some new administration. Internet access is rarely a nationally influential issue (as it was at the last federal election here). Unfortunately, Australia has too small of a population to support local government infrastructure like this, and we have the added issue of a lack of over-arching government for our major cities.

      --
      Be careful. People in masks cannot be trusted.
    33. Re:Answers. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We don't need more regulation. We need the *right* regulation. And the *right* regulation is opening up the networks to competition. Empowering bureaucrats is not an adequate substitute for competition. Empowering bureaucrats is all that any "network neutrality" regulation will ever do.

      Don't get me wrong, I don't want to see a few companies gain a stranglehold on the Internet, but network neutrality regulation is not going to stop that.

    34. Re:Answers. by Pi1grim · · Score: 1

      "Mom and Dad" can pick a plan that bills them per megabyte if they feel, that their hard-earned dollar is subsidising other internet users. If provider can't deliver, what it promises it is not a reason to "choke" some types of traffic. People would be able to choose those providers, that would not resort to filtering — given, that there were providers to choose. Unfortunately not many have this luxury and are stuck with one, two providers at best. In this case it's better to regulate the ISP not to tamper with the traffic and just provide, what they signed up to provide: bandwidth.

    35. Re:Answers. by sac13 · · Score: 1

      But the problem with NOT having government regulation is that the monopolies fuck the consumer just as hard then.

      Name a monopoly that isn't the result of government involvement. And, the problem with having government regulation is that the companies get to use the government to fuck the consumer even harder.

      Look at all the places in the US where cable companies have a monopoly, simply because they managed to raise the barrier to entry high and entered into collusion agreements with other companies to pull out (my area used to have TW, Comcast, and Verizon for cable TV options, now we're stuck with Comcrap only because they ran Verizon out by running under cost and then TW "traded" us away by promising to pull out of our city if Comcrap pulled out of another city on the other side of the state).

      The biggest barrier to entry in telco is government regulation. Period. Regulation entrenches the big guys and gives them the ability to monopolize. And, in many areas, it's agreements with government that has given them exclusive access.

      Now look at what precisely Comcrap has been trying to do: block off streaming video from Youtube, Hulu, and Netflix to force people in their monopoly-areas to pay more for Comcrap's crappy shitty "video on demand" cable service instead.

      No. In this case, we need government regulation. The trick is making sure it's the *right* regulation and properly enforced.

      What has the government regulated that has been done with the *right* regulation and has been properly enforced? Why would this turn out any different?

    36. Re:Answers. by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      The real problem with government regulation is it can screw you in the face. Take Canada for example where the CRTC has decided that UBB is just fine, oh and we get to charge more. And you can only use 60gb/mo even if you're on another ISP. The SS Fail Train has set sail for the bottom of the Atlantic.

      And you honestly believe things would be *better* if the CRTC didn't exist at all??

      LOLFR... wow. Just... wow.

  4. No? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm not americkan, but I'm pretty sure most parts of your country don't have much of a choice in ISP, so I'd say regulate it.

    1. Re:No? by protektor · · Score: 1

      The problem isn't to regulate ISPs to make more ISPs. The main problem is the last mile. They have basically allowed a monopoly at the last mile and then didn't force either the telcos or cable companies to share the last mile that they have had as a monopoly for the last 40-100 years. If you won't open up the last mile to competition, and you won't make them share, then you aren't going to ever have real competition. To see this all you have to do is look at how many locally owned ISPs there were 15 years and look at how many there are now. If you setup a form to ask users which ISP they use, you could list 10 of them and you would get 90-95% of the population with those 10. That is because of the last mile and the way the telcos and cable companies have been able to illegally leverage their monopolies to keep competition out of the marketplace.

    2. Re:No? by natehoy · · Score: 1

      They haven't allowed it, they've encouraged it. The government put up the poles using eminent domain. Because no one wanted the government to own the wires, but someone had to spend the bucketloads of money necessary to run all those wires, the government sponsored a single company to run all the wiring. The government offered part of the costs necessary to install the wires, and a monopoly on the use of those wires.

      If you want a free market, the government has to buy those wires back from the company that built them, and allow everyone to access the wires freely at the same cost, and they also have to allow anyone to hang whatever wires they want to on Government poles at a reasonable cost so someone who thinks they can do it better than copper has the ability to do so.

      And any reimbursement of the cost of the lines to the private company that installed them is going to be nailed by the Democrats as "corporate welfare" even though the resulting free market would give the consumer exactly the freedoms they want - find a plan that fits your needs and buy the thing. But the Democrats like regulation too much, and that'll never ever fly.

      And any concept that includes the government owning the poles outright is going to be nailed by the Republicans as "government monopoly" even though the resulting free market is exactly what they claim they want. As opposed to an unregulated monopoly, which is what "free market" seems to be a short cut for now and what they seem to really want.

      --
      "This post contains words, known to the State of California to cause thought. Wash brain thoroughly after reading."
  5. It all comes down to one question. by moortak · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Do you trust someone with a profit motive to screw with your connection, or someone with a political motive?

    --
    Xavier Rabourdin for president 2012
    1. Re:It all comes down to one question. by thynk · · Score: 0

      Do you trust someone with a profit motive to screw with your connection, or someone with a political motive?

      profit, as it has the market forces to help keep it in check. What keeps politicians in check? More politicians.

      --

      Good judgment comes from experience, and a lot of that comes from bad judgment.
    2. Re:It all comes down to one question. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      They're the same thing in America.

    3. Re:It all comes down to one question. by DamienRBlack · · Score: 1

      What keeps politicians in check?

      I'm going to go out on a limb here and say... voters? When was the last time you saw a large corporation seriously change their policies because of market pressure? When the pressure gets too high, they just change their image with a marketing campaign or re-branding.

    4. Re:It all comes down to one question. by geekoid · · Score: 3, Insightful

      wow, just ... wow. Are you really that ignorant?

      Profit never keeps anything in check. EVER. It drives people to do whatever they can to make money, regardless of who is getting screwed over.

      Politician, ultimately, answer to us.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    5. Re:It all comes down to one question. by Moryath · · Score: 1

      profit, as it has the market forces to help keep it in check.

      Only till some asshatted megaconglomerate comes in and runs in an area at under-cost until they drive out all competition, then jack the rates and fuck the consumers as a monopoly.

      See also: the shitty situation most of America is stuck in for ISP service. There *IS* no real competition.

    6. Re:It all comes down to one question. by protektor · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Profit will only keep market forces in check if there is actually a free market with all risks associated with a product are disclosed by the company. The and only then can consumers decide how much risk they are willing to take and the price at which they are willing to purchase that product with known risks. You also need to make sure that monopolies aren't leveraging their monopoly in one market to monopolize new markets. This is exactly what has happened with telcos and cable companies who got in to the Internet business.

    7. Re:It all comes down to one question. by somersault · · Score: 3, Insightful

      When was the last time that voting in one of two directions actually had much correlation with what any single voter wanted?

      It seems to me more like the two main parties in the US are shaping the people, not the other way round. You can see it whenever someone goes on a long rant demonising "republicans" or "democrats", acting like their "side" is 100% right and everything the opposite side believes is wrong. It's absurd.

      Of course, most humans love to have their thinking done for them, so they just jump on one of the bandwagons and start taking potshots at the other one.

      --
      which is totally what she said
    8. Re:It all comes down to one question. by qkslvr · · Score: 1

      what is this market force and where can I apply it?

      get real, we have two options for broadband. their policies, service and prices are all in close lockstep. If I could punish them with this 'market force' you speak of I would in a heartbeat, but I would also have no internet access at home. there is no third choice

      'let the market decide is akin to saying 'let the companies screw the people, because they're too stupid to realize or do anything about it'

    9. Re:It all comes down to one question. by TooOldForThis · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Do you trust someone with a profit motive to screw with your connection, or someone with a political motive?

      Profit motive. Because I can take my business elsewhere.

      And since when has any government regulating body ever been satisfied being limited to their original mandate? Exactly what was the FCC's original purpose? Don't underestimate the desire to hold power over others, even from government functionaries. *Especially* from government functionaries.

      -k

    10. Re:It all comes down to one question. by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      How can market forces keep a monopoly in check? Votes keep politicians in check (or are supposed to anyway).

    11. Re:It all comes down to one question. by BJ_Covert_Action · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Politician, ultimately, answer to us.

      In theory, sure. In practice, nah, not really. They don't answer to anyone because there is not a significant enough chunk of folk that give a damn anymore.

      That said, I do not think the profit motive is a better option either. The best solution would probably just involve setting up some kind of distributed network that doesn't require payment to a central authority to access. Unfortunately, I have no idea how to go about doing that.

    12. Re:It all comes down to one question. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      COMCAST becomes ... XFINITY!

      Same stupid product. Same stupid oversell

    13. Re:It all comes down to one question. by MoonBuggy · · Score: 1

      In theory, sure. In practice, nah, not really. They don't answer to anyone because there is not a significant enough chunk of folk that give a damn anymore.

      I think it's perhaps more the case that not enough people give a damn about each issue. A few of us might change our votes based on a politician's policy on net neutrality, but that one thing probably won't be enough to really damage their campaign. We might even still vote for them next time if we find the other candidate objectionable enough.

      Direct democracy is probably too inefficient to work on a large scale, even with the internet to help, but giving it a try would be the only plausible way of overcoming this problem.

    14. Re:It all comes down to one question. by jammer170 · · Score: 1

      I wish I had mod points for that statement. Essentially, our only options in this case are two evils, corporate control or government control. There is too much money to be made through screwing with the traffic to trust corporations, but there is too much political interference in America and the world to trust the politicians (the recent UN summit to censor the internet is particularly relevant to this point).

      --
      Remember, you can't look dignified when your having fun! Don't take life too seriously, you'll never get out of it alive
    15. Re:It all comes down to one question. by turbidostato · · Score: 1

      "Do you trust someone with a profit motive to screw with your connection, or someone with a political motive?
      Profit motive. Because I can take my business elsewhere."

      Unless you can't. Which happens to be the case.

    16. Re:It all comes down to one question. by AmeerCB · · Score: 1

      You SHOULD be right, but there's a bigger problem in this country. The guy with the political motive is supposed to keep the guy with the profit motive from screwing his constituents over - that's why we vote for that politician. But right now, the guy with the political motive and the guy with the profit motive are best friends.

    17. Re:It all comes down to one question. by protektor · · Score: 1

      Wow are you really that ignorant? It is true free markets that do a better job at keeping companies in check. The problem is that the US government, courts, and companies have so rigged the system that it isn't anything close to a free market anymore.

      In a true free market companies disclose all risks associated with their product and make pricing clear. Consumers are then able to make informed decisions about how much risk they are willing to take and at what price.

      For example ISPs don't disclose what SPAM filter they are using, they don't disclose the type of traffic shaping they are doing, they don't always clearly disclose how much traffic you are allowed per month, they don't always disclose how much true bandwidth you will actually end up with once everything is hooked up. This all lead to market uncertainties.

      Here is a simpler example. Airline A has no security, other than every pilot and stewardess carry a gun, and their average ticket price is $100. Airline B strip searches everyone and X-rays every bag 5 times, and their average ticket price is $500. Now you get to choose are you willing to take the risks of a lower price but less security or more security at a higher price. The choice is yours.

      The problem is in the market you have issues like the Ford Pinto. It wasn't an issue of poor engineering, which I think it did have. It was an issue of undisclosed risks. Consumers were not aware of all risks associated with the car so they were not able to make an informed decision about the car. That is why there were lawsuits, not because they didn't spend $20 more for a different gas tank. Every car has different risks, the issue is did the company disclose all the risks so the consumer can make an informed choice about which one to buy based on price and how much risk they are willing to accept.

      Same thing is true with the Internet. If anyone can get cable/wire to the last mile, and everyone discloses everything about their service, then absolutely the market is better, than the government, at keeping things under control and driving prices down.

    18. Re:It all comes down to one question. by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      What keeps politicians in check?

      Guns. We used to be able to shoot votes at them to make them behave, but that's not working so well anymore.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    19. Re:It all comes down to one question. by Steauengeglase · · Score: 1

      The saddest part of listening to the FCC commissioners was that they boiled it down to those same two points. The truth is this should be treated like an engineering problem, not one of ideals. Because of that we will neither have a proper definition of what "network neutrality" is, nor will we allow anyone who does within a hundred yards of the table. Because of that, if anything is done or if nothing is done, we will only end up with abuses, because we can only look at it through that lens with the same set of awful solutions.

      Don't get me wrong, I like what Copps and the others had to say, but without a proper definition, it will go nowhere. Instead, McDowell and his like minded ilk will get any and everything their hearts desire. If I were in that room I would have just walked out at that point.

      So what do we get? A guarantee that no one will screw with Apple's app store as long as they keep a finger in AT&T's pie.

    20. Re:It all comes down to one question. by zzatz · · Score: 1

      I'll go with voting making a difference. I would much rather deal with the DMV than with AT&T.

      The DMV used to be worse than the phone company. It got bad enough to become a campaign issue, and the politicians who promised to fix it did what they promised. I can do most of my business with the DMV over the Internet. If I need to visit their office, I can make an appointment. The last time I went in, the person I dealt with was pleasant and went out of his way to help solve my problem.

      AT&T's web site is useless. The only way to report an outage is over the phone, which may be a bit difficult when the phone isn't working.

      Elections and market forces work when there is competition; neither elections nor markets are good in themselves, they are merely mechanisms that allow competition to work. Regulation is needed to counter other anticompetitive forces. If there is strong competition, less regulation is needed. Some only see regulation as interfering with the market, but regulation can be used to counter other forces which are interfering with the market. Removing regulation doesn't remove interference with the market, it only removes one type of interference and leaves the others. The Wall Street Journal usually sides with those who favor interfering with the market to suppress competition, as long as it results in more wealth in the right hands.

      If you don't think elections matter, then you need to get more involved in primary elections. That's where the competition is strongest, and you can make a difference. The 2008 Presidential race wasn't decided when Obama beat McCain, it was when Obama beat Clinton. I live in a Republican county in a Democratic state, and nothing I do is likely to change that. But my vote can decide which Democrat runs against which Republican.

      tl;dr version: Elections and markets are tools for enabling competition, and are only good when they serve that end. When they don't, they need to be fixed. They are means to a goal, not goals themselves.

    21. Re:It all comes down to one question. by dogmatixpsych · · Score: 1

      Which is why you break up the market monopolies and let Capitalism do its thing with a very light hand from the government. All of this Net Neutrality stuff is important but it doesn't quite fix the problem. The real problem in most of the country is no competition between ISPs.

    22. Re:It all comes down to one question. by protektor · · Score: 1

      That is because of the monopolies on the last mile. Telcos and Cable companies have fought like hell to keep everyone else out of the last mile, and you can see what it has done for America. You can thank your city and state governments for that. They have the power to seriously open up the last mile but have failed in that task, and chose to side with the monopolies who make large campaign donations.

    23. Re:It all comes down to one question. by Xyrus · · Score: 1

      Free-marketers seem to have this inane idea that competition will always yield "the best". This is predicated on a notion similar to evolution. However, evolution never yields "the best". It yields the "good enough". Just because an organism/organization is successful does not mean it is acting in it's own best interest or the interest of others.

      --
      ~X~
    24. Re:It all comes down to one question. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Politicians answer to whoever cuts them a check. Corporations are far more democratic, because if we don't like what a corporation does, we can stop paying them and it impacts the bottom line. We can hold them accountable by not paying for them.

      In contrast, a Politician is completely unaccountable to us. We don't know where they stand, who they've taken money from, or even if they've read the bills they voted for. It's also pretty much a full time job to stay abreast of the things one would need to keep abreast of in order to hold politicians accountable.

      I trust the completely amoral, single-mindedness of the corporation over the ambiguity of the politician, because I can always trust the corporation to do what's right for its bottom line every time.

    25. Re:It all comes down to one question. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's basically the same thing with consumer products and services.

      Companies can get away with a lot of crap because people don't care enough to look for alternatives or just refuse to buy the product. People still buy Ubisoft games despite them having some of the most intrusive DRM ever.

    26. Re:It all comes down to one question. by dangitman · · Score: 1

      Of course, most humans love to have their thinking done for them, so they just jump on one of the bandwagons and start taking potshots at the other one.

      You have a band in your wagon? That's awesome! Can I come along? I hope it's Daft Punk.

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
    27. Re:It all comes down to one question. by somersault · · Score: 1

      Sure, but you'll have to bring your own helmet.

      --
      which is totally what she said
    28. Re:It all comes down to one question. by sac13 · · Score: 1

      Do you trust someone with a profit motive to screw with your connection, or someone with a political motive?

      What's the difference?

    29. Re:It all comes down to one question. by sac13 · · Score: 1

      wow, just ... wow. Are you really that ignorant?

      Profit never keeps anything in check. EVER. It drives people to do whatever they can to make money, regardless of who is getting screwed over.

      Politician, ultimately, answer to us.

      Seriously? Politicians answer to us? Maybe on an individual level. But, there are many of them in the government. If they do lose elections, they end up as appointees for one of the 90+% of incumbents that do win. So, on the aggregate, they don't.

      And, you act like politicians aren't influenced by the profit motive. To quote, "wow, just ... wow. Are you really that ignorant?"

    30. Re:It all comes down to one question. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No.

    31. Re:It all comes down to one question. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you trust someone with a profit motive to screw with your connection, or someone with a political motive?

      I don't see the difference realistically. In theory, yes, there is a difference. In practice profit motive and political motive are one and the same end of two different means.

    32. Re:It all comes down to one question. by seekertom · · Score: 1

      re: In theory, sure. In practice, nah, not really. They don't answer to anyone because there is not a significant enough chunk of folk that give a damn anymore. I don't think it's about not enough people careing. We do care. (maybe we don't all care about the same thing...?) Unfortunately we have human sociological traits that are known, and are being exploited by the govt and the corporation. To fix things, ya gotta eliminate the causality behind what drives THEM. Enact the 28th amendment, remove the special status the folks in govt enjoy, and things will turn around in the country, real fast.

  6. Does it really matter anymore? by seepho · · Score: 1

    I've been spreading the good word of Net Neutrality for the last five years. Why is it that now, after I've stopped caring since the FCC passed this non-functioning solution under the banner of Net Neutrality, do I actually see people talking about the issue?

    1. Re:Does it really matter anymore? by vlueboy · · Score: 1

      Compare with the slowness of IPv6 progress in the US and contrast with the ol' Y2K.
      Because until they're looking for filler, the media takes its time things that don't go "BOOM!"
      If it doesn't, they at least want to make someone's public image implode

    2. Re:Does it really matter anymore? by Elbereth · · Score: 1

      That's right. We all just started talking about this subject today, because, you, Seepho, have stopped caring about it. We're just doing this to confuse and annoy you. In fact, we're waiting for you to stop caring about copyright infringement and Microsoft, so that we can start discussing those subjects here at Slashdot, as well.

    3. Re:Does it really matter anymore? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Compare with the slowness of IPv6 progress in the US and contrast with the ol' Y2K. Because until they're looking for filler, the media takes its time things that don't go "BOOM!" If it doesn't, they at least want to make someone's public image implode

      The hell..?

    4. Re:Does it really matter anymore? by Surt · · Score: 1

      Piffle. I've been spreading the good word of NN for 15 years! What did you waste your lost decade on?

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    5. Re:Does it really matter anymore? by seepho · · Score: 1

      Clarification: when I say 'people', I mean people outside of the internet.

    6. Re:Does it really matter anymore? by somersault · · Score: 1

      You must be new here*. There have been plenty of articles and discussion on Net Neutrality here in the last few years.

      *this is of course confirmed by your ID. Damn near 2000000 users now. I wonder how many of those have died, or at least got bored and left.

      --
      which is totally what she said
    7. Re:Does it really matter anymore? by seepho · · Score: 1

      Public education.

  7. The author is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    a typical anti-neutrality shill.

    However, the question should be asked, is granting control over the Internet to political appointees the way to go?

    And who wants to do that? Net neutrality is not about regulating the Internet, it's about regulating telecomms with one simple rule: "all traffic should be equal".

    1. Re:The author is... by Hatta · · Score: 0

      Would you expect anything else from a NewsCorp owned outlet?

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    2. Re:The author is... by jedidiah · · Score: 0

      This has nothing to do with NewsCorp.

      WSJ is the paper for the Robber Baron wannabe. Regardless of their ownership, they would be all for allowing those with money to be free to abuse that don't have money.

      Profit is everything and we don't want to let the proles or their concerns get in the way of that.

      Just your basic psuedo-libertarianism.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    3. Re:The author is... by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      All traffic is not equal, some is more sensitive to latency and congestion.

  8. free from regulation by uncanny · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Regardless of your political point of view shouldn't the Internet remain free from regulation?"

    Yes, very much so, which is why we dont want companies regulating it. Content or availability.

  9. shouldn't the Internet remain free from regulation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Absolutely. The incumbent players should be able to use their monopoly status to erect barriers to stifle innovation in every form. Existing business models should be able to protect their revenue streams from new upstarts. They should be able to block innovation which threatens their operations.

  10. Your -complaints- online by KublaiKhan · · Score: 1

    Whether or not you think the FCC's alleged power over internet connections is useful, legit, or otherwise constitutional, there -is- a new influence that we can now bring to bear against people trying to disrupt the structure of the internet, e.g. Comcast v. L3:

    The FCC has shown itself to be vulnerable to PTC-style interventions, where a large segment of organized users more-or-less simultaneously demands intervention against a regulated entity--see nipplegate for details.

    A PTC-like organization of interested internet users (Hey, Anonymous--you guys reading this?) could force the FCC to levy fines against ISPs that engaged in activities that contravene usability of the internet for various users.

    What we have here is an opportunity. Sure, the whole structure is not perfect, but that can be changed. Let's -use- this opportunity.

    --
    In Xanadu did Kubla Khan
    A stately pleasure dome decree
    1. Re:Your -complaints- online by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Comcast has had their butt kicked by the market and the press every time they have tried this. We don't need the FCC to correct this limited short term issue. The FCC is a solution looking for a problem.

    2. Re:Your -complaints- online by cdrguru · · Score: 1

      I would be looking at the FCC to operate far more like the FAA does. The FAA is an advocate for air travel and only takes a regulator role when absolutely unquestionably necessary.

      Also, the FAA rulemaking is really done by the airlines and aircraft manufacturers.

      Which means the rules are going to be written by Comcast, Verizon and Google.

  11. A lack of government is also regulation by twitcher101 · · Score: 2

    To assume that a lack of government regulation is the same as no regulation is to completely overlook the corporate regulation that those who want net neutrality oppose. I would always rather have the government regulating instead of the profit driven anti-competitive private sector.

    --
    Time is an illusion, lunchtime doubly so- Zaphod beeblebrox
  12. To Troll or not to Troll... by Dharkfiber · · Score: 1

    Wall Street Journal obviously has no dog in that hunt...

  13. ISPs don't care what their customers want by Senes · · Score: 5, Insightful

    In an environment of "the customer is always right," the market can be trusted to deliver exactly what is in the customers' best interests without any form of outside interference.

    In an environment of telco monopolies, multi-year contracts, terms which the provider can change at will, and more; it becomes necessary to restrict what providers can and cannot do because the customers are left powerless other than as voters who tell the government what they want.

    1. Re:ISPs don't care what their customers want by shadowrat · · Score: 1

      do you have a multi year contract with your ISP? that sucks.

    2. Re:ISPs don't care what their customers want by Naturalis+Philosopho · · Score: 1

      Anecdote time! Just before checking slashdot today I took a second to read the fine print in my local cable company's latest ad for cable internet access. On all plans 2-year contracts are required. Period. Can't get internet otherwise through them. Oh, and they are the only cable provider in the county.

    3. Re:ISPs don't care what their customers want by zeroshade · · Score: 1

      Every ISP around here except for Optimum uses 2 year contracts. Which is why there isn't even a choice for me.

    4. Re:ISPs don't care what their customers want by Rossjman1 · · Score: 1

      Anecdote time! Just before checking slashdot today I took a second to read the fine print in my local cable company's latest ad for cable internet access. On all plans 2-year contracts are required. Period. Can't get internet otherwise through them. Oh, and they are the only cable provider in the county.

      That doesn't sound right. How do they expect to deliver internet service to people who rent apartments and plan on living there for less than 2 years? Is the cable company going to not sell them internet - and loose profit - because of this?
      Most of these "deals" that are advertised require contracts ("Get the first 6 months for $20/month with 2 year commitment - for new customers only"), but the regular internet plans don't.

    5. Re:ISPs don't care what their customers want by stephathome · · Score: 1

      A lot of the time they let you out of the contract if you can prove you've moved someplace they aren't providing service. At least that's what I was told when I opted to not take a 2 year contract with TW. You move out of the area, they can't hold up their end of the contract anymore, so they let you out, supposedly without penalties. I have no idea how it actually works since I declined the contract and haven't had to move away from one.

      If you move and you're still in the service area, you're still bound to the contract.

    6. Re:ISPs don't care what their customers want by Surt · · Score: 1

      Most people who have switched to using cell tethering and given up on dsl/cablemodem get locked into 2 year contracts.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    7. Re:ISPs don't care what their customers want by sorak · · Score: 1

      I don't know what the cable companies do, but most people with contracts do have early termination fees.

    8. Re:ISPs don't care what their customers want by sac13 · · Score: 1

      In an environment of "the customer is always right," the market can be trusted to deliver exactly what is in the customers' best interests without any form of outside interference. In an environment of telco monopolies, multi-year contracts, terms which the provider can change at will, and more; it becomes necessary to restrict what providers can and cannot do because the customers are left powerless other than as voters who tell the government what they want.

      But, the telcos are already heavily regulated. Why do we still have problems?

      Name an industry that you have problems with that isn't regulated. Why is it the industries that people continuously complain about are the one's that are the most regulated? Is that just a coincidence?

  14. Anonymous Coward by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes I mean I wouldn't want the government mucking around with my internet just like my healthcare.
    Unless I manage to get to France where the government mucks with everything and I get to relax after a nice 35 hour work week, and take my 5 weeks vacation. Oh wait am I advocating both socialist heathcare and the internet? Anyway I found this author's post similar to the NeoCon arguements promoting "Individual Control" and felt compelled to make satire !!

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

      I forgot to answer the question Yes Net Neutraity is definately needed, already with bandwith throttling cases against Comcast and friends regarding ftp and other types of media, large companies always prove themselves in direct opposition to consumer rights,and further employee rights in many cases. Electronic Arts and developers,Starbuck's and taking the barrista's tips, plus the whole money laundering scheme that is legal called the double Irish allowing Google, Microsoft, Starbucks and others to reduce their tax rates to 3.5 % By the way sorry Wesley (Snipes) you should have incorporated before evading taxes then its legal!! Next time will be better... don't worry the loophole will still exist!! You too can then cash in on the action, while the banks lend their free interest loan back to the US government with interest charges, I love the whole freedomness, the US corporations enjoy, it makes me all warm and fuzzy inside. Good night I am filled with too much jubilent libertyness I think I will make some democracy smores with a nice creamy capitalist marshmellow center and a hot chocolate and sleep like a baby

  15. No and No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "However, the question should be asked, is granting control over the Internet to political appointees the way to go? Regardless of your political point of view shouldn't the Internet remain free from regulation?"

    Those are two separate questions and should be answered as such, rather than conflated as the OP seems to be trying to do...

    Should the Internet remain "free" from regulation the way food was before the FDA? No.
    Should the Internet be vulnerable to ideological manipulation by political appointees? No.
    Should the Internet be vulnerable to ideological manipulation by the telcos, cable providers, or wireless companies? No.

    The solution should have been simple: classify internet service as a common carrier, so that _no-one_ has authority to interfere in the business of transferring data.

  16. Net Neutrality(tm) is not about net neutrality by RocketRabbit · · Score: 0

    If the FCC gets ahold of control over the internet they will screw it up really, really badly. Look at the radio spectrum. Do you really want your packets limited to say, 3 hops?

    The FCC works for the phone companies, who are the ones pushing against net neutrality. Asking them to defend it is like guarding your goats with a T-Rex.

    1. Re:Net Neutrality(tm) is not about net neutrality by Senes · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The FCC doesn't "control" the internet. It is merely prohibiting ISPs from controlling their customers' access to the internet. The electric company sells you electricity, they don't get to tell you how you can and can't use it - that's the nature of net neutrality.

    2. Re:Net Neutrality(tm) is not about net neutrality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow. I just have to say: wow! Much disinformation?

      Net Neutrality *means* each packet is treated equally, irrespective of its source.

      I'm not sure what is so difficult about it. And if you want your packets to be limited to 3 hops, just set your TTL accordingly.

    3. Re:Net Neutrality(tm) is not about net neutrality by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      If the FCC gets ahold of control over the internet they will screw it up really, really badly.

      FCC has had "control of the internet", insofar as they do with the recent Report and Order, for some time. The only thing the Report and Order does is provide advance notice of how they will exercise that control, rather than the exercise of control being exclusively reactive and ad hoc (though based on the same principles that the recent Order is based on.)

      This provides clarity to consumers and ISPs as to the rules that will be applied and reduces uncertainty for all market participants.

      The FCC works for the phone companies, who are the ones pushing against net neutrality.

      But, oddly, the position -- against net neutrality -- that the phone companies were pushing for secured the support of only two of the five members of the FCC, and now is being taken up by the people saying that the problem is the FCC. Which is, you know, kind of odd if the FCC is controlled by the people who are against net neutrality.

    4. Re:Net Neutrality(tm) is not about net neutrality by jmorris42 · · Score: 2

      But that is the future of electric service, or haven't you heard of the smart grid? They want to charge different rates based on their costs, in the case of electricity they want to charge by time of day. ISPs are talking about charging based on their costs, which vary by time, destination and QoS.

      --
      Democrat delenda est
    5. Re:Net Neutrality(tm) is not about net neutrality by TheEyes · · Score: 1

      But that is the future of electric service, or haven't you heard of the smart grid? They want to charge different rates based on their costs, in the case of electricity they want to charge by time of day. ISPs are talking about charging based on their costs, which vary by time, destination and QoS.

      What you're talking about is time-of-use rates, and the electric companies have been offering that for at least ten years--possibly more--in my area. The smart grid is something different: it's an attempt to match more variable sources of electricity--solar and wind especially, in contrast to gas and coal--with electricity demand by making the whole grid more capable of understanding the flows of power going through it from moment to moment.

      And the smart grid is a whole different animal compared to the sort of paid traffic discrimination that Comcast is trying. The closest analogy I could see is if the power company suddenly started shutting down my refrigerator because they just merged with Burger King.

    6. Re:Net Neutrality(tm) is not about net neutrality by protektor · · Score: 1

      The FCC absolute does want to control the Internet. This is just their flag plant to say that they are the governmental regulating body that will control and regulate the Internet. They have said this repeatedly. I'm not sure where you have been for the last few years.

    7. Re:Net Neutrality(tm) is not about net neutrality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can't "regulate the internet," only regulate domestic service providers. If the FCC tried to censor something then the censorship would be treated as damage and the packets would go around it on their own.

      Net neutrality is about keeping netflix bittorrent and youtube alive, no matter how much the ISPs start kicking and screaming about how users are actually using the bandwidth they paid for.

    8. Re:Net Neutrality(tm) is not about net neutrality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      time of day, ie congestion pricing, makes perfect sense. The series of toobz can fit a certain amount of cats at a time or some such.

      To address your electricity analogy the difference is if LG bought your local utility and charged you more for using other appliances.

      To use a car analogy, the problem would be if GM had been granted the right to build a long stretch of highway and then began charging non-GM car owners more to try and shore up their shitty car business. You don't have to use the highway, you could build your own or just take surface streets and back roads.

    9. Re:Net Neutrality(tm) is not about net neutrality by protektor · · Score: 1

      You might want to know that large percentage of the core Internet services are controlled by US companies, and thus can be controlled by the US government. Want a .net,.com,.org, .us domain? Yep get that from the US. Want an IP block? Better talk with ARIN the US company. Only 3 of the root DNS servers are not owned/run by American companies and could be replaced easily. The US has huge control over the Internet, that not all countries like, but considering it was basically invented in the US that is the breaks. So if the FCC begins to regulate things, depending on what they do, they absolutely could end up regulating the Internet and effecting everyone world wide.

      Which is exactly the reason the FCC needs a hands off policy when it comes to the Internet itself. They could and probably will do more harm than good.

    10. Re:Net Neutrality(tm) is not about net neutrality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      see: fairness doctrine by the fcc.

    11. Re:Net Neutrality(tm) is not about net neutrality by sorak · · Score: 1

      I prefer a post office analogy. The mail man doesn't get to look through your mail and charge you extra for the letters that look "really valuable". Your mailman doesn't get to block the letters from people he doesn't like, or shake down businesses, saying "I know you already paid postage, but you're mailing too much stuff out. I'm gonna have to charge you extra because you can afford to pay it".

      The post office would be a highly lucrative business if they were completely unregulated, for profit, and ran themselves like an ISP. Essentially, they'd look at each package, not as a delivery to be made, but more inventory that they can sell to the intended recipient.

    12. Re:Net Neutrality(tm) is not about net neutrality by RocketRabbit · · Score: 1

      Wrong. As soon as you give the FCC a mandate over the Internet that mandate will start expanding.

      In would rather see 15 big companies duking it out than the FCC gain power over the Internet.

    13. Re:Net Neutrality(tm) is not about net neutrality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah, no, they don't DIRECTLY tell you what you can or can't do with "your electricity", but if your usage pattern indicates you've got an internal grow operation, they certainly don't mind passing that information along to the bastards who will turn up to lock you away.

      Had an argument with my (proto-fascist) father-in-law last week - he thinks because he owns a property, he can "do what he likes with it" and throw out a tenant who requests that he pay for the dishwasher repairs. I told him he can't "do what he likes with his property", since he can't run a brothel, he can't dispose of toxic waste, he can't open an unlicensed restaurant in a residential tower, he can't double the rent overnight, charge more to black people, make loud noises after 10pm, and he can't grow weed. Because some people will be selfish areholes, we regulate their behaviour with laws. YOU have to repair the dishwasher, because in the end, that's the kind of society we all, including you, want to live in, one where we are treated "fairly". Poor bastard nearly choked on his hypocrisy - charming old bugger that he is.

      I know people in general are too lazy to think, and so we "assist" them with useless car and pipe analogies and such like, but in the end we're just encouraging the idiocracy because we leave ourselves open to valid counter-attacks to the analogy by our opponents. Quit with the analogies already - the 'net is too complicated for this. Just split the service from the provider -> regulate the content (censorship) = "NO", regulate the carrier (promote competition) = "YES". You will not force me to watch Fox, and I won't force you to watch PBS. All of us want to live in a society where we can ACTIVELY choose our consumptions - that is the "fairness" we aim for, and that is how to make NN understood. it has its own nature, not like pipes, not like cars, and not like newspapers. The world changed and keeps changing - catch-up, goddamit !

  17. We need some regulation... by mlts · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Net neutrality is a misnomer. What is needed is are regulations to stop ISPs from doing any or all of the following:

    Discrimating by site. Non-DDoS traffic to site "A" should not cost more than going to site "B".

    Add/modifying/deleting in flight traffic. Throttling/QoS is one thing, adding adds via Phorm, or changing people's postings to Web boards in flight is another.

    Blocking/slowing down one site, just to make another site seem faster.

    Unneeded snooping on connections. Traffic should be considered PII, stored only a few days to check for security breaches, then binned. It is not to be sold to any ad companies who want router logs.

    Expanding infrastructure. We never see Japanese ISPs wringing their hands in front of the Diet and saying how they are being driven into the ground by people in Tokyo watching TV on their phones. Nor do we see this in Korea or Singapore. ISPs build infrastructure, not just whine about people actually using their services.

    We need to address issues exactly, not bundle them under the hazy "net neutrality" topic.

    1. Re:We need some regulation... by DragonWriter · · Score: 2

      What is needed is are regulations to stop ISPs from doing any or all of the following:

      Discrimating by site. Non-DDoS traffic to site "A" should not cost more than going to site "B".

      Non-discrimination is Rule 3 of the recent Report and Order.

      Add/modifying/deleting in flight traffic. Throttling/QoS is one thing, adding adds via Phorm, or changing people's postings to Web boards in flight is another.

      Most of that would seem to fall within the Rule 2 provisions on blocking or the Rule 3 provisions on discrimination in the recent Order.

      Blocking/slowing down one site, just to make another site seem faster.

      Again, Rule 3 on non-discrimination.

      Unneeded snooping on connections. Traffic should be considered PII, stored only a few days to check for security breaches, then binned. It is not to be sold to any ad companies who want router logs.

      Separate regulations addressing privacy in the ISP-customer relationship may be needed; the recent Report and Order does not address that topic.

      Expanding infrastructure.

      Non-discrimination, non-blocking should address this indirectly, since its reduces the ability of providers to charge for broadband service while crippling uses that take advantage of the available capacity; this should encourage the use of resource to expand generally-available capacity.

      We need to address issues exactly, not bundle them under the hazy "net neutrality" topic.

      "Net neutrality" isn't actually the label that the FCC uses for the subject of the recent Report and Order, or the previous publications on the same topic. The term they've used is "Open Internet".

      In any case, while regulatory actions often have high-level labels, they do address specific issues, and most of the specific issues you raise are directly addressed in the Report and Order recently issued by the FCC.

    2. Re:We need some regulation... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Expanding infrastructure...

      I don't think we want regulations to stop infrastructure expansion; you probably meant to negate this point, correct?

    3. Re:We need some regulation... by jmorris42 · · Score: 1

      > Discrimating by site. Non-DDoS traffic to site "A" should
      > not cost more than going to site "B".

      Really? Imagine this scenario. ISP does the sane thing and begins charging by the megabyte plus a small base fee, i.e. exactly the same way every other utility charges for service. Now imagine they add another layer and charge for that traffic by band based on their costs. So purely internal traffic is free (or dirt cheap) traffic to providers they can get to over peering agreements are almost as cheap as internal and traffic going over links the ISP pays for per MB gets billed at an even higher rate.

      Now in this environment it would make a lot of sense for content providers to take steps to get their traffic out of that highest rate band, by buying pipe that gets them into peered links or co-locating servers in that ISP's internal net. P2P clients would have a big incentive to get smart enough to keep as much traffic as possible inside the local net. In other words it would lead to a more efficient net. But in your ignorant (and Obama's) world all of this would be illegal.

      > Add/modifying/deleting in flight traffic... Phorm, etc.

      100% agreement here, no different than than if the Phone Company started snooping your calls and inserting ads, marketing based on who you call and what you say, etc. It is just wrong. But in the Internet we have ssl and that gives us a powerful weapon.

      > We never see Japanese ISPs wringing their hands..

      Plus mentions of Korea and Singapore... notice anything common about these? All are very compact in geography and easy to wire up with fiber. The US, not so much. We have urban sprawl to contend with. It is all a matter of customers per mile of wire. Combine that with the fact the same progs pushing network neutrality also dominate the corrupt political machines controlling every one of the high population density areas in the US that would otherwise be good candidates for high speed Internet deployments and it is clear we aren't going to compete with Japan on this front.

      --
      Democrat delenda est
    4. Re:We need some regulation... by mlts · · Score: 1

      Exactly. I should have worded it better, e.g., "shut up, and go to your Cisco rep."

    5. Re:We need some regulation... by AmeerCB · · Score: 1

      Yeah...it really is that simple. Which is why it's ridiculous that the FCC is screwing it up.

    6. Re:We need some regulation... by mlts · · Score: 1

      Why should the user care about pipe lengths and quality? All this leads to is that companies will scamper to collude with ISPs so the ISP charges their subscribers less to go to their site than the competitions. Instead of finding the cheapest routes to go on, all companies will do is be wheeling and dealing backstage to see which of them get blessed by the ISPs, and who ends up having the site customers have to pay significantly more to view. The argument is good in theory, but in the real world, it just hands more power to the ISPs, because they have the keys to the roads and everyone else has to kowtow to them if they want to stay open on a daily basis.

      SSL is useful, but it isn't perfect. All a rogue ISP has to do is block the connection to the core CAs if a certificate for websites they don't like comes by. They can then insert whatever they please, so the site in Elbonia which is a good reference for synchronized projectile vomiting ends up having its content replaced in flight by the ISP. Yes, the user will get a message that the key can't be verified, but users will do what they do, and just continue onto the site. This way, an ISP can effectively defeat SSL. If people say the ISP is at fault, the ISP can say that they block what they feel like they want to, and deal with it or leave it.

      Japan isn't a small country; it is the size of California. However, there are many other nations where ISPs focus on building, and not whining. China is one example -- they just went on a spending spree from the government on down to lay fiber and build infrastructure. Russia is slowly but surely getting its infrastructure to where it needs to be. It is just the US that the ISPs are whining instead of actually doing the business their customers pay them to do.

    7. Re:We need some regulation... by mdielmann · · Score: 1

      We need to address issues exactly, not bundle them under the hazy "net neutrality" topic.

      Except in the US, where it's technically feasible to have a single vote by congress include any and all of these issues, as well as a law mandating that cows wear runners in June. Good old riders.

      --
      Sure I'm paranoid, but am I paranoid enough?
    8. Re:We need some regulation... by seebs · · Score: 1

      Non-DDoS traffic to site "A" should not cost more than going to site "B".

      What if I just want to block site "A" entirely? What if I'm looking at traffic from them? What about malware, which isn't DDoS?

      --
      My blog: http://www.seebs.net/log/ --- My iPhone/iPad app: http://www.seebs.net/seebsfrac/
  18. Awww... by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 2

    How cute. The WSJ has dug up somebody who thinks that only governments are capable of "regulation".

    States generally reserve the most dramatic flavor of regulation for themselves "Don't do X, or men with guns will put you in a cage"; but corporations, particularly monopolists and oligopolists, are easily capable of exerting influence on par with fines, taxation, censorship and almost any other flavor of regulation short of that promising imprisonment or death....

    1. Re:Awww... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      By far the most salient comment in this thread.

      It wasn't always the case, but in the modern world, you will be regulated. All corporate entities (corporations and governments) seek to regulate your conduct. It's just a question of whether you'll have a say in how it happens. For some services, we can prefer a private, opt-in regime, the terms of which you cannot control (these are your relationships with your corporate--as in private corporations--regulators). For others, it makes sense to prefer an arrangement that is mandatory, but the terms of which you can control, at least to some extent.

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

      Trust me, I'm not replying to myself!

  19. Cable companies wouldn't abuse it? by EmperorOfCanada · · Score: 1

    Cable companies have a huge incentive to protect what is otherwise a dying industry. They will do whatever it takes to block or otherwise interfere with those services that are going to kick their butts. This whole "you didn't pay for the bandwidth" is crap as it is their customers demanding these services and thus if anyone is going to pay it should be the customers. Except at wholesale rates bandwidth is nearly free. Even if you downloaded a gig an hour 24/7 the cost to provide this on a per customer basis is a tiny fraction of what customers are already paying per month. Most of the costs of providing high speed connections are things like call center support and marketing. The tech portion while large is actually tiny per customer per month.

  20. Government is as government does by howlingfrog · · Score: 4, Insightful

    In what way is a large, powerful institution that can control the flow of information NOT a government? In what way is showing preference for certain packets over others NOT regulation?

    Anarchism is feudalism. There is no such thing as total deregulation--the choice is about who gets to regulate and how much say you and I get in it.

    --
    The original Howling Frog is a fictional character and has no UID.
    1. Re:Government is as government does by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I suggest that the people who own the resources 'regulate' what is done with those resources. We do not own the Telco's routers or wires.

      I suggest that the only reason telco's are monopolies is because of regulation and government grants of permission to run wires.

      I suggest that the only reason people want 'regulation' via government is because if they cannot pay for the service they want, then they will force someone to provide it to them.

      I suggest that the only reason people cannot pay for the service they want is because the government has already stolen the majority of their funds and regulated the business climate to the point that small business has almost no chance.

      Fixing a government created problem with government regulation only creates a bigger government created problem.

    2. Re:Government is as government does by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anarchism is feudalism.

      No. anarchism is chaos. Feudalism is like when you have a bunch of bandits who build forts in the mountain passes and charge tolls for people to pass them. Or at least that's the same general period in history. I think literal feudalism required a few serfs.

      We don't do that anymore. We hired a group of people we called "the government" to raise an army and march on the mountain passes, and take over the forts. Because in the long run, it's cheaper to be robbed once by the government than every time you go through the mountains.

    3. Re:Government is as government does by rogerz · · Score: 1

      In what way is a large, powerful institution that can control the flow of information NOT a government?

      In this way: the government can point a gun at you to force you to behave in a particularly way. If you don't like what a corporation is doing, you can simply walk away. What? But you want the service the corporation is offering, you just want it your way? Tough.

      If you are arguing against the government monopolies granted to (some) ISPs and TelCos, then you have my full support. But be clear that it is government action to which you are objecting, and that this action always comes with the threat of force.

      The equivocation of government power with economic power is the equivocation of force with trade. It is a category error which leads to perverse conclusions.

      --
      If humans are mostly water, and beer is mostly water, then humans must be mostly beer.
    4. Re:Government is as government does by sac13 · · Score: 1

      There is no such thing as total deregulation--the choice is about who gets to regulate and how much say you and I get in it.

      So, you think big companies colluding with the government gives us more say? Name an example of a regulated industry where that has happened.

  21. First impressions by jfengel · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I look at the link and I think, "Gosh, is the Wall Street Journal capable of delivering an objective opinion on this? They do, after all, have a stake in the issue."

    So I click through, and there's the sub-head: "The campaign to regulate the Internet was funded by a who's who of left-liberal foundations."

    Technically, I have to actually read the article to come up with an opinion. But I had a chili dog for lunch, and I don't need to be nauseated any further. I might even agree with the article's conclusion, but I doubt I'll find the reasoning sound.

    1. Re:First impressions by KublaiKhan · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The WSJ has an impressively schizophrenic personality. The regular articles--the ones that you'd find on, say, the front page of the print edition--are very well researched and well-written, as well as impressively neutral in political alignment. They tend to stick strictly to the facts and use as little conjecture as possible.

      The editorial page, however, is sometimes even further to the right than Glenn Beck. It is -RABIDLY- right-wing, sometimes getting close to fascism. It's probably what the Fox News people point to when they try to claim that their coverage fair and balanced.

      --
      In Xanadu did Kubla Khan
      A stately pleasure dome decree
    2. Re:First impressions by geekoid · · Score: 0

      Point made.

      You can't think for yourself, and judge people bu some small heading in a newspaper.

      We really need less people like you.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    3. Re:First impressions by jfengel · · Score: 1

      That's my impression as well. They still do a good job of reporting the real news, but are completely insane on the opinion pages.

      Not entirely unlike Fox News, in fact, which really does deliver only somewhat slanted news on the pure news shows but are frothingly deranged on the opinion shows. WSJ seems to do a better job of keeping it from spilling over, while Fox News viewers who believe that they're genuinely separate are deluded.

    4. Re:First impressions by Stregano · · Score: 2

      Wow, mods must be nice today. You got +4 insightful for a really long version of:

      tl;dr

      --
      The world is how you make it
    5. Re:First impressions by jfengel · · Score: 1

      Actually, you're the one judging people (me) based on a small amount of information.

      I wasn't judging any people. I was judging the article. If you'd care to demonstrate that my snap judgment was wrong, go ahead. Or did I waste my time reading your response as well?

    6. Re:First impressions by jfengel · · Score: 1

      More like "too stupid;dr". But it's not as catchy.

    7. Re:First impressions by KublaiKhan · · Score: 1

      It's always been that way, even back before they got bought out.

      (Disclaimer: I learned to read with the WSJ. YARLY. Grandparents had a subscription.)

      --
      In Xanadu did Kubla Khan
      A stately pleasure dome decree
    8. Re:First impressions by TooOldForThis · · Score: 1

      I look at the link and I think, "Gosh, is the Wall Street Journal capable of delivering an objective opinion on this? They do, after all, have a stake in the issue."

      So I click through, and there's the sub-head: "The campaign to regulate the Internet was funded by a who's who of left-liberal foundations."

      Technically, I have to actually read the article to come up with an opinion. But I had a chili dog for lunch, and I don't need to be nauseated any further. I might even agree with the article's conclusion, but I doubt I'll find the reasoning sound.

      So you're willing to pass judgement without reading the whole article? Very enlightened and progressive. Really.

      -k

    9. Re:First impressions by jfengel · · Score: 1

      Nope. I'm willing to skip reading the article (and refrain from passing judgment) because my time is limited and I've got better things to do.

      Is there some bit of insight buried in the article? Or is my reasonably obvious conclusion that a liberal-baiting headline tops a bunch of liberal-baiting paragraphs, devoid of anything but partisan nonsense?

      Right now I'm deferring any judgment except to not read it. But if you'd like to confirm that it's partisan BS, go ahead.

    10. Re:First impressions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you'll dole out your judgement based on one comment? Not even a lengthy comment at that. Or is this one of those times where you think your insight trumps everyone else and you can get away with the old "do as I say..." cop out?

      After looking at a few of your posts it is pretty easy to see that you're just as guilty at snap judgements and harsh retorts as anyone else. Maybe we would be better off with less people like you?

    11. Re:First impressions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Point made.

      You can't think for yourself, and judge people bu some small heading in a newspaper.

      We really need less people like you.

      uh, because with the amount of information possible to consume, it makes sense to have no filter whatsoever?

      Ideally, sure - every argument should be considered based on its entirety and even given the benefit of parsing it down to the relevant intentions and ignoring whatever hurt feelings might be caused by posturing.

      Practically, there is too much bullshit to wade through. jfengel applied a reasonable parsing filter - imperfect, no doubt, and obviously not consistent with yours, but clearly not so ludicrous as to be dismissed with "we need less people like you." I could just as reasonably dismiss your argument based on the use of "less" instead of "fewer".

    12. Re:First impressions by protektor · · Score: 1

      Fox News isn't the only channel to have that problem. There are many shows on cable that look like they should be news shows but in fact are opinion shows. MSNBC does this, and a few CNN shows have had this issue.

    13. Re:First impressions by zzatz · · Score: 1

      The real problem is that there are very few news shows. Most shows labeled 'News' are actually entertainment. Fox doesn't have news. MSNBC doesn't have news. CNN doesn't have news. They have entertainment shows.

    14. Re:First impressions by dogmatixpsych · · Score: 1

      I agree. I do find, yes I'm biased as a conservative, that most of the editorials are pretty good. They are usually right-wing but are generally well-written and provide a nice counter-balance to editorials from the New York Times. There are a number of op ed pieces on the WSJ (and NYT) that I find completely ridiculous though. I can't find the source but there was a study done that found that the WSJ's non-editorial news leaned left - the editorials were a different matter.

  22. Faux News by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 4, Interesting

    An opinion piece over at the Wall Street Journal

    Since being taken over by NewsCorp, I'm not sure you could describe any of their articles as anything else. They're just GOP/big business shills now, RIP the news organization that used to make a meaningful contribution to our society.

    Regardless of your political point of view shouldn't the Internet remain free from regulation?"

    You might as well ask, "Regardless of your political point of view shouldn't the privately owned bridges be free from regulation?" or how about "Regardless of your political point of view shouldn't the banks remain free from regulation?" or maybe "Regardless of your political point of view shouldn't the electric company remain free from regulation?"

    In any case the answer is "NO!" Vital resources should be regulated by the government because the government, for all its flaws, is ultimately answerable to the people and private companies have shown again and again they put their profits first and do great harm to society in pursuit of that, whether it be by dumping poison in our nation's rivers, gouging individuals using monopolies, Misusing money put into banks with risky investments, or leveraging resources to influence politics for profit.

    A better question isn't if the government should regulate things, but "Why are we still letting private companies and foreign nations" influence our politics through campaign contributions, lobbying, and political adverts when the vast majority of individuals thing it should be illegal?"

    1. Re:Faux News by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You sir - are apparently a communist!

    2. Re:Faux News by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hell, you'd think companies would actually want a little regulation. It gives them a perfect escape from responsibility if crap ever hits the fan. Did your product just kill a bunch of people? The federal inspection guys said it was good to go, blame them.

      Of course this assumes we have a system where companies are forced to take full responsibility for their actions, but that's clearly not the case, even when there were not government screw-ups or there wasn't some other party asleep at the switch. Extreme view points sound good in theory, but they usually require a certain world-view to hold true, and they almost never do hold true. That's why these view points always end up faltering. A truly free market would be a great thing and I'm a big supporter of making any market as free as possible, but I understand that creating a true free market at this time would result in bedlam.

      Blah, blah, middle ground and all that good shit.

    3. Re:Faux News by sac13 · · Score: 1

      In any case the answer is "NO!" Vital resources should be regulated by the government because the government, for all its flaws, is ultimately answerable to the people and private companies have shown again and again they put their profits first and do great harm to society in pursuit of that, whether it be by dumping poison in our nation's rivers, gouging individuals using monopolies, Misusing money put into banks with risky investments, or leveraging resources to influence politics for profit.

      What evidence to you have that the government is ultimately answerable to the people and not their corporate donors? And, even with regulation all of those things have happened. So, what exactly are we getting with all this "regulation"?

      A better question isn't if the government should regulate things, but "Why are we still letting private companies and foreign nations" influence our politics through campaign contributions, lobbying, and political adverts when the vast majority of individuals thing it should be illegal?"

      Could the answer be that the government also has self-interest? Could it be that by capping individual donations and allowing corporations unlimited donations the government doesn't have to worry about individuals? Could it be that the assumption that the government can be accountable to individuals is virtually baseless in reality?

  23. We hold these truths to be self-evident by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That all packets are created equal.
    that they are endowed by their server with certain unalienable Rights.

  24. Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by jwietelmann · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If they were willing to either A) deliver all of us the kind of bandwidth promised in their Unlimited*** plans, or B) charge by the megabyte instead of by the month, this should be moot. I paid for that bandwidth, and I'll use it as I see fit. If I need to prioritize my own traffic, I'll do so with my router. That way my streaming video doesn't interfere with my VOIP calls.

    But they're not talking about that, are they? They don't want my streaming video to interfere with their other customers' VOIP calls... which would seem to suggest that they don't actually have the capacity to deliver their Unlimited****** (up to) 10Mbps** that they sold to everyone in my neighborhood.

    We have this fundamental problem where these companies have oversold the bandwidth, and the only solution they're willing to consider is to invent rules that will give you less of what you paid for. Because any other solution would force them to abandon an already-misleading marketing gimmick.

    1. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by DubThree · · Score: 2

      I think you've nailed it. It pisses me off when I get poor quality on Netflix, but a speed test puts me at over 20 Mb/s. I'm thinking about switching from Comcast to a competitor because I know they're throttling Netflix. Let's let the free-market solve the problem.

    2. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by KublaiKhan · · Score: 2

      Some of the plans sound like they want to bring back AOL, in essence--the walled garden of 'preferred' content, with, optionally, a pipe out to that "internet" place.

      Why we didn't use "you don't want AOL back, do you?" as an argument for net neutrality before completely escapes me.

      --
      In Xanadu did Kubla Khan
      A stately pleasure dome decree
    3. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by DescData · · Score: 1

      May be the whole idea of unlimited access was never realistic. As the uses of the internet when from text, to static images, ..., to streaming high def video, the providers need to thicken the pipe at ever point in the net. The question is who will pay for the upgrade. The existing users or the new users. Why should I pay to for upgrades for someone unlimited need bandwidth?

    4. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by FredFredrickson · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Good point, the free market can sort this out. I'll just dump comcast and sign up with my local dial up. That'll show them.

      In the mean time, what does a majority of the country do - since most of us do not have multiple options for broadband?

      --
      Belief? Hope? Preference?The Existential Vortex
    5. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by KublaiKhan · · Score: 1

      Well, that's what competition's about, ain't it?

      If you can't provide the services that I demand at the price point I demand 'em, I'll go to someone else who can.

      Progress happens. Keep up with the times, or die. That's how the world works.

      (Hey, how's your buggy-whip business doing?)

      --
      In Xanadu did Kubla Khan
      A stately pleasure dome decree
    6. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 4, Interesting

      They don't want my streaming video to interfere with their other customers' VOIP calls...

      That's not what's going to kill the Internet. That's a problem that's easily solved with QoS and prioritizing based on protocol. What they don't want - and will pretty much kill to prevent - is they don't want you to stream video content that competes with their video content. And since the Telcos all got smart and invested in content providers, it is trivial from a technical perspective to implement this.

      In China, the free Internet died because the government didn't want the users to watch Tiananmen videos. In the US, the free Internet will die because corporations don't want the users to watch content they're not getting paid for.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    7. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by ubergeek65536 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The free market is the problem. You trust Comcast to do the right thing? I've got a nice piece of swampland to sell you. Many people only have one available provider in their area, ie there is no choice.

    8. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by DescData · · Score: 1

      Do you know how the internet works?

    9. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by jwietelmann · · Score: 1

      Well, yes, I'm sure they would love that. I was just trying to illustrate the ludicrousness of claiming that ISPs need to do traffic shaping and QoS.

    10. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by MoonBuggy · · Score: 1

      You seem to be conflating two related (but separate) issues; admittedly the fact that we seem to use 'bandwidth' interchangeably with 'monthly data transfer' doesn't help matters. Point is, paying by the megabyte would do nothing to ease congestion at peak time unless they also stopped overselling bandwidth - if everybody pays for 1GB of transfer and tries to use it simultaneously, your streaming video will still interfere with your neighbour's Skype call.

      The overselling of bandwidth, however, is necessary to make remotely efficient use of the infrastructure. The vast majority of net use is burst-based, so it's a huge waste to pay for the full 10Mbps of capacity for every user - just look at the prices on a leased line if you want to see how much that'd actually cost. Even at peak time, nowhere near 100% of customers are using their lines at 100% capacity. Here's a fairly good post on the subject (admittedly biased, but accurate nonetheless) from Dreamhost.

      The problem arises when that oversold bandwidth is coupled with so-called unlimited transfer. If there is no limit on your data transfer, you have the right to use your line at full bandwidth capacity 24/7 - if too many people start doing that (and if the bandwidth has been oversold too heavily) then problems start to arise.

      Per-GB pricing on data transfer doesn't actually do anything to prevent congestion in itself - as I mentioned above, you'll still hit problems if you all try to use your 1GB allowance at the same time - but it helps to even out usage, and you can at least reach the point where everyone can theoretically use their entire transfer allowance (even with oversold bandwidth) over the course of the month.

    11. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by mikael_j · · Score: 2

      Yet this problem doesn't exist here in Sweden where the population density is approximately 20.6 per square kilometer (3.3 per square kilometer in the region I live in). Perhaps it's simply that US ISPs aren't doing their jobs properly? (And no, it's not just for sites/services hosted in Sweden that we don't have any bandwidth issues, it's for pretty much anywhere except for sites/services hosted by dodgy providers (surprisingly often in the US) or in certain asian countries that have always been notorious for having crappy bandwidth to the rest of the world).

      --
      Greylisting is to SMTP as NAT is to IPv4
    12. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by natehoy · · Score: 2

      That's great, where you have a competitor. That's the problem with a free market, it really doesn't exist in the case of a natural monopoly like power (or at least power transmission in deregulated markets), wireline phone, cable TV, natural gas, or sewer. And in many markets, wireline Internet means dealing with a monopoly (wireless can't compete - it's too expensive and the caps are too low), or a oligopoly where there may be one or two choices.

      The government grants them a monopoly mandate because that's the only practical way to run the wires to every house. The government sponsored putting up a lot of those poles and running a lot of those wires, used government powers of eminent domain to get the land to run them on, and granted a monopoly to someone in return for their portion of building and maintaining them.

      If you want to talk about "free market" economics, you have to have a free market for it to operate in.

      If the companies want complete freedom from regulation, then the answer is really simple - the government should take over the wires and poles and let everyone use them at a fixed rate (per customer or per gigabyte, whatever works best) that covers maintenance to the infrastructure, then the free market can decide who can provide the best plan to each consumer.

      As long as a single company or a small oligopoly are the only ones who can use the wires and the poles, government regulation must take the place of the competitive market.

      --
      "This post contains words, known to the State of California to cause thought. Wash brain thoroughly after reading."
    13. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by alen · · Score: 1

      because people don't care if email takes 10 seconds longer to arrive but they want youtube right now with no hiccups. no one has the capacity on the backend for every customer to run their internet at max speed. even the old ma bell didn't have the capacity for everyone to use the phone at the same time

    14. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by cpu6502 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You use two words that don't go together.

      "Free market" and "comcast". Comcast is a local Government-created monopoly, not a free market. Please learn the difference. Comcast is similar to the electric, water, or natural gas monopolies. In a truly "free market" we'd not have monopoly but instead be able to choose from CC or Cox or Cablevision or Time-warner or AppleTV or whoever

      --
      My AC stalker: " I personally agree with your posts most of the time, but that won't keep me from modding you troll"
    15. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      They can just charge per GB and implement bandwidth caps. In fact that's what they should be, makes all this whining a moot issue.

    16. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by cpu6502 · · Score: 1

      I still use AOL (netscape branded).
      It's not any worse than any other ISP. It's easy to bash AOL but we forget they created the first Graphical-based national BBS in 1985. They were also the easiest way to access the Usenet and Internet for us home users. See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_Link

      --
      My AC stalker: " I personally agree with your posts most of the time, but that won't keep me from modding you troll"
    17. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by whitehaint · · Score: 0

      The owner should pay for the upgrades, that is why we pay them a premium every month. This would be like being a member of a gym with unlimited access to all the equipment, but then the place becomes popular, except now the club is refusing to buy more machines and instead allowing only certain people to use certain equipment and complaining. If I pay for unlimited whatever, it better damn well be unlimited !

    18. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by theghost · · Score: 4, Informative

      US ISPs are doing their jobs properly, it's just that they define "doing their job properly" as maximizing profits. They don't actually need to serve the customer because there's almost no real competition.

      --
      The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing.
    19. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      They don't want my streaming video to interfere with their other customers' VOIP calls

      I think it's more a matter of them not wanting your streaming video to interfere with their streaming video, or with their "strategic partnership" with content providers. There's not one little bit of this debate that's about QoS.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    20. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by PopeRatzo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Let's let the free-market solve the problem.

      Why don't you ask Santa Claus to sort it out while you're at it. He's just as real.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    21. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by natehoy · · Score: 1

      And that's fine, there's nothing in "Network Neutrality" that prevents a provider from capping your bandwidth and/or charging you for extremely heavy Internet use. That's fair, and is as it should be. Though I'd say it's equally fair that providers should disclose VERY clearly if their plans have some form of monthly cap, and what the costs and consequences are if you want more bandwidth than your cap.

      The problem is that providers are choosing which services you can access, not how much bandwidth you can gobble down. So Netflix might reach an agreement with Comcast that they get "premium" bandwidth, as long as Comcast agrees to throttle traffic from all other movie sites. Or Comcast decides that, since they have their own digital phone service, that the latency to Vonage's servers should be increased and/or all traffic to and from Vonage should start suffering severe packet loss (*).

      If I'm paying for 250GB a month of bandwidth (my current Comcast cap), then I should be able to choose for myself what I use my 250GB for.

      (*) this really happened.

      --
      "This post contains words, known to the State of California to cause thought. Wash brain thoroughly after reading."
    22. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by cpu6502 · · Score: 1

      easiest way to access the Usenet and Internet*

      *prior to the invention of Mosaic Browser. I should make that correction. AOL/Quantum Link also created the first MMO in 1986 called Habitat (later renamed Club Caribe).

      --
      My AC stalker: " I personally agree with your posts most of the time, but that won't keep me from modding you troll"
    23. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by Moryath · · Score: 1

      But they're not talking about that, are they? They don't want my streaming video to interfere with their other customers' VOIP calls... which would seem to suggest that they don't actually have the capacity to deliver their Unlimited****** (up to) 10Mbps** that they sold to everyone in my neighborhood.

      They don't give a crap about anyone's VOIP calls.

      What they care about is degrading a competing service - Youtube, Hulu, Netflix streaming - to the point where, out of frustration, many customers will pay through the nose for their shitty-quality monopolist "video on demand" cable services instead.

    24. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by zeroshade · · Score: 1

      Except that the unlimited data transfer is part of what makes a lot of services viable. If you can transfer 1GB or even 5GB, then netflix and other streaming services become moot because you can't really use them "anytime" can you? Especially when an HD movie streamed from netflix is easily 1GB or more.

    25. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by KingMotley · · Score: 0

      since most of us do not have multiple options for broadband

      Citation needed.

    26. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by protektor · · Score: 1

      Do you? Do you have any idea how much dark fiber is still out there? Do you realize how cheap fiber is these days? The biggest cost isn't the fiber its the right of ways. The problem isn't the Internet at large, the problem is the lack of competition at the last mile.

    27. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by xerxesVII · · Score: 1

      What the hell?

      If you're going to make an analogy around here, you need to work a car into it somehow.

      --
      "We shall grapple with the ineffable, and see if we may not eff it after all." - Douglas Adams
    28. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by protektor · · Score: 1

      There are lots of providers who don't clearly disclose this. I have talked with many different sales people for ISPs. They tell me it is unlimited I can use as much as I want. Then I ask them why the fine print says limit 50gig a month or whatever. They always go "ummm.....oh I didn't know that." There are a lot of companies that don't say unlimited in their ads they just make claims that you assume means unlimited until you look at the fine print and see serious limits for some of them.

    29. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by turbidostato · · Score: 1

      The overselling of bandwidth, however, is necessary to make remotely efficient use of the "infrastructure."

      No it isn't.

      Proper business management is.

      If they promise me "X", by contract, they better get me "X", not "X, unless you happen to try to get X, in which case we'll give you x". It is they the ones that promise. What about making promises they can back instead of bogus ones?

    30. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by steve6534 · · Score: 1

      Or maybe the problem is on Netflix's end ? Your ISP can't guarantee the quality across the internet that's out of their control.

    31. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by careysub · · Score: 5, Informative

      I keep hearing that "since most of us do not have multiple options for broadband" but is this true? There are 5 different places to get bandwidth in my area and I live in central Illinois.

      The government doesn't solve problems. It relishes control...

      Well, if we are playing "proof by anecdote" I live in a densely populated Southern California area and I have exactly one option for a broadband provider - Charter. No one else will provide BB service to my house. Maybe Verizon FiOS someday, but they won't make any promises.

      What are the nationwide stats?

      --
      Starships were meant to fly, Hands up and touch the sky - Nicky Minaj
    32. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by Moryath · · Score: 1

      That'd be great if any one of them actually offered a real, trustworthy way to tell how much bandwidth you were using.

      Comcrap promised to provide that two years ago when they started throttling people and saying you had a "250GB/month limit", and where is it? FUCKING VAPORWARE, that's where.

    33. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by JumpDrive · · Score: 1

      Exactly, what I try to say to people who keep telling me that the market will sort it out.

      All of these people keep acting like there is some competition going on.

      Where I live there is no competition, you live in this neighborhood you get this provider. The end. I'd like to know where all these places are which have all these choices.

      The only competition they will know is when people do switch to dial-up , or Co-Ops built on Comcast or some provider. So far I've given them back their cable TV and my VoiP.

    34. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by Galestar · · Score: 1

      Not only does this violate the concept of Net Neutrailty, I'd love to see Comcast get hit with Anti-Trust suits for stunts like this. Alas I doubt this will ever happen.

      --
      AccountKiller
    35. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by drew30319 · · Score: 1

      since most of us do not have multiple options for broadband

      Citation needed.

      http://www.google.com/search?q=broadband+availability

      --
      JAGga.me ----> Producing video games addressing emotional health and wellness issues affecting teens.
    36. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by protektor · · Score: 1

      There should absolutely be no congestion of traffic at peak usage times. If there is you either designed a shit network or you way over sold your bandwidth. I ran an ISP and I never ever had that problem and I was able to easily turn a profit. It is something the telcos and cable companies try to get people to believe so they can move to tiered services and payment by the gig or whatever. They want to squeeze as much as possible out of the consumer and don't give a damn if it good for the consumer or not. Their only interest is how much can I squeeze out of the public before they scream for the government to do something or before they just stop buying.

      You can thank your local cities for not properly opening up the last mile. You can thank the government for playing games with the unlicensed spectrum. You can also thank the government and states for not reigning in these historic monopolies to keep them from trouncing all over anyone who tried to compete with them, by using their historic monopoly status to give their Internet side an unfair advantage. Just look at how many ISPs there are these days and how many independent ISPs have been driven out of business, and it wasn't because of poor management. It's because of how they got treated in the market place by the monopolies.

    37. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Exactly. I live in Metro Phoenix (Tempe actually), and there's precisely two: DSL from Qwest, and Cox Cable. I suppose a third might be some satellite provider, but satellite performance sucks compared to land-based options, and it's quite a bit more expensive.

      Luckily, Cox actually isn't that bad, and nothing like the horror stories I've heard about Comcast, but we're probably going to move out of state soon, and I'm not looking forward to having to deal with Comcast.

    38. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by Freddybear · · Score: 1

      I trust the free market more than I trust the government, no matter which party is in power.

    39. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by Grishnakh · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Exactly. And since having a truly free market for broadband is physically impossible (or at best, extremely infeasible) for the exact same reason it's impossible for electric and water providers, we have to go with government regulation.

      When someone invents a way to deliver broadband over wormholes, THEN we can think about having a free market in broadband service.

    40. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by careysub · · Score: 1

      May be the whole idea of unlimited access was never realistic...

      Okay, forget "unlimited access".

      I'd settle at this point for broadband speeds that match Japan, or South Korea, or Finland, or France, or the Netherlands, or Portugal, or Norway, or Poland, or Canada (for those of you who claim the U.S. is too big for good broadband), or Austria, or Belgium, or Iceland, or ...

      The U.S. is also beaten in price by 10 other nations, Japan pays one quarter what we do on average.

      --
      Starships were meant to fly, Hands up and touch the sky - Nicky Minaj
    41. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Excellent! It will go nicely with this bridge a nice gentleman from the cellular company sold me.

    42. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by Zan+Lynx · · Score: 0

      I bet you could get a T1 line or lines connected to your house.

      If it can be done in rural Colorado it can be done in southern California.

    43. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by swrider · · Score: 1

      Comcast is NOT a government created monopoly. In almost every locale where Comcast, or any other cable company, has a franchise, that franchise is NOT exclusive. Any other company can come in and establish a franchise to provide service as long as they meet the conditions of the franchise, such as providing access to everyone in the area that wants it and not cherry picking or redlining.

      That franchise, by the way, applies only to Cable service and not to internet.

    44. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by corbettw · · Score: 1

      Have you checked Covad? They provide DSL service pretty much everywhere.

      --
      God invented whiskey so the Irish would not rule the world.
    45. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by presidenteloco · · Score: 1

      Not having net neutrality is kind of like if different sections of the Interstate Freeways were owned by a few large corporations who each owned all the major roads in a particular geographic area. Now if you were a rich top-level drug dealer, you could pay the monopoly a substantial cut of the proceeds to set aside a private fast lane which would be restricted to carrying only your organization's Escalades. Other peoples' un-pimped rides (and of course all commuter buses) would be stuck in massive traffic jams around you.

      This would work even better for you if you could pay the freeway monopolist (note the oxymoron) to provide a series of protective tubes around your private lane.

      --

      Where are we going and why are we in a handbasket?
    46. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by MoonBuggy · · Score: 1

      That's only an issue if the limits are unreasonably small. Per-GB pricing doesn't need to mean that you only get a few GB, after all! An unlimited 10Mbps connection equates to about 3.25TB of transfer per month - if the 'base package' gave you only 5% of that transfer you'd still have 160GB/month to play with. Admittedly in the current US market I'd expect the ISPs to use transfer-limited pricing to screw you for every penny you're worth, but that's a problem stemming from lack of competition.

      If transfer limits were being used as an actual form of traffic regulation rather than an attempt to squeeze out extra profits, here's what you might see for a fairly cheap connection (back of the envelope numbers, but it'll do for an approximation): 100Mbps of backbone bandwidth, sold to 500 customers as 20Mbps connections. The actual bandwidth is thus oversold 100:1 - not great, but acceptable given normal usage patterns. Call it $5000/month for the 100Mbps backbone and you've got a base cost of $10/customer/month for a total monthly transfer capability of 66GB/customer burstable up to 20Mbps. Since some customers won't even use that 66GB every month, you can probably get away with a bit of excess on your transfer limits and still stay within your means - not the 100:1 ratio you can manage on bandwidth, but maybe a 150-200GB/customer/month allowance without oversaturating your backbone.

    47. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by cdrguru · · Score: 1

      Nobody ever advertised 10Mb dedicated bandwith. They always weaseled with terms like "up to" and "burst". You want 10Mb dedicated bandwith? You are going to pay a lot more for it. Just get a business account.

      But don't blame them for overselling. They sold "burst" bandwidth, not dedicated. So has every other ISP in the world so far.

      Oh, and by the way, they don't have 10Mb for everyone in your neighborhood. Once Netflix gets beyond maybe 20% penetration in a neighborhood it will be worthless because the network capacity between the head end and the neighborhood node (for cable) or between the head end and the DSLAM (DSL) simply doesn't exist to cover even the 3-4Mb/sec that Netflix needs. Does. Not. Exist. Will not exist without a massive change to the infrastructure which will likely take a very long time to build out, if it is ever done.

      Just one of the nasty little downsides to IP TV.

    48. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by Solandri · · Score: 1

      Good point, the free market can sort this out. I'll just dump comcast and sign up with my local dial up. That'll show them.

      I don't know why so many people insist on calling government-mandated monopolies or duopolies like Comcast a free market. If anything, they're a textbook example of how government can screw up a free market in the name of some other good. The local governments artificially limited the market for these services to one or two suppliers under the misguided belief that if they didn't do so, companies wouldn't build out the necessary infrastructure, and wouldn't cover the lower income areas.

      Back before the courts overturned the FCC requirement that phone companies lease their lines to anyone offering DSL service, I could shop around for DSL service from a dozen or so different companies. All had different features, rates, customer service, guarantees, and prices. That was the closest thing we've had to a free market in network service.

      After a lot of discussion with people from across the political spectrum, the best solution IMHO would be to treat network bandwidth like a public utility. A single company contracts with the government to wire up your hose and the neighborhood. But they are prohibited from providing Internet service themselves. All they can do is lease their lines (at rates monitored and approved by the government) to other companies which provide the actual service. This avoids the waste of wiring up multiple connections to the same house (unless they're different technologies), while preserving competition among service providers.

    49. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by presidenteloco · · Score: 1

      Seriously though.

      Internet = (Road Network)

      Critical infrastructure moving information (stuff) around the country and world.

      Do you want it neutral or discriminating against some traffic in favor of other traffic?

      --

      Where are we going and why are we in a handbasket?
    50. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by raw-sewage · · Score: 1

      Another "me too" post: I live in the city of Chicago, and I have exactly two options for consumer-grade wired Internet access: AT&T DSL, and Comcast.

      Some parts of the city have more options (e.g., WOW and RCN), but not me.

    51. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by MoonBuggy · · Score: 1

      Overselling doesn't mean they won't give you what's in the contract, nor that they don't have the capacity to do so, it just means that they don't have the capacity to give everyone that. It's a gamble, but usually a worthwhile one. As the article I linked above put it:

      Imagine we didn’t “oversell” at all. We still offer 20GB of disk space and 1TB of bandwidth on our $7.95/month plan because that’s what the competition has forced us to offer. 1TB of bandwidth is about an average of 3Mbs. 3Mbs for a month costs us about $90/month. The 20GB of disk space actually costs us about $200 (BELIEVE IT OR NOT!), because of the level of availability and backups we provide. So, we’d be losing about $200 up front and $82 / month on each and every customer!

      And, all in the name of not “overselling”, our disk arrays would sit 98% empty and our network pipes 1% full! [...] But with us, you really CAN use all the stuff we’re offering. You won’t be disabled for it. You won’t have to wait. Your performance won’t suffer. It’s just a good thing for us there’s a difference between being able to use something and actually using it!

      “But what if, let’s just say, everybody DID use it one day? Just WHAT IF? Then you’re screwed, eh?! Then the house of cards all comes crashing down around this charade of a pyramid scheme scam!!”

      That’s true. I guess it’s a good thing we live in this universe, where we have the law of large numbers, and not in your universe where ANYTHING THAT CAN HAPPEN, DOES!!!

      The prices are probably a bit dated, but the point stands.

    52. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by Radical+Moderate · · Score: 1

      Pretty much everywhere? I just checked, not to my house.

      --
      Never let a lack of data get in the way of a good rant.
    53. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by MoonBuggy · · Score: 1

      Interesting post. I'm no expert on network design, so I'm quite happy to defer to your judgement on congestion. Out of interest, what kind of overselling ratios are reasonable? I've been told that UK ISPs operate anywhere between 30:1 and 100:1.

      I quite agree with you that the telcos are just out for all they can squeeze from us, but do you really think per-GB charges are a bad thing in themselves, or is it more the potential for abuse that's the issue? I'm of the opinion that a published limit based simply on (total monthly backbone transfer capacity)/(number of users), perhaps with an extra multiplier to account for those users who don't consume their total allowance, would be more sensible and more user friendly than the current method of selling "unlimited" and complaining when the users go over 10% of that.

    54. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by raw-sewage · · Score: 1

      The overselling of bandwidth, however, is necessary to make remotely efficient use of the infrastructure. The vast majority of net use is burst-based, so it's a huge waste to pay for the full 10Mbps of capacity for every user - just look at the prices on a leased line if you want to see how much that'd actually cost. Even at peak time, nowhere near 100% of customers are using their lines at 100% capacity.

      Who says the infrastructure needs be used efficiently?

      Besides, if there was more competition for last-mile connectivity, we'd have 10x the number of providers, meaning, 10x the infrastructure. Sure, the usage of all that combined infrastructure would be "inefficient", but it wouldn't have to be so oversold, because there's the same number of customers spread out over more lines.

      As someone else mentioned, fiber, aka "the infrastructure", is cheap. It's getting the rights to bury the fiber that's expensive. And I wonder if that's because so many communities have granted monopoly status to last-mile providers like Comcast?

    55. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except it isn't "unlimited access". On the Internet, the scarce resource is bandwidth - and you are charged appropriately for it. The thing is, however, that ISP business models are based on customers having a 10% or less link utilization. So they put on a secondary cap whereby you are sold, say, 1MiB/sec, but you can't use more than 250GiB/mo. That 250GiB/mo cap is actually a 100MiB/sec cap, but it's over a longer period. So what it really means is that you are being sold a 100MiB/sec avg, 1MiB/sec peak connection, which honestly makes much more sense than an arbitrary 250GiB cap.

      The big problem, however, is that last-mile telecom is a political nightmare and getting any sort of upgrades done there is nigh-impossible. Wired providers don't want to spend money upgrading networks that they can just cap and extract profits from. They also don't want people wiring up their own fiber networks, so they have franchise agreements with the local governments they serve to keep them from allowing competing networks to build out in their home turf. Wireless providers have to get spectrum and regulatory clearance from the FCC to build a tower. They also have to deal with people who think cellphone towers cause cancer and hold up or even destroy proposals to build new transmitters. We need to remove the barriers to network growth or we're going to face more and more anti-NN bullshit.

    56. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by cpu6502 · · Score: 1

      NOT physically impossible. Where I like (and parents live) BGE and PPL merely supply the lines. The source for the electricity is wherever you choose. The same could be true for the internet where Comcast provides the line, and you can choose any ISP you want.

      Or better yet: Let the government lay 50-or-so fiber optics (in a single 1cm thick cable) and then just lease those lines one-by-one to whoever wishes to market. Then customers would have upto 50 companies to choose for their ISPs. This would be similar to how government provides the roads, and customers choose to drive any company car they desire.

      --
      My AC stalker: " I personally agree with your posts most of the time, but that won't keep me from modding you troll"
    57. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by luther349 · · Score: 1

      oh i agree. but the sad part voip uses upstream not downstream. so a movie and voip shouldn't lag. its the weak upstream.

    58. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by cpu6502 · · Score: 1

      that franchise is NOT exclusive. Any other company can come in and establish a franchise to provide service

      Not true.
      At least not true where I live. Other companies are forbidden from entering and even when the City government tried to create its own Public CATV/ISP company, Comcast sued and won, claiming they had an exclusive franchise per contract. Which they did.

      Now in theory somebody like Cox could win the contract when it expires (every five years) but in reality the politicians like the free money Comcast hands them. So Comcast always wins the bid.

      --
      My AC stalker: " I personally agree with your posts most of the time, but that won't keep me from modding you troll"
    59. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by MoonBuggy · · Score: 1

      OK, last-mile fiber might be cheap enough to 'waste' by underutilising it (if the monopoly status was removed), but that just shifts the issue to the backbone connections (which is more what I was talking about anyway, although I admit that 'interfering with your neighbour's Skype call' isn't relevant in that case). Transcontinental or transoceanic fiber is, to my knowledge, still bloody expensive and thus an ISP's allocation is heavily oversold against end-user connections. Then again, I suppose that with increased last-mile competition, local caching at the ISP could be used to reduce backbone load somewhat.

    60. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by DocSavage64109 · · Score: 1

      Wait, you're refuting the parent post with information that backs his argument?

    61. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This needs regulating. Yes, that "evil R-word".

      ISP's should be regulated to have two types of pricing plans:
      1 - Metered bandwidth rate: This would be similar to current access plans, allowing "unlimited" access at a given rate of speed. As much data as you can squeeze through the pipe at the speed cap.
      2 - Metered download data: This would allow per-byte (MB, GB, TB, whatever) charges, but with no artificial speed cap. As fast as your line can handle, but you pay for every last piece of it.

      There should be no allowance for the combination of both metering methods.

    62. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      With this new NN stuff, you might see that back and it would be in their interests to do it. It's the easiest way for them to blow off the FCC in this matter.

    63. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by Grishnakh · · Score: 2

      NOT physically impossible. Where I like (and parents live) BGE and PPL merely supply the lines. The source for the electricity is wherever you choose.

      Wrong. You obviously don't understand how electric power generation and transmission works. It's not like some pipe you can stick electrons into, and they come out on the other side; it's a grid, and it has to be actively managed through direct control of the generators to maintain line voltage as demand fluctuates. It's not like you can choose to get your electrons from power plant A instead of power plant B.

      The same could be true for the internet where Comcast provides the line, and you can choose any ISP you want.

      What really is the difference between the ISP and the line provider? All I want is a high-bandwidth connection to the internet. What else does an "ISP" do for you besides that? Provide email? Big deal, I get that for free from Google, and a lot better than any ISP-provided crap. Why do I need some middleman between my line provider and the internet?

      Or better yet: Let the government lay 50-or-so fiber optics (in a single 1cm thick cable) and then just lease those lines one-by-one to whoever wishes to market. Then customers would have upto 50 companies to choose for their ISPs. This would be similar to how government provides the roads, and customers choose to drive any company car they desire.

      And who gets to maintain that fiber when there's a problem with it? If we're going to have the government lay the connections, then why not just let the government be the ISP too? BTW, laying 50 fibers to every house isn't exactly cheap. Yes, a lot of the cost is in the digging and laying the cable, but the fiber itself isn't so cheap that you can run that much dark fiber everywhere, at taxpayer expense. People are already whining about government spending on every little thing (but curiously overlooking things like big expensive wars and bloated out-of-control entitlements), they're certainly not going to stand for that.

      The best thing to do is to make data connections a public utility, just like power and water. Have private companies operate this stuff, and ONLY this stuff (not also provide content), and be strictly regulated by local government, just like your local electricity, natural gas, or water/sewer company is. It's worked fine for those services for decades.

      The problem in this country is that we don't have any anti-trust laws (not that we bother to enforce, anyway), and companies are growing far, far too large and getting involved in too many different things. We already saw what a disaster that causes in the real estate market. Companies need to be kept smaller and more focused, even if that means having the government preventing them from getting too big and forcing them to split up if they do.

    64. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by DocSavage64109 · · Score: 1

      I see your point, but an even fairer option would be to charge everyone according to a flat maintenance fee plus, their usage, and a fair profit, much like how gas or electricity is billed. This would not only help lower bills for everyone who uses the internet less, but will reduce wasteful traffic, like illegal bittorrenting, which should free up a fair bit of capacity.

    65. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by cbhacking · · Score: 1

      How many of those are just re-selling other company's offerings? For a while here we could get DSL via Qwest or Verizon, but the Verizon was just re-sold Qwest.

      That said, I suppose I'm lucky to have three options, sort of:

      Comcast, which becomes unusable under weekend congestion.
      Clear, which usally works at least 22 hours a day (or 5 of any 6 hours I'm at my home computer)
      Qwest, which won't provide fiber-to-the-door here but will happily charge as much as FiOS for something that's not too much worse (~8 of a nominal 12 Mbps, with ~860 Kbps upload).

      I'm in Seattle, a few minutes from Microsoft, Amazon, and a bunch of other tech companies.

      --
      There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
    66. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by seebs · · Score: 1

      They need to do traffic shaping because different kinds of traffic have different requirements. My netflix streaming video doesn't need much bandwidth, but suffers horribly if that bandwidth is too erratic. My torrent can use all the bandwidth there is, but I don't care whether it goes in fits and starts.

      I wouldn't mind at all some kind of deal with a low "guaranteed" bandwidth amount (you can always get that much) and a high "maximum" bandwidth amount (which you may not get). But ultimately... As long as bandwidth is a finite resource, things like traffic-shaping, and blocking bad actors, are crucial.

      Think about a DoS attack. Do you want your ISP to be able to block that traffic, rather than delivering it all down your pipe to your router so you can filter it yourself? I sure do. But by filtering a DoS attack, while not filtering my Usenet feed, they are not being "neutral".

      --
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    67. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by shentino · · Score: 1

      Business doesn't even WANT to compete.

      We had a perfect solution: Municipal internet where the local government owns the pipes and the ISPs compete for access to it.

      In fact, Monticello was on track to doing exactly this when they got sued to a halt by TDS while they marched on with the same network they stopped the city from building.

    68. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 1

      Isn't a T1 only something like 1.5 megs? Even if it's a higher quality 1.5 megs it's still 1.5 megs.

    69. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      Does your contract include an SLA that specifies you will receive that bandwidth? Because if it does, and you're not getting it, then you can sue them pretty easily, and you'll win.

    70. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 1

      You're either implying that a free market can never exist or that Microsoft never had a monopoly or did the government somehow stop Apple and others from competing with Microsoft?

      People have a free choice between mobile phone providers and the US still has an awful over priced mobile phone market.

    71. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 1

      People have multiple choices in mobile phone services and yet the US still has an over priced awful market. No company actually tries to offer anything better. It's easier if they're all a bit shit and the people bounce back and forth between companies.

      Secondly how could a free market ever be possible when not anyone can place their own phone lines to provide DSL? I'm not talking about cost but the lack of actual space to put up your own poles / lines or dig your own trenches to lay lines?

      It's for the reason you can't realistically have free market water, electricity, phone services or broadband. Unless of course you make the people that lay the lines open the lines to anyone willing to provide DSL.

      Companies don't want that because they don't want to just own lines that ISPs rent from them. They want to control everything and if they do you won't ever have a free market and in fact I'd say a free market is a myth. Unless there is some logical government regulation to ensure companies play nicely together then it won't happen. If that government regulation exists and it in fact increases competition then is it really a free market?

    72. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by KingMotley · · Score: 1

      I see you could not find one either. Considerung that currently I have at least 4 broadband choices, I find it hard to believe most don't have two.

    73. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by drew30319 · · Score: 1

      I see you could not find one either. Considerung that currently I have at least 4 broadband choices, I find it hard to believe most don't have two.

      Actually, from the first site returned by the search: "The FCC says that broadband is available via DSL to 79 percent of local telephone company subscribers, and via cable modem to 93 percent of cable television subscribers." It appears that around 20% would not have DSL as a (presumably secondary) broadband option.

      I live in Atlanta and have a few options for broadband but realize that many people are not as fortunate. Here's a study which finds that at the state level about 1/2 have a duopoly and some states arguably have a monopoly: http://www.georgia.gov/vgn/images/portal/cit_11783501/151286677State_of_Broadband_Competition_in_America_2010.pdf

      --
      JAGga.me ----> Producing video games addressing emotional health and wellness issues affecting teens.
    74. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      Another "me too" post: I live in the city of Chicago, and I have exactly two options for consumer-grade wired Internet access: AT&T DSL, and Comcast.

      Some parts of the city have more options (e.g., WOW and RCN), but not me.

      Yeah. I have two as well: AT&T U-Verse and Comcast-down-to-the-depths-of-Hades.

      Guess which one I have.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    75. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      but will reduce wasteful traffic, like illegal bittorrenting

      I'm pretty sure that it will reduce legal torrenting more than it will illegal torrenting.

      This is especially true if they hit you both on the up and on the down.

      Think about it. For anything legal, there is always a simple alternative to torrenting. It is only the illegal stuff where there often isnt a simple alternative.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    76. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by Kpau · · Score: 1

      I have two choices... but one is Hughes Satellite (which isn't a choice if you have any clue) and the other is a mom'n'pop wireless ISP (which is rather fragile). My useless land line caps out at 26.4kbps (yes, KBPS) because the CO equipment and the stuff in between hasn't been updated since the 1980s. There is no cable at all in my area. Do I live in a wilderness? No, I live a couple of miles from a major Intel Corp. campus in a mixed suburban/rural use area. Verizon steadfastly refused to even provide me ISDN (required by state law)... and recently they've sold the whole thing to Frontier and skedaddled for Brave New Lands.

    77. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by bmajik · · Score: 0

      In my small town (Fargo, ND), _at my house_, I have the following internet options available to me:

      1) cable modem form local cable monopoly
      2) qwest dsl, with qwest as the ISP
      3) qwest DSL, with a competing ISP
      4) qwest POTS, with any number of local or national dial-ISPs to serve me
      5) I29 metro-area wireless
      6) DirecWay Satellite internet service
      7) Verizon's wireless data technology (is this EVDO? or something else now?)
      8) GSM/GPRS
      9) pringles can to a friend
      10) HFLink / AX.25

      I left out avian carriers. And in your metro area, you have options available to you that I don't list (WiMax/Clearwire, LTE, FIOS, various municipal broadband initiatives, etc). Heck, in different parts of town, the options change (DSL through a CLEC becomes available, for instance)

      Of all of the possible "utilities", IP transit has more competeting providers available to me _at my house_ than most states or whole regions have for something like electricity. And the technololg behind most of the things I list didn't exist 25 years ago. IP transit to the home is one of the last places i want regulation, zillions of random taxes, and the innovation impediments that usually come with quasi-monopoly status.

      The myth of the "last mile monopoly" is that -- a myth, at least for IP transit. There _are_ options. But few of them are "full speed, full freedom, cheapeast price". I think that is the basic complaint here, and it comes off as whining.

      I've settled with a "less speed, more freedom, competitive price" option myself. Maybe your priorities are different? In almost everywhere in the US -- you can choose something else.

      (I live 12 blocks from Qwest's CO for the town. There's a chance I could get a DS3 or metro ethernet or something to my house if i was rich enough...)

      --
      My opinions are my own, and do not necessarily represent those of my employer.
    78. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by hairyfeet · · Score: 2

      Well if we are all gonna play anecdote roulette, here are my "choices" for broadband: Cableco at $106 with a 36GB cap, DSL at a max speed of 300Kb when the stars align (actual speed? 80Kb to 160Kb depending on the time, and slow enough it is often faster to drive the 20 miles round trip to my place and download drivers than to wait for them at a customer's house) at $98, or a WISP at 200Kb with a cap of 25Gb,and if you try to use more than say a half a GB in a day they will automatically say "you must have a virus because normal people don't use that much" and cut you off. Whee! What wonderful choices we have!

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    79. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by KingMotley · · Score: 1

      Well, those numbers show at least 73% of all US homes are covered by at least 2 broadband options, not including cellular, broadband over power lines, and/or broadband from satellites.

      "most of us do not have multiple options" is thoroughly debunked. Sorry you live in a shit hole, and you didn't check your internet connectivity options before you moved there. Sucks to be you. Move somewhere else.

    80. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And who voted politicians into office that voted on the exclusive video franchises allowing a single provider to have a monopoly in your area?

    81. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We have this fundamental problem where these companies have oversold the bandwidth, and the only solution they're willing to consider is to invent rules that will give you less of what you paid for. Because any other solution would force them to spend their outrageous profits on adding capacity to their network, instead of giving their executives fat bonuses.

      FTFY.

    82. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      We're talking about broadband here, so #4 doesn't count. You can't watch YouTube videos on dial-up. Most people don't even have landlines any more.

      As for the rest of them, the wireless ones are generally expensive as hell, and have small data caps.

      #3 is a great example of why regulation is needed. Why does Qwest DSL cost more with a competing ISP? Because of a lack of regulation.

      #9 is probably against the terms of service of any ISP.

      You argue for "competition", but you're listing a lot of options that are expensive as hell, while people in more civilized countries (Korea, Japan, European countries) have far, far cheaper broadband (and mobile phone) rates than we do, even with all their "evil" government regulation.

      The myth of the "last mile monopoly" is that -- a myth, at least for IP transit. There _are_ options. But few of them are "full speed, full freedom, cheapeast price". I think that is the basic complaint here, and it comes off as whining.

      So I guess you think it's "whining" if people in industrialized countries expect uncontaminated running water and electric power than doesn't have rolling blackouts every day? Communication is vital to a democracy, and an expected service in this day an age (just like telephone service was 25+ years ago, and mail service was 150+ years ago), and expecting people to pay top dollar for it when it's easily possible to deliver it for extremely cheap prices is nothing but corporate fascism.

    83. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by BoberFett · · Score: 1

      Government discriminates against certain traffic all the time. Or have you never heard of HOV lanes?

    84. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by BoberFett · · Score: 1

      In which case Net Neutrality is the wrong answer to the wrong question.

      The problem is not that all packets should be treated equally, it's that physical lines should not be under the same ownership as content.

      Leave it to government to layer bad laws on top of a bad system rather than simply fix the initial problem.

    85. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by oatworm · · Score: 1

      Plus it's far more expensive than DSL or cable broadband because it's a dedicated circuit to the phone company's CO. Where I live, a data T1 is somewhere in the $400/month range.

    86. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by Estanislao+Mart�nez · · Score: 1

      I'm of the opinion that a published limit based simply on (total monthly backbone transfer capacity)/(number of users), perhaps with an extra multiplier to account for those users who don't consume their total allowance, would be more sensible and more user friendly than the current method of selling "unlimited" and complaining when the users go over 10% of that.

      I don't think your proposed metric is a fair statement of the service that a properly run ISP would provide you. See, the point of overselling in a correctly run ISP is that you can regularly get maximum speeds that are higher than uplink/subscribers. It's not unreasonable for a properly run ISP to advertise the maximum bandwidth that customers can achieve.

      It's only when you get into improperly run ISPs advertising this number that things get problematic. But it sounds like the right thing to do is to allow ISPs to advertise subscriber maximum speeds only if they meet certain technical standards; e.g., uplink utilization at peak hours falls below a certain threshold, like 85%.

    87. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by BeanThere · · Score: 1

      I presume this is an off-topic discussion, because so-called 'Net Neutrality' is not going to ring in an era of lower prices and increased competition.

      Statistically, the US always has, and continues to place quite well in both pricing and bandwidth on broadband options, certainly always on par with its peer economies, so it's intriguing how much Americans complain.

      There really is no "problem" waiting to be solved by 'Net Neutrality', and handing the power to regulate over to government is just one more nail in the economy's coffin.

    88. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by Estanislao+Mart�nez · · Score: 1

      Who says the infrastructure needs be used efficiently?

      My wallet does!

      Besides, if there was more competition for last-mile connectivity, we'd have 10x the number of providers, meaning, 10x the infrastructure.

      No, we'd have 10x the number of providers, each one with 0.1x the amount of infrastructure on average, for a total of 1x the infrastructure. It boils down to the fact that providers that can provide the same service level without using as much infrastructure will be able to outcompete the ones who overbuild.

      Dude, this is not rocket science. A good ISP will observe how much bandwidth its users demand on the aggregate, and provide that much plus a bit extra on the uplinks. That way they can provide the bandwidth their users actually demand at the lowest possible cost. If the aggregate demand grows over time, then more capacity can be built when it crosses above a threshold.

      The problem isn't overselling. The problem is monopolistic ISPs that have no incentive to provide the bandwidth that their customers demand, and thus deliberately run their networks badly.

    89. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by MoonBuggy · · Score: 1

      I was talking about total monthly transfer limits, not continuous bandwidth limits. I'm well aware that bandwidth is oversold to allow higher burst rates, and I fully support this - I was the one who made the GP post in favour of overselling.

      I think that advertising unlimited transfer, unless you're damn sure that you can provide it to the proportion of customers who choose to use that full allowance, is misleading. That was the basis for my suggestion - work out the total monthly transfer capability of your uplink, divide by number of customers, and then multiply by a factor of two or three to account for the fact that some customers won't use their full allowance. That gives you a reasonable basis to say 300GB/month on your 10Mbps connection, or whatever, rather than saying "unlimited" and then using shady backhanded tactics to keep customers using a minimal fraction of their total theoretical allowance.

    90. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by protektor · · Score: 1

      There is no hard and fast number that you can use. It entirely depends on your customers usage habits. Typically you can start at a 20:1 or 30:1 and see what your traffic levels look like at peak times, and then go from there, leaving yourself a small unused overhead (I used to try and leave about 10-20% never used for just in case) in case of any sudden strangeness, or flash traffic, or hot streaming events that come up. If your traffic levels are peaked and staying slammed for hours at a time then it is way past time to upgrade and get more/bigger connections from a backbone provider.

      It also helps to target your advertising to various groups to spread out your peak times. Target businesses/telecommuters for more day time traffic. Target retired people for afternoon traffic. Home users for at night. Things like that. So you are spreading your user base out and not having every single customer hit at the 6-11pm time frame.

      There is more to managing an ISP network than just making sure bits move around.

    91. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by protektor · · Score: 1

      Yes and there all kinds of tricks you can do to help bring down the traffic level going off network to a lower level. Transparent web caching, transparent audio and video caching, getting CDNs to co-locate on your network. The more content you can get closer to the customer facing edge of the network the better the network will perform, and the better the customer experience.

      There are other tricks you can do, but that is starting to get in to the area of actual network consulting that I do. ;)

    92. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by drew30319 · · Score: 1

      Sorry you live in a shit hole, and you didn't check your internet connectivity options before you moved there. Sucks to be you. Move somewhere else.

      Hmm, very interesting. While it appears you read my post, apparently I wasn't clear when I said "I live in Atlanta and have a few options for broadband but realize that many people are not as fortunate." Perhaps if I clarify:

      Me live in big city. Big city has options. Options = good. Me understand that other people exist. Me also understand that others no have options. No options = bad.

      In any case I might take you up on your suggestion to move somewhere else; if nothing else I'd be interested to see if you're as charming a neighbor as you are a commenter.

      "I did point you in the right direction. You are just are too lazy to use google."

      --
      JAGga.me ----> Producing video games addressing emotional health and wellness issues affecting teens.
    93. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by bmajik · · Score: 1

      You argue for "competition", but you're listing a lot of options that are expensive as hell, while people in more civilized countries (Korea, Japan, European countries) have far, far cheaper broadband (and mobile phone) rates than we do, even with all their "evil" government regulation.

      The cost of living in the US, plus paying top dollar for its sub-standard broadband, is still very competitive with all of the places you mention. Which is amazing since we subsidize all of those nations military security with the worlds largest "defense" budget.

      Communication is vital to a democracy, and an expected service in this day an age

      One reason why the USA is not a democracy is because peddling to what people want others to give them is toxic to a society.

      expecting people to pay top dollar for it when it's easily possible to deliver it for extremely cheap prices is nothing but corporate fascism

      Why aren't you providing this cheap fast broadband to people then?

      --
      My opinions are my own, and do not necessarily represent those of my employer.
    94. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by Freddybear · · Score: 1

      "Logical government regulation"?

      Don't make me laugh.

    95. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by KingMotley · · Score: 1

      You were clear. Perhaps you didn't understand that I don't give a crap about YOU.

    96. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by stdarg · · Score: 1

      The government also makes a lot of money off of roads by playing with the laws. Speed traps, traffic cameras, etc.

      Sir you were downloading at 16mbps, that's irresponsible and endangers your neighborhood node! $165 plus $110 court costs.

    97. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      You're obviously a Glen Beck-worshipping moron. I've had it with trying to reason with your dogma.

    98. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by bmajik · · Score: 1

      Suppose for the sake of argument that I didn't think Beck was a self-serving blowhard asshole (Incidentally, I do); what difference would who I like or dislike make?

      I don't see that you've even _started_ to try and reason with me at all, much less my "dogma", much less to the extent that you should tire of it already.

      Do you get this bent out of shape everytime someone disagrees with you? Is there a newsletter of yours that is prerequisite material I should have already covered so you don't have to bother to support or justify any of your spew?

      Do you actually disagree with my original claims?
      #1: IP transit is the _most_ competitive home "service" most people receive
      #2: most of the technology used in last-mile IP delivery did not exist even 25 years ago
      #3: it is possible for most people to get the right mix of speed and features -- at a price
      #4: the fact that there are so many options at so many price points suggests that there IS a market at play here, government collusion notwithstanding

      Again -- if amazing broadband is so cheap to provide, why aren't you providing it? It's a serious question. I figure with a few days of reading, I could brush up on a few things and be running a multi-homed ISP. I could make a few arrangements with area businesses and home owners to put p2p optical ethernet links between them and me, and then cover their sites with wifi or wimax. I could get say 100 subscribers pretty easily, and we'll just ignore the startup costs since no company ever has to turn a profit these days.

      Now I've got 100 subscribers * $xx revenue stream per month. What are my costs? Upstream and electricity, right? Support costs are zero -- I've replaced all the humans in my operation with tiny shell scripts (as the saying goes...)

      This is just my dumb slashdot idea for a small broadband provider. I could do it in a month. I'm sure your idea is better. Why aren't you making an ass-ton of money on it? If there is so much evil corporate greed out there sucking money from people like a vampire, why aren't you in on the take? Better yet, why aren't you doing the ethical thing and offering better service for less money and _still_ raking in the profits?

      My very first job was to re-write the C++ billing system for a national dial-up ISP. So I have at least one anecdotal data point about life running consumer IP transit, and how you make money...

      --
      My opinions are my own, and do not necessarily represent those of my employer.
    99. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by chucklebutte · · Score: 0

      I live in central CA, in the foot hills. We have a tier3 ISP that gets their pipe from TW. Terrible DSL we have here. In the closest town (Fresno) they have AT&T DSL, AT&T Uverse or Comcrap cable. No real choice, either AT&T, AT&T or Comcrap... Since 99 when Fresno got broadband, we had AT&T or Roadrunner which became TW, which became Comcrap. Man wow so much competition! I can't even decide...

    100. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're still a right wing nut Bober, but I think this is right. Does Net Neutrality (in any incarnation) actually prevent Comcast from hosting its own video content within Comcast's intranet (which your cable modem is part of) and significantly throttling all content from the rest of the internet? Isn't this what is already happening to Netflix - pay a premium to colocate, or go the same bottlenecked speed to Comcast customers as the rest of the internet?

      They're equally blocking ALL internet content, except the big companies who can pay to colocate. And I'm sure if you ask them about their promised speeds, they'll coincidentally point you to one of those colocated businesses to demonstrate how fast your internet is.

    101. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      Absolutely. But that's not going anywhere, not to mention that it comes with its own set of peculiar problems. See the British railway system, for example.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    102. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by niftymitch · · Score: 1

      Missing in all of this is the reality that in the vast majority of this country
      there is no competition.

      I live in the heart of Silicon Valley and there are
      only two sets of wires into a home... POT and
      Cable Coax.

      DSL over the POT lines is a joke. Error rates are
      high and data rates low. Large percentages of the
      service areas do not qualify for DSL data rates much
      better than a voice line because they are too far from
      a central office.

      Comcast sells a triple package here. Telephone,
      Data and Video(all digital now). They directly compete
      with the phone company. They now directly compete
      with NetFlix and offer their own video library on demand.

      Yes they need to do traffic shaping. Yes they need
      to disclose their biases. No bias will be neutral.

      As for traffic shaping, P2P sharing as used by NBC
      video services, and other P2P technology will be key,
      even Skype uses proxies.

      There is however technology ready and waiting in this
      old coaxial cable world. Technology such that there
      is NO reason for digital dropout for most services
      including video, voice and data.

      A coaxial cable will service many RF channels that can
      be decoded in isolation. Thus there is no reason for
      Comcast to traffic limit NetFlix when they have reserved
      a full set of RF channels for their own video services.

      I do not trust Comcast to be neutral because they are
      not neutral now. They have reserved the vast majority
      of the bandwidth of my coaxial cable drop for their own products
      and now with Xfinity they are dipping into the TCP/IP bandwidth
      pool to serve video in direct competition with other video
      services from youtube to netflix ....

      Fiber optics to the neighborhood might help if there was
      enough bandwidth behind it. FO like coax can also
      deliver multiple domains of data... the decoding loading and
      unloading of these domains is not neutral.... and is not
      part of the discussion.

      Some of this will come to a head with the deployment
      of IPv6.

      --
      Truth is stranger than fiction, but it is because Fiction is obliged to stick to possibilities; Truth isn't. Mark Twain.
    103. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      France's speedy broadband is censored now, and as for Canada, at least in Ontario the options don't seem to be any better than the more built-up areas of the States. I have an uncle who lives in a rural area of Ontario, about a 30 minute drive from a major built-up town, and can't get anything but dial-up...cell phones barely even work out there.

      And with a few exceptions (Mobilicity, Teksavvy - both of which are only available in select areas) anything you can buy from the telecoms is total shit: Metered mobile data, capped broadband, all the usual garbage short of Comcast's Bittorrent sabotage.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    104. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by cpu6502 · · Score: 1

      Yes I can in fact choose where I get my electricity. BGE or PPL or GreenPower or SolarCoop or TMInuclear or whoever.

      why not just let the government be the ISP too?

      That's a monopoly. A pro-choice solution would be better so customers can choose their providers for internet, just as they currently can with electricity and phone.

      --
      My AC stalker: " I personally agree with your posts most of the time, but that won't keep me from modding you troll"
    105. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by gnapster · · Score: 1

      Good point, the free market can sort this out. I'll just dump comcast and sign up with my local dial up. That'll show them.

      I have done this, since Satellite is my only alternative to Comcast and it is even more expensive (Right now, Comcast's best offer in my neighborhood is 5Mbps for $60/mo). I get my broadband fix at work and McDonald's.

    106. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by gnapster · · Score: 1

      I'm looking to buy. What ISPs serve your swamp?

    107. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by sac13 · · Score: 1

      In the mean time, what does a majority of the country do - since most of us do not have multiple options for broadband?

      Where I am, the choices are limited because of government granted monopolies. And, a lot of other places don't have options because the amount of regulation and potential regulation pushes the costs too high for anyone to waste their money trying to offer something different.

      Name an industry that you have problems with that isn't regulated. Why is it the industries that people continuously complain about are the one's that are the most regulated? Is that just a coincidence?

    108. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by sac13 · · Score: 1

      Exactly. And since having a truly free market for broadband is physically impossible (or at best, extremely infeasible) for the exact same reason it's impossible for electric and water providers, we have to go with government regulation.

      Why is it impossible? Because the government is already involved and has pushed up the barriers to entry so high the big players in any of those areas get either explicit or de facto monopolies? We talk about the cost of running lines or pipes, but that's an easy thing to take care of. It's the uncertain and potentially huge cost of "regulation" that keeps competition out.

      When someone invents a way to deliver broadband over wormholes, THEN we can think about having a free market in broadband service.

      No, we can't. Since wormholes might cause cancer in California, they'll have to be regulated. So, you're stuck with the same big guys the government has chosen to be your monopolies.

    109. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by sac13 · · Score: 1

      US ISPs are doing their jobs properly, it's just that they define "doing their job properly" as maximizing profits. They don't actually need to serve the customer because there's almost no real competition.

      And, where I'm at, that's because of government granted monopolies...

    110. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by sac13 · · Score: 1

      In China, the free Internet died because the government didn't want the users to watch Tiananmen videos. In the US, the free Internet will die because corporations don't want the users to watch content they're not getting paid for.

      And, the US government won't use the power that people are wanting to give them to shut down what it doesn't like?

      I'm sure our government is so much more benevolent than China's, though. So, we're probably ok, right?

    111. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by gryf · · Score: 1
      I'm sorry you live out in the boonies, but don't ask me to subsidize your youtube.

      I've never known anyone who lived within ten miles of a POP unable to choose their internet provider. Since most of the country lives in cities or their suburbs rather than out in the country, I doubt your situation is common. My mom lives in a very rural area of Oregon, she has at least three choices for broadband.

      --

      #-#
      Ad Astra Per Aspera
      A rough road leads to the stars
    112. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by gryf · · Score: 1

      It's hardly impossible. When my parents left Comcast for Verizon they simply let Verizon run fiber up to the house. Ta Da! Choice in the market right up to the last mile.

      --

      #-#
      Ad Astra Per Aspera
      A rough road leads to the stars
    113. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by Coren22 · · Score: 1

      It mostly depends on area. Many local governments (or apartment complexes I have heard) make agreements with a single broadband company. In my area it is FiOS, numerous DSL providers, or Comcrap, so you can probably guess which I went with. I love FiOS, they don't stop you from doing anything, and symmetric 25Mb is not too shabby for the price.

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
    114. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by gryf · · Score: 1

      Bingo! In practice regulating markets limits competition by making the barrier for entry higher. Look at car manufacturing, by constantly raising standards for safety and efficiency they make it impossible for new companies to break in. When Toyota first entered the US market, they're product was drek, but soon customers began looking for the one thing that Toyota was better at: efficiency. Then came consumer interest in safety and Volvos became popular.
      With ever increasing mandates, new manufacturers must be incredibly good at all things to get in. It's not a matter of having cheap cars kill people, even Toyota has problems, but by allowing the market to choose the winner consumers get a larger voice in who is allowed to make a car.

      --

      #-#
      Ad Astra Per Aspera
      A rough road leads to the stars
    115. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by Coren22 · · Score: 1

      Anne Arundel County, Maryland. I at least can tell you that there is some selection here.

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
    116. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by Coren22 · · Score: 1

      This specific problem was recently brought up in a recent /. article.

      http://slashdot.org/story/10/12/14/1335235/Comcast-Accused-of-Congestion-By-Choice

      Netflix does not have a server on the Comcast network (competition to Comcast's TV service) so they have to deal with the horrid peering connections Comcast has.

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
    117. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by Coren22 · · Score: 1

      Its like paying for a leased car that includes maintenance, then the dealer just never does maintenance on the car until it dies.

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
    118. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by tepples · · Score: 1

      you live in this neighborhood you get this provider.

      <libertarian>Then choose a different neighborhood.</libertarian>

    119. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by tepples · · Score: 1

      When my parents left Comcast for Verizon they simply let Verizon run fiber up to the house.

      But how did Verizon get the right to run fiber past non-subscribers to reach a subscriber?

    120. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? by FredFredrickson · · Score: 1

      Try the entire north east, anything north of boston.

      --
      Belief? Hope? Preference?The Existential Vortex
  25. Definition vs. Regulation by kc0dby · · Score: 1

    I think the last thing anybody wants is one or more government's interfering with the Internet.

    Perhaps the best solution would just be to define "Internet Access" as a utility that provides unrestricted use of an Internet connection. Just like the power
    company can't introduce fancy tech to prevent me from powering a TV if it does something the electric company doesn't like, if I'm paying for a service, I
    should be able to use it as I see fit. I personally think that companies shouldn't be able to advertise a service as "Internet" if they are blocking certain sites,
    certain ports, or other services I may wish to access.

    It is just ridiculous that to be able to connect to something on Port 25, I have to pay twice as much for a "business" account. What is happening here is that
    corporations are trying to "Re-AOL" the Internet so that it conforms to their business models.

    --
    I apparently forgot that sig != uptime...
    1. Re:Definition vs. Regulation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Blocking port 25 on residential internet accounts has nothing to do with "Re-AOL"ing the Internet. It's about stopping a good portion of spam from pwned Windows machines. I'm glad they do it.

    2. Re:Definition vs. Regulation by kc0dby · · Score: 1

      I would have no problem with this if it weren't for the fact that it costs me $30+ a month more to opt out.

      --
      I apparently forgot that sig != uptime...
    3. Re:Definition vs. Regulation by TheGothicGuardian · · Score: 1

      Perhaps the best solution would just be to define "Internet Access" as a utility that provides unrestricted use of an Internet connection.

      Mod this guy up. It's not called buying a car if all you get for your money is a set of tires and a gas cap.

  26. How often do we have to go over this? by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The Internet is not going to remain free, regardless of what happens. Either Telcos and content providers integrate to add value to their commoditized dumb pipes and control where users go through caps and channel pricing, or the government regulates what Telcos and ISPs can and cannot do to users. One is the guaranteed effect of a capitalistic system in a market with very high barriers to entry, the other is the result of a population wanting some input on how a market prone to the creation of monopolies.

    This means that the argument that a lack of regulation is the same as a free system is a flat-out lie. It necessarily implies that corporations will never engage in monopolistic rent-seeking, which is clearly false.

    The only question then is: who gets to control the Internet? A corporation, or a bureaucrat? Furthermore, will control be left to an entity that is guaranteed to create a system that is designed to maximize its profit, or to an entity where the common citizens has even a chance of providing input?

    This doesn't mean that any regulation is good. Some regulation will lead to the same result as no regulation. Some will lead to worse results. But there is at least the chance that it will lead to a better result. What's more, other countries have already shown what kind of regulatory environment is more beneficial to users than the one that currently exists in the US. So it's not that it's hard - it just requires some politicians to be afraid of their constituents.

    Finally, I'd like to point something out that Americans seem to have a hard time understanding: a corporation is not a person. Furthermore, a corporation behaves like a sociopath. This means that things that benefit a corporation are not the same that benefit society as a whole. Remember that next time a corporate lobbyists argues that what's good for them is good for the country.

    --
    Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    1. Re:How often do we have to go over this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess this all boils down to if you think you "as a user" have more influence through the representative process or through your pocketbook as a customer.

      For me that is a very tough question especially considering you may lean one way or the other politically on most issues other than this so then what do you do?

      Why can't we just pass a law that makes it illegal for content providers to call their service "Internet Service" if it is not totally open and available and also force the big telcos to share their backbone.

    2. Re:How often do we have to go over this? by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      It's pretty simple: in a monopolistic environment, you have power only through the representative process. In a free market, you have more power through your pocket book. Identify what type of market you're in, and the decision is easy.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    3. Re:How often do we have to go over this? by nbossett · · Score: 1

      Logical extensions to "common carrier" status would seem to outlaw many/most business abuses without restricting technical mechanisms or preventing innovation.

    4. Re:How often do we have to go over this? by jammer170 · · Score: 1

      Finally, I'd like to point something out that Americans seem to have a hard time understanding: a corporation is not a person. Furthermore, a corporation behaves like a sociopath. This means that things that benefit a corporation are not the same that benefit society as a whole. Remember that next time a corporate lobbyists argues that what's good for them is good for the country.

      Apparently, you don't know many Americans. Most people aren't even aware corporations are equated the rights of a person. The most visible ones who think that are the American government, which I'm going to have to point out something that most non-Americans seem to have a hard time understanding: they are not representative of the general American population.

      I also have to point out that the job of the American government is not the ensure that everything that happens benefits society. The American government guarantees freedom (or is suppose to). That is the basis of the idea that corporations are people. I don't agree with that corporations should be given all rights of a person, but I understand and agree with the foundation of it.

      --
      Remember, you can't look dignified when your having fun! Don't take life too seriously, you'll never get out of it alive
    5. Re:How often do we have to go over this? by protektor · · Score: 1

      The high barriers to entry in the Internet business are totally artificial created by the existing monopolies, the cities and the states. Setting up an ISP is not particularly expensive. Getting through the last mile due to regulations and an unwillingness to open the last mile to serious competition is the problem. Cities are regularly restricting companies from laying any new cable, and the states aren't forcing the cities to change that. The states aren't forcing the telcos to open up the last mile either. That is how Independent ISPs have ended up screwed over the last number of years. Combined with monopolies playing games with pricing and using the other side of the house to prop up their Internet side, and the massive amounts of campaign donations to keep things exactly they way they are. Combined with threats of pulling out or the sky falling if others are allowed to compete with them openly and honestly. I have seen these tactics first hand.

    6. Re:How often do we have to go over this? by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      Setting up an ISP is not particularly expensive.

      Really? Then try setting up an ISP without renting out space on anyone's infrastructure. You need a couple of billion dollars before you even hit the last mile problem.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    7. Re:How often do we have to go over this? by protektor · · Score: 1

      What do you think interconnectivity agreements are between the backbone providers? Why would setting up an ISP be any different than that? Your issue is a non-existent one that is easily dealt with.

    8. Re:How often do we have to go over this? by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      Wow... you are dense, aren't you? In order to have a peering agreement with a provider, you need to be able to accept as much traffic as you send. Which, guess what, needs the same few billion in investment that the peer already has. If you don't, you're hosed. If the backbone provider doesn't want you hooking into their lines (presumably because you're a direct competitor), they won't let you, price be damned. Either way, you pay out the nose. Why? Because the existing telco wants to extract monopoly rents from the market, not the competitive price it might have to settle for if it sells bandwidth to you.

      Tell me, you've never worked in a telcom environment, have you?

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    9. Re:How often do we have to go over this? by sac13 · · Score: 1

      This means that the argument that a lack of regulation is the same as a free system is a flat-out lie. It necessarily implies that corporations will never engage in monopolistic rent-seeking, which is clearly false.

      You do realize that corporations are a creation of government, right? So, unless the government totally gets out of the market, meaning no more such thing as the artificial, government created entities called corporations, you are absolutely correct. We need more regulation because the government has already been too involved. But, where does that end? How much control would you like to give to someone so that they can take care of the problems that they keep creating with the control you give them?

      Name an industry that you have problems with that isn't regulated. Why is it the industries that people continuously complain about are the one's that are the most regulated? Is that just a coincidence?

    10. Re:How often do we have to go over this? by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      Name an industry that you have problems with that isn't regulated.

      Wrong question. There isn't a single industry that isn't regulated. It's all a question of degrees.

      Why is it the industries that people continuously complain about are the one's that are the most regulated? Is that just a coincidence?

      No. It's selection bias. Do you know how much automechanics are regulated? Daycare? Schools?

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
  27. OMG socialism by asamad · · Score: 1

    yeah like your (USA) health system is soooo good for the masses, once corporate greed gets involved forget it.

  28. What alternate theory? Crying socialism? by Sonny+Yatsen · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The crux of John Fund's ENTIRE article is, to paraphrase, "Net Neutrality is bad because it was created by SOCIALISTS! AND MARXISTS! AND THEY DON'T DENY IT!"

    That is, of course, the problem with a lot of the commentary about Net Neutrality (although more on the side against Net Neutrality than for, I've noticed, although maybe that's just my own biases showing). None of the commentary actually address the issues of why Net Neutrality is or isn't necessary. Rather, it devolves into arguments about collateral issues like crying socialism like John Fund does here. He thinks Net Neutrality is bad because a "socialist" came up with it. As if a person's political views will render a person's idea per se invalid.

    There are always those who thinks the way to score political points is to try to fit the word "socialism" as many times as they can into an article and call it an argument.

    --
    My postings are informational and does not constitute legal advice. Act on it at your risk.
    1. Re:What alternate theory? Crying socialism? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      <Hat type="conspiracy">
      control of information is one of the major tenants of communism/socialism...

      </Hat>

    2. Re:What alternate theory? Crying socialism? by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      And this is..worse than the FUD we see from the NN supporters?

      "OMG, COMCAST IS GOING TO CHARGE PEOPLE MORE FOR NETFLIX!" (well, no, they're not)

      "OMG, THE CORPORATIONS WILL CENSOR ME!" (yeah...)

      "Hey, check out this cool make believe graphic I did showing the "private Internet", it looks like a product brochure be sure to show it around all the forums even though it's make believe!"

      Bunch of chicken littleism. Reminds me of the global warming debate. I tend to roll with the bulk of the science saying it is happening, and we are causing it. But chicken littles running around screaming that the Earth is going to end in 40 years if you don't buy a Prius sort of sour people on the issue and give the right wing kooks plenty of room to critisize AGW.

    3. Re:What alternate theory? Crying socialism? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's not a conspiracy theory so much as it's just wrong. Control of information isn't a tenet of socialism, it's a tenet of totalitarianism and/or dictatorship. Now, actually existing socialism in Russia and elsewhere did and does put a lot of effort into controlling information, but no more than non-socialist forms of totalitarianism do.

    4. Re:What alternate theory? Crying socialism? by lwsimon · · Score: 1

      Coming from a libertarian, this annoys the hell out of me as well.

      I'm not opposed to the concept of NN, as much as I question its necessity as legislation.

      --
      Learn about Photography Basics.
    5. Re:What alternate theory? Crying socialism? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seriously man is causing global warming? 0.6C degree increase in 40 years and it is all man doing it? I guess you missed all the scandals where the scientists were caught lying and admitted they were lying and using their positions and friendships to keep all dissenters out of the public eye. Yea that really makes me believe in global warming. I guess climategate and hockey stick graph hoax don't mean much to you.

    6. Re:What alternate theory? Crying socialism? by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      Ahahaha. I also love how the deniers make a mountain out of the email scandal mole hill. Oh no, some scientists did some bad science and some incriminating sounding mails were released, that _totally_ proves the _huge_ body of science wrong!

      Climategate was just a bunch of right wing kooks making a big deal of nothing.

      You guys try to make it more complex than it really is. The greenhouse effect is real, easily provable. It's also provable that we are dumping enormous amounts of human released carbon into the atmosphere. Case closed.

      Now, where there's legitimate debate is how much of an impact is has. I don't think it's going to ruin the planet in 50 years, but it might in 150.

  29. The internet is going to be regulated by SOMEONE. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The internet is a situation that is inherently unstable. If it is not regulated and controlled by the government, it will be regulated and controlled by commercial interests, i.e. ISPs. Nature abhors a vacuum, including a power vacuum, and companies will inherently work to segment the market and charge all the market can bear in any area of endeavor; the internet is no exception to this, and such market segmentation could include paying for access to the wider internet outside of a walled garden; paying for access to specific protocols of communication (i.e. e-mail is extra, gaming is extra, etc.). The nature of the market is such that many consumers are effectively stuck with a monopoly (as there is only one provider of internet services in the area they live), and therefore the free market's "invisible hand" is useless to prevent such actions.

    Why not allow ISPs to do whatever they want? The economic effects would be quite terrible for a lot of other parties. If you had to pay extra money to get access to E-bay, a lot of people wouldn't do it, so charging this fee (though enriching the ISP) would hurt the market and other companies disproportionately. Also, there is a wonderful amount of political discourse and free speech that could be easily stifled.

    I personally would prefer a political appointee at least theoretically on the side of the people controlling the internet, to a company out to squeeze the market for all the wealth that can be extracted from it.

  30. Doesn't the US have consumer-protection laws? by shawnhcorey · · Score: 1

    How can a carrier offer anything but net neutrality? It's the same hardware, it's the same software, therefore it's the same service; the only difference is an artificial one created by the carrier. I don't know about the US, but in my country there are consumer-protection laws which prevent business from charging two different prices for the same service.

    --
    Don't stop where the ink does.
    1. Re:Doesn't the US have consumer-protection laws? by Batmunk2000 · · Score: 1

      Amen. We already have plenty of laws forbidding business practices most NN alarmists already preach are going to happen. (Or could much easier be added instead of getting the FCC into the Internet) And any observed lack of competition between ISPs is largely caused by the same FCC NN want to hand the keys to. It's a bit of a feel good idea with almost no practical or ethical usefulness in the real world. I honestly don't care what the FCC or government says because it all happens on their whim anyway. The mindless mob grants them the power whether I approve or not. If Government is authorized to prevent something you just handed them the keys to *someday* do the opposite and allow it. Once they are in... they never go away. That is how this works.

    2. Re:Doesn't the US have consumer-protection laws? by zero_out · · Score: 1

      Sure there are consumer protection laws. No, they don't cover this sort of thing. A business can negotiate two different prices with two different customers for the same service. It's perfectly legal. However, the country was founded on principles of freedom, and free markets. Therefore, you find a lot of freedom for corporations to do whatever they want, because they bankroll the politicians, but very little freedom in practice for individuals. Sure, individuals can say whatever they want, but they can't do whatever they want. It's the ongoing pursuit of this mythical thing called "security" that prevents that.

  31. No by geekoid · · Score: 1

    It's a primary means of information. Not regulating it means corporations will control where you can go, adn tyou will ahve no course of action.

    With government regulation you have rights, and due process. You also have a voice.

    The 'no regulation' concept is bullshit. Either the government will regulates it or corporations with regulate it.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  32. yes and no by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Technical net neutrality, the state that the Internet has always been: yes. Political bullshit like "a conservative magazine, they would provide a link to a liberal site" and "get rid of the media capitalists" and "overthrow the capitalist system itself": no.

  33. An example of a strawman argument? by jtseng · · Score: 2

    FTA:

    "The losers are likely to be consumers who will see innovation and investment chilled by regulations that treat the Internet like a public utility."

    How will the consumers be losers? We're treating the companies that maintain the conduits of the Internet like a public utility and we should keep it that way. Do we have the water and power utilities telling us how to use our water and power? Should the water company prevent us from buying bottled water or buy it only from them? What if there are new start-ups with good ideas - I doubt these regulations will "stifle" these newcomers.

    Of course we don't want bad regulations. But to say we shouldn't have any regulations is a bad idea (see Wall Street as a guide).

    --

    Sanity.html - Error 404 not found

    1. Re:An example of a strawman argument? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So what you want is for the internet to be treated like water and electric, eh? In other words, completely outdated and crumbling because there is exactly zero incentive to do anything better? Wait, I can hear it now... 'If we had competition...'. Yeah, because ISPs are just dying to move into markets already served by someone else, when the only thing they have to look forward to is a race to the bottom because they are unable to differentiate themselves on service.

    2. Re:An example of a strawman argument? by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      Of course we don't want bad regulations. But to say we shouldn't have any regulations is a bad idea (see Wall Street as a guide).

      The target audience of the Wall Street Journal is exactly the people who think that the absence of Wall Street regulations -- and bailing out Wall Street to assure that other people bear the costs of any problems caused by that deregulation -- is a good idea.

    3. Re:An example of a strawman argument? by zeroshade · · Score: 1

      The problem is they have had the opportunity for a long time to differentiate themselves on service and haven't done so. The only difference between the ISPs near me is whether or not I want a contract and what bandwidth packages are available. Any time the bandwidth packages are the same, they are the same price.

      Hell the only reason I chose my current ISP is because I have no contract and it's the same place I got my tv and phone from, and only because they gave me a discount for having them all.

      AT&T U-Verse? I don't want a contract and I don't like AT&T customer service.

      Verizon FiOS? I rent, so I can't have the box installed, plus I don't want a contract.

      Dish Network? Prices are the same, speed is the same, cable > satellite.

      Optimum? No contract, parents had it so when I moved, I already knew what to expect so I went with them. Prices aren't much different than anyone else around here.

    4. Re:An example of a strawman argument? by protektor · · Score: 1

      The more you have regulations the more it costs businesses to make sure they are complying with all regulations. Thus costs are increased. So they are spending money making sure they are in compliance when they could be spending it on other things. Also if you end up fighting for your slice of the bandwidth on the Internet then there is less incentive for people to innovate because see the artificial barriers are too high to bother.

  34. No... by Xanthas · · Score: 1

    The Internet has never been free of regulation. In fact, it was originally envisioned as a switching network much like typical telephone systems. I recall reading somewhere (can't find the article, please link to it in response if you have it), that it was a political end-run around the telcos, who apparently did not see it coming, that led to its current packet-routing form instead of a switched version (at least for the commercial Internet we know today). The telcos and others obviously (due to pushes to "shape" traffic a la Comcast) still want the degree of control and revenue extraction that a switched system would provide them. It is only now that the back-end providers have the hardware sophistication necessary to analyze every packet to the degree necessary to do this. Hence, now is when the need for regulation comes up--it wasn't needed before because the problem was not possible.

    And I for one find the current FCC rules to be a major step in the right direction. Now we have precedent that the Internet does in fact fall under their regulatory umbrella, and that they are working to protect citizens using the Internet from over-reach by those with a monopoly on the physical network in their areas. What is allowed and is not allowed will certainly change as the technology progresses, but for now, what they have developed is certainly better than nothing.

  35. Shame on /. for airing a professional shill's rant by RandCraw · · Score: 2

    A WSJ blogger? Are you kidding me? Has Slashdot fallen so far that now you're promoting for-profit hacks like this guy?

    For shame. This article is 100% unrecyclable trash.

  36. ...aware that lawmakers are human. by dazedNconfuzed · · Score: 2

    it's about regulating telecomms with one simple rule: "all traffic should be equal".

    Except it isn't.

    To paraphrase the old management joke: big, fast, cheap - pick two.
    And not everybody is going to pick the same two. Especially politicians who don't care about your data.

    Is your driving need...
    Streaming/bulk data? a per-packet charge is going to cost you a LOT. The data difference between a Netflix-streaming couch potato and email-checking grandma is several orders of magnitude. Will your bill be four-five digits? or will her bill be pennies? Remember: "all traffic is equal" so you're going to pay per packet, and grandma's 'net bill isn't going to approach zero.
    Time-sensitive data? you want low-latency pings for your multiplayer games, you'll have to pay for prioritization - or, well, you can't because "all traffic is equal". Get your packets in line behind a buffered movie.
    Cheap data? since nobody can pay for prioritization even if they want to, you all get cheap data - and cheap does not necessarily mean inexpensive.

    Careful what you ask for. You might get it.

    --
    Can we get a "-1 Wrong" moderation option?
    1. Re:...aware that lawmakers are human. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      -1 wrong, this is a pretty clear-cut issue. We're not talking about doing away with QoS. We're also not talking about latency, this is almost purely a discussion of bandwidth. No one in sane countries else gets charged per packet, you pay for bandwidth and whether you use it is up to you.

      The best expression of Net Neutrality I've heard so far (here) is that we should not prioritize data based on end points. Anon for moderation.

    2. Re:...aware that lawmakers are human. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Careful what you ask for. You might get it.

      Those of us who insist on Net Neutrality are just asking to preserve the status quo. Right now there aren't any ISPs charging more for one packet than another. There aren't any charging Google protection money to make sure Youtube stays fast. But since greedy companies have started making noises about such plans, we want to make them illegal. So the Internet stays the way it has always been in that regard.

    3. Re:...aware that lawmakers are human. by kenshin33 · · Score: 1

      up until some point in time it worked exactly as you described. and everybody was happy.
      The problem is that traffic is growing disproportionally to the pipes that transport it, and ISP are over selling that capacity, hoping that some will not use as much as others, now the email gramma wants to see some youtube/netflix videos too. There is a french saying for that : "déshabiller Pierre pour habiller Paul". It's a kind of a ponzi scheme, in a way.
      Ex: few years back BELL was contrasting the locality of DSL and cable --http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ArpmbnxIQIQ -- (DSL : your own pipe to the CO, cable shared). In 2007 they started throttling P2P -for their customers- without saying anything to anyone, 2008 they throttle anyone connected via their last mile -all DSL in one word- the reason hey gave P2P eats too, and it is affecting "the neighbors". right at that time they started advertising higher speeds (7mbps VS 5mbps)to their customers (See the contradiction ??? at 5mbps they say we can't too much traffic and they offer higher speeds)

    4. Re:...aware that lawmakers are human. by AdamWill · · Score: 1

      some people use a tiny amount of water and some have swimming pools, but even the ones with swimming pools don't really pay a *lot* for water.

      a perfectly reasonable scheme would be, say, $40 per month for 100GB, then 10 cents per gigabyte. Or some variation on the theme of 'flat rate for a moderate amount of data, low per unit charge after that'. doesn't violate any net neutrality principles, as long as the ISP doesn't provide unmetered access to privileged content. supplies both moderate data consumers and grannies.

  37. Privatization by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    On the other hand, private corporations are not beholden to the Bill of Rights. That's the beauty of privatization. You give carte blanche to a few big companies to determine how traffic is managed on the internet. You call the CEO and give him a few "suggestions" (not mandates; suggestions) as to what he should do. The CEO, not wanting to displease the government, lest they subsequently feel the need to audit him, does the patriotic thing and takes there advice.

    And that's how you censor the internet without technically infringing on anyone's rights.

  38. The only regulation we need is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...a strict regulation for net neutrality.
    Without net neutrality, the Internet would sooner or later turn into a maze of near-monopoly controlled payware networks. All of these networks would be based on TCP/IP and somehow reachable via the IP protocol, but most services demanding some bandwidth would only work when you buy them from the near-monopoly content provider that has been approved by your near-monopoly network provider. Say good-bye to small internet companies, free projects, free internet telephony (free as in freedom), affordable streaming, torrents, etc.

    In a nutshell: Yes, we are in need of keeping the Net as neutral as possible. Or do you want to pay way toll every few miles for using someone's roads like in the Middle Age?

    I just wonder why anybody would think that the FCC could be responsible. The Internet is international, and so the regulation obviously needs to be international, too. If at all, the FCC could be the US organ responsible for enforcing that international regulation.

  39. Natural monopolies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Natural monopolies must be regulated. The only sensible alternative is to put infrastructure into public hands, i.e. to take not just the policy-making away from private businesses but also the operative business. The more interesting question is how to regulate natural monopolies. An approach which works relatively well in Europe is to require infrastructure providers with a high market share to rent whole connections and services to competitors at competitive prices. The result is that you can switch to a different ISP if your old ISP does not peer appropriately or doesn't buy enough transit, and the new ISP does not need to build out the last mile again. With actual competition, there's very little need for explicit network neutrality regulation.

    1. Re:Natural monopolies by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 3, Insightful

      There are no "natural monopolies". The idea of "natural monopolies" was one that was popularized to justify the government interfering in the telephone market to create the original AT&T monopoly.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    2. Re:Natural monopolies by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      You clearly didn't pay attention in Econ 101 when they went over what is necessary for a free market, what barriers to entry into that market mean to competition, and where infrastructure fits in when discussing efficient markets.

      It's unfortunate that your ignorance seems to be the common opinion of American voters.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    3. Re:Natural monopolies by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      Please name a "natural monopoly" which occurred without the intervention of government regulation.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    4. Re:Natural monopolies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can debate if there is such a thing as a 'natural' monopoly or not, but the fact is the government(s) have given all the end-user facing networks (DSL, Wireless, Cable) *actual* monopolies on the rights of way for their lines and by doing so completely eliminated any sort of free market for that service.

      The government is already interfering. The question is simple. Do you want the government to say 'Here is your monopoly, do as you like' or, maybe provide some regulation to ensure that the monopoly they have been granted is being used for the best interests of the population??

      Generally whenever you hear someone talking about 'less regulation' what they really means is 'enhance the regulations that suppress competition and help me, get rid of the ones that make me play fair'. You will never see a telco arguing that the regulations that create their monopolies are bad for business, even though that is exactly the truth.

      The fundamental problem is that the companies with the monopoly right should have never have been allowed to expand into any other lines of business than providing service over their monopoly.

    5. Re:Natural monopolies by HeckRuler · · Score: 2

      The Mississippi river flows through Louisiana. You ain't getting to the gulf from Iowa without going through Louisiana.
      There are three power grids in the USA. East, West, and Texas. You want to sell power over the grid, you have to hook up to the one in your area. They don't overlap. No body is stopping you from laying down your own transmission lines. Go for it... Oh look, it's ludicrously expensive.
      There is only so much space in the RF spectrum. If two signals get sent out on the same frequency, neither will be received. Now, that's not a monopoly, but it's a limited resource.

      And in case you weren't aware, those are three examples where there is heavy regulation. Not because the government goes around regulating things willy nilly, but because without fair rules to play by, boats would crash into each other, we'd have constant blackouts, and radio would be garbled. Are they perfectly fair? No. But they do try. The resource is limited, the position unchangeable, or the bar to entry is way too high, and so they're natural monopolies.

    6. Re:Natural monopolies by joe_frisch · · Score: 1

      Not quite a fair question since there is government regulation of almost everything, and especially of businesses before they become full monopolies.

      A alternate question is whether there is case where there was a high cost to entry in a field with a distributed infrastructure (railways, roads. internet, pipelines, telecom etc) where there was no government intervention and there was not a monopoly. (honest question, I can't think of one, but would be interested to hear an example).

      Monopoly can also mean a lot of different things. Is Microsoft a monopoly? There are competitors, but despite making an significant effort, I haven't been able to avoid using their products because of my need to interact with other users.

      Is Comcast a monopoly? In my area an alternate provider with the same performance is very much more expensive. Is that because Comcast has better technology, or because the barriers to entry are too high?

      Is Chase bank a monopoly? I've never opened an account with them, but due to acquisitions my bank accounts, mortgage and credit card now are all owned by Chase - with a high cost to change to a different vendor.

      I think there are many situations that do not technically qualify as "monopolies" but where the consumer's choices are nonetheless very restricted.

    7. Re:Natural monopolies by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      That would require a country that has no government. Which is total anarchy, which doesn't exist anywhere. Nice try though.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    8. Re:Natural monopolies by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      The Mississippi river flows through Louisiana. You ain't getting to the gulf from Iowa without going through Louisiana.

      Sure you can. You go east to the Atlantic Coast and then take a ship to the gulf.

      There are three power grids in the USA. East, West, and Texas. You want to sell power over the grid, you have to hook up to the one in your area. They don't overlap. No body is stopping you from laying down your own transmission lines.

      I am pretty sure that there are laws preventing you from doing that. I know that there were laws that limited who was allowed to sell electricity in a given area. I remember a time when only one company was allowed to sell electricity in the area I live in. The law still only allows one company to run electrical transmission lines to retail customers in my area.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    9. Re:Natural monopolies by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      Is Comcast a monopoly? In my area an alternate provider with the same performance is very much more expensive. Is that because Comcast has better technology, or because the barriers to entry are too high?

      No, the reason Comcast has that monopoly is because there was a law that allowed local municipalities to grant a local monopoly and Comcast bought the companies that held those franchises.

      A alternate question is whether there is case where there was a high cost to entry in a field with a distributed infrastructure (railways, roads. internet, pipelines, telecom etc) where there was no government intervention and there was not a monopoly. (honest question, I can't think of one, but would be interested to hear an example).

      The problem here is that I can't think of one of those that did not have the government step in and impose a monopoly.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    10. Re:Natural monopolies by joe_frisch · · Score: 1

      The problem then is that we can't tell if government intervention creates monopolies, or reduces their severity. My guess is that it does both - the "government" is far monolithic organization.

    11. Re:Natural monopolies by protektor · · Score: 1

      You clearly didn't pay attention or learn the history of the telephone company. The reason the government gave a monopoly to AT&T was because there were dozens and dozens of different phone companies and none of them could talk with each other and none of them would work it out so that they could talk with each other. Because of this and because the government wanted to be able to call from state to state. They setup AT&T as government sanctioned monopoly that no one could compete with. Just like the postal system used to be a government protected monopoly.

    12. Re:Natural monopolies by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 2

      NO, the Woodrow Wilson Administration wanted to be able to control this new technology and made a deal with AT&T to do so. The Woodrow Wilson Administration believed (probably correctly) that it was easier to control one large company than a bunch of small ones.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
  40. Um. by jwietelmann · · Score: 1

    Neither, but I do trust one simple-to-understand-and-enforce rule ("you shall indiscriminately handle and deliver packets") to take it out of the hands of both.

    If there were only a name for such a rule...

    1. Re:Um. by dcroxton · · Score: 1

      Have you looked at the rules involved in net neutrality? I guarantee you it will be a book, not a one-liner.

      --
      Sincerely, Derek

      A curious little blog
  41. Net Neutrality is only a start by imgod2u · · Score: 1

    I think net neutrality as it's currently being proposed simply treats a symptom, not the cause. The cause is that telecom and cable companies have virtual monopolies due to access to public property that is granted to them exclusively. This allows them to pull whatever shenanigans they please; not just prioritized service. They have fiber wire just laying there unused because they don't feel the need to compete -- there's no one else around after all. They can price their plans ridiculously high (Verizon Wireless, I'm looking at you) without fear since they have sole access to a creme de la creme slice of spectrum that no one else is allowed.

    If we truly want change, the various levels of governments need to pool some public funds into developing line and spectrum sharing technology. Plenty of non-profit organizations out there (EFF for instance) can provide technical input and ways to improve it in the future.

    Then and only then will there be true competition when it comes to the internet. Anyone can start a cable company if they choose to invest in the routing/server infrastructure. Communities would be free to setup their own service with one giant pipe to the nearest hub. Competition will keep prices down and force companies to improve service instead of sitting back and raking in cash (and charging all sorts of nebulous, borderline scam fees).

  42. Real problem by jmorris42 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    > maybe that's because there isn't much difference between the two.

    Especially in the Internet biz. For 99% of customers the choice is between a huge bloated government granted and regulated monopoly telco and the almost as bloated government grated and regulated cable company. Then there is a couple of wireless options here and there most of which are owned and operated by the monopoly telco and will never deliver enough bandwidth to matter.

    But the bigger problem with the FCC is the newspeak. Whenever progs open their piehole words come out but they don't mean what normal people assume they mean. "Freedom is Slavery" "Ignorance is Power" "Ministry of Truth" "Network Neutrality" You can bet your last dollar that the absolute last thing the FCC has in mind is "Neutrality".

    Hopefully the courts will knock this one down as fast as the last attempts by the FCC to exceed their mandate.

    --
    Democrat delenda est
    1. Re:Real problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not responding to your post but your sig. South Park never once ridiculed Mohammad or Allah. They ridiculed the lunatic fringe Muslim extremists, just like they did the Christian extremists, the Jewish extremists, the Scientologists, etc. If that's what you got from those eps, you need to reexamine.

    2. Re:Real problem by corbettw · · Score: 1

      For 99% of customers the choice is between a huge bloated government granted and regulated monopoly telco and the almost as bloated government grated and regulated cable company.

      Name one telco company in the US that is a monopoly and gets a charter from the government. Just one. I'll wait.

      --
      God invented whiskey so the Irish would not rule the world.
    3. Re:Real problem by jmorris42 · · Score: 0

      > South Park never once ridiculed Mohammad or Allah.

      That was what made it so powerful as political commentary, they hammered home in an unmistakable way that it is now unalllowed for us infidels to even mention their Prophet. That they have a ironclad veto going beyond garden variety political correctness because the networks are in fear.

      And no South Park doesn't just go after "Christian extremists" or "Jewish extremists" They have gleefully attacked and ridiculed pretty much every philosophical system with the notable exception of Islam. From Objectivism (Chickenlover), Anarchists, Truthers(Mystery of the Urinal Deuce), Mormons (All about the Mormons), Christians in general, Catholics (Red Hot Catholic Love) in specific, Budda, Jesus, Christmas (Woodland Critter Christmas anyone? Mr. Hankey?), Scientology (Out of the Closet), Democrats, Republicans, nobody has been safe from their humor. Fer crying out loud Jesus Christ was a regular character for years, usually portrayed as a hapless and ineffectual cable access talk show host. Then one of Saddam's guards killed him off. That was not just aimed at extremists. And the episode "Jewbilee" didn't cut Moses much more slack. But it was good clean "South Park" style fun and no Christians threatened to cut off their heads. Isaac Hayes did quit the show when they put his sacred cow on the grill though. Hypocrite.

      But make a joke about the idiocy of being censored for showing Mo and Comedy Central actually censors you. Which made the satire turn in on itself and become even more hilarious. Matt and Trey totally trolled their own network. And the central park (attempted) bomber may have been trying to exact 'revenge' against Comedy Central anyway which turns the comedy to full circle to tragedy.

      --
      Democrat delenda est
    4. Re:Real problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know what all the fuss was about. Mohammed appeared uncensored in the Blaine-tology episode as a member of the Super Best Friends with Buddha, Jesus, John Smith and Aquaman.

    5. Re:Real problem by calidoscope · · Score: 2

      Especially in the Internet biz. For 99% of customers the choice is between a huge bloated government granted and regulated monopoly telco and the almost as bloated government grated and regulated cable company. Then there is a couple of wireless options here and there most of which are owned and operated by the monopoly telco and will never deliver enough bandwidth to matter.

      The whole issue of ISP regulation would (mostly) go away if there was a functioning marketplace for internet service. This was pretty much the case during the dial-up era, but the capital demands for high-speed service makes it difficult to get a true competitive marketplace.

      Maybe the solution is for a municipal utility to provide a fiber optic line from the residence to a C.O. It would then be up to the individual residents to contract with their preferred phone provider, TV provider and ISP for connection to the various services. Only problem is that this would rely on the utility being responsive to their customers.

      --
      A Shadeless room is a brighter room.
    6. Re:Real problem by spazdor · · Score: 1

      Name one telco company in the US that is a monopoly and inherited all of the benefits formerly granted by a charter from the government. Just one. I won't have to wait very long.

      --
      DRM: Terminator crops for your mind!
    7. Re:Real problem by chaboud · · Score: 1

      Your public service commission exists because phone and cable companies are granted local exclusive grants on line easements. Virtually every utility you use, including wireless, is granted certain exclusive rights that effectively render them artificial monopolies (or oligopoly, which is effectively the same thing).

      You have to work very hard to find a utility that is subject to open and fair competition.

    8. Re:Real problem by oztiks · · Score: 1

      Australia's NBN is supposed to pave the way for this process. Taking fiber to the residence and then simply allowing providers to offer data to individual homes. With IP6 enabling the use of individual IPs per unit within the residence would take it one step further.

    9. Re:Real problem by j0nb0y · · Score: 1

      Every corporation has a charter from the government...

      And if the phone company is the only one allowed to lay phone lines to your house, I would call that a government granted monopoly.

      --
      If you had super powers, would you use them for good, or for awesome?
    10. Re:Real problem by adamofgreyskull · · Score: 1
      And then there's this: song, Mr. Garrison sings Merry Fucking Christmas from the album Mr. Hankey's Christmas Classics

      I heard there is no Christmas
      In the silly Middle East
      No trees, no snow, so Santa Claus,
      They have different religious beliefs
      They believe in Muhammed, and not in our holiday,
      And so every December I go to the Middle East and say


      Hey there Mr Muslim, Merry Fucking Christmas
      Put down that book, the Koran,
      And hear some holiday wishes.
      In case you haven't noticed it's Jesus' birthday
      So get off your heathen Muslim ass and fucking celebrate

    11. Re:Real problem by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 1

      All the little Bells. Additionally, while the comcast company itself cannot really be said to not have paid for anything itself, generally it went like this : govt. builds network X -> X goes broke and comcast buys it for 5c with the promise of keeping the cable going.

      NONE of the big telcos was created from the ground up as a private company.

    12. Re:Real problem by GooberToo · · Score: 1

      It would be better to create a short list, if in fact one can be created, where a monopoly doesn't exist. By design, the government and especially cities, create utility monopolies. Things get even worse once you look at the world of wireless communication whereby the monopoly is up for the highest bidder thanks to the FCC.

    13. Re:Real problem by GooberToo · · Score: 1

      This is true for the electric grid too.

    14. Re:Real problem by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Name one telco company in the US that is a monopoly and gets a charter from the government. Just one. I'll wait.

      AT&T has a monopoly on wired (read: low-latency) telecommunications service for vast swaths of the USA now, and formerly it was a bunch of baby bells who had such a monopoly. I can buy service from someone else over their copper. I can buy internet service from someone else who resells them or from them or via old school telephone modem over their wire. In my county they are literally the only ones with fiber in the whole fucking thing.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    15. Re:Real problem by Creepy · · Score: 1

      Technically land lines are deregulated and other phone companies can lease them from the incumbent carrier, but most people not only go with the incumbent, they don't even know about the competition. In contrast, cable companies like Comcast are government regulated monopolies and are charged a fee for this, which they pass on to the consumer. If you read your bill for, say, Comcast, it says "regulatory fees" - this is just the fees the monopoly pays the government.

      From a consumer perspective, there is no way I'd ever want net neutrality to end - it would allow providers like Comcast to strangle whatever businesses they want out of the market to fail. If they decided BitTorrent was worthless, they could strangle all of the sites where you find torrents to 1 byte/second so the page takes all day to load. So until regulated monopolies are gone, I see net neutrality as a necessity.

      OTOH, if I ran Comcast I would feel net neutrality is the devil - kill it and strangle out any free sites and replace them with pay alternatives!!! MORE MONEY FOR THE MONOPOLY!! More money to buy lobbyists and government. Pretty soon, Comcast will replace the government with corporate drones... oh wait, they're doing that already with tea party Republicans (a group I personally find either idealistic or clueless that they would empower monopolies like this with their ideals - I'm pretty sure most are clueless idealists because the only one I've personally met is Michelle Bachmann [before she got elected the first time] and she definitely fell in that category).

  43. Political point of view by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

    However, the question should be asked, is granting control over the Internet to political appointees the way to go?

    That's actually not a relevant question in regard to the recent decision. No power was granted to political appointees that they did not already have under existing law. What happened was the parties to whom power was granted in existing law chose to exercise it in a manner which is proactive and provides advance notice and clarity as to how it will be applied, rather than the reactive, case-by-case manner in which the same political appointees have previously used the same grants of authority to pursue the same ends.

    Regardless of your political point of view shouldn't the Internet remain free from regulation?

    (1) The internet wasn't free of regulation before the net neutrality order; it was already subject to FCC oversight which was exercised on a case-by-case basis exercising the FCC's statutory authority, on top of that, it is subject to generally applicable laws, and, on top of that, the ability to offer connection services is subject to a wide variety of government regulations securing property rights, creating easements for specific purposes, governing telcos and cable providers outside of their ISP roles, etc.
    (2) The concept that the internet should be "free of regulation", whether that means actually free of regulation (i.e., lawless) or merely free of the particular kinds of regulation adopted this week is a political point of view, and the attempt to portray it as if it were a universal norm independent of political viewpoints is extraordinarily disingenous.

  44. Conceptually, yes by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    If there isn't some regulation for 'fairness' to protect us citizens, you end up with comcast.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    1. Re:Conceptually, yes by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      Regulations are how we ended up with Comcast in the first place.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
  45. Wireless by jwietelmann · · Score: 2

    I think he's probably referring to his wireless internet plan, and you're thinking strictly in terms of wires.

    1. Re:Wireless by cbhacking · · Score: 1

      Nah, lots of residential ISPs will do contract plans too, with early termination fees and upgrade schedules and all that fun garbage. It's not yet mandatory where I live - you can still get month-to-month, though you either have to pay more or switch to inferior service - but a few years ago it didn't even exist, and lately it's becoming more common. The numbers are too thin to call it a trend (there only being a few providers at all) but it's happening.

      --
      There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
  46. Seriously.... by guybrush3pwood · · Score: 1

    this post again?

    --
    Perhaps I'm trolling, perhaps I'm not.
  47. Objective opinion? by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

    Gosh, is the Wall Street Journal capable of delivering an objective opinion on this?

    No one is capable of delivering an "objective opinion" since opinion is, by definition, subjective.

  48. Re:First impressions of weak ad hom teabagging by wagadog · · Score: 1

    Exactly

    "The campaign to regulate the Internet was funded by a who's who of left-liberal foundations."..."(They are the Pew Charitable Trusts, Bill Moyers's Schumann Center for Media and Democracy, the Joyce Foundation, George Soros's Open Society Institute, the Ford Foundation, and the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation.)"

    you know, the same people that fund the Evil Crazy Scary Commie Socialist Dirty Hippie Kids Show uh...what was the name of that again?

    Oh yeah. SESAME STREET.

  49. This will work both ways by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If ISP's think they can somehow negotiate a nice bonus from Google, they will be in for a big surprise.
    Google should already have a list of which ISP is available in each area of the world. They will simply offer there services to (and only to) the highest bidder in each area. They rest of the ISP's will have to try and sell an internet without google, youtube, gmail, etc.

  50. This "opinion" article is horrible by MobyDisk · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The entire article just talks about what leftist-liberal-marxist-socialist groups are supporting network neutrality. There is no evidence that this guy even knows what the issue is. You could replace "Network Neutrality" with "Lowering Taxes" or "Abortion" and not even notice. There's only one single attempt to even talk about the legislation:

    There's little evidence the public is demanding these rules, which purport to stop the non-problem of phone and cable companies blocking access to websites and interfering with Internet traffic.

    That's the only "fact" he stated, and it is completely wrong.

    1. Re:This "opinion" article is horrible by sugarmotor · · Score: 1

      Thanks for going to the effort of searching through the article for any kind of useful information.

      I also came up with nothing, and called it "just a rant".

      --
      http://stephan.sugarmotor.org
    2. Re:This "opinion" article is horrible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So those groups didn't support this version of Net Neutrality and they don't have the political leanings he said? I suspect they are exactly what he says, but that AT&T, Comcast, Charter, and others had far more pull than those groups did in the end.

  51. The internet has never been "free of regulation" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That is an extremely misleading statement.

  52. Obama ignoring advice.. wha? by Beerdood · · Score: 1

    Yet President Obama, long and ardent backer of net neutrality, is ignoring both Congress and adverse court rulings, especially by a federal appeals court in April... He is seeking to impose his will through the executive branch

    You know, this might be a bit off-topic, and I don't mean to sound trollish, but where the hell was this attitude when it was needed for so many other things, like the war(s), healthcare, Guantanamo bay etc?? Why couldn't Obama have this GWB-like attitude of "fuck it, Ima gonna do what I wanna do" for all those other important topics? I follow US politics to some extent, but I'm still a little confused here - I.e. can he override a decision in congress if it doesn't have a 2/3 majority vote, but not in the senate? I'm gonna look this up now, but any elaboration would be helpful.

    --
    Global warming and other natural disasters are a direct effect of the shrinking number of pirates - Gospel of the FSM
    1. Re:Obama ignoring advice.. wha? by lwsimon · · Score: 1

      First, Bush had support of both houses of Congress for both wars. Second, Healthcare isn't in the president's control, period, as it must pass both houses before it even gets to him. He can ask, pressure, and use political leverage on members of Congress, but he has no direct power here. As for Gitmo - well, I'm not sure what you had hoped would be voted on. It is well within the power of the Executive Branch to decide where to hold prisoners of war. Yes, there are questions about that designation, but it's not like Bush "ignored" Congress here.

      Congress is composed of two houses - the House of Representatives, and the Senate. All spending bills must originate in the House, then move to the Senate.

      Bush ignored his political opposition - which sometimes included his own party - but I can't recall off the top of my head any time when it could be said that he "ignored Congress".

      --
      Learn about Photography Basics.
  53. Smoke screen by msromike · · Score: 0

    This monopoly, pricing, bandwidth, fairness discourse is just a smoke screen.

    The government wants to regulate the Internet so they can control how ISPs operate. The government wants to control "illegal" Internet traffic. The term "legal traffic" and "illegal traffic" is a recurring theme in the various descriptions of the new regulation.

    So, say goodbye to websites that serve "illegal traffic." USENET, illegal traffic. Wikileaks, illegal traffic. Gambliing sites, illegal traffic. Porn sites, depends on the jurisdiction.

    It will be hard for ISPs to keep track of what is and what isn't legal based on jurisdiction. I think the Department of Homeland Security could help by setting up monitoring at various NAPs so that DHS agents can filter dynamically in real time.

    BOHICA

  54. Let's wait a bit for ForevRGov by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    None of this will be settled until we do away with the idea of public property (such as the "airwaves") and move from public government to private government. Once government is beyond the reach of interfering citizens and their so-called elected representatives, there will be peace. Everlasting, monolithic, corporate peace.

  55. Reasoned arguments by LaissezFaire · · Score: 1, Funny
    Ah, another Net Neutrality article on Slashdot. Be prepared for a suite of polite, reasoned arguments.

    Note:Anti-Net Neutrality arguments are automatically marked down as "troll."

    1. Re:Reasoned arguments by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

      Note:Anti-Net Neutrality arguments are automatically marked down as "troll."

      That's because almost all of them are. I'm a registered Libertarian, love Ron Paul, thought "Atlas Shrugged" was a good read, and can't think of a single defensible argument against Net Neutrality. To me, it's like arguing against the First Amendment because it limits the rights of the government to express their displeasure at things you might say against their interests, or something goofy like that. I just can't imagine a good reason to let Comcast restrict the data I pass to other Internet hosts over data lines I built with my tax dollars.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    2. Re:Reasoned arguments by LaissezFaire · · Score: 2

      Note:Anti-Net Neutrality arguments are automatically marked down as "troll."

      That's because almost all of them are.

      The vast majority of shrill comments and ad hominem I've seen are on the pro-side. Yours is a blessed cool breeze, and I appreciate that.

      I just can't imagine a good reason to let Comcast restrict the data I pass to other Internet hosts over data lines I built with my tax dollars.

      The government has its hands in so many things, it's nearly impossible to find something that your tax dollars didn't help fund. Or, better yet, both fund and restrict, like tobacco.

      To stick with a close analogy, roads and rail have been largely built by government dollars. However, UPS, FedEx, and USPS can charge different rates to different customers who ship large and small, and heavy and light packages.

      With an Internet "utility" it's about impossible to provide different rates on speed of delivery, such as you can with a physical shipment. (Heck, higher latency traffic is generally more expensive, like satellite based providers.) Bandwidth and uptime are what they have that they can use for pricing.

      The FCC has shown over its decades that it is not geek-friendly. It restricts speech (the seven word you can't say on television, the fairness doctrine), and it restricts technology (cell phones weren't allowed for about 20 years after the technology was developed).

      I think what's most likely is that the FCC starts relying on an RFC/ANSI/W3C-like system -- slow, behind, though partially useful.

    3. Re:Reasoned arguments by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

      To stick with a close analogy, roads and rail have been largely built by government dollars. However, UPS, FedEx, and USPS can charge different rates to different customers who ship large and small, and heavy and light packages.

      But UPS, FedEx, and USPS don't claim to own those roads. Really, those two industries have nothing in common, even for analogy purposes. I pay my ISP. Google pays their ISP. That should be the end of the discussion as far as our respective providers are concerned. Comcast et al can't reasonably claim that Google should be paying extra to deliver the packets they serve and that I already pay to receive.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    4. Re:Reasoned arguments by LaissezFaire · · Score: 1
      Why not? I pay my satellite TV provider for access to some basic channels, and extra for some others. Then other groups pay for advertising, and still others pay to have part or whole of their entire show played.

      The FCC mandating how payments are made in the system will undoubtedly distort the market. The computer industry as a whole has consistently driven down prices and upped capability. When the government mandates certain bundles, such as not allowing ISPs to charge other ISPs for high usage, the ISPs will either 1) stop delivering that service in the same manner, or 2) charge us for it.

      When Congress passed Obamacare and mandated that health care insurance companies that sold individual policies for minors ignore preexisting conditions, the insurance companies have nearly all stopped selling those policies. It's the natural cost-avoidance of unprofitable mandates.

      Similarly, ISPs are either likely to stop selling unlimited bandwidth services, or pass all of those costs to the end consumer. I'm OK if Google cares enough about its content that they pay Comcast to deliver it, rather than Comcast charging me for it. One way or the other, the market will come up with an efficient, fair payment system.

  56. The bottom line... by bjk002 · · Score: 1

    You're going to get f*cked, and no it cannot be avoided. The only question is who's face you want to see in the mirror...

    --
    Opinion:=TMyOpinion.Create(Me);
  57. for a deep analysis of domination and freedom by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    have a look at this book from alexander rüstow: http://www.amazon.com/Freedom-Domination-Historical-Critique-Civilization/dp/0691053049/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1293053099&sr=8-2

    the only review from amazon.com:

    [review]
    Alexander Rustow was a sociology professor at Heidelberg University in Germany. He lived through Hitler's nightmare and was a leading opponent of the Nazis. When Rustow originally wrote this history in his native German language, he filled three volumes. In his reputation of writing history, he was Germany's version of our William Appleman Williams or our Howard Zinn. He wrote "I affirm freedom and reject domination, I affirm humaneness and reject barbarism, I affirm peace and reject violence. The pairs of opposites are the great poles between which the drama of human history is enacted".

    His research led him to uncover the root of what ails mankind and by assuming the role of a self-conscious "pathologist", he sought the origins for the Nazi horrors of the twentieth century. His discovery was not a popular one in his time. He learned that the root of conquest and domination was the establishment of the state. In other words, government is the problem - not the solution. During the twentieth century, too many people were dreaming about a welfare state that would take care of their needs or a warfare state that could do the same, both by robbing from Peter to pay Paul.

    Rustow's book is able to lay out the historical development of domination in a easy-to-understand drama. Libertarians, true conservatives, progressives, and others concerned about the global corporatists and the neocons who rape the Bill of Rights while they bomb and kill our global neighbors would benefit from reading this one-volume condensation of Rustow's history.
    [/review]

  58. I'm talking about the real thing. by jwietelmann · · Score: 1

    Not the newspeak-named lie of a policy that just came out.

  59. Regardless of your political point of view... by fishexe · · Score: 1

    Regardless of your political point of view shouldn't you just adopt my political point of view?

    A more honest way of saying the same thing.

    --
    "I don't care about the Constitution!" --Bill O'Reilly, November 17, 2009
    1. Re:Regardless of your political point of view... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What a great tool of rhetoric... instead of offsetting what he has to say with some views and ideas you'll just mock it and try to make yourself seem witty.

      Sorry. Fail.

  60. Clueless raving, scourge of net neutrality subject by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 1

    If I need to prioritize my own traffic, I'll do so with my router. That way my streaming video doesn't interfere with my VOIP calls.

    Dear raging lunatic, I would like to introduce Mr. bidirectional. Unless you control both entry and exit routers for the network, you can't do prioritizing. I'm sure you're convinced this problem was introduced by evil AT&T people in black suits with fresh baby blood on their teeth and shoes, but a course in network theory is likely to provide a slightly less extravagant explanation that is somewhat hard to get upset about.

    But they're not talking about that, are they? They don't want my streaming video to interfere with their other customers' VOIP calls... which would seem to suggest that they don't actually have the capacity to deliver their Unlimited****** (up to) 10Mbps** that they sold to everyone in my neighborhood.

    Of course they don't, but don't worry : they have such plans too. They're called "business" or "synchronous" bandwidth. Of course, you'd best be willing to pay 10 times what you're paying now (and more).

    Since even 10 times the price you have now results a profit margin of maybe 50%, there is no possible way to deliver what you ask without quintupling the price (at the very least, since the cost of the internet backbone infrastructure is unfortunately related to the product of all bandwidths worldwide (specifically clients * servers, both averaged, in other words, peer-to-peer networks massively raise backbone costs even without counting the increase in traffic)). Raise bandwidth too much before technology catches up, and you're seriously fucked as a telco. Of course the marketing department can *claim* stuff for free.

    What I don't understand is how people seriously claim they didn't know beforehand comcast wouldn't deliver 10 mbit synchronous full-time bandwidth. I mean, really ?

    Democracy *might* work ... if people were to have a clue before getting involved. Government interference is what created AT&T, comcast and so on. What is the solution to this problem ? Ah, *more* government interference, of course, which is going to make things *so* much better (after all, last time AT&T controlled only all phones, while now all television sets and computers will be included in the new all-encompassing government telecom entity)

  61. Regulation is needed by GPLDAN · · Score: 2

    Q: Regardless of your political point of view shouldn't the Internet remain free from regulation?


    As somebody who has already been modded to 5 said, Internet yes - ISPs no. And what is the internet other than a collection of Tier 1,2 and 3 providers. And the Tier 1s, the AT&Ts and Level 3 and such, they have a oligopoly partially caused by de-regulation. Regional competition in the DSL space, like Rhythms and Covad, was shoved aside because of fair use considerations to the central offices for equipment. They were shut out. Cable - same thing. The Comcasts were never mandated to allow their cable infrastructures to be shared. So they didn't. Which is why only now the Telecom's, using the old phone infrastructure, can complete against cable. Celestial like DirectPC never had a chance in hell to be anything other than a last resort technology.

    So de-regulation caused this oligopoly. There was already a /. article earlier this week about how Comcast lets it's ISP peering points slam to 100% and congest, because it is in their interest to create poor response for streaming competition and force those companies to pay to locate services within their networks for fees.

    If the FCC doesn't stop this via regulation, the Tier 1 providers will simply force the upstream peering points to differentiate classes of service. Tier 2 providers can only send so much Skype into AT&T's network and any more than 10% of the pipe will get congested using QoS. Because it's not in AT&T's interest to support the flow of voice when they themselves are in the business of carrying long distance and supporting the PSTN. Why should they? Who will stop them if they band with Global Crossing and Level 3 and Qwest and say "why the fuck should we cut our own revenue carrying Skype when we don't want to?" And if the Tier 2 provider buys a bigger pipe to the Tier 1 carrier, the Tier 1 carrier can say "I don't give a shit if you have a 10Meg or 10Gig pipe, you can only send us 1Mb/s of Skype traffic and that's all."

    Who can insure that their isn't collusion? Only the Federal government can.

    As others have pointed out, it is in the Tier 1 providers INTERESTS to create artificial scarcity of bandwidth. A Tier 3 provider buying upstream pipe from a Tier 2 should be federally mandated to buy at least 50% of the bandwidth he is selling in aggregate to end customers. There is PLENTY of dark fiber and equipment to handle that, even if we are talking about a company like Comcast that sells an entire medium size city all 100Mb pipes using new DOCSIS specs. Add up all the bandwidth sold, and federally MANDATE that they purchase upstream capacity to support all that.

    1. Re:Regulation is needed by Estanislao+Mart�nez · · Score: 1

      As others have pointed out, it is in the Tier 1 providers INTERESTS to create artificial scarcity of bandwidth. A Tier 3 provider buying upstream pipe from a Tier 2 should be federally mandated to buy at least 50% of the bandwidth he is selling in aggregate to end customers.

      Eh, no, this is bullshit. The practice that /. nerds keep decrying as "overselling" is the whole damn point of having a shared network. I don't put 50% utilization on my broadband pipe; I don't want to pay for the network that supports that.

      If you want to be ambitious about this, what you should go for is (a) separate the last-mile cable owners from the ISPs, so as to create a competitive market for the latter, (b) force ISPs to disclose upstream bandwidth utilization metrics on an ongoing basis.

    2. Re:Regulation is needed by lwsimon · · Score: 1

      And yet, none of the examples (that have happened) you listed are impacted by NN. Scarcity of bandwidth is A-OK according to these regs, so long as no traffic is given favourable treatment.

      I'm not opposed to the concept - it just seems unnecessary to me. The *threat* of NN regulation seems like it was just as effective as the regulation itself.

      --
      Learn about Photography Basics.
    3. Re:Regulation is needed by protektor · · Score: 1

      The problem isn't de-regulation. The problem is regulation at the last mile by cities and states. No one can compete with these companies because they control the last mile with an iron fist. They pay huge campaign contributions to the politicians and make sure their lobbyists are always there to make sure no one ever messes with their monopoly at the local level. If we hadn't given AT&T a monopoly for 100+ years we wouldn't have this mess. If cities hadn't given cable companies their monopolies for 40+ years we wouldn't be in this mess either. Right of ways are always going to be the most expensive part of the equation. When you lock other companies out of them, you will never have real competition.

  62. Article is just a rant by sugarmotor · · Score: 1

    I found the WSJ article is just a rant, with cheap attacks on the messengers (tells stories about net-neutrality proponents which are supposed to be evil communists, etc). Doesn't really discuss the issues, nor contain much information.

    --
    http://stephan.sugarmotor.org
  63. Wrong payment structure. by Tr3vin · · Score: 1

    I think the biggest problem we have is how we pay for our connection. Back when speeds were fairly limited and the data we were retrieving was fairly small, a monthly rate tied to connection speed made sense. People got used to this scheme. If you wanted pages to load faster, you paid more for you your service. It was easy to understand and didn't take much to manage.

    As speeds increased, the types of data accessed changed and more data was consumed. Now that we have the potential for really fast connections, we also have the potential for enormous data usage. Services like Netflix get noticed because they use an incredible amount of data. You have some households that are using enormous amounts of data while others are using far less. It would make sense to scale based on usage, like all other utilities. I think we get into very tricky issues when we look at wireless services. You can physically transmit only so much data. While your speeds can be fast, in order to make sure that as many customers as possible can use the service, you have to do some type of limiting. This normally comes as a data cap. People don't like those because it makes them think about their usage.

    While I think all services should be allowed, and we need to make sure one isn't getting an unfair advantage over another, we have to get our expectations back in line. Many providers don't have the backbone to support all of their users maxing their connections 24/7. The ultimate solution would be a unified, equally shared network. As long as we have various companies owning various portions of our network, we will always have problems. The only other fair solution is to pay for your usage.

    1. Re:Wrong payment structure. by sageres · · Score: 1
      Oomph....

      Many providers don't have the backbone to support all of their users maxing their connections 24/7. The ultimate solution would be a unified, equally shared network.

      Sorry but a libertarian in me cries out in pain. This is a good recipe for centralized censorship. I was wondering for a long time, how could China so easily block every single web request, every single website inside of their network that is on their "banned" list. Well, the bulk of the "Golden Shield Project" is implemented on the border routers that is directly controlled by their government. (And 30,000 volunteers who continuously monitor the Internet for "anti-revolutionary propaganda", but that's beside the point).

      As long as we have various companies owning various portions of our network, we will always have problems.

      Have you ever done a traceroute to a website you are trying to reach? You will find that the routers it hits belong to many different corporations (some of whom are competitors). After the packet leaves your server, it might hit AT&T router, BBN, MCI or Sprint. Once it passes through these it will eventually end up on your target ISPs. That's how Internet really was developed, but these large communications companies laying down the cables and connecting various small networks together. Government natural inefficiencies and inherent bureaucracies will prevent them from running global network effectively.

  64. ask that question when you have a 20GB cap by chronoss2010 · · Score: 0

    and pay 60$ and will pay anohter 25$ or more in overage fees

    1. Re:ask that question when you have a 20GB cap by Moryath · · Score: 1

      Use World of Warcraft with regularity and you'll be over 20GB in no time.

  65. Wireless by fadethepolice · · Score: 1

    Has been exempted from this ruling. Preventing throttling / censorship by ISP's is valuable even if it is done by communists. We can watch for any unhelpful moves from julius in the future. In the meantime I suggest getting familiar with and supporting the tor network for your censored / charged android communications. It's easy to get around paying for facebook by the month / pageview by going through the tor network. Now we know how people in iran and china feel. There is a tor android app available. Not sure if it is available on itunes however.......

  66. Simple Answers to Simple Questions by fishexe · · Score: 1
    From the summary:

    However, the question should be asked, is granting control over the Internet to political appointees the way to go?

    Yes.

    Regardless of your political point of view shouldn't the Internet remain free from regulation?

    No.

    --
    "I don't care about the Constitution!" --Bill O'Reilly, November 17, 2009
  67. The only question is "what regulations"? by sjbe · · Score: 1

    Regardless of your political point of view shouldn't the Internet remain free from regulation?

    Is that a rhetorical question? Because the internet ISN"T and WON'T remain free of regulation. In fact I can't really conceive of how you would have any sort of social activity on that scale without some form of regulation. The only actual question is what the regulations are going to be? I suggest they be regulations that favor end users and entrepreneurial activity rather than supporting large monopolistic networks. Since we are so fond of car analogies here, doing away with net neutrality is similar to having every road be a toll road. It can work in theory but it generates far less economic benefit to society as a whole.

    Unregulated markets have a strong tendency to behave in ways that aren't in the interests of consumers. (see our current financial crisis if you need a timely example) The economics of delivery of internet service are very very similar to that for telephone service. Economies of scale matter greatly and there is a strong tendency towards natural monopoly as a result. Once an ISP has control over delivery, they effectively have a monopoly and can charge monopolistic prices. (this is already true in some cases) They also can stop competition completely if unregulated. Comcast for example owns a social networking site. It would be trivial for them to block or charge high prices to Facebook which competes with them. Without network neutrality I'm quite confident the internet as we know it would never have happened and certainly would be a far less dynamic and interesting place.

  68. User regulation vs provider regulation by jklovanc · · Score: 2

    Should users be regulated on how they use the Internet? No.
    Should providers be regulated on how they restrict users of the Internet? Yes.

    Do you really want a Microsoft funded provider slowing down you Google searches to the extent that Google is unusable?
    Do you want a provider owned by one media conglomerate slowing down streaming video from everywhere else so that they are the only option?
    Do you want a provider black holeing requests for web sites they do not agree with?
    Do you want all your search requests re-directed to Bing?

    Without regulation providers can make decisions on how customers interact with the Internet that are better for their bottom line and not necessarily for the customer's benefit.

    There is a major flaw in the article's argument. They state that most people are fine with the way the Internet works now. That part is true as net neutrality is the norm right now. The flaw is what do we do when net neutrality is not the norm and people fell issues of providers restricting traffic? Do we regulate then? Isn't that a bit late? There is no problem with what providers are doing now; the problem is what they could, and some companies are trying to, do in the future.

    1. Re:User regulation vs provider regulation by protektor · · Score: 1

      If you truly open the last mile, then this will become a complete non-issue. Since the last mile is really what is killing competition, and the fact that the telcos and cable companies have their monopolies there with the right of ways. Open that up to anyone and you won't ever have to legislate what ISPs can and can't do. The market will take care of things just like it should. Cities should build their own fiber network to every business and every house in their town, then sell access to the fiber network to anyone who wants to buy. That will instantly remove any possible problem.

    2. Re:User regulation vs provider regulation by jklovanc · · Score: 1

      Sometimes I wonder about the critical thinking that goes into /. posts.

      Who will pay the billions of dollars to install all that fibre? No city I know has extra cash lying around to handle that. Cities are not in the business, and nor should they, of competing with private enterprise in delivering fibre to homes.

      Have you ever heard the saying 'a chain is only as strong as the weakest link'? Even if the last mile was perfect, there are quite a few routers that a request goes through between the source and destination. These routers are are controlled by the big telcos. If at any of these points the request is delayed, rerouted or replaced there is still an issue. The entire route between the source and destination must be net neutral for there not to be an issue.

      It does not matter how many net neutral last mile providers there are if they are feeding into the same compromised backbone.

  69. The FCC rules are close to the IEEE-USA position by grandpa-geek · · Score: 1

    The rules adopted by the FCC are very close to the position recently approved by IEEE-USA and prepared by the IEEE-USA Committee on Communications Policy. The position can be found at http://www.ieeeusa.org/policy/positions/NetworkTrafficManagementNov10.pdf The position is on Network Traffic Management and not on "net neutrality".

    From a white paper that preceded the position statement (http://www.ieeeusa.org/volunteers/committees/ccp/docs/NTM-whitepaper.pdf), there are multiple ways to define net neutraliry. One is to say "a bit is a bit". That is neutrality across applications, but is not technically accurate. A bit in file downloading has different quality-of-service requirements than a bit in streaming video. The alternative definition is to say that ISP's should be able to manage their networks for quality-of-service to different applications, but not to discriminate between users having similar applications, especially based on commercial considerations and side deals. That is neutrality across users running the same kinds of applications.

    The IEEE-USA position is that quality-of-service should be stated and transparent. Higher QOS could be priced differently by ISP's. However, the parameters of QOS are well known (bandwidth, packet loss, latency, jitter, and availability/uptime) and users can figure out what they need for their applications. ISP's should be held to their stated QOS levels and should not be allowed to discriminate against content, applications, or services within a given QOS level.

    That is substantially what the FCC decided yesterday and it is the proper policy.

  70. We don't need Net Neutrality by protektor · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There is very little problem with the Internet. This is a solution looking for a problem. All this is going to do is legalize companies discriminating against other sites online. They are going to say it is legal for me to make sure my network runs well, since I can't control the big bad Internet out there. So they will QoS the local traffic to give everything local better traffic rates. Then they will basically lackmail companies like Yahoo, Netflix, and other CDNs (Content Distribution Networks) like Akamai, one of the first. You want great web performance to your web site you should put your content servers in our network for huge monthly fee. Thus those sites will work great because they are part of the local network. Backbone providers will do the same thing by offering large websites direct connections, now they are part of the network, so they can QoS that traffic. The entire time every company will be saying, Hey you said we could manage traffic to make our networks run the best possible, it's not my fault that I don't/can't control traffic out there on the big bad Internet. This is how these companies will grab as much money off the table as they possibly can. Then they will say heavy bandwidth users are a problem for making our network run like crap. So we are going to go to a measured service since we can manage traffic to make sure our network runs fine. Then consumers will still pay $40-$60 a month for Internet but have limits like 30gig and each extra gig is $5. All this does is legalize what they have wanted to do for years, but haven't because they were afraid of market forces in response to this type of plan.

    All this has done is screw the consumer, and screw innovation.

    You want real Internet competition. Stop letting the telcos and the cable companies have monopolies on the last mile. Stop letting them use their historic monopoly status to trample and destroy anyone who tries to compete at the local last mile level. Telcos and cable companies have had monopolies on the last mile for 40-100 years. The cities and the states are then bought off by these companies to make it impossible to even run your own lines to compete against them. These companies have used their monopoly status to run all the other ISPs out of business. They have propped up the Internet side using the other side of the house (phone & TV) to drop prices so low that others can't compete, and attacked other ISPs by lying about them, then once they are gone they start jacking up prices. All you have to do is look at how many independent ISPs there were 15 years versus now. Now about 90% of the US uses one of 10 ISPs. That isn't free market competition, that is monopoly leveraging and market collusion. I have seen telcos and cable companies tell the state and cities that independent ISPs have no business trying to compete with them for the Internet. That it is their domain, they know best and if you don't want huge problems you shouldn't allow these guys to exist. The telcos and cable companies were very pissed that the independent ISPs existed years ago. They saw them as taking food out of their mouths, they were an affront, and should not be allowed to exist. They waged a campaign against independent ISPs and were very successful, using lobbying and fake grassroots groups.

    All of this just allowed the consumer to get screwed again. Only the state forcing cities to open up is going to help. I doubt the feds have the authority to do anything about the local level.

    1. Re:We don't need Net Neutrality by ducomputergeek · · Score: 1

      This is where our state/local governments failed us over the last 25 - 50 years. They should have been the ones investing in copper and later fiber. The city/county provides the wire to your house. You then decide whom they lease the line to for service. The city/county charges each ISP/Teleco the same amount to lease the line for $X per month or $Y per/GB or whatever calculation you want to do. Infrastructure is then supported by those fees + any local taxes the people vote for to improve services.

      --
      "The problem with socialism is eventually you run out of other people's money" - Thatcher.
    2. Re:We don't need Net Neutrality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To add one to your list that people seem to forget is the affect on online gaming this would have. Say good bye to MMOs, low latency gaming, etc.

    3. Re:We don't need Net Neutrality by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      There is very little problem with the Internet.

      Much of the point of the recently adopted Report and Order is to prevent problematic policies that certain large ISPs that are often regional broadband monopolists have been openly looking into adopting.

      That there are not problems now is very different from saying that there aren't reasonably foreseeable problems.

      Additionally, there are current problems with internet with regard to things that the FCC has been given a mandate from Congress to ensure, such as the deployment on a "reasonable and timely basis" of broadband connectivity to all Americans.

    4. Re:We don't need Net Neutrality by protektor · · Score: 1

      Deployment to all American's is going to be a major issue for the FCC until they unlock the last mile. That is the largest hurtle for competition at the local level. An ISP can already choose from dozens of backbone providers and play them off each other for better pricing. The same is not true at the local level. Once the last mile is unlock for real in a solid tangible way, then you will see real serious competition and prices dropping.

      There is no technical reason that every house in America, no matter where they are, couldn't have access to broadband Internet. It is possible for everyone in all but maybe the most remote mountain towns to get broadband. It isn't really so much an issue of affordability either. As a former ISP owner I went to a lot of really small towns that the big guys wouldn't go anywhere near at the time, and made it work and made a profit at it. It wasn't the obscene amounts of profits the telcos and cable companies like though. The big issue is the right of ways, or truly open last mile.

      If cities did their own fiber networks and sold access to everyone that would help a lot. Plus selling network access would give them another revenue/profit stream. All they have to do is maintain the buried fiber, which generally isn't that great of an expense. You could then blast narrow & focused wireless to the houses out in the country and hop-scotch around the rural parts of a county that way without too much of an issue or really all that much of serious cost. Counties/cities could even handle the wireless part and make it part of the network connection they sell to anyone. It's again an issue of right of ways, that cities would have far less of a problem over coming.

  71. Free from Regulation by srobert · · Score: 1

    "Free from regulation" is an interesting phrase.
    By this you mean, I'm "free" to pay your ISP to assure that when you shop for what I'm selling, you experience ease of use and quick access to information from my web site, but not from the web sites of my competitors?
    I'm free to spend my billions of dollars however I want.
    Why should you have any say so about it?

  72. The gov has been corporated, news at 11 by Nyder · · Score: 1

    The Government looks after the interests of the corporations, not the people.

    If that hasn't been clear before, it should be pretty clear now.

    --
    Be seeing you...
  73. Actually... by jwietelmann · · Score: 3, Insightful

    In a truly "free market", private companies would have to own the telephone poles on which they run their lines, and to own the telephone poles, they'd probably have to own the sidewalks. So then they'd snap up sidewalks in walled-off shapes that keep anyone else from putting up poles or running wires into their fiefdom.

    Or the government would have to lease the right to run data lines on public property to anyone who asked. But then that government would have to set a price, which means the government is now in the internet business whether they like it or not.

    I guess what I'm getting at is that a "free market" for broadband cannot and will never exist.

    1. Re:Actually... by Pentium100 · · Score: 1

      Hmm... Where I live (somewhere in Europe), the company that owns the underground channels must lease then at a price set by law to anyone who asks. A company that has a radio tower must allow other companies to place antennas on it (again, the price is set by law), so that different companies do not have to dig parallel channels or build separate towers within 200m of each other (like they were before that law was passed).

      The result is that in a bigger city, especially if ou live in a multiple flat building (as opposed to a individual house) you have at least 3 options for wired internet connection - the telephone company (DSL or FTTH), some sort of LAN (Cat5 or fiber, may be more than one), the cable TV company (may be more than one, coax cable). You can also get your connection from one of the three cellphone providers (almost anywhere in the country) or the WiMAX provider (not everywhere).

      The result of that is that you can get a 200/200/80/80 mbps (200 up/down inside the country, 80 up/down to other countries) unlimited* for a bit less than 29EUR/month.

      * you can saturate the connection fr the entire month, nobody will say anything. The speed, though, is "up to", so it may not always achieve 80mbps (and in my experience the upload speed drops to about 10mbps in the evening). I manage to upload 7-10TB/month and the ISP does not care.

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

      In a truly "free market", private companies would have to own the telephone poles on which they run their lines, and to own the telephone poles, they'd probably have to own the sidewalks. So then they'd snap up sidewalks in walled-off shapes that keep anyone else from putting up poles or running wires into their fiefdom.

      How did you get these notions in your fucktarded head? Why does a ""free market"" (why the quotes, dickface?) demand you own a telephone pole to use it? Their are at least two solutions here. You might lease property or rights to its usage or there are things called easements which are negotiated on every urban or suburban parcel of land (typically before your purchase or during your ownership). Easements may include utility throughways. Maybe this isn't taught in your mom's basement (what a whore). Get a job and buy some land, shithead.

      I guess what I'm getting at is that a "free market" for broadband cannot and will never exist.

      This is what we always here from you assholes, a million excuses why you need Uncle Sam to wipe your shit-encrusted ass. Man, you are pathetic. Just man up and say you don't want a free market! Say it, pussy. At least then you might have some self-respect.

    3. Re:Actually... by juasko · · Score: 0

      your all missing the point.

      These 2 examples you gave where 2 extremes. But there is a balance between.

      Allow the "free market" companies to have their lines set up in an area. They where first so they have the monopoly on those physical lines. But the government who is the one making laws. Force them to rent bandwitdh on those lines to their competitors.

      In that way you end up having competition over the customers, and not so much about the areas. Basically a local company in NewYork could sell bandwidth to a customer in Los Angeles.

      In Finland this is what we have. All major network companies are forced to rent bandwidth. They can set their own price but that wont help them if their customers need to use an other network companys network. In the end the prices will drop for the customers.

      This is the role the government needs to have. The government needs to force competition on the markets. And that might include telling how the companies are allowed to do their bisness.

      Here in Finland this has led to that we have mobile carrier companies that don't even own their network at all, they just rent it from those who have. Interestingly these usually also give you a better deal than the carrier companies that also have their own network.

    4. Re:Actually... by sac13 · · Score: 1

      In a truly "free market", private companies would have to own the telephone poles on which they run their lines, and to own the telephone poles, they'd probably have to own the sidewalks. So then they'd snap up sidewalks in walled-off shapes that keep anyone else from putting up poles or running wires into their fiefdom.

      Yeah... because no one ever leases that kind of stuff.

      Or the government would have to lease the right to run data lines on public property to anyone who asked. But then that government would have to set a price, which means the government is now in the internet business whether they like it or not.

      Why does the government have to do it? I don't see the logic behind that assertion.

      I guess what I'm getting at is that a "free market" for broadband cannot and will never exist.

      But, you never got there. You made a couple of arbitrary statements based on vague assumptions. And, the best evidence to support your statement is that the government is already involved. So, you are correct that there will never be a free market for broadband. There never has been.

      Name an industry that you have problems with that isn't regulated. Why is it the industries that people continuously complain about are the one's that are the most regulated? Is that just a coincidence?

    5. Re:Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You forgot about the microwave spectrum.

    6. Re:Actually... by gryf · · Score: 1
      You have a very broken idea of what 'free market' means.

      A free market allows private entities enter into any consensual agreement between parties to accomplish their goals. If they need to run cable across someone's property, they arrange, or lease, access. If they don't have the infrastructure, they lease resources from another party. ( See 'roaming cell service' )

      What prevents a free market for broadband in the fullest sense is government regulation preventing carriers from running cable the last mile or under the sidewalk, etc. If a carrier can lease access from the city to put cables under the sidewalk, that's still the free market at work.

      --

      #-#
      Ad Astra Per Aspera
      A rough road leads to the stars
    7. Re:Actually... by Coren22 · · Score: 1

      I have heard of solutions to this many times. Why is it that the local government doesn't just own the lines to your house and allow whoever to run data over those lines to the internet? You pay taxes to support the fiber to your home, you pay the broadband company of your choice to connect you to the internet, and you are all set.

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
    8. Re:Actually... by Miseph · · Score: 1

      "But then that government would have to set a price, which means the government is now in the internet business whether they like it or not. '

      I actually, I think that would put them into the rent extraction business. I suppose that the utility poles could become so heavily wired as to run out of space or lose structural integrity if enough businesses were to lease space on them... but frankly that seems more than a little unlikely.

      As an added bonus, FCC taxes and the like could simply be rolled into the rent, streamlining the billing cycle and saving money for business and government alike.

      Of course, I also favor 1-page tax return forms and an end to employer-paid payroll taxes to make the system simpler and more transparent. I'm obviously a loon.

      --
      Try not to take me more seriously than I take myself.
    9. Re:Actually... by tepples · · Score: 1

      Yeah... because no one ever leases that kind of stuff.

      True, the owner could offer to lease them out at prohibitive rates and then claim the market has won when nobody takes the owner up on the offer.

      Why does the government have to do it?

      If not the government, then who else should own the sidewalk under the condition that the owner lease access at reasonable rates?

      Name an industry that you have problems with that isn't regulated.

      The music industry and the video game industry. The music industry sues over vague similarities, and the video game industry locks small developers out of entire genres.

    10. Re:Actually... by tepples · · Score: 1

      You forgot about the microwave spectrum.

      Already sold to Verizon, Sprint, AT&T, and T-Mobile.

  74. Massive ignorance by vlm · · Score: 1

    shouldn't the Internet remain free from regulation?"

    So.. My P.U.C. regulated monopoly telco raised some federal reserve regulated money on the SEC regulated stock exchange to buy some FCC regulated DSL headend gear to connect to my locally regulated monopoly phone lines which run to my HOA and zoning board regulated house where plug in my FCC regulated DSL modem so as to access my trademark and copyright office regulated domain name web sites, as I chow down on my FDA regulated cheetos while drinking some EPA regulated water from my local public utility in an effort to see some FTC regulated pr0n on the intertubes.

    All that and the phone company wants to mess with my connection, but the govt can't stop them, because THAT would be "too much regulation". What a steaming pile.

    --
    "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
  75. An example by scot4875 · · Score: 1

    Regardless of your political point of view shouldn't the Internet remain free from regulation?

    And for those keeping score, here we have an excellent example of begging the question.

    --Jeremy

    --
    Jesus was a liberal
  76. can net neutrality exist without regulation? by mostlyDigital · · Score: 1

    Corporations own the internet. At least they own the backbones, distribution networks and a lot of the content providers. And the default state of corporations is to manipulate the business environment to maximize return. If a corporation owned a bridge it would have to charge a toll to cross the bridge, If it didn't, its shareholders would sue and replace the board of directors. The first amendment is a regulation. Traffic lights are regulation. I don't know of anyone who thinks that we're over-regulated and that the first amendment and traffic lights should go. Unfortunately, corporate ownership means that some equal and opposite force, i.e. regulation is necessary. Of course regulatory power could guarantee net neutrality along with government censorship. Unfortunately, there is no umbrella organization large enough to codify a set of rules which would assure net neutrality without th need for government intervention. No regulation? Well, look what happened when deregulation allowed commercial banks to become investment banks.

  77. conflation by bugi · · Score: 1

    It's not about discrimination against packets. It's not even about discrimination against service providers.

    It's about discrimination against people and their choice of information/entertainment/functionality sources. Anything else is a separate issue.

    Separate issues include choice of peering and oversell. Frustrating as those are, they're separate issues.

  78. WSJ has changed since Rupert Murdoch bought it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is a far right propaganda piece masquerading as a reasoned argument. Welcome to the new WSJ, now a wholly powned subsidiary of FOX "news".

  79. Network Neutrality or Mandatory Line-Sharing by divisionbyzero · · Score: 1

    We need either Network Neutrality or Mandatory Line-sharing. Network neutrality (real Network Neutrality, not the abomination that was disgorged by the FCC yesterday) is essential to ensure all legitimate traffic is treated equally because most ISPs are monopolies. If they were forced to share their last mile lines with potential competitors we wouldn't need Network Neutrality because if our ISP did something we didn't like we could switch. Unfortunately there is less of a chance that mandatory line-sharing will happen than a real Network Neutrality Order. It's a shame because I'd rather leave it up to the market than the government because the government produces crap like yesterday's Order that tries to please everyone where as the market tries to please me, the consumer. The question posed by the WSJ is nothing more than a straw man at best and at worst ideological masturbation and neither is worthy of discussion. Network Neutrality would not "grant control over the internet to political appointees." It would simply establish rules for the game, just like any other regulation. Not to mention that it would be impossible for such appointees to control the whole internet.

  80. As much as I hate big government... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I hate big corporate interests even more. You need some balance to keep any one group from having too much power. I would
    rather have political types (that SOMEONE voted for) making the rules than corporate types (that were not elected by the public).

  81. Free market by MM-tng · · Score: 1

    Free markets lead to monopolies. There is one bigger player. It has economies of scale and buys the smaller players. Then prices lower so smaller players get marginalized. Once you have two or three players the CEO's go golfing with each other. They decide to make complex buying plans to make the market non-transparant and keep a couple of different brands around too keep all the customers confused and the prices high. The free market does not exist in the wall street journal talks about it. Every market has rules and needs good rules. These rules are made by the government. Free market here is used as a catch phrase to let monopolies get away with sub standard service.

  82. No competition or no cheap competition? by Zan+Lynx · · Score: 0

    Most people seem to be confusing a lack of competition at $19.95 / month as a lack of competition. This is false.

    If you'd like to pay $200 / month you can get business class service from a wide range of ISPs.

    1. Re:No competition or no cheap competition? by Moryath · · Score: 1

      Nope. Not the way it works.

      There is no consumer grade service competition in my area. As a result, even the shit-poor "entry level" Comcrap offering they want $85/month for. "Business class" in my area is $300+ because Comcrap has a monopoly on that, too.

    2. Re:No competition or no cheap competition? by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Consumers buy business class service is just dumb. That is like suggesting if you're not happy with your flight options then buy your own plane.

      The US government is refusing to regulate the internet correctly and big business is just waiting to turn it into cable tv. Unfortunately people seem to uninterested both sides will end up fucking it up completely.

    3. Re:No competition or no cheap competition? by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      "The US government is refusing to regulate the internet correctly"

      That's it in a nutshell, all this talk about the "internet remaining free from regulation" is complete bollocks, it has always been regulated.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    4. Re:No competition or no cheap competition? by Kpau · · Score: 2

      Exactly.. its always been regulated. And it wouldn't need additional regulation if the CORPORATIONS (telcos) continued play fairly well as has been done up through around 2000. What has changed is not the "cry for Net Neutrality", what has changed is the big ISPs committing felonies (man-in-the-middle-attacks), lying about service, and now trying to DOUBLE-charge for packet transfer (since sources and sinks both ALREADY pay for their internet connections). The WSJ piece is exactly that -- a sound-bite clustered piece of shit written by a shill for those would balkanize the Internet and return us to the days of AOL's prison-wall gardens.

    5. Re:No competition or no cheap competition? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why would they want to turn it into cable TV when they already have cable TV and the Internet is more popular?

    6. Re:No competition or no cheap competition? by farble1670 · · Score: 1

      i have consumer grade competition in my area between at&t and comcast. interestingly, once you price things out you see that they are almost exactly the same price for the same service. coincidence? i think not.

    7. Re:No competition or no cheap competition? by vegiVamp · · Score: 1

      And that wide range of ISPs goes over who's wires, exactly ?

      While it's true to say that this is not about the price of the service, it *is* actually about what competition will do to the price if it's not obstructed by semi- or actual monopolies, whatever form they take.

      A consumer shouldn't have to go to business solutions to get decent service. You can also ask what "business" means, vs. "consumer" - here it's usually a bit more volume and a fixed IP. Real competition instead of agreeing with the competition to not nick customers off one another, will ensure that all services eventually, and maybe even swiftly, drop to their real value.

      Real competition needs regulation, however. People love to say that a true free market regulates itself, and this is true. What those same people usually fail to understand, however, is that it regulates itself towards the best interests of it's most powerful participants, not those of the consumers. THAT is why companies will make deals with one another about limiting competition, when left unchecked.

      --
      What a depressingly stupid machine.
    8. Re:No competition or no cheap competition? by tepples · · Score: 1

      Why would they want to turn it into cable TV when they already have cable TV and the Internet is more popular?

      Because cable TV operators have long inserted advertisements from local businesses into cable TV programming, and they want a piece of that on the Internet as well.

    9. Re:No competition or no cheap competition? by tepples · · Score: 1

      You can also ask what "business" means, vs. "consumer" - here it's usually a bit more volume and a fixed IP.

      And an acceptable use policy that doesn't result in termination for running a server behind the connection. "Consumer" in this industry tends to mean one who uses a service solely for home entertainment rather than to produce another product or service.

    10. Re:No competition or no cheap competition? by sac13 · · Score: 1

      The US government is refusing to regulate the internet correctly and big business is just waiting to turn it into cable tv.

      Do you have an example of anything that is regulated "correctly"?

      Unfortunately people seem to uninterested both sides will end up fucking it up completely.

      And, this is the fundamental problem with government involvement. People care about something until a law is passed. But, the real rules are defined after that by the regulators. So, the people that advocated involvement are already placated and detach themselves because they got what they wanted... the government is involved. But, the guys with the money know that's when they can come in and get what they want.

      Any regulation ends up protecting the big players in whatever industry. They get monopolies granted. They get immense barriers to entry for anyone that might like to come along and offer something better. And, the politicians and bureaucrats get their share of the pie. Meanwhile, we end up getting screwed worse than we were before.

      Name an industry that you have problems with that isn't regulated. Why is it the industries that people continuously complain about are the one's that are the most regulated? Is that just a coincidence?

    11. Re:No competition or no cheap competition? by gryf · · Score: 1
      Regulation invariable helps big business, more than consumers. They can afford to sustain the costs of handling the overhead costs incurred by regulation while smaller outfits cannot.

      I have only one cable provider in my area, and Verizon gave up expanding FIOS in my state, but I have two sat companies who are aggressively asking for my business, both partnering with the telco.

      It's not that competition has gone away, it just doesn't look like it did fifteen years ago. That's normal.

      I'm surprised that people trust the government "a series of tubes" to regulate something as complicated as the internet after they make obvious, repeatedly, they don't know what they're doing. The latest example? The FCC said they would have imposed stricter regulations, but they recognized Android was 'open'...

      --

      #-#
      Ad Astra Per Aspera
      A rough road leads to the stars
    12. Re:No competition or no cheap competition? by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 1

      Because selling chunks of the internet or at least the most popular internet sites would be much more profitable than a flat fee of $20 to $50.

      Arguably that is what the likes of AOL and Compuserve tried to do and look at the xbox 360. Microsoft isn't giving people a web browser and expects you for gold to have access to facebook and twitter.

      I think the only reason AOL failed is because there was the treat of an open internet and that's what people really want. But if businesses are allowed to do what they want and they all put up walls then what can you do?

      Just look at mobile phones. They all act in the same way and no one is even thinking of attempting to offer the same sort of offers you find in Europe because there is no incentive to.

    13. Re:No competition or no cheap competition? by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 1

      Do you have an example of anything that is regulated "correctly"?

      Admittedly there aren't many successful cases to point you towards. However I would say that mobile phones in the UK are a good example.

      They are regulated so they can't lock you into anything. Soon they won't be allowed to charge extortionate amounts for chargers either because they're being standardised.

      Because there is only one type of network, your phone is yours to do with what you want and your phone number is yours to keep so they have to come with better incentives to get you to come to their network. That means most phones are free on a reasonable contact and you get more minutes, texts and data for your money because that's really all they have to compete with.

      BT owns virtually all the phones lines if not all of them. They could have a monopoly on DSL and phone services but their lines are treated as a utility and they have to let anyone onto the lines if they want to offer phone services or broadband. That is the way it should be. You just can't expect every company to lay their own lines. It's not an issue of cost. It's physically impossible without the roads constantly being tore up or tons of wires hanging everywhere.

      To be fair if the US regulated the internet so it was easy to switch companies you had plenty of choice you could argue that net neutrality wouldn't be needed because there could be dozens if not hundreds of companies to choose from so there would be no incentive to lock up the internet for an ISP. This is of course assuming it's regulated that the networks the ISPs use aren't allowed to modify / filter traffic.

    14. Re:No competition or no cheap competition? by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 1

      The problem is no one wants to run a business operating their network as nothing more than a utility. But that is what needs to happen. If anyone was allowed to start up an ISP through the phone lines, cable, etc then there could be much more competition.

      The owner of the networks shouldn't be able to filter or modify their traffic and they should be made to allow any business use their network to provide service. That's all that needs to be done to protect net neutrality in my opinion. If people have 20 choices for an ISP then who would be dumb enough to operate another AOL?

    15. Re:No competition or no cheap competition? by sac13 · · Score: 1

      Do you have an example of anything that is regulated "correctly"?

      Admittedly there aren't many successful cases to point you towards. However I would say that mobile phones in the UK are a good example.

      I'm not that knowledgeable about UK regulations (other than the occasional horror story that pops up around here periodically), so I can't speak to that specifically. You did touch primarily on the choice aspects of it, though, highlighting the network portability. Is the entire gamut of mobile regulation in the UK without issue?

      But, to go back to your first sentence, what does that say about the nature of regulation? It seems that the inevitable conclusion is we can have things regulated or not regulated and big business is going to take advantage of it regardless. So, the real question is whether we're better off with the government being involved in market decisions or not. And, bearing in mind that the entire existence of corporations is due to government involvement in the market, it would appear that if the government gets completely out of the way, we no longer have the threat of big corporations taking advantage of people. We just have people that can be held liable if they violate someone's rights, rather than a non-person entity that just has to pay tribute to it's government creator.

    16. Re:No competition or no cheap competition? by vegiVamp · · Score: 1

      Yes, and isn't that exactly what net neutrality is about ? I rent a pipe from you, with x bits of capacity. What I do with that pipe should be no more your business than what I do in the house I rent is the landlord's business. And, before you mention keeping the house in good condition, I can't exactly paint my internet bright pink, can I ?

      As for "home entertainment", they are not the ones who get to decide what I find entertaining. Hell, I'm a geek, it entertains me to run a server.

      --
      What a depressingly stupid machine.
    17. Re:No competition or no cheap competition? by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 1

      I'm not that knowledgeable about UK regulations (other than the occasional horror story that pops up around here periodically), so I can't speak to that specifically. You did touch primarily on the choice aspects of it, though, highlighting the network portability. Is the entire gamut of mobile regulation in the UK without issue?

      I think it would wrong to claim anything in this world is perfect. I believe the regulation is about as good as it can get.

      There were issues where people were claiming the companies were making profits through other means like high roaming costs in other countries and extortionate data rates.

      Within the EU those issues are being addressed and costs are coming down in those areas. I'm sure they'll look for some other loophole to increases costs on something but hopefully when that arises it won't be left to get out of hand.

      Again, I don't think anything is completely perfect so the best way to address something is to try and do you best at first and then just keep a vigilant eye on and fine turn things to keep it as fair as possible. Too many people expect a single quick fix solution to things. I think that's why politicians get away with a lot.

      But, to go back to your first sentence, what does that say about the nature of regulation? It seems that the inevitable conclusion is we can have things regulated or not regulated and big business is going to take advantage of it regardless. So, the real question is whether we're better off with the government being involved in market decisions or not. And, bearing in mind that the entire existence of corporations is due to government involvement in the market, it would appear that if the government gets completely out of the way, we no longer have the threat of big corporations taking advantage of people. We just have people that can be held liable if they violate someone's rights, rather than a non-person entity that just has to pay tribute to it's government creator.

      Corporations will always take advantage of people. Just look at where a lot of companies put their factories. They're in countries where there are less regulations and the companies treat their employees like shit.

      I believe we need something, like the government that is equally as large as the corporations to take them on. The way society is set up now we are dependant on large businesses. How can we push them around? I would point to mobile phones in the US. There isn't a monopoly. There is choice but they don't really compete and mobile phones are one of the few things that quite often appear to be more expensive in the US.

      If there is no one regulating them who is to stop any sector from deciding it's better to stick together and keep prices high and if they do what can you do?

      The only problem with using the government is that you need people who actually care about voting and understand it. Sure by lowering education standards we've made it easier for people to get into college but I think we've also ended up with people who don't care as much about education, intelligence and as a result politics and the government.

      the government is free to do what they want and yes you can argue they are therefore useless but if people aren't willing to hold politicians accountable then why would they hold companies accountable especially when that society loves shopping so much?

  83. Line sharing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Three things. First is that net neutrality is a poor substitute for line sharing. I am in complete agreement that the free market would be the best solution. And that solution would involve cutting off the physical line monopoly at the knees (no vertical integration) so that there is actually a free market for internet service. Otherwise it is a monopoly and should be regulated as so. Secondly the ISPs should either get common carrier status and network neutrality or they should be responsible for everything that goes over their wires since they are controlling the content. It should probably be up to the individual ISPs to determine how much common carrier status vs responsibility they wish. But they shouldn't get both. Third is that wireless shouldn't be treated any differently than land lines.

  84. What's the political downside to Net Neutrality? by sageres · · Score: 2

    The article says, I quote:
    The net neutrality vision for government regulation of the Internet began with the work of Robert McChesney, a University of Illinois communications professor who founded the liberal lobby Free Press in 2002. Mr. McChesney's agenda? "At the moment, the battle over network neutrality is not to completely eliminate the telephone and cable companies," he told the website SocialistProject in 2009. "But the ultimate goal is to get rid of the media capitalists in the phone and cable companies and to divest them from control."
    Wow. Just Wow. So is the real goal is to turn an ISP into a public utility? Ok, so the author implies that the net neutrality has been perpetrated by the same groups as those who funded the "Fairness doctrine" attempt. Bad thing in my opinion, I was designed and would have put conservative side of the American public spectrum in disadvantage. But my question is this: Theoretically, how and how could the ability to deny ISPs ability to provide "tierred" Internet put any one of these political wings in a disadvantage?

  85. really no compettition? by corbettw · · Score: 1

    For you people claiming to live in areas that have no competition, and you have to use Comcast or just not be on the Internets, I suggest you go here, sign up, and start your DSL-providing ISP. Because it sounds like there's tons of opportunity in your area.

    --
    God invented whiskey so the Irish would not rule the world.
    1. Re:really no compettition? by pantheonwhaley · · Score: 1

      This is only available for users who are in Verizon territory where Verizon would supply there local telephone service if they had a land line at there residense or business.

      If only that site knew the difference between there and their. And probably they're, too. And maybe how to spell residence? All that aside, I'm sure these guys are legit. Now, if you'll excuse me, I need to go out to get my free candy from the Windowless Candy Van.

  86. to avoid losing money by Kohath · · Score: 1

    If they were willing to either A) deliver all of us the kind of bandwidth promised in their Unlimited*** plans, or B) charge by the megabyte instead of by the month, this should be moot.

    They aren't. Neither of those are efficient business models. That's not likely to change. Get over it.

    Asking a company to lose money on the services it provides you is futile. Using the government to force the company to lose money on the services it provides you is ultimately futile too. Companies don't do business and won't continue to do business to lose money. (It's not a corporate thing, individuals don't work for free either.) They'll just stop.

    I'm not sure why you cling to the fantasy that you deserve to get services at below the cost to produce them. Unfortunately, you're not alone.

    1. Re:to avoid losing money by DocSavage64109 · · Score: 1

      They don't have to lose money to provide rated services with government supervision. For examples, see gas, electric, water and every other utility to your house.

  87. Welcome to Canada by chronoss2010 · · Score: 0

    and i can go over that without games or pirating. I am disabled and its a source of communication. was i mean.... soon i will be gone....

  88. WSJ against net neutrality? shocking by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the wsj is a BUSINESS newspaper, they side with BUSINESS. of course they don't think net neutrality is needed, let the telco BUSINESSES manage their own networks. nevermind the consumer argument. this is typical for this paper.

  89. What a worthless article. by crazyf00l · · Score: 1

    Mr. Fund sounds like he's already been bought and paid for by media conglomerates. Net Neutrality doesn't hurt consumers, it hurts predatory billing and marketing practices of media conglomerates. He is just another witless toolbag on their payroll.

  90. Dear god YES we need network neutrality. by HeckRuler · · Score: 1
    And we have it. Mostly. There have been a few cases of people breaking the neutral nature of the Internet, but honestly it's pretty rare.

    is granting control over the Internet to political appointees the way to go? Regardless of your political point of view shouldn't the Internet remain free from regulation?"

    OH! Network neutrality regulations! Yeah, that's a good question. At first I didn't think that we really needed laws to ensure that we maintained a neutral and fair network that was a level playing field for startups and giant corporations alike. If anyone tried it, I thought we'd simply jump ship and they'd suffer for it.
    But then Comcast broke NN. And only a few people really cared. And I realized that the ISP market was consolidating and even if I wanted to pay more, I couldn't buy broadband from someone else. (So now I'm on DSL). And so yeah, the idea of regulating ISPs to FORCE them to actually provide a connection to the real, unfiltered, uncensored, unthrottled Internet-that-I-paid-for doesn't sound all that crazy anymore.

    But you just assumed that "Network Neutrality" meant legislation and regulation. Huh. I wonder who it was that explained it to you.

  91. competition by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anybody not for fair competition? Like rules in a football game, no knives to the dance party, can't put poison in your enemies drink?
    Business competition? Hey, it's barely fair now. You think competitors rush to please you with the best product? Fooey. Competition includes wiping out the enemy any way that is legal... so, legal kind of includes locking them out of markets, out of retail locations, denying them discounts, or, like the phone companies, just wiping out the DSL services and paying the FCC fine.
    So, we want fair competition. We want fair competition. That is what regulation is about: seeing that the deal is fair and fair to the public, too.
    People live in an ordered society, carried around like kids in a back pack, and rudely suggest, hey, I don't need government, what has it ever done for me: I am a solo, self made perfect individual. Nonsense. "To secure these liberties governments are instituted among men"...
    We need internet regulation... and we don't have nearly enough.
    Competition in the internet means, oh, misdirecting your email if it's coming from a competing ISP... yup.

  92. What exactly could cause an uprising? by HeckRuler · · Score: 1

    Like Comcast choosing to send false NAK packets to people using particular protocols just to hinder their connection?
    Been there, done that, only the Slashdot crowd really cared.

  93. Spectre of the Fairness Doctrine by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

    Have you heard of the FCC fairness doctrine. The Democrats keep bringing the idea back up.

    No, they don't.

    There are one or two Democrats in office who have raised the idea occasionally (mostly as a symbolic gesture toward the partisan alignment of certain "news" sources), and they consistently fail to receive support from any other Democrats in Congress, or any substantial number of people of any party, Democratic or otherwise.

    And there are lots of Republicans who keep misrepresenting that as "the Democrats", collectively, pushing to restore the Fairness Doctrine, even when, you know, when the Democrats had a majority in both Houses of Congress and their guy in the White House, the issue never even came out of committee. (I'm not even sure if a proposal was even introduced in that time.)

    If the FCC has internet regulatory rights; why do you think the FCC will not in the future apply an "fairness doctrine" to the internet?

    The FCC doesn't have any rights. It has authority under specific provisions of law passed by Congress, none of which -- at least, none of which that has been cited in any of the FCC actions relating to open internet -- appears to support the kind of content-based regulation of the internet that would be required to apply a "fairness doctrine", not too mention that content-based restrictions would need to meet a high Constitutional hurdle even if they were statutorily authorized.

    At any rate, what the FCC might conceivably try to do in the future is not an argument against the specific Report and Order that has recently been adopted. If you want to argue that Congress should pass a statute expressly forbidding the FCC from applying the Fairness Doctrine to the internet, well, I think that's probably superfluous and paranoid, but also harmless, and, in addition, completely irrelevant to the debate over the Report and Order recently issued regarding open internet rules.

    1. Re:Spectre of the Fairness Doctrine by TimSSG · · Score: 1

      http://www.humanevents.com/article.php?id=27185 When asked “Do you personally support revival of the ‘Fairness Doctrine?’” ... “Yes,” the speaker replied, without hesitation Good thing Pelosi is not an important Democrat. Tim S.

  94. wsj pushing yellow journalism for plutocrats by Dan667 · · Score: 1

    no one should trust anything written in that newspaper since it has been taken over by news corp.

  95. Size of net neutrality rules by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

    Have you looked at the rules involved in net neutrality? I guarantee you it will be a book, not a one-liner.

    The material provided from the Report and Order recently passed is a hair over two pages; given that the reason that the FCC previously gave that the full Report and Order wouldn't be available immediately was that the final document would include material addressing the dissents, I would expect that what has been released already represents substantially all of the rules material.

    So, while far from a one-liner, I would say it is also far from a book.

  96. Put up or... by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

    We already have plenty of laws forbidding business practices most NN alarmists already preach are going to happen.

    Please point to the existing laws which clearly address the issues of transparency, non-blocking, non-discrimination, and, in the context of non-discrimination, paid prioritization addressed in the Dec. 21, 2010, FCC Report and Order.

    Or could much easier be added instead of getting the FCC into the Internet)

    The FCC has been "into the Internet" for some time, though its previous actions have been case-by-case reactive rulings, and this week's action sets clear rules that are known to all parties in advance. So the idea that the alternative to the recent Report and Order was the FCC not getting into the Internet is ignorant, at best, and dishonest, at worst.

    And any observed lack of competition between ISPs is largely caused by the same FCC NN want to hand the keys to.

    NN isn't an entity that wants anything.

    No one is arguing for handing any keys to the FCC.

    Insofar as incorrect or inadequate use of existing regulatory authority in regard to its existing mandate to promote broadband competition is a problem, why shouldn't that problem be corrected by correct and adequate regulation?

    It's a bit of a feel good idea with almost no practical or ethical usefulness in the real world.

    Beyond the vague generalizations, what are your specific bases for the claim that the Dec. 21 Report and Order by the FCC has "almost no practical or ethical usefulness in the real world".

    I honestly don't care what the FCC or government says because it all happens on their whim anyway.

    What is this supposed to mean?

    The mindless mob grants them the power whether I approve or not.

    The FCC's power derives from grants from the Congress. The Congress' power derives from grants from the people via the State legislatures in adopting the Constitution and amendments thereto. Its not clear to me which of these groups you are attempting to characterize as a "mindless mob".

    If Government is authorized to prevent something you just handed them the keys to *someday* do the opposite and allow it.

    Really? So the Constitution authorization and obligation of Congress to ensure a republican form of government to every State in the Union (Art. IV, Sec. 4) hands them the keys to prevent any State from having such a government? The power of Congress to prevent slavery in the United States (Amend. XIII, Sec. 2) hands them the keys to impose it? The power of Congress to prevent States from imposing poll taxes (Amend. XXIV, Sec. 2) hands them the keys to require poll taxes?

  97. Re:First impressions of weak ad hom teabagging by protektor · · Score: 1

    I think you may have gotten off the train at the wrong place. Sesame Street was programmed by a large number of educators and psychologists. There is/was very little left or right leaning with it. It was government money that paid for most of it for a long time.

  98. Hope electricity companies don't catch on.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and charge me $5 everytime i want to use my toaster

  99. What a stupid ass question: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Is granting control over the Internet to political appointees the way to go?"

    No. It's much better to give default control to business interests, who are beholden to stock holders, rather than to the government, who are ostensibly beholden to the public. Jesus Christ.

  100. Control? by PPH · · Score: 1

    Net neutrality isn't about granting control to political appointees as much as it is denying control to everyone else.

    --
    Have gnu, will travel.
  101. Meanwhile, in the real world... by DragonWriter · · Score: 2

    I have a lot of problems with how the FCC regulates the air waves.

    The Fairness Doctrine is being leveraged to ensure that there are only two viable political parties.

    The Fairness Doctrine was adopted in 1949 and repealed by the FCC in 1987. Its not being leveraged to do anything. So you've got problems, but they don't seem to be with the FCC.

    The two-party duopoly is a product of the electoral system, and has been pretty much a consistent feature of the US since the adoption of the Constitution, which long predates the Fairness Doctrine -- and has unsurprisingly outlived the Fairness Doctrine.

    1. Re:Meanwhile, in the real world... by Caerdwyn · · Score: 1

      Yes, the Doctrine was repealed in 1987. However, the FCC still enforces the same principle under the "Diversity" moniker, with the same methodology (programming must contain content X, Y and Z in the proportions the FCC requires or your broadcast license is revoked). The Fairness Doctrine is alive and well, under the auspices of their Chief Diversity Officer (yes, that's the title of the position and it has real authority), Mark Lloyd.

      --
      Everybody gets what the majority deserves.
    2. Re:Meanwhile, in the real world... by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      Yes, the Doctrine was repealed in 1987. However, the FCC still enforces the same principle under the "Diversity" moniker, with the same methodology (programming must contain content X, Y and Z in the proportions the FCC requires or your broadcast license is revoked).

      Really? Evidence (not speculation or unsupported allegations) of this is to be found, where exactly?

      The Fairness Doctrine is alive and well, under the auspices of their Chief Diversity Officer (yes, that's the title of the position and it has real authority), Mark Lloyd.

      AFAICT Associate General Counsel and Chief Diversity Officer Mark Lloyd's resposibilities with regard to "diversity" have to do with ensuring "that the communications field is competitive and generates widespread opportunities" (as per the FCC page about him) -- that is diversity of ownership, equality of access among groups, and diversity of viewpoints across the whole market -- not that individual broadcasters represent a specified ratio of particular viewpoints as was the case under the Fairness Doctrine. This seems consistent with the general use of "Diversity" as a goal within the FCC, such as the orientation of the Diversity Federal Advisory Committee.

      The only references I can find on to "Diversity" or the "Chief Diversity Officer" at the FCC having anything to do with anything even remotely related to the single-broadcaster requirements imposed under the Fairness Doctrine are political advocacy sites making claims of that nature with no concrete support.

  102. False choice by sjbe · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Either you trust the government : no choice of provider (that much, history should prove)
    Or you trust business : you can choose (for a little more money probably, yes, deal with it) a better provider, additionally you can build something yourself

    Talk about false dichotomies. I don't trust either one and neither should you. I trust restrictions on each and a balance of power. We have separate branches of government because concentrating too much power in any one branch inevitably leads to abuse of power. We have government oversight of business to curb the inevitable excesses of corporate behavior. We allow corporations AND individuals to have a voice so that government does not abuse its power. We also have freedom of the press to keep both government and corporations (more) honest.

    Both government and corporations can be a powerful force for good as well as evil in society. Laws and careful checks and balances are how we ensure that they both remain more on the good side than the bad.

    Additionally your notion that there is always a choice with corporations simply isn't the case. I have precisely one choice of corporation when buying electricity, garbage disposal, natural gas, and mail delivery. I have precisely two choices for landline telecom services (a recent development from one) only one of which provides internet service to my address. Some businesses simply are natural monopolies and the only realistic way to keep them in check is through government oversight and regulation.

    1. Re:False choice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your one choice options are all government granted monopolies. Call your city and ask for a permit to collect your neighbors garbage, put up a power pole or to provide any of the services you mentioned. Corporations have very little power unless they are the few that in tight with the government. Net neutrality is a stupid idea. It will allow the cable companies to charge for lousy service without filtering out DOS attacks, hey because they have to be neutral! I'm an engineer with a patent on unauthorized network device detection. Net neutrality laws have too many unintended consequences, if they are passed it will be worse.

    2. Re:False choice by sac13 · · Score: 1

      We have government oversight of business to curb the inevitable excesses of corporate behavior.

      How's that working for you?

      We allow corporations AND individuals to have a voice so that government does not abuse its power. We also have freedom of the press to keep both government and corporations (more) honest.

      What recent government action was a result of individual voices and not corporations? What press is there that isn't owned by government or corporations that actually has some sort of influence?

      Additionally your notion that there is always a choice with corporations simply isn't the case. I have precisely one choice of corporation when buying electricity, garbage disposal, natural gas, and mail delivery. I have precisely two choices for landline telecom services (a recent development from one) only one of which provides internet service to my address. Some businesses simply are natural monopolies and the only realistic way to keep them in check is through government oversight and regulation.

      Every single industry you complain about there is something that's regulated or made a monopoly by government action. Name an industry that you have problems with that isn't regulated. Why is it the industries that people continuously complain about are the one's that are the most regulated? Is that just a coincidence?

    3. Re:False choice by gryf · · Score: 1

      One detail you left out is that government regulation mandates monopolies on utilities. It's not a natural condition.

      --

      #-#
      Ad Astra Per Aspera
      A rough road leads to the stars
  103. the cable box is dead by hofftendo64 · · Score: 1

    but the ISPs need that extra 60 a month so they just change the rules. it blows but the internet is about information and creativity. And I can pretty much do everything I want from my Kindle for free anyway. I'll go to the video store to rent my movies and the record store to get my music.

  104. Yes it is infrastructure but... by sjbe · · Score: 1

    But why shouldn't the government provide internet access?

    Government should only provide it if there is not economically feasible way for the private sector to do it. Economists call this market failure and it's not hard to come up with examples.

    Internet access *is* infrastructure -- it is what we have governments for. The internet is like power, water, sewage, roads, and the post.

    All of which are usually provided by private companies under government oversight. We only occasionally need the government to directly act. More often we just need government to provide regulation, oversight and sometimes funding. I agree that the internet is now vital infrastructure and that a certain amount of oversight in the public interest is desirable. The last thing we need is ISPs erecting unnecessary virtual toll booths to prioritize their own interests above yours and mine.

  105. Phony Claims by anorlunda · · Score: 1

    Net neutrality advocates main claim is that regulation is needed to preserve a level playing field. They say that a poor startup site must be able to deliver its content to us as fast as giants like Google. That's preposterous.

    Rich providers are able to buy many servers and faster servers. They lease multiple T3 lines instead of one T1. They also pay big bucks to third parties like Akamai to cache their content locally and deliver it faster. For example, only Hulu.com is able to deliver smooth video to me via my smartphone tethered to my laptop. Hulu has plenty of expensive adaptive software to do that and they also spend untold millions to Akamai to help speed it along. No proposed regulations will ever level the playing field to counter the advantage of deep pockets.

    Another thing bugs me. The net neutrality debate focuses exlusively on ISP carriers. Suppose instead of Comcast conspiring to slow down Google content, it is my web browser that throttles Google content? Suppose Apple starts slowing down content from any source that competes with Itunes? Suppose, Google slows down content to anyone not using the Google Chrome browser? Suppose, Hulu blocks content to people not running politically correct software [they already block delivery to Google TV]. Suppose the news networks decide to deliver different content to red states and blue states? The point is that there are countless non-ISP parties who are able to screw up a freely flowing Internet. It makes no sense to reglate ISPs and not everyone else.

    I'm deeply suspicious of present day net neutrality advocates. Their proposals will not create a level playing field, nor will they regulate anybody other than the ISP carriers. I smell a hidden political agenda here; just what I haven't figured out yet.

  106. MSJ OpEds are worthless now by serutan · · Score: 1

    a huge win for a slick lobbying campaign run by liberal activist groups and foundations. The losers are likely to be consumers who will see innovation and investment chilled...

    Yep, typical Murdoch Street Journal editorial, didn't read the rest. I used to actually read the Journal when it was an objective paper with a conservative slant. Now it's essentially Fox Financial News. Much of their news writing contains Limbaugh-esque omissions and half truths. Their OpEd formula is to blame something on liberals in the lead paragraph, recite standard Republican Party litany, continue until trimmed for space. It's no longer the reliable source of information it once was. It's a very sad vandalism of an American institution by a mercenary bastard.

  107. Microsoft and Illegal Drugs by sjbe · · Score: 2

    I challenge you to name one current unregulated market, or one company with a complete monopoly that isn't created by government regulation.

    I'll take the second one first. Microsoft. They have been convicted of abusing monopoly power in a court of law and Microsoft did not achieve its monopoly with help from government regulation.

    If you want unregulated markets that's easy too. Illegal drugs. In fact any black market - counterfeits, prostitution, etc. Oh, there are laws but that doesn't make them regulated markets. There are plenty of small scale monopolies on local markets for the distribution of illegal narcotics. Try competing with drug traffickers and you are very likely to wind up dead. That sounds an awful lot like an unregulated market to me.

    1. Re:Microsoft and Illegal Drugs by owski · · Score: 2

      If you want unregulated markets that's easy too. Illegal drugs. In fact any black market - counterfeits, prostitution, etc.

      Black markets, are by their very definition, absolutely regulated market. Simply because market participants break the regulations doesn't mean that the regulations don't exist.

      Oh, there are laws but that doesn't make them regulated markets.

      That's exactly what that means. Especially in this case as the regulations are vigorously and violently enforced.

      That sounds an awful lot like an unregulated market to me.

      That's because you don't have a clue what any of those words mean.

  108. Newspeak-named lie? by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

    In what specific manner is the Dec. 21 Report and Order a "newspeak-named lie of a policy"?

  109. Free of regulation. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Shouldn't medicine be free of regulation?

    Why should the government decide what I put in my own body.

    Shouldn't Roads be free of regulation?

    Why should the government decide what speed I drive?

    Shouldn't Housing markets be free of regulation?

    Why should the government decide what loan I can or cannot get?

  110. You mean easements? by calidoscope · · Score: 1

    You got pretty close to one of the key issues here. Utilities (including government owned) generally do not own the land that the wires or pipes run over/under. Those lines/pipes are routed via an easement granted an appropriate government (typically city/county) because such service was considered to in the Public Interest, Convenience Or Necessity.

    --
    A Shadeless room is a brighter room.
  111. You keep using that word... by sjbe · · Score: 1

    The monopoly created by your friendly government? Even in those areas you still usually have more than one choice.

    A monopoly BY DEFINITION means you have only a single choice of where to buy a product. If you have a few choices that is called an oligopoly. If you have only one customer that is called monopsony.

    And even if you only have one choice you can still boycott, or vote with your feet and move.

    Move where? From one town with a single provider of electricity to another town with a single provider of electricity? Wow. Great choice! [/sarcasm]

    Neither of those options is available with the federal government.

    You've never heard of immigration apparently... People move to different countries all the time for precisely that reason

    With uniform government regulations we lose the ability to exercise our power as consumers.

    Exactly when did we lose the right to vote?

  112. Rehash old shit, pose as new argument. by unity100 · · Score: 1

    So, this is what wall street, the mouthpiece of private interests, the lapdog of corporations, is doing.

    it passed the stage of whether it being something good or bad, as you see, now they are posing it as questions like 'is it REALLY needed'.

    all it is aimed at is, rekindling the fire in the minds of the fools that believe that there can be 'competition' in a conglomerate world in which more than 50% of the top economic entities of the world, are corporations even before countries. http://news.mongabay.com/2005/0718-worlds_largest.html

    these corporations are basically GOVERNMENTS. they are bigger than governments. their reach, their effect is much bigger than governments. you can go around and buy innumerable goods and services in a state, and yet still not leave the domain of a holding that maintains a few megacorporations that dominate those sectors. and you wouldnt even know, because of proxy shareholderships, stakeholderships, co-branding, branding and so on.

    and there are idiots who believe that 'free market' will handle that. yeah, it handles that. every 15-20 years, when some new technology comes, free market gives a chance for nobodies or small time companies to go big. like in the case of internet. with that, maybe it can be possible for a corporation that is not already owned by an established conglomerate may come up and get some market share, and you, as the consumer, may have 'choice'. but when dust settles, the big established conglomerates will move in with their MEGA capital, and consolidate the sector again. just like how it happened with isps. end of line sharing regulation ended in 2006, mega corps like at&t, comcast started to consolidate the internet, and, ironically, immediately at the same time they started attacking net neutrality. see how that works ?

    no, free market wont avail you until a new technology is found. the established powers in a capitalist economy is always bigger than any upcoming competitor can handle. competitors are either destroyed, or bought, or subdued and integrated into the existing hierarchy. it is the way of things in situations where the society allows a dog eat dog situation. the strong subdues the weak.

    see, there is THAT much lobbying, even though it is fairly well understood by now that no net regulation will mean walled gardens. there are still shitty pieces like this coming up in mouthpiece conglomerate media like wall street. you think they are doing all that effort for nothing ? you think they will not wall you off ?

    you think 'competition' will happen ? lets see how will it happen in this situation http://tech.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=10/04/18/1318210

    but actually, yeah, competition might happen. it may take 5 to 10 years for an acceptable competitor to come up and allow you a non walled garden choice. but in the meantime, your kids will grow up, you will have aged a decade, in a world in which you are not able to decide what you can do on the internet, but some corporate appointed administration.

    its private censorship, for profit. its worse than any other kind of censorship. even the censorship in repressive countries, have some ideology behind them, right or wrong, an idea. but, in the case of this kind of private censorship, your life gets restricted for the mere sake of private profits of a small group of individuals.

    yeah. net neutrality is needed. it is what made internet what it is in the first place. what is not needed is, lapdog publications like wall street trying to do shitty propaganda, and fools believing some school of economics which even the most prominent figure of that school have given up. http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2008/oct/24/economics-creditcrunch-federal-reserve-greenspan

  113. In Soviet Russia.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In Soviet Russia, the broadband filters YOU! (sorry, couldnt resist!)

  114. History lesson time by jmorris42 · · Score: 3, Informative

    > This was pretty much the case during the dial-up era, but the capital
    > demands for high-speed service makes it difficult to get a true
    > competitive marketplace.

    As someone who was there, yes the capital demands ramped up with the move to 56K and DSL (Go lookup the price of a fully loaded Portmaster 3 in 1996/7 vs a Portmaster 2 and a sack of modems) but that wasn't what changed. In that era the telcos were mostly out of the picture, selling (raping) the ISPs for dialup lines on a even basis. Then they realized the Internet wasn't just a passing fad and got in bigtime at prices nobody could hope to compete with. The head of AT&T was on the tube saying things like "Yea we expect to lose money for five plus years but we can afford it." Small 'Mom & Pop' operations started dying left and right about then as the price for 'unlimited' dialup fell through the $19.95/month level and started toward $9.99/month. Those prices were lower than the cost of telco service to handle a customer and that wasn't even taking into account the leased circuit upstream, normal business costs, etc.

    But there were still big players capitalized well enough to stay in the game and the laws were on their side. Then Rep Tauzin (R-BellSouth) spearheaded the effort to gut the CLECs, the markets panicked, the equipment makers were left with worthless paper for the equipment they had been self financing to the CLECs and before anyone realized what was happening it had spread throughout the Internet and the .bomb was in full swing.

    > Maybe the solution is for a municipal utility to provide a
    > fiber optic line from the residence to a C.O.

    That is one way. A better way would be to revisit the AT&T breakup and this time do it right. A regulated monopoly with the part that is a natural monopoly, the physical plant comprising the CO and the wires/fibers/right of ways and the rest a totally unregulated entity who buys access to an equal footing with as many additional players wish to enter the market.

    --
    Democrat delenda est
    1. Re:History lesson time by witherstaff · · Score: 2

      Great writeup. When the country goes from thousands of ISPs back to only the ILECs (Baby bells) it's not market consolidation, it's the baby bells acting like the monopoly they are. It got really bad when Bush took office and put Powell's kid in charge of the FCC. All the good things of the '96 telco reform were removed and big telco won the internet access war. We have all suffered since.

      Since I doubt we'll ever see a penny of the 300 billion we've already spent for nationwide broadband, or the ILECs ever getting punished, my only hope is new tech. Maybe aircraft that can loiter indefinitely, or blimps, can provide the last mile and Google's dark fiber is the savior. Maybe someone figures out quantum entangled routers. Any answer that leads to the baby bells going belly up would make my year.

      I still have Portmaster 3s and a Portmaster 4 sitting in back, a DS3 trunk of modem cards in one box - ooh ahh! Those were the days.

    2. Re:History lesson time by ultranova · · Score: 1

      That is one way. A better way would be to revisit the AT&T breakup and this time do it right. A regulated monopoly with the part that is a natural monopoly, the physical plant comprising the CO and the wires/fibers/right of ways and the rest a totally unregulated entity who buys access to an equal footing with as many additional players wish to enter the market.

      I have an even better idea: keep the physical lines as government-owned utility, and sell access to anyone who pays (or just finance the whole thing from taxes, but that's socialism). No wholesale prices, no middlemen - a bit per second of bandwidth costs 1/1000000th of what 1 megabit per second does. Of course, this still requires some way of handling bandwidth scalpers.

      There's no benefit to be had from having companies act as middlemen between a regulated monopoly and users.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    3. Re:History lesson time by jmorris42 · · Score: 1

      > I have an even better idea: keep the physical lines as government-owned utility,

      We don't have many totally government owned utilities and most suck. More typically we have the government grant a monopoly to a company then regulate the hell out of it. A utility stock is known for fairly flat share prices but reliable dividends. This gives the utility easier access to the private capital markets.

      > There's no benefit to be had from having companies act as middlemen
      > between a regulated monopoly and users.

      But therre is. There is a big difference between a naked pipe and Internet service. Wile the last mile is a natural monopoly the rest of the Internet Service isn't a natural monopoly so the Free market should be leveraged to provide it's magic of plenty.

      Imagine a mid size market supporting the following competitors:

      1. An AOL like provider pushing an Internet Plus experience based on robust customer service, lots of internal content, etc.

      2. A Full Premium Internet Provider (think Speakeasy) charging a really premium price but providing web space, lots of email accounts, a full Usenet server and good phat pipes to the wider Internet and no bandwidth caps.

      3. A budget provider with an overloaded upstream, bandwidth caps to try to keep things flowing enough to keep people leaving in droves, no frills and pricing cheap enough the poor will put up with it.

      4. A triple play provider. They have local steaming/multicast servers, a full telco switch and provide cable tv, telephone service and Internet.

      All built on leasing access to the last mile to get to to their customers from a regulated utility. Some of those suggested providers would probably end up failing and other I didn't think of in a minute or two of pondering might pop up and thrive. Can YOU say which ONE set of services the government should provide to everyone? Do you really believe that if the government did decide that you would like their choice?

      --
      Democrat delenda est
    4. Re:History lesson time by ultranova · · Score: 1

      There is a big difference between a naked pipe and Internet service.

      Of course there is. Namely, a naked pipe lets you do whatever you want and buy additional services wherever you want, while an "Internet service" bundles unnecessary crap and has incentives to hinder the usage of outside services to sell their own "extra" ones.

      There is no reason whatsoever of why you should pay for email and web space to the same guy who you are paying for actual connectivity, and plenty of reasons not to.

      All built on leasing access to the last mile to get to to their customers from a regulated utility. Some of those suggested providers would probably end up failing and other I didn't think of in a minute or two of pondering might pop up and thrive.Can YOU say which ONE set of services the government should provide to everyone?

      Yes: packet delivery. There is no reason to bundle anything else on it. If you want email, buy that from a private provider. If you want web space, buy that from the same or another provider. But there's no reason whatsoever why any of these service providers should get a single burnt wooden penny for connectivity, since they aren't providing that. They are simply renting lines, then renting those same lines to you at a higher cost, contributing nothing.

      Do you really believe that if the government did decide that you would like their choice?

      That's the beauty of it: in my model, you buy whatever services you want, and pay for them, and only them. You don't pay a bunch of stockholders a lease to use wires that were build with taxpayer money in the first place. You don't end up paying third parties with connectivity they have no part in delivering, and thus also don't end up subject to their whims with port blocking, traffic shaping, etc (you are, of course, subject to the government's whims, but you would be anyway, even if there were middlemen).

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

  115. Only liability is needed by hacksoncode · · Score: 1
    ISPs can't have it both ways. Either they get to control the data they are transporting based on content, *or* they can have the safe harbor legal provisions available to common carriers.

    It's *logically inconsistent* for them to have both. If they control it, they are partly liable... that's a major part of the legal definition of the term.

    If you make them liable for the data they transport if they control the data based on content, I can guarantee this whole net neutrality problem will go away. Regulations aren't necessary. Holding people accountable for their actions is. No free passes!

  116. Regulation to *protect* freedom by SoftwareArtist · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Let me quote from the preamble to the GNU General Public License:

    To protect your rights, we need to prevent others from denying you these rights or asking you to surrender the rights.

    That principle applies to so many different situations. People often discuss freedom under the false assumption that you have freedom unless the government takes it away from you. That view is way too simplistic. There are many threats to freedom from many sources. The fact is, lots of people will try to restrict your freedom unless they are prevented from doing so. That is what government regulation is about (when it's done properly, which certainly is not always the case): protecting your freedom by denying others the right to restrict it.

    --
    "I'm too busy to research this and form an educated opinion, but I do have time to tell everyone my uninformed opinion."
  117. really, they don't get it by farble1670 · · Score: 1

    Regardless of your political point of view shouldn't the Internet remain free from regulation?"

    really, whoever wrote this does not get it at all.

    of course ideally the internet would be free from all regulation. unfortunately we live in a world where corporations that control the internet act to maximize their profits in ways that will hurt the consumer. who's going to stop them? our (only) recourse is to make laws that bind these corporations.

  118. Troll, false dichotomy... by chaboud · · Score: 1

    Protection from business abuse does not equal governmental abuse.

    This is the standard free-enterprise fear-mongering tripe, and it has *no* place on slashdot. Protecting the consumer from abuse by artificial monopolies (or oligopolies) is just as important as protecting the citizen from abuse by the government. It is the function of a responsible government to do both.

    Why worry about a slippery slope when you're already aiming for the bottom?

  119. Why Is This Modded Up Insightful? by crunchygranola · · Score: 1

    As DragonWriter points out the "Fairness Doctrine" was abolished in August 1987 - about what is termed "a generation ago" (23 years).

    Mod this guy down and DragonWriter up as "Informative".

    --
    Second class citizen of the New Gilded Age
  120. No by Charliemopps · · Score: 1

    If there was choice... if ISPs weren't government sanctioned monopolies, then maybe. But the majority of Americans have only one choice for their ISP. That ISP can do ANYTHING they want and there is nothing their customers can do about it. I live in a major metropolitan area and even here I only have 2 choices for internet service, a single DSL provider or a single Cable company... and the Cable service is so incredibly bad that it's not even an option. In a situation like this either the ISP needs to be heavily regulated or the government simply needs to run the utility. Simple as that. Maybe if mobile broadband comes down to a reasonable pricing structure then maybe that would be an option... but theres rather obvious price fixing going on in that industry so we're unlikely to see lower prices until, you guessed it, they get more regulation.

  121. Free vs Unregulated by vanyel · · Score: 1

    There is a common misconception, both with Net Neutrality and with Economics, that "free" == "unregulated". That is simply not true. An unregulated market quickly becomes very *not* free as the strong use their power to protect their interests and squash the others. Perhaps a better term would be "fair" market, as what we want is for an entity to have the freedom to do what they want, without controlling what others do, so that everyone has the same opportunities. If there is no regulation, the gorillas want very much to, and will, control what others do.

  122. hairyfeet eats his words (twice) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://it.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1916240&cid=34612834

    and

    http://it.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1916240&cid=34647708

  123. No, but the current administration... by scottbomb · · Score: 1

    ...thinks that big gubbermint is the answer to every problem great, small, even imaginary (like this one).

    I don't recall any ISP ever preventing me from downloading anything. Nor have I ever met anyone with such a complaint. And yet, here we are.

    1. Re:No, but the current administration... by HuskyHero · · Score: 1

      Great post! This latest FCC power-grab/debacle is just the latest example as to what Government agency should be first on the chopping block and totally disbanded. The unconstitutional actions of these unelected "regulators" while operating on the taxpayer dime is simply astounding. Anyone believing the motives of the FCC are altruistic and not about ULTIMATELY gaining control over the internet is not a student of history. We would save a bunch of money get rid of plenty of headaches if we start with dumping the FCC and move to privatizing the responsibilities of the TSA and disbanding that black-hole of money as well. This country has far more important problems to tackle with the fools at the FCC creating an imaginary one to get there greasy paws on the freeflow of information known as the internet.

  124. American Centric by omb · · Score: 1

    Sorry you guys, you have completely lost the plot. Most posts, but not most of the internet is USA offshore.

    We dont like you, care much about your CRAP ISP subscription rip-offs, or your broken and benighted legal system which deliverers Justice, only to the very rich (costs in cause) tort-reform, the "American Centuary" or who is patent fucking or time wasting today, your debt is huge, your productivity carp and the whole economhy is in the tank while your leaders still do Keynsian eye-shut and continue to try to spend other peoples money.

    "The problem with re-distribution/socialism is when you run out of other peoples money"

    You will be very lucky to last another 10 years

  125. the internet vs. the connection to it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the internet itself, its content and protocols, should remain unregulated. however the manner in which people connect to the internet, namely via monopolistic ISPs, needs regulation to ensure the ability of its customers to get where they want to go. A cable-like subscription service, with packages of websites, as is proposed, harms those sites with niche markets, as well as political dissidents and pirates, who the ISP will block access to. Regardless of your position on those activites, free speech on the internet requires a neutral connection to the internet; I for one am all for free speech on the internet, and am therefore for regulation on the companies we depend on to connect to the internet.

  126. TFD is the least of your worries by weston · · Score: 1

    The Fairness Doctrine is being leveraged to ensure that there are only two viable political parties.

    If you're worried about an entrenched party duoarchy, any content-focused "Fairness Doctrine" should be the least of your concerns. Even if it were still operating (it's not, and it's pretty easy to verify both by pointing at examples of broadcast outlets that violate its principles as well as checking history), any effects it has are an order of magnitude lower than the plurality voting system.

  127. TFA in a nutshell by sorak · · Score: 1

    TFA uses the "seven degrees of Kevin Bacon" game to tie Network Neutrality in with communism. This article is FUD and John Fund needs to either debate the issue or put on his tin foil hat and go home.

    1. Re:TFA in a nutshell by Intrinsic · · Score: 1

      Its the wall street journal, free market bullshit at its finest. Another journal that believes we live in a free country.

  128. Consumers need protecting. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Someone has to represent the interests of consumers in all of this, especially given that the majority of wired broadband services are effectively monopolies due to the cost of rolling out new fiber. Arguing that we don't need regulation to protect the interests of consumers in the broadband market "because the industry will regulate itself" is like arguing that wolves make perfectly good sheep dogs. I don't think corporations are evil, but neither are the wolves - they're just hungry, and they will glut themselves if they're allowed to.

  129. Regulation by Internetuser1248 · · Score: 1
    I think it is bizarre how people speak of regulation by government as though it infringes on personal freedoms, Perhaps if you have a really corrupt government and unfair regulations this may be the case but the original reason for government regulation as it was first envisioned was to protect the public interest against powerful private interests. The idea that lack of regulation equates in some way to freedom is absurd. Regulations limit the use of power in society. WIthout them we would have a despotic system where wealthy private interests controlled the police and the judiciary, and people were merely slaves.

    is granting control over the Internet to political appointees the way to go? Regardless of your political point of view shouldn't the Internet remain free from regulation?"

    Regardless of corruption and ineptitude the population at least has a modicum of power over the government, it would be lovely if the internet could remain free but if it isn't regulated it will be controlled by corporate interests, they are behind the curve but they will catch up eventually.

  130. Yes by uolamer · · Score: 1

    Yes.

    --
    s/©//g
  131. Wrong. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Corporate ownership of our government is the problem.

    The reason the government only levies a trivial fine when a regulated corporation is caught doing something like poisoning its customers is that by and large, business effectively owns government and prevents real regulation from operating.

  132. Net neutrality is needed as legislation by crispytwo · · Score: 1

    Simple, clear laws are best. Ones that lawyers can't understand because they are too straight forward.

    There are 2 things I think it must protect, and should be enforceable.

    1) an ISP cannot determine where a customer can and where a customer cannot go on the internet - i.e. all IPs are accessible at all times
    2) an ISP cannot charge a customer extra to visit any particular end-point (IP) - including ports.

    Whatever legislation that the FCC is proposing *may* cover these 2 things. If so, great. If not, shame!

    I can imagine no rules about:
    * volume of data - charging me more for high volume, I can understand that. False advertising falls under other laws, along with contract law. If I agree that anything over 50 GB produces an extra charge, and that is what I agreed to, and therefore I expect a charge. However, that means a measurement should also be presented/available at all times if I'm interested... proof and track-ability is essential then.
    * bandwidth guarantees - paying for ensuring that I have minimum bandwidth, I can understand paying extra too. Again false advertising falls under other laws.
    * connections that occur in other countries are not guaranteed. i.e. if China blocks you from accessing their end-points from the US, tough luck. Your ISP is not involved.

    false advertising law explained

    We don't need crazy laws that a child cannot understand.

    I seriously don't understand why these concepts are so difficult to accept de facto. It has essentially been this way for a long time. Forcing it to not change would be relieving. I would imagine that the ISPs would be able to use legislation like this to play nice with each other too. i.e. "you can't, ISP A block ISP B because you will be causing a violation of law X"

  133. Ad Hominem Journal by Dr.+Hellno · · Score: 1

    The Net Neutrality Coup
    By: John Fund

    Liberals like net neutrality.
    Liberals funded research which supported net neutrality.
    Liberals advocated for net neutrality.

    In conclusion, as I have proven above, net neutrality is evil.

  134. The Net *will* be regulated. Debate is, by whom. by richardtallent · · Score: 1

    I don't trust any form of unlimited power: government, corporations, churches, unions, mobs, free markets, or individuals.I don't think any of them should be in charge of the Internet, or society at large. But I do believe in pitting them against one another where needed, to balance each other's ability to control my life.

    I give telcos the exclusive right to run wires through my back yard and shoot electrons through the air on limited frequencies. In return, I reasonably demand that if I'm paying for their services, I can connect who whoever they hell I want to without them degrading the connection because they want to sell me a competing service.

    I don't let the water company charge me one rate for water to fill my pool, and another to brew my beer. I pay for water to be delivered, and it's none of their damned business who I use it. Same for electricity. Telcos can charge me for usage, but should not be able to use their quasi-government role as a monopoly utility service to turn the Internet back into Cable TV.

    When the choice is between living without Internet access, or choosing a watered-down version, there really isn't an economically viable choice for most people, any more than most people could reasonably choose to live without water, electricity, or roads. You can survive, but you can't compete. So we can't unplug, nor can we vote with our wallets.. A natural monopoly requires a balancing force, because there is no free market. The government is the way that democratic societies choose to impose the will of the people when the market cannot.

  135. Corporate Police State by Sinn3d · · Score: 1

    Never expected the citizens of the land of the free wanting and accepting so much of its goverment bs. A corporate police state will surely make you win the war on terror, drugs and nipples... ... oh and ofcourse, protect the children.

  136. If you think this is a good idea... by RogueWarrior65 · · Score: 1

    If you think government control over the Internet is a good idea, ask yourself how you would feel when the party opposing your personal political beliefs gets control and does things you don't like. I guarantee that you'll wish you were back in the good old days.

  137. and it is for this very reason.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    that those skilled individuals will band together and protest online.

    Internet must remain unfiltered. It is what makes it one of the greatest inventions of our time and perhaps ever.

  138. It's not regulation, it's a technical problem by phrackwulf · · Score: 1

    Let me explain, no there is too much, let me sum up.

    Not that anyone will read this, but. The Internet is due to be split in half. We're going to see a corporate whitenet that is dominated by the Disney level content and major corporations for their purposes and that is regulated primarily by the FCC to provide all the legal protection those companies demand. Then we're going to see a greynet emerge that is fairly similar to the Internet we know and enjoy today though the corporations and government will have the power to roll in to clear the "thieves forest" with the "brute squad" any time they feel like it. Verizon probably ends up controlling most of the access to the greynet because of their excellent 1G and 3G usb internet connections through cell towers and it comes down to demand. Most people don't give a crap about the anarchy and freedom a small population on the Internet like techies wants and needs. Sorry folks, all frontiers end up being settled eventually. The next frontier is the merger of biological and digital technology. Have fun storming the castle! Think it'll work? It would take a miracle!

    --
    What would Richard Feynman do, if he were here right now? He'd do some math and he'd follow through!
  139. Re:First impressions of weak ad hom teabagging by wagadog · · Score: 0

    oooh aaagh dirty hippie government socialist commies!!!

    controlling the internets and sesame street!

    dear god will someone please think about the children?

  140. Nothing is free by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Internet will be regulated by either:

    1) A small cartel of big corporations.
    2) The government.

    Freedom is nice in theory, but eventually free market forces drive *everything* into the hands of one of the above.

    All you can hope for is to pick which one.

  141. From where to where with what? by sgt101 · · Score: 1

    Ok, you want 10mbs uncontended.

    Fine.

    From where to where?

    From here to everywhere?

    Ok, what if the google gateway is contended inthe IP-X, or thier cache is dry if your ISP has one? What then?

    What if your ISP's backbone is flooded? Will you pay for them to have enough capacity to manage the peak for everyone on their backbone? Can you? Doubt it.

    And if the ISP's backbone is clear, what about the CDN or the T1 network? You can't pay them directly because of the market and technical structure at the moment. Google can, Amazon can, and check it. The big content providers run their own CDNs.

    And neutral to what? Voip? Filetransfer, Video? What bits of the video? The structural packets or the detail? If we are neutral we kill voip and video for what? Why should we have poor video so that someone can share toretzzz ? Ok - why should we have slow torrents so that someone can watch a video... the point is that it is a decision.

    And; why IP? What about common carriage?

    To get proper neutrality we need to rebuild from the bottom up. A total network rearchitecture world wide. Never, never, never going to happen again.

    What this comes down to is the access network. The access network is either an mechanism of community extortion or it's a utility, like the water network or the roads.

    The answer is for the access network to be run as a utility at a national level. Until we go back to that in a very large part of the world wide consumer market (so I mean the USA and Europe) we are going to go round and round with this. The mobile network is going to have the same thing in 5 years for sure.

    Or - tollroads.

    Now, let's be fair, some parts of every system are going to need tolls. International shipping has tolls, railways have tolls... hell roads have tolls on bridges and so on; to get the strategic links done in hard places this is what is going to be needed, but you can manage day to day without going accross the toll bridge if you want, and that has to become the case or continue to be the case with the internet.

    --
    --------------------------------------------- "In the end, we're all just water and old stars."
    1. Re:From where to where with what? by profplump · · Score: 1

      You're confusing the issue. If there's an expensive link or a bandwidth-constrained link net neutrality would not prevent the link owner from charging for use of the link or to upgrade the link. The current Internet is already based on your "toll roads" plan. Net neutrality would simply prevent the toll road operators from charging one content provider more than another based on their name. I seriously doubt you'd put up with a toll bridge that charged people named sgt101 twice the toll as everyone else.

  142. Not currently "free from regulation" by profplump · · Score: 1

    The Internet is not currently "free from regulation" so I don't see how avoiding net neutrality would "keep" us from anything.

    If there were 14 ISPs that serviced my home I wouldn't give a rat's ass about net neutrality. But there are only 2, as a direct result of governmental regulation about who can run wires to me, and I'm relatively lucky to have that "choice". Anyone claiming that net neutrality is adding regulation to an otherwise wide-open system is either uniformed or trolling.

  143. Prohibitions don't imply micromanagement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You say it should be against the law for me to strike you with an axe. But is giving control of all axes to political appointees, really such a great idea? Why are you trying to put the government in charge of overseeing all axe usage?

    Word pretty much any other issue the way the anti-neutrality people like to characterize neutrality, and you'll see how dishonest they're being. Guess what guys, there isn't going to be serious debate -- or at least not with you included -- while you're spouting that bullshit. When you lie about the issue, you are opting out of discussion of the issue and letting your opponents go on with their lives of solving the problems that they think they have.

    I have a lot of sympathy for people who don't want their privately-owned networks be regulated, or at least the ones whose networks' existence isn't actually owed to government-granted monopolies (oops, so that rules out just about every cable TV, phone, and wireless company). If there's anyone left after that gapingly-wide hey-you-claim-to-be-a-capitalist-but-really-you're-a-socialist caveat, then you should go ahead and really argue that you ought to be able to run your network however you choose, and I'll support your freedom.

    But don't fucking lie and say that since someone is proposing putting a prohibition on some of your freedoms, that they're talking about putting some beaurocrat in "control" of your network. When you do that, everyone is too distracted by the stupid fuckedupness of your statement and we forget that you actually had some rights being infringed. Make it actually be about your rights, not your paranoid imagination.

    And likewise, if you're one of those people who runs a network that owes itself to socialist government involvement, either due to the decisions of local governments to grant franchises, or actual government money, or easements, or the FCC's own spectrum usage rules, then SHUT THE FUCK UP about issues of property and rights. You have chosen to work within a framework where Public Good is the primary issue. Nobody made you do that, Comcast, Quest, and Verizon. If you lie to the public by trying to distract them with libertarian talk while you're taking public handouts, then your hypocrisy distracts us all from any point you just might happen to make about the Public Good. Stop lying.

  144. Why Europe will not fail... by termineite · · Score: 1

    Blame AT&T and blame Google.

    The real issue here is cable vs mobile. Apple has been clever enough to force AT&T into a flat-rate program where there is no reward whatsoever for AT&T to speed up its lines. In Europe (where I live), users are charged by GB so the cellphone groups are actually putting pressure in users to use more data.

    Google is seeing YouTube growth in the mobile "trend" threatened and wants to speed up things. They will even go to the extent of paying ISP's to do it.

    Like fixed phones (who uses them anymore?) in the near future so will mobile net access dominate. The big players will then have established themselves in such a way that there is no way a "youtube"-like startup will be able to compete as it's site will be excruciatingly slow.

    This is an establishment-play by Google. A greedy play by the ISP's. A power-need play by the Government. And a suck-it-up-play for the rest of us.

  145. the US is getting more stupid by the day by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    what's next? Hey, lets get rid of state owned police forces, after all who really needs protection should be able to choose the suitable package along his own needs!

    WTF?!

  146. Other subscribers' ability to burst by tepples · · Score: 1

    I rent a pipe from you, with x bits of capacity.

    Just because you rent a pipe that can burst at 6 Mbps doesn't mean you get to burst all the time and degrade other subscribers' ability to burst. Would you rather have TOS restrictions against services commonly associated with degrading other subscribers' ability to burst, or would you rather have a monthly cap plan in which the ISP automatically downgrades your pipe to 0.05 Mbps down and 0.02 Mbps up if you've transferred more than 5 GB over the past 30 days?

    And, before you mention keeping the house in good condition

    Viruses, worms, spam zombies, etc.

    I can't exactly paint my internet bright pink, can I ?

    Not exactly, but Firefox users can paint their web browser bright pink.

    1. Re:Other subscribers' ability to burst by vegiVamp · · Score: 1

      You are indeed specifying the definition of "burst": it's the ability to temporarily go above your limit. That is to say, what (usually/should) happens is that when you rent, say, a 5Mbps pipe, you now rent the pipe for an average speed of 5Mbps instead of the more traditional top speed of 5Mbps.

      If you constantly use your burst capacity, your average is going to end up above the 5Mbps, and your provider will be in his full rights to kick you in the nuts.

      Additionally, your question doesn't make sense, because your example specifies a pipe rented at bandwidth, while your question mentions a pipe rented at volume. And, yes, I'm aware that some ISPs - mostly in the same countries - do both at once. Still I don't want no damn TOS - if I rent by volume and exceed my volume, I fully expect to be capped until I cough up, same as when I buy a pint I don't expect it to magically refill until I order another one.

      Your point about services associated with degrading other subscribers' bandwidth is really an issue of your ISP overselling his capacity, isn't it ? How would you react if the bartender tells you you can only have one pint every hour because otherwise the other customers won't get any ? I'd be pretty fast to find a decent pub, I can tell you.

      For your second point, yes, that's indeed an issue. Particularly, that's an issue of termites. As long as they stay in my house (virus eating my performance and bandwidth) and I return the house in pristine condition when I give it back, none of the landlord's concern. As soon as they go eat the neighbours' houses (viruses infecting other people) someone will rightfully tell me to get my shit together.

      --
      What a depressingly stupid machine.
  147. Without overselling, expect skyrocketing rates by tepples · · Score: 1

    what (usually/should) happens is that when you rent, say, a 5Mbps pipe, you now rent the pipe for an average speed of 5Mbps instead of the more traditional top speed of 5Mbps.

    That's easy to bury in fine print: the residential plan is an 0.05 Mbps line burstable to 5 Mbps.

    Your point about services associated with degrading other subscribers' bandwidth is really an issue of your ISP overselling his capacity, isn't it ?

    Yes. Without overselling, all services would be priced at the "business class" rate, and very few home users could afford to subscribe.

    Particularly, that's an issue of termites. As long as they stay in my house (virus eating my performance and bandwidth)

    Except they don't stay in your house. Spam zombies don't stay within your LAN; they send mail over the connection that you rent and through the oversold connection that you share with your neighbors.

    1. Re:Without overselling, expect skyrocketing rates by vegiVamp · · Score: 1

      In one line you offer a consumer line at 0.5 Mbps, in the next you offer that without overselling stuff would be more expensive. In your third line you apparently haven't even bothered to read the entire paragraph you reply to.

      This is pointless.

      --
      What a depressingly stupid machine.
    2. Re:Without overselling, expect skyrocketing rates by tepples · · Score: 1

      In one line you offer a consumer line at 0.5 Mbps, in the next you offer that without overselling stuff would be more expensive.

      What I meant to say but appear to have failed to get across is that ISPs advertise a speed in large print and then in small print disclaim that the advertised speed is not the sustained speed. If they were to provide their large-print speed as sustained rather than burst speed, they would have to charge far more. As I understand it, "overselling" in the home and small-business Internet access market refers to this practice of not buying enough upstream to serve advertised speed times the number of customers, relying on results from queueing theory under the assumption that traffic will be intermittent. If I misunderstand this, we have run into Layne's Law.

    3. Re:Without overselling, expect skyrocketing rates by vegiVamp · · Score: 1

      That may be the case wherever you deal with your crooked ISP, but I have never seen burst rates advertised here in Belgium. Maybe I missed them, though.

      I get promised 20Mbps on my home line, and I routinely get 15 to 18 out of it.

      Some amount of overselling is very reasonable - you don't expect people to be online and pumping 24/7. If you take that to the point where you have to embed stuff like "we really promise a trickle but you may get more" in the fine print, that's thievery. No amount of brainwashed corporate apologistism can change that.

      That is also not what this was about. It was about what you pay for, and wether or not the company you buy your bandwidth off should have any say in what you do with said bandwidth.

      --
      What a depressingly stupid machine.
  148. We don't need no skinkin first amendment. by zenpickle · · Score: 1

    By the same shaky reasoning you could ask why we have a constitution to protect us. The constitution is the first level of regulation. Who needs the first amendment? Get the government out of the business of regulating speech. Let the market decide. Why have anti-monopoly legislation. Who needs OSHA anyway.

    I have libertarian tendencies. I don't think the government does a great job at proactively running things. I believe that the market does best at most things except ensure fair competition in the market. Let the government be negative and merely prevent the things that restrict fair and open competition. I see net neutrality as an extension of free speech needing the same protections.

  149. Geolibertarianism by tepples · · Score: 1

    But then that government would have to set a price, which means the government is now in the internet business whether they like it or not.

    I actually, I think that would put them into the rent extraction business.

    Which according to geolibertarians is exactly the business that the government should be in.

    I suppose that the utility poles could become so heavily wired as to run out of space or lose structural integrity if enough businesses were to lease space on them

    The government should set the rates such that once poles start to become unsafe, it can afford to build more poles. But as I understand real-world governments, much of the revenue would be siphoned off into the general fund to pay for unrelated entitlements.

  150. E/I for one by tepples · · Score: 1

    However, the FCC still enforces the same principle under the "Diversity" moniker, with the same methodology (programming must contain content X, Y and Z in the proportions the FCC requires or your broadcast license is revoked).

    Really? Evidence (not speculation or unsupported allegations) of this is to be found, where exactly?

    There are a few things that grandparent might be referring to. One is the E/I requirement: three hours per subchannel per week of regularly scheduled educational programming intended for children. Television programming for children 12 and under must be carefully edited so as not to look remotely like an infomercial; the series Pokémon and Yu-Gi-Oh! in particular have been responsible for fines against broadcast stations. Another is "Reasonable Access" and "Equal Opportunity" for candidates to buy ad time. Read more here.

    1. Re:E/I for one by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      There are a few things that grandparent might be referring to. One is the E/I requirement: three hours per subchannel per week of regularly scheduled educational programming intended for children. Television programming for children 12 and under must be carefully edited so as not to look remotely like an infomercial; the series Pokémon and Yu-Gi-Oh! in particular have been responsible for fines against broadcast stations.

      Sure, while that has to do with content, it is nothing like the viewpoint balance requirements of the Fairness Doctrine.

      Another is "Reasonable Access" and "Equal Opportunity" for candidates to buy ad time.

      That does have to do with viewpoint non-discrimination, but only in advertising sales in a narrow area (not in the broadcasters own content), and neither of those policies initiated by the FCC within its discretionary authority -- both "Reasonable Access" and the "Equal Opportunity" requirements are express Congressional mandates in the Telecommunication Act.

      The idea that the FCC is covertly applying the same kind of rules that were involved in the Fairness Doctrine under the label "Diversity" is, plainly and simply, false.

  151. Let me see that thong by tepples · · Score: 1

    Exactly. I should have worded it better, e.g., "shut up, and go to your Cisco rep."

    They'd mishear that as "shut up and go to your SisQó rep", giving them an excuse to prioritize "The Thong Song" over indie music sites.

  152. Why Just The Internet? by Nom+du+Keyboard · · Score: 1

    Why just the Internet? What about if the FCC had been able to regulate the content of your telephone calls from the days of Alexander Graham Bell? Why not just let them regulate everything, since some people believe that more government and its intrusion and associated spending the the solution to Everything wrong in the world?

    --
    "It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."