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Verizon's Plan To Turn the Web Into Pay-Per-View

snydeq writes "InfoWorld's Bill Snyder writes of Verizon's diabolical plan to to charge websites for carrying their packets — a strategy that, if it wins out, will be the end of the Internet as we know it. 'Think of all the things that tick you off about cable TV. Along with brainless programming and crummy customer service, the very worst aspect of it is forced bundling. ... Now, imagine that the Internet worked that way. You'd hate it, of course. But that's the direction that Verizon, with the support of many wired and wireless carriers, would like to push the Web. That's not hypothetical. The country's No. 1 carrier is fighting in court to end the Federal Communications Commission's policy of Net neutrality, a move that would open the gates to a whole new — and wholly bad — economic model on the Web.'"

4 of 332 comments (clear)

  1. Aren't they just... by Derec01 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ...trying to offer us the web a la carte, like we wanted for cable? The whole web is one big bundle! There's tons of crap I don't want to pay for! :)

  2. Simple solution by breser · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Seems like there's a simple solution. Verizon's only choice is to try and degrade service for sites that don't pay. If all sites refuse to pay then customers will complain about the degraded service and possibly choose other ISPs. Customers that want to prevent this sort of behavior can simply refuse to visit or given business to sites that do work these sorts of deals. Thus discouraging both sides from doing this. Vote with your wallets people.

  3. Re:Same old song and dance by wvmarle · · Score: 5, Interesting

    In many countries public utilities are run by a commercial company, for profit.

    Sounds odd? Not really. There are two quite easy ways to control them, and push them to provide good service while maximising their profit and keeping prices to the end user reasonable.

    Power companies in Hong Kong, are commercial. They have their monopoly, they have limited pricing power (they must apply to the government to change prices), and have certain supply obligations, like must provide power to anyone within their area. They can make a profit, which is a percentage of their fixed asset investment. Invest more, be allowed to make more money. As a result we have exceptionally reliable power for a reasonable price. An improvement here would be to separate infrastructure and supply, but it's not that bad as it stands.

    Telephone/internet (ADSL) infrastructure, like in The Netherlands, is owned almost entirely by KPN, the former state-owned telephone company. They have the job to provide the infrastructure, and accept other ISPs on that same infrastructure at a fixed price. All ISPs pay the same for access to the homes. And KPN makes profits by keepking their cost lower than the set price they may charge for access. Currently there are dozens of ISPs available for end users, competing with one another, keeping their price low and their service quality high.

    In Europe there are more such separations of infrastructure and supply: power lines and power supply. Gas pipes and gas supply. Railways and train services. Not all of it runs perfectly well, but it's at least the correct direction.

    So yes sure it takes some kind of government regulation - but not necessarily government taking part in the company. The key problem in the US is probably that ANY governmnet intervention is frowned upon, even if it helps freeing a market from a monopolist's stranglehold and allowing many more players to take part.

  4. confusion of ideas that could provoke such a q by Serious+Callers+Only · · Score: 4, Interesting

    No. They're trying to charge content producers for using their network and end up with control over access, which will let them choke off that control, bundle the web, and charge on both sides of the equation - for the ability to push content, and for the ability to pull content.

    The web currently doesn't allow a monopoly on content and on bandwidth, it's completely open, it's not a fucking bundle, and I can't rightly understand the confusion of ideas which could lead you to ask this question. You pay for access to the network, not for any specific bundles of information, how is that anything like cable, and how the hell do you think this has anything to do with offering the web a la carte.

    Providers like Verizon should remain a dumb pipe, no matter how much they try to control the network. If they want control, it's certainly not so that they can offer you the web 'a la carte', it's so that they can impose control.