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The Republican Push To Repeal Net Neutrality Will Get Underway This Week (washingtonpost.com)

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Washington Post: Federal regulators will move to roll back one of the Obama administration's signature Internet policies this week, launching a process to repeal the government's net neutrality rules that currently regulate how Internet providers may treat websites and their own customers. The vote on Thursday, led by Federal Communications Commission Chairman Ajit Pai, will kick off consideration of a proposal to relax regulations on companies such as Comcast and AT&T. If approved by the 2-1 Republican-majority commission, it will be a significant step for the broadband industry as it seeks more leeway under government rules to develop new business models. For consumer advocates and tech companies, it will be a setback; those groups argue that looser regulations won't prevent those business models from harming Internet users and website owners. The current rules force Internet providers to behave much like their cousins in the legacy telephone business. Under the FCC's net neutrality policy, providers cannot block or slow down consumers' Internet traffic, or charge websites a fee in order to be displayed on consumers' screens. The net neutrality rules also empower the FCC to investigate ISP practices that risk harming competition. Internet providers have chafed at the stricter rules governing phone service, which they say were written for a bygone era. Pai's effort to roll back the rules has led to a highly politicized debate. Underlying it is a complex policy decision with major implications for the future of the Web.

6 of 141 comments (clear)

  1. You idiots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You fools elected a nightmare scenario government. Decades of progress in human rights, science, and technology getting wiped out. Congratulations.

  2. So much for progress... by cyn1c77 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's amazing that the Republicans are focusing rolling back old policy rather than making new policy with all the issues going on in the government right now!

  3. 'New business model', indeed: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    * Price-gouge consumers for slow, unreliable service
    * Man-in-the-middle attacks to spy on all their web traffic, collect the data, sell it to advertisers so they can spam the fuck out of everyone
    * Break into customer emails for the same reasons as the above
    * Effectively break the Internet by crippling competing services
    * Push consumers into walled gardens 'for their own good' (and for greater profit)
    * Become both content creators and content providers, effectively creating a monopoly, raise prices even more
    Given their druthers:
    * Make all OTA broadcasts illegal, all content reception must be PAID for

    ..yeah, the GOP can shove it up their fat asses. If what they do fucks the internet worse than it already is, I'll just refuse to play anymore. I got along without it for decades, I can get along without it again if I have to. Bastards.

    Of course Trump will probably be arrested before the year is out, and in the next general election, Republicans will be run out of town on a rail, too, for fucking everything up, so it might take a while but everything might just get set right again before they manage to blow it all up.

  4. Re:Net neutrality lasted less than 18 months by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The past was not as rosy as you believe, and innovation stifling monopolies in telecom are nothing new. I remember trying to negotiate a peering agreement with MCI/Worldcom/UUNet back in the 1990s: "We own 60% of the Internet, and as long as you also own 60% of the Internet, then peering is no problem. Otherwise, pay up."

  5. nest to be repealed: road neutrality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Where road ownership will be privatized and each owner will get to set its own rules regarding who gets to drive on the roads, what brand of cars are allowed on the road, which destination you are allowed to go to when using said road, and where both the person driving the car and the owner of the destination where he is driving to will have to pay for the privilege of using the road.

  6. Re:Content + access: AOL, CompuServe, Prodigy by silentcoder · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Your example also happened at a time when the internet relied entirely on sitting on top of a wire infrastructure that already existed and was maintained by companies not involved in the supply of internet services. Those ISPs were sitting on the phone lines - and changing ISPs was as easy as terminating your account and getting another one. It was fairly easy to switch ISPs and fairly cheap and easy to establish one - because the infrastructure costs were limited to a few routers and servers.

    That era doesn't exist anymore - broadband technology came with the downside of requiring expensive new infrastructure and the ISPs converged into being the same companies that build the infrastructure.
    The old ISP competitive market was lost in the process.

    Your prediction then that the same would happen is not supported by the evidence you're providing since the two situations are markedly different. It's a basic principle of the scientific method that if you change the parameters of the experiment you cannot assume the results will not also change.

    --
    Unicode killed the ASCII-art *