Net Neutrality 5-15-2006
Filed Under Business Life, Community, Successful Blog, Trends | 1 Comment
Net Neutrality Links
I’ve added these links to the Net Neutrality Page today.
Peter Svennson, Hack AP Reporter, Screws Up Net Neutrality Story by Mark Stoller
The public deserves real discourse about this issue. People care about the internet. We should have a real conversation about the public policy implications of what we do with this platform upon which millions rely. And if we decide to hand it over to the telcos, so be it. But the press delivered first apathy, and then warmed over spin and lies. That’s not democracy. That’s not journalism. It’s stenography.
I wanted to believe that the press were working the public’s interest. I really did. I no longer believe this, because of writers like Peter Svennson.
Telecoms Create Front Site to Combat Net Neutrality
Basically, what follows is my analysis of a little site called “dontregulate.org”. They seem inocuous. They’ve got ads going through blogads.org, which, MLW, Booman, and other lefty sites, including ActForLove, use to get ads based upon their sites. Now, they’ve got this fascinating flash video to start the site, and from there, it just turns into arguments against net neutrality, looking all like it’s a regular internet site that regular people put up, with regular drawings and Flash movies…
For more info, SaveTheInternet has also made it the big lie of the week
Soon, The New Design Won’t Matter
But, in a couple of months time, it’s likely that all TechCrunch will have to do is pi** off a large Telco or two (or a congressman in a back pocket) and, ‘voila’, you and I won’t be able to visit them anymore, anyway.
–ME “Liz” Strauss
Related
NET NEUTRALITY PAGE
Do Me a Favor, Read Mark’s Post
Filed Under Community, Successful Blog | 5 Comments
Mark Wade of RWebdesigns.com has a post today about the immortality of blogging in a public form. It’s simple, short, and powerful. Please read it, and then share it with anyone who blogs–your family, especially your kids, your friends, your coworkers, your boss, your neighbors. It’s a reminder that we can all use.
As a past first-grade teacher, I also hope you’ll share the advice that he mentions, on Blog Safety by Jonathan Ezor with every teacher, principal, and school librarian you know. It belongs on school bulletin boards, in libraries, bathrooms and locker rooms too.
Thanks, Mark, for caring about it, for writing it in such a compelling fashion. Well-written words move people to action. Some things are too important not to do.
–ME “Liz” Strauss
