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Net Neutrality 12-11-2006

December 11, 2006 by Liz

Net Neutrality Links

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

SavetheInternet.com Coalition Calls on New Congress

Companies like AT&T, Verizon, BellSouth and Comcast pushed the FCC to remove Net Neutrality protections last year and have since spent more than $150 million to keep Congress from reinstating the nondiscrimination rules that enabled the Internet to become an unprecedented vehicle for free speech and economic innovation. But in the end, they couldn’t overcome widespread public opposition, and Congress would not pass a telecommunications bill that failed to protect Internet freedom.

[ . . . ]

“We look forward to working with the new Congress to craft a comprehensive broadband policy that will preserve the open character of the Internet,” added Gigi Sohn, founder and president of Public Knowledge. “Consumers were the winners when Congress chose not to pass legislation during the session just ending that would have given control over delivery of Internet content to the telephone and cable companies and, in addition, would have given control of consumers’ use of digital media to the FCC and entertainment industries.”

The more than 850 groups in the SavetheInternet.com Coalition also include the National Religious Broadcasters, the Service Employees International Union, the American Library Association, Educause, Gun Owners of America, Future of Music Coalition, Parents Television Council, the ACLU, and every major consumer group in the country. The coalition also includes thousands of bloggers and hundreds of small companies that do business online.

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, Gigi-Sohn, Net-Neutrality, Public-Knowledge, Save-the-Internet

Bloggy Question 33: You’ve Changed, Man — DON’T Look at Yourself

December 10, 2006 by Liz

Where’s the Guy We Loved?

For those who come looking for a short, thoughtful read, a blogging life discussion, or a way to gradually ease back into the week. I offer this bloggy life hypothetical question. . . .


You and a friend started blogging 8 months go. You’re in different businesses, but you have similar goals — to establish yourselves, to see what you’ve got, and to watch where it takes you.

The ride has been fun and almost a tale from a famous book — The Tortoise and the Hare. He’s been the hare. He collect links hand over fist during the first 6 months — almost 100 in the first month. You were the tortoise. You collected a respectable link count at a slower, more natural pace.

At your six month blog-anniversary, your friend began to lose links at the same rate he had collected them. At first he tried to act as if it didn’t matter, but he started posting more and more in month seven. In month eight, he began a campaign of self-promtion. He’s been outright asking for links at the end of every post.

His writing has changed. Some people have mentioned that fact to you.

You are still gaining links at a natural pace. He’s beginning to mention that to you.

How do you respond?

–ME “Liz” Strauss

Related articles
Bloggy Question 32: Blogger Alert! Where Is She? What Should You Do?
Bloggy Question 31: Do You Send Away the Idea of a Lifetime?
Bloggy Life Question 30 — How Does He Get the Book to Readers?
Bloggy Life Question 29 — Will You Sell the URL to the Porn King?
Bloggy Life Question 28 — The Prince and the Pauper in the Blogosphere?

Filed Under: Blog Comments, Bloggy Questions, Outside the Box, SOB Business, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, blog-promotion, blogging-hypothetical-question, blogging-life, Bloggy-Questions, personal-branding, problems

Terry Starbucker Is a B.A.D. Blogger!

December 10, 2006 by Liz

Blogger A Day Call: Hello is Terry there?

What threw me was that I had to ask Terry, if I might call him later than we planned. He said it was no problem — I was getting to talk to the glass half full guy, and I was making him wait. What was wrong with me? That was my thought at the time.

When I finally got connected to him, I jumped into a story about how I was only called predictable once in my life.

Starbucker’s such a gentleman. He acted as if every phone starts with a story about the FBI and guys in tuxedoes. When I was done, I asked him if the phone call was what he expected, and he implied that he knew not to come with expectations.

Starbucker knows people, especially this one. I suspect everyone says that.

Terry’s not Mr. Predictable himself. He’s Mr. Positively Alive and Aware of Everyone. He still remembers that we first met over a post that compared writing to driving through the mountains. He danced with all of the girls at Open Comment Night more than once. He has a fan club that knows the soundtrack to his life — it’s a life that’s lived with gusto and a glass that’s half-full.

Once I caught my breath again, the actual conversation got rolling. I asked Terry what his real job is. He told me that he is a Sr. VP of Operations. I said I never met one that traveled as much as he does. He said it was the only way to know the people who work with and for his company. Terry said that being there Is the only way to be fully part of the process. He said that way he can champion what works and stop ideas that surely won’t. We discussed the value of the intuitive detail that a person gets from experience. We both agree it can’t be replaced by a description on the telephone or the data on a spreadsheet.

Terry and I talked about consultants. We discussed how some are so good at what they do. He said they connected like-minded positives with like-minded people. We talked about how some are, well, not good. That led us to the subject of people who don’t know what business they are in — who their real customers are.

We ventured into a discussion of how VCs look at what they do, the dot.com bubble bust and how it hurt good companies who weren’t a part of it — his and mine — because the banks were so busy covering bad debts, they didn’t have time for us.

Then somehow we were back to talking about people and how important they are.

Starbucker knows people are at the center of everything. That’s why he has a fan club.

B.A.D. Blogger Quote

If what’s on that computer screen is real, it does carry over and you know it, . . . forging relationships, great ones, meaningful ones, . . . astounding.–Starbucker

Stop by Terry Starbucker’s Blog, Ramblings from a Glass Half Full, and say hi!

Thanks, Terry, you B.A.D. Blogger!

–ME “Liz” Strauss
Want to be a B.A.D. Blogger see the. . . a B.A.D. Blogger? page in the sidebar.

Filed Under: SOB Business, Successful Blog Tagged With: B.A.D. Blogger, bc, Blogger-a-day-call, Ramblings-From-A-Glass-Half-Full, Terry-Starbucker

1.2 Million Signatures Are Louder Than Lobbyist Dollars

December 10, 2006 by Liz

Bye, Bye, Stephens Bill

Pack up all your cares and woe,
See the uninformed talk go,
Bye, Bye, Bad Bill . . .

I guess we all had our moments when

  • we didn’t know there was a problem
  • we didn’t understand net neutrality
  • we didn’t think it was about us
  • we didn’t think we could do a thing
  • we realized that we had to do something, anything
  • we made what noise that we could.
  • we didn’t know whether anyone would listen
  • we figured this Congress would let it sit.

Here’s what happened . . .

That petition you signed. I signed one just like you. There were 1.2 million people who took the time to do it too.

We made a noise of our own.

It was LOUD together.

It was LOUDER THAN THE LOBBYISTS.

IT WAS LOUD ENOUGH FOR CONGRESS TO HEAR.

They took action before they closed the 109th Congress.

It was you and me and people like us that did that.

You and I made a difference.

Take a Listen to the Reaction

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Successful Blog Tagged With: 109th-Congress, bc, Net-Neutrality, Save-the-Internet, Stephens-Bill, Ted-Stephens

We Were Conspiring: Now Chris Is Writing at Successful Blog!

December 9, 2006 by Liz

Welcome Chris!

Today, I am delighted to announce that a friend, a great guy, and someone we all know is a bigger part of Successful Blog. Chris Cree now is a contributor with a column that expands and enhances what’s already happening here. Chris will be talking about ideas too. He’s got some plans that are definitely what we define as cool.

I thought it was time for a male voice and another point of view. Chris, being Chris, didn’t waste one breath agreeing with me.

Don’t think I didn’t notice that Chris’s lack of disagreement. It’s what convinced me the idea would work out perfectly.

One Way to CC It logo

You’ll know when it’s Chris, the one who makes sense, when you see his name in the byline. Oh yeah and of course, there will be that great big series button. Click this one — Like the clever title? — to take you to his first post.

This is only the first cool thing for Successful-Blog 2007!! Keep an eye out for the rest of our Blue Ocean Strategy.

Welcome, Chris! It’s nice to have you!

–ME “Liz” Strauss

Filed Under: Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, Blue-Ocean-Strategy, Chris-Cree, One Way to CC It

What is He Talking About? Chris Cree on Incompetence

December 9, 2006 by Chris Cree

Violence is the last refuge of the incompetent. –Isaac Asimov

One Way to CC It logo

There was a time when I bought into that quote by Isaac Asimov wholeheartedly. At first brush it really makes complete sense. Even today when I get frustrated or impatient I can feel the anger rising in me. I can see how that anger, if left unchecked, could easily lead to violence. And trust me, I have no delusions about my own competence in some areas. 🙄

But as I get older I find myself wondering if all violence is a result of incompetence. I mean unfortunately the truth is that some folks just don’t understand anything short of violence. Bullies must be faced down or they won’t stop bullying.

Passive resistance only works in systems that have some sort of built in restraint. Can you imagine if someone like Gandhi tried to passively resist the Roman Empire to throw off their oppression? Rome didn’t have the same aversion to mass slaughter that the 20th century British did and would have nailed resisters up on crosses by the thousands faster than a spilled Starbucks in a January Chicago parking lot would freeze.

Nope. As I get older I’m learning that life has a lot more shades of gray than I thought. Violence usually takes more than one party to ensue. Even with the most perfectly competent person, I think there may come a time when others give them no alternative.

Chris Cree is a regular contributor here at Successful-Blog and he helps businesses fuel growth through blogging with his consulting business, SuccessCREEations.

Filed Under: Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, Guest-Writer, incompetence, Isaac-Asimov, One-Way-I-CC-it

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