Canadian ISPs Plan Net Censorship

Concerns grow that Canada's plan will wipeout alt news sites and spread to U.S.

By Mike Finch

A net-neutrality activist group has uncovered plans for the demise of the free 
Internet by 2010 in Canada. By 2012, the group says, the trend will be global. 
Bell Canada and TELUS, Canada’s two largest Internet service providers (ISPs), 
will begin charging per-site fees on most Internet sites, reports anonymous 
sources within TELUS.

“It's beyond censorship, it is killing the biggest ecosystem of free expression 
and freedom of speech that has ever existed,” I Power spokesperson Reese Leysen 
said. I Power was the first group to report on the possible changes.

Bell Canada has not returned calls or emails.

The plans made by the large telecom businesses would change the Internet into a 
cable-like system, where customers sign up for specific web sites, and must pay 
to see each individual site beyond a certain point. Subscription browsing would 
be limited, extra fees would be applied to access out-of-network sites. Many 
sites would be blocked altogether. 

“We had inside sources from bigger companies who gave us the information on how 
exclusivity deals are being made at this moment between ISPs and big content 
providers (like TV production studios and major video game publishers) to 
decide which web sites will be in the ‘standard package’ offered to their 
customers, leaving all the rest of the Internet unreachable unless you pay 
extra subscription fees per every ‘non-standard’ site you visit,” Leysen said. 
“We knew the source to be 100% reliable, but we also knew the story would be 
highly controversial if we released the information. We did it because we knew 
that we’d get more official confirmations once we’d come forward with it. And 
indeed that is what happened. Dylan Pattyn, who is writing the soon-to-be 
published article for Time Magazine, received confirmation from sources within 
Bell Canada and TELUS after we released the information.”

The plans would in effect be economic censorship, with only the top 100 to 200 
sites making the cut in the initial subscription package. Such plans would 
likely favor major news outlets and suppress smaller news outlets, as the major 
news outlets would be free (with subscription), and alternative news outlets, 
like AFP, would incur a fee for every visit. 

“The Internet will become a playground for billion-dollar content providers 
just like television is,” said Leysen. “It won’t be possible for a few 
teenagers in their parents’ basement to start a small site like E-bay that then 
grows out to be the next big thing anymore. Right now the Internet belongs to 
those with the greatest ideas. In the future, it’ll belong to those with the 
biggest budgets.” 

With plans in Canada uncovered, I Power thinks that companies in the United 
States and other nations are also planning similar actions.

“By 2012 ISPs all over the globe will reduce Internet access to a TV-like 
subscription model, only offering access to a small standard amount of 
commercial sites and require extra fees for every other site you visit. These 
‘other’ sites would then lose all their exposure and eventually shut down, 
resulting in what could be seen as the end of the Internet,” Leysen said. 

Such a subscription plan could possibly restrict free speech far beyond even 
the current restrictions set by the governments of communist China. Not only 
would browsing be limited, but privacy would be invaded, as every web site 
viewed would likely be recorded on a bill in a manner similar to a phone bill.

Why would the ISPs institute such a plan? One word: money.

“This new subscription model is commercially far more beneficial to them than 
how it is now,” Leysen said. “If Fox wants to launch a new television show 
online, they’ll have to pay big money to all major ISPs to ensure that their 
new show will be offered and pushed in the ‘standard package’ of 
sites/services/channels that people will get through their Internet access. 
Plus ISPs will also gain extra revenue out of people trying to access the rest 
of the Internet, as they’ll pay extra subscription fees for every web site they 
visit.”

But it’s not just the big ISPs that stand to gain.

“Marketing and big budget ‘content-pushing’ just doesn’t seem to work on the 
Internet, and this is something that several industries want fixed. ISPs know 
this and will benefit greatly by fixing this for the marketing and 
entertainment industry,” Leysen said.

The ISPs are said to be confident they can institute such plans through 
deceptive marketing and fear tactics.

“The Internet will be more and more marketed as a place full of child 
pornography and other horrible illegal activity in order to get people on their 
[the ISP’s] side once they start restricting it and make it ‘safer,’” Leysen 
said. “Unless we really make a stand for this and make sure that mainstream 
media thoroughly covers the issue, the whole thing will be eased in with proper 
marketing to make sure that most mainstream customers won’t make a big deal out 
of it. They will only realize what was lost long after it’s gone.”

For more information about this story see http://ipower.ning.com

For more information about Internet freedom: savetheinternet.com

http://www.americanfreepress.net:80/html/canada_net_censorship.html

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