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Net Neutrality 10-22-2006

October 22, 2006 by Liz

Net Neutrality Links

I’m adding this link to the Net Neutrality Page.

FROM PDF: Nuts and Bolts of Network Neutrality by Edward M. Felten, Center for Information Technology, Princeton University, was released in July 2006.

In this essay, Mr. Felten presents unpacks the murky mysteries of Net Neutrality. The paper is unemotional, understandable, unbiased, and well-written. His stance is detached and instructional stance which leads to a detached, observer’s conclusion.

Read this and Mr. Felten’s work if you need to know what Net Neutrality is about. If you want to know what to do, read MA Bell Monopoly Versus the Free Internet.

Ed Felten Explains, Then Is Silent

Mr. Felten begins his essay by saying

One of the reasons the network neutrality debate is so murky is that relatively few people understand the mechanics of network discrimination. In reasoning about net neutrality it helps to understand the technical motivations for discrimination, the various kinds of discrimination and how they would actually be put into practice, and what countermeasures would then be available to users and regulators. These are what I want to explain in this essay.

Felten offers seven core issues that underpin the discussion. I summarize them here.

  1. The Argument Is Partly about Controlling Innovation. Unlike most networks, the Internet is built with the intelligence at the edges. Routers in the “center” transmit and receive. Three advantages of this are that the intelligence is where the resources — computers, memory, processing power — are; network users own and control the computers at the edge; innovation usually happens faster at the edge.

    Those for Net Neutrality tend to be at the edge. Those against tend to be in the center. Both groups want to control the intelligence and thereby control innovation.

  2. Minimal Discrimination Is a Necessity; Non-Minimal Discrimination Is Purely Economical. When a router in the “center” receives more than it can transmit, it “buffers” incoming packets in memory to wait for an outgoing link. If the buffer is full, the router must discard a packet — any packet.

    One way a router might choose which packet to drop is by assigning priorities. In what Felten calls minimal discrimination the router only discards packets when congestion requires it. A second way, or non-minimal discrimination, drops low-priority packets when they could be sent through. Minimal discrimination is an engineering necessity. Non-minimal discriminatiion is an economic choice.

  3. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Business Life, Community, SOB Business, Successful Blog, Trends Tagged With: bc, discrimination-of-packets, Ed-Felton, Edward-Felten, intelligence-at-the-edges, Net-Neutrality

Net Neutrality 10-21-2006

October 21, 2006 by Liz

Net Neutrality Links

I’m adding this link to the Net Neutrality Page.

Strong Copyright + DRM + Weak Net Neutrality = Digital Dystopia?
This is a pdf research resource at Educause.

Abstract:
Three critical issues – dramatic expansion of the scope, duration, and punitive nature of copyright laws; the ability of Digital Rights Management (DRM) systems to lock-down digital content in an unprecedented fashion; and the erosion of Net neutrality, which ensures that all Internet traffic is treated equally – are examined in detail and their potential impact on libraries is assessed. How legislatures, the courts, and the commercial marketplace treat these issues will strongly influence the future of digital information for good or ill.

Want to know what you can do?
MA Bell Monopoly Versus the Free Internet — Tell the FCC Net Neutrality Is Not Negotiable

–ME “Liz” Strauss

Related
NET NEUTRALITY PAGE

Filed Under: Business Life, Community, SOB Business, Successful Blog, Trends Tagged With: bc, copyright, digital-rights-management, DRM, Educause, Net-Neutrality

Fresh-cut Flowers in Every Room

October 20, 2006 by Liz

I've been thinking . . .
When I was 40, I went for a drive with Nancy — my close friend who owns a Porsche, and we ended up at a movie. Who knows, who cares which movie it was?

I do remember this much of the movie: the high gloss mahogany table in the center of the entry hall had a vase of tall, beautiful, fresh-cut flowers from the gardens. They were breathtaking. They made me notice that every room in the mansion of the movie had a table with glorious flowers.

After the movie, Nancy and I walked in silence to the Porsche. We let our movies sink in that way. She had her thoughts. I had mine. I was thinking about those flowers. When I grow up, I’m going to have fresh cut flowers in every room of my house.

That thought stopped me in my tracks.

Nancy stopped too. She knows me well enough. She looked at me in anticipation. “Yes?” was all she needed to say.

“What am I waiting for?”

“You’re waiting? You’re stopped. What are you waiting for?”

I started slowly walking in circles around the late night parking lot. I was watching my sneakers, as if the words were hidden on my shoelaces.

“No, no. Here I am 40 years old. I’ve built a new home. I’ve got a great job, and I left that movie thinking When I grow up I’ll have fresh flowers in every room in my house. What am I waiting for? “

“And?” She had faith I’d figure it out.

“When exactly did I think that would be? What’s stopping me from doing that now?”

“And your answer to that?”

“I’m giving myself permission right now to have fresh flowers in my house from this day now on. Think this little car could take us somewhere that we could buy flowers on the way home?”

“Sure thing,” she smiled, the way she does.

The next week I became a gardener and in a month I had fresh flowers in my office every day too. . . .

Friday is a good day to give yourself permission to do something you forgot you always wanted to do.

Liz's Signature

Filed Under: Business Life, Motivation, Successful Blog, Writing Tagged With: bc, Fresh-Flowers-in-Every-Room, Friday-thoughts, Ive-been-thinking

Net Neutrality 10-20-2006

October 20, 2006 by Liz

Net Neutrality Links

I’m adding this link to the Net Neutrality Page.

The Net at Risk

For those who could not see it. Follow the link above to the documentary.

MOYERS ON AMERICA
The Net at Risk Introduction
watch video with:
REALPLAYER
WINDOWS MEDIA

Click this image on the landing page.

Bill Moyers' The NEt at Risk

Want to know what you can do?
MA Bell Monopoly Versus the Free Internet — Tell the FCC Net Neutrality Is Not Negotiable

–ME “Liz” Strauss

Related
NET NEUTRALITY PAGE

Filed Under: Business Life, Community, SOB Business, Successful Blog, Trends Tagged With: bc, Bill-Moyers, NET-At-Risk, Net-Neutrality, PBS

Net Neutrality 10-19-2006

October 19, 2006 by Liz

Net Neutrality Links

I’m adding this link to the Net Neutrality Page.

No Room for Neutrality on Net Neutrality

Imagine the Internet as being like cable television. To access websites of your choosing, you’ll have to pay extra to your Internet service provider (ISP). To put up your own website or blog, you’ll have to pay an additional surcharge to ensure that your website is easily accessible to your friends. If your ISP has a special relationship with, for example, Barnes & Noble, then you may not be able to easily access its rival Amazon.com, or independent booksellers like Pages for All Ages. There’s even a chance that your ISP will decide to block certain content (like political websites challenging its authority) or ban certain devices (like free Internet phone service)––all for your own good, of course.

If powerful interests get their way, this nightmare scenario could easily become the new reality. Up until now, a safeguard called “net neutrality” has prevented this from happening. But at this very moment, the fate of net neutrality rests on legislation pending in Congress.

[ . . . ]

Looking ahead, the stakes are even higher. In the coming years, with increased convergence and decreased numbers of market players, Americans will be forced to rely on single providers to deliver so-called “triple play”––Internet, television, and phone––via one pipe to each household. This creates the potential for one telecom giant to take control over all of these media––not just in terms of pricing, but, without net neutrality, gate-keeping power over all content as well.

Want to know what you can do?
MA Bell Monopoly Versus the Free Internet — Tell the FCC Net Neutrality Is Not Negotiable

–ME “Liz” Strauss

Related
NET NEUTRALITY PAGE

Filed Under: Business Life, Community, SOB Business, Successful Blog, Trends Tagged With: bc, cable-television, gate-keepers, Net-Neutrality

Writing Project: The Successful-Blog 25-Word Birthday Challenge

October 18, 2006 by Liz

25 Words — It’s Harder than It Looks

Tuesday, October 24th is one-year since I wrote Who’s ME Strauss and What’s She Doing Here? That was my very first post at Successful-Blog. This post is somewhere over number 1000. A lot has happened between then and now.

successful blog logo - ff

In that first post, I defined Successful-Blog in 33 words. Not too shabby, but not too lean either. Put it down to being new here.

Now it’s your turn. I’m having a contest — a challenge really — to see what happens when folks, great writer/bloggers like you, try to describe Successful-Blog in a few words. Here it is.

The Successful-Blog 25-Word Birthday Challenge: Define Successful Blog in 25 words max. That’s 24 PLUS One — in keeping with the plus one tradtion that’s been part of this blog for so long.

The Rules, Regulations, and Prizes

Of course there have to be rules, regulations, and prizes. So I’m going to tell you about them.
Rules and Regulations
They’re easy, and there’s not a lot of them.

    1. Twenty-five words is the limit.
    2. Describe Successful-Blog — your experience, a memory, something funny, UPDATE: no need for love notes to Liz . . .
    3. Post your answer on your blog UPDATE:OR JUST EMAIL IT TO ME..
    4. Send the link AND the 25 words to Successfulblog [at] aol [dot] com
    5. Entries must be received by noon, Sunday, October 22, 2006 UPDATE:OR AS SOON AS YOU CAN.
    6. One entry per person.
    7. As always, be nice

Prizes
Hey, I’ve got a kid in an expensive university. So bear with me on this one.

    1. An autographed copy of Phil’s Book, 10 Ways to Make It Great!
    2. An autographed copy of my dearest writing essay “Walking on Water.”
    3. A guest post or an interview by/with me.
    4. Every participant, of course, will get linked and front page notice on the 24th.

UPDATE: Kirsten Harrell, Psy.D. the dynamic and delightful author of ipop-in has donated a new prize to the 25-Words Birthday Challenge. Now one lucky winner will get a $25 Gift Certificate for an RX for a Positive Attitude.

All entries will be posted on Monday, October 23rd. UPDATE: early a.m. Chicago time, Tuesday, October 24th. The winners will be announced Tuesday Night, but THE MIC WILL BE OPEN ALL DAY. We’re Having a Blow-Out Birthday Party!!!

So join the fun, get a link, and wish us a happy birthday!

Prize donations are still being accepted. Who knows what the judging criteria will be? I might just have to do a random drawing if they’re all as good as I think they’ll be. Feel free to suggest some. I’m making this up as I go along.

UPDATE:The judging will be by random drawing.

— ME “Liz Strauss

Related
Who’s ME Strauss and What’s She Doing Here?

Filed Under: Business Life, Community, SOB Business, Successful Blog Tagged With: 25-words-or-less, bc, Blog-Birthday-Party, Contest, Open-Comments-Night, Successful-Blog-Birthday-Challenge, ZZZ-FUN

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