Why I'm Against Net Neutrality
Larry Dignan - Baseline Wed Aug 9, 10:41 AM ET

http://news.yahoo.com/s/zd/20060809/tc_zd/185690

The network neutrality debate, which is expected to surface again this 
fall, is a faux issue that if mandated by Congress is bound to become a 
mess. Count me in the camp that Congress do nada about net neutrality.

"Net neutrality" is a term few can agree on. For Google, Yahoo and eBay, 
mandating net neutrality means that telecommunications giants will have 
to treat all Internet traffic equally. For net neutrality's staunchest 
supporters, the concept has become a quasi censorship issue (as if 
Verizon would tell its customers they couldn't use Google). For those 
telecom giants like AT&T and Verizon, net neutrality means they couldn't 
charge for enhanced services. For Internet users, profiled in eWEEK this 
week, the end of net neutrality would be downright scary because costs 
could go up—or not. Perhaps startups would be shut out—or not. No one 
knows what will happen, since the debate is really a fracas between Net 
and telecom behemoths battling over their interests and trying to prod 
Congress to fix a problem that doesn't exist yet. In other words, the 
histrionic levels in this debate are high.

So why shouldn't Congress get involved? Here are a few reasons:

1. Congress will screw it up. If techies can't agree on a definition of 
net neutrality, it's highly unlikely that a bunch of pols understand the 
issue. Let's say Congress does mandate net neutrality. Great news, 
right? Not so fast. Once net neutrality is mandated, the laws of 
unintended consequences kick in. Suddenly, we're locked into a Net 
architecture (the current one that's decades old). Suddenly, there are 
no fast lanes allowed. Suddenly, entrenched players become more 
entrenched into the current setup. Is it possible Congress could mandate 
net neutrality in a way that would allay all these concerns? Sure, but 
it's unlikely. In fact, the only consensus on the net neutrality issue 
is that no one thinks Congress has a clue.

2. Fast lanes exist today. Proponents of mandating net neutrality cringe 
at the concept of tiered services. However, tiered services exist today. 
Fast lanes exist today. Case in point: Akamai. If you are a big Web 
content provider such as Google, Yahoo or CNN, you can afford to use 
Akamai's services, which house content in places near the end users. If 
you are a startup, you may not be able to use Akamai. Take it one step 
further: If Congress says there's no fast lane, does that mean Akamai 
can't exist? Hmm.

3. All traffic isn't created equal. An e-mail doesn't have the same 
service requirements as a VOIP call. An X-ray of a heart patient should 
have priority over a Britney Spears video. Corporate networks manage 
traffic that way, and at some point there has to be some intelligence 
added to public Internet infrastructure between the end points. Net 
neutrality requirements mean all traffic is created equal. You can 
debate over who makes the call over what traffic gets priority, but to 
pretend all traffic is equal doesn't hold up.

4. Telecom giants are already doomed. So net neutrality disappears and 
AT&T and Verizon can theoretically do whatever they want. AT&T gets 
huffy and blocks Google and YouTube because it taxes Ma Bell's 
infrastructure. Guess what? Customers leave. Sure, AT&T and Verizon 
wield a lot of power, but it's more tenuous than you'd think. For 
starters, telecom giants are in no position to censor traffic. 
Meanwhile, technology is going to pull an end run on the last-mile 
issue. Sprint is rolling out WiMax and Clearwire has hefty financial 
backers. Both will succeed. Don't buy that argument? How about this one: 
If net neutrality ends, the likes of Google and Yahoo could start 
charging AT&T and Verizon to carry them on their networks. Why couldn't 
Google charge network operators just like ESPN charges cable companies?

5. Laws exist to thwart net neutrality concerns today. Say AT&T does 
block Vonage. The
Federal Communications Commission can act. Vonage can sue under 
antitrust law. Maybe these efforts won't do enough. If that turns out to 
be the case, then Congress can cook up a fix when the problem surfaces. 
For now, mandating net neutrality is a recipe for disaster.

Check out eWEEK.com's Infrastructure Center for the latest news, views 
and analysis on servers, switches and networking protocols for the 
enterprise and small businesses.


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