I am planning to take my time on this. I would like for example, to
at least communicate well with a republican senator and a democratic one.

Admittedly, if we can upgrade everybody to 100Mbit, everybody can have
all 4 home members being couch potatoes in front of HD netflix and
there won't be much motivation to do anything else.

https://news.slashdot.org/story/21/03/04/1722256/senators-call-on-fcc-to-quadruple-base-high-speed-internet-speeds

Anybody know these guys?

On Sun, Feb 21, 2021 at 8:50 AM David P. Reed <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> This is an excellent proposal. I am happy to support it somehow.
>
>
>
> I strongly recommend trying to find a way to make sure it doesn't become a 
> proposal put forward by "progressive" potlitical partisans. (this is hard for 
> me, because my politics are more aligned with the Left than with the 
> self-described conservatives and right-wing libertarians.
>
>
>
> This is based on personal experience starting in 2000 and continuing through 
> 2012 or so with two issues:
>
>
>
> 1. Open Spectrum (using computational radio networking to make a scalable 
> framework for dense wireless extremely wideband internetworking). I along 
> with a small number of others started this as a non-partisan effort. It 
> became (due to lobbyists and "activists") considered to be a socialist taking 
> of property from spectrum "owners". After that, it became an issue where a 
> subset of the Democratic Party (progressives) decided to make it a wedge 
> issue in political form. (It should be noted that during this time, a 
> Republican Secretary of Commerce took up the idea of making UWB legal, and 
> fought off lobbyists to some extent, though the resulting regulation was 
> ineffective because it was too weak to be usable).
>
>
>
> 2. Network Neutrality or Open Internet. Here the key issue was really about 
> keeping Internet routing intermediaries from being selective about what 
> packets they would deliver and what ones they would not. The design of the 
> Internet was completely based on open carriage of all packets without the 
> routers billing for or metering based on end-to-end concerns. Again, for a 
> variety of reasons, this simple idea got entangled with partisanship 
> politically - such that advocates for an Open Internet were seen to be 
> promoting both Democratic Party and Silicon Valley Tech interests. In fact, 
> the case for Open Internet is not primarily political. It's about scalability 
> of the infrastructure and the ability to carry Internet packets over any 
> concatenation of paths, for mutual benefit to all users. (That "mutual 
> benefit" concept does seem to be alien to a certain kind of individualist 
> libertarian cult thinking that is a small subset of Republican Party 
> membership).
>
>
>
> If this becomes yet another Democratic Party initiative, it will encounter 
> resistance, both from Republican-identified polarizing reaction, and also 
> from the corporate part of the Democratic Party (so called Blue Dog Democrats 
> where telecom providers provide the largest quantity of funding to those 
> Democrats).
>
>
>
> Some "progressive" Democrats will reach out to add this to their "platform" 
> as a partisan issue.
>
>
>
> It may feel nice to have some of them on your side. Like you aren't alone. 
> But by accepting this "help" on this issue, you may be guaranteeing its 
> failure.
>
>
>
> In a world where compromise is allowed to generate solutions to problems, 
> polarizing would not be effective to kill a good idea, rather merely raising 
> the issue would lead to recognizing the problem is important and joint work 
> to create a solution. In 1975, the Internet was not partisan. Its designers 
> weren't party members or loyalists. We were solving a problem of creating a 
> scalable, efficient alternative to the "Bell System" model of communications 
> where every piece of gear got involved in deciding what to do with each bit 
> of information, where there were "voice bits" and "data bits", "business 
> bits" and "residential bits", and every piece of equipment had to be told 
> everything about each bits (through call setup).
>
>
>
> But today, compromise is not considered possible, even at the level of 
> defining the problem!
>
>
>
> So this simple architectural approach to clearing out the brush that has 
> grown like weeds throughout the Internet, especially at the "access provider" 
> will become political.
>
>
>
> Since in the end of the day it threatens to reduce control and revenues to 
> edge "access providers" that come from selling higher-rate pipes, the natural 
> opposition will likely come from lobbyists for telecom incumbents, funded by 
> equipment providers for those incumbents (Cisco, Alcatel Lucent and their 
> competitors), with Republicans and Blue-Dog Democrats carrying their water. 
> That's tthe likely polarization axis. I can say that Progressive members of 
> the Democratic Party will love to have a new issue to raise funds. I can make 
> the argument that it should be supported by Republicans or Independents, 
> though. If so, it will be opposed by Democrats and Progressives, and the 
> money will flow through Blue Dogs to them.
>
>
>
> Either way, you won't get it adopted at scale, IF you make it a Party 
> Loyalist issue.
>
>
>
> So please look that "gift horse" of Democratic Party support in the mouth 
> when it comes.
>
>
>
> Accept the support, ONLY if you can be assured it isn't accompanied by a use 
> in polarization of the issue. In other words, if you can get support from 
> Republicans, too.
>
>
>
> Since I am neither an R or a D, I'd be happy to support it however it is 
> supported. Personally, I don't want it to be affiliated with stances on 
> abortion rights, or defunding the police, etc. I have views on those issues, 
> but they aren't issues that should be conflated with openness of the Internet.
>
>
>
> (Since many seem to think the world is a dichotomy between Left and Right or 
> Democrat or Republican, let me explain. My core political view has always 
> been that centralizing functions in government unnecessarily is the same 
> thing as despotism, that the ends don't justify the means, but that 
> organization of functions in society "organically" is better than any 
> governmental approach. This view is compatible with the Internet's founding 
> principles. I view the Democrats and the Republicans as centralizers of 
> power, each in their own way. Which is why I will not be loyal to either. 
> That Socialists want to create centralized power just as much as 
> Conservatives do. But making decentralized structures work isn't just a 
> matter of creating a distributed ledger or a free cryptocurrency, in fact 
> those things lead to centralizing power very efficiently.)
>
>
>
>
>
> On Thursday, February 18, 2021 11:23am, "Dave Taht" <[email protected]> 
> said:
>
> > Link below:
> >
> > If anyone would care to edit or comment. I really struggled with a
> > means to present an
> > "upgrade in place" in a uniformly positive manner. I had to cut out a
> > lot of cusswords.
> >
> > https://docs.google.com/document/d/1T21on7g1MqQZoK91epUdxLYFGdtyLRgBat0VXoC9e3I/edit?usp=sharing
> >
> > Secondly, I also decided that I didn't care so much about having to
> > submit this in the context (and noise) of the rural broadband thing,
> > so the pressure came off me to get it done by feb 20, with the
> > inevitable outcome of me not getting on it til this morning. :/
> >
> > Getting there, but it's been kind of lonely... I can do a
> > videoconference today between now and 11AM
> > if anyone would like to join in at:
> > https://tun.taht.net:8443/group/bufferbloat and will be back online
> > tonight after 6PM.
> >
> > That said, it would be good to fire this off there, and/or do an "open
> > letter", do a press release, and open up more shots at whatever
> > government orgs we can aim at.
> >
> > PS It would help my focus a lot if some folk tossed some dough into my
> > patreon. https://www.patreon.com/dtaht and longer term, if this
> > develops into something good, we can do a bake sale for a press
> > release.
> >
> > --
> > "For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public
> > relations, for Mother Nature cannot be fooled" - Richard Feynman
> >
> > [email protected] <Dave Täht> CTO, TekLibre, LLC Tel: 1-831-435-0729
> > _______________________________________________
> > Cerowrt-devel mailing list
> > [email protected]
> > https://lists.bufferbloat.net/listinfo/cerowrt-devel
> >



-- 
"For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public
relations, for Mother Nature cannot be fooled" - Richard Feynman

[email protected] <Dave Täht> CTO, TekLibre, LLC Tel: 1-831-435-0729
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