Net Neutrality 5-26-2006
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h2> Net Neutrality Links
I’ve added these links to the Net Neutrality Page today.
Net Neutrality Scores A Win by Jason Lee Miller
Net Neutrality advocates got something today they haven’t been used to: a victory in Congress. The Internet Freedom and Nondiscrimination Act, sponsored by Rep. Jim Sensenbrenner and Rep. John Conyers, won the majority approval of the House Judiciary Committee, passing by a vote of 20-13.
“Today’s vote would have been unthinkable three weeks ago,” said Josh Silver, executive director of Free Press, the nonpartisan media reform group that coordinates the SavetheInternet.com Coalition.
Neutrality predictions already coming true
One of my many arguments against net neutrality legislation is that it involves the federal government in an issue with which it wasn’t involved previous. We do not currently have neutrality legislation, and the variety and size of the Internet are growing apace. We are doing very well.
I am not against neutrality as an outcome, if that is what the consumer demands. Sounds fine to me, I might even demand it too.
House Judiciary passes Net-neutrality bill
Specifically, the bipartisan bill amends the Clayton Act to require network providers to run on a nondiscriminatory basis, making it a violation for a provider to refuse to interconnect with other broadband providers and block or interfere with another’s services or content, among other things.
–ME “Liz” Strauss
Related
NET NEUTRALITY PAGE
Net Neutrality 5-05-2006
Filed Under Business Book, Community, SOB Business, Successful Blog, Trends | 2 Comments
Net Neutrality Links
I’ve added these links to the Net Neutrality Page today.
What’s Really at Stake with Net Neutrality by Josh Silver [via caelidh ]
Broadband will soon deliver nearly all television, radio, phone service – and of course the Web – to most Americans. This transition is our big chance to do an end run around 24-7 lapdog journalism, low-brow entertainment, celebrity gossip, and rampant commercialism that has left the public in a fog of Brangelina, windbag pundits, sound bytes and little knowledge about what’s happening in the world and what our elected officials actually think or stand for.
If we lose this net neutrality battle, we lose the greatest opportunity of our lifetimes to get critical journalism and diverse media into living rooms across the nation, as the largest cable and phone companies turn the Internet into modern cable TV: they control what you see and how much it costs.
This is an international issue. In some countries it is addressed better than others. (In France, for example, I understand that the layers are separated, and my colleague in Paris attributes getting 24Mb/s net, a phone with free international dialing and digital TV for 30euros/month to the resulting competition.) In the US, there have been threats to the concept, and a wide discussion about what to do. That is why, though I have written and spoken on this many times, I blog about it now.
[Note: This is the blog of Tim Berners-Lee, who created the World Wide Web]
–ME “Liz” Strauss
Related
NET NEUTRALITY PAGE
