massive_attack
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Save The Internet . Com said:Congress is pushing a law that would abandon the Internet's First Amendment -- a principle called Network Neutrality that prevents companies like AT&T, Verizon and Comcast from deciding which Web sites work best for you -- based on what site pays them the most. If the public doesn't speak up now, our elected officials will cave to a multi-million dollar lobbying campaign.
massive_attack said:
Basically, big business is trying to "help" (read: ruin) the internet for us IMHO.
Short story : Big Business Corp Inc wants to create a "tiered" internet. The one for people who PAY them (read: blackmail) for traffic and those who don't.
This will create problems. Those who pay, who can afford to pay will get the best service (read: faster service). As of now, all sites get equal treatment.
Think of it like a toll road for the internet. Those who pay the toll go fast, those who don't , well - don't go fast. Except like with toll roads which charge to pay for themselves the "internet" has already paid for itself. You don't hear about ATT and etc going into debt because golly jee, this internet thing is just dragging them down.
So ebay.com will load fast but debatepolitics.com ? Heh, not so much. All those other web sites you go to that can't afford to pay the blackmail fee to ATT and so on, ya, they won't be loading fast either.
If this passes LITERALLY future generations will ask you stuff like, "oh so you got to use the internet before...."
From the site Save The Internet
Have a nice day !
ps. can we make this a sticky until this issue is over with ? this is probably the most serious issue to come up about the internet !
I think it is on the other end, the sites' ends rather than the users's ends.jamesrage said:So this isn't the same as paying extra service for cable internet verses regular dial up internet?i
This thread belongs in the archives. We already have to pay relative to the service speed. Nothing new here.massive_attack said:
Basically, big business is trying to "help" (read: ruin) the internet for us IMHO.
Short story : Big Business Corp Inc wants to create a "tiered" internet. The one for people who PAY them (read: blackmail) for traffic and those who don't.
This will create problems. Those who pay, who can afford to pay will get the best service (read: faster service). As of now, all sites get equal treatment.
I still do not see any source material. What are you talking about? What Law?hipsterdufus said:This is THE issue today. The fact that people seem so apathetic about it is disconcerting.
Net Neutrality is the 1st ammenedment of the internet. It keeps DP as fast as Yahoo News, Newsmax, Daily Kos or anywhere else. Without it, the internet loses a lot of its freedom. This should really be a bipartisan issue that we can all agree on its importance.
Jerry said:I still do not see any source material. What are you talking about? What Law?
Site the existing statute, with a link, and show how the new legislation, provide a link to that also, will change it.
ibidRep. James F. Sensenbrenner, Jr.
Rep. Sensenbrenner (R-Wisc.) has championed Net Neutrality through a bill in the Judiciary committee.
Sen. Ron Wyden
Sen. Wyden (D-Ore.) introduced the Internet Non-Discrimination Act of 2006 (S 2360) in March
That's just something that lazy people say.massive_attack said:Oh and BTW Jerry : google it.
It is I who had to do your work.massive_attack said:Jerry,
I run into a lot of people on forums who want me to do all their googling for them and frankly I don't have the time.
Your asking me to find the info for you and you call me lazy ?
I've already posted a link to a site that contains info on the subject matter
Back to you calling ME lazy. If you'd have bothered to click the FAQ link at their site you could find some of the same information you petitioned me for.
Tisk tisk tisk.
Or, maybe, just maybe, if you'd have been polite I would have provided the information to you.
That's just the thing, though. Yes, it's a concern, so just extend the law. The public need not even be notified. Why all the fear mongering? Why is only high-speed dialup the issue? Why is cable left out? Why why why?talloulou said:Seems like an important issue to me. I don't like the idea of the internet being censored in anyway and it almost seems like this is a form of censorship as smaller blog sites may not be as accessible if the internet is turned into a tier system and small sites have low to zero priority. The thing that is great about the internet is thus far capitalism hasn't made it "smaller" so to speak. Taking away internet neutralilty could in fact make it smaller in the long run. So it will be similar to the major newspapers and major news stations....it will seem like all the info is coming from a variety of sources when in fact there are very few stations and papers that own everything.
vauge said:Jerry is right - it is up to the original poster to site a claim with evidence for a good discussion.
Back to topic:
What is the issue? This is capitolism at it's best.
The internet is free, but bandwidth is not.
I use comcast. If comcast all of a sudden decided that google will be blocked - I will go to another service.
(6)Despite the growth of the Internet and increased access to the Internet for Americans, there is very little choice in who provides them high-speed Internet access. According to an April 2005 White Paper by Harold Feld and Gregory Rose, et. al., entitled, ‘‘Connecting the Public: The Truth About Municipal Broadband’’ only 2 percent of Americans get high-speed Internet access from someone other than their local phone company or cable provider. According to the Federal Communications Commission, approximately 20 percent of Americans do not have a high-speed Internet access provider that offers them service.
(7) As more and more Americans get high-speed access to the Internet without having much choice of who their provider will be, it is important
that Congress protect the freedom on the Internet to ensure its continued success.
Jerry said:It is I who had to do your work.
Save-the-net has no useful information, only "because I say so" op-eds and news articles. Since it's your thread, it's your job to know what your talking about and back it up with verifiable facts. If you speak of a law, you must source that law so that others can read it for themselves.
You will have to excuse me for not being a follower. I don't accept something just because I want it to be true. You should follow my example.
The fact that you cling to an anti-corporate literary style tells me that you did not in-fact read the law before posting an opinion on it.
So tell me, why is cable left out? Why is the Act only about dial-up? Why the fear mongering over something which has always been illegal?
All your sourced was a ninja and some opinions. I sourced law.massive_attack said:No useful information according to you. You being the same person who didn't even read the FAQ to get the name of the bill(s) in question.
Your right, I didn't read the law and I never will.
You'll also find me complaining about the Patriot Act and guess what - I'm not reading that one either.
The fact is I'm chosing not to engage you because you call this a "non-issue" and you seem to have a contrary attitude towards me. I think you are misinformed, there are a lot of people who think this is an issue.
You misunderstand.massive_attack said:Google is one of them. Perhaps you'd like to accuse them of anti-corporate views and what not. The fact is I've heard about this bill(s) on every major tech web site I go to : digg, slashdot, wired and so on. Oh FYI, Microsoft (the ultimate anti-corporate , "i like non-issues" company) thinks this is an issue to. Amazing isn't it ?
Other people who think this is a big deal : the aclu, christian coalition of america, moveon.org, the founder of craigs lists, Scott Bradner -- Harvard Technology Security Officer, Professor Susan Crawford -- Online legal expert, Internet2 and the Texas Internet Service Providers Association.
My god, it's a whos-who of anti-capilist misinformed nut jobs
This of course is the very small list of people concerned. Yet you assure me this is a non-issue. Perhaps you can understand why I have trouble believing you, the only person to date who I've seen call this a non-issue.
If I got the impression that you had a genuine interest about this I'd address you.
Yet you tell me this is a "non-issue" while at the same time admitting to not knowing much about it.
Irony indeed.
Article continued at url.By JIM ABRAMS, Associated Press Writer
Wed Jun 28, 6:50 PM ET
WASHINGTON - A massive effort by Internet users to prohibit telephone and cable companies from providing better service and prices to preferred customers failed to get through a Senate committee on Wednesday.
After three days of debate, the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee approved a bill intended to let phone companies and other telecommunications providers better compete in video markets now monopolized by cable companies.
The measure faces an uncertain future because of the controversy over "net neutrality" — how to ensure that consumers and Internet content providers continue having open and nondiscriminatory access to the Internet.
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