[Biofuel] Net Neutrality Diversion

2006-06-24 Thread Keith Addison
http://www.tompaine.com/articles/2006/06/21/net_neutrality_diversion.php

Net Neutrality Diversion

Art Brodsky

June 21, 2006

Art Brodsky is communications director for  Public Knowledge, a 
public interest group working at the intersection of information and 
technology policy.

A couple of days ago in an auditorium at George Washington University 
here in Washington, former Clinton administration spokesman Mike 
McCurry trotted out the hottest talking point in the fight against 
keeping the Internet open. He accused the pro-openness forces of 
hypocrisy because search engines play favorites.

What Google does, he said, looks suspiciously to me like exactly the 
sort of content-discrimination business model that advocates of the 
network neutrality are foisting off on the telecoms. What is the 
difference?

As a logical argument, the issue is just silly. As a diversionary 
tactic, it is more valuable. For while this is being argued out, the 
telecom, cable, movie and recording industries are getting away with 
one big goodie bag.

Google, of course, is a staunch advocate for a fair and open 
Internet. In his answer to what looked like a planted question during 
a debate with Amazon's Paul Misener, McCurry kept in play a great 
diversionary tactic that surfaced in April during the House Energy 
and Commerce Committee consideration of telecommunications 
legislation. Then, Rep. Charlie Gonzalez, D-Texas, who represents 
ATT's hometown of San Antonio, proposed an amendment that would have 
required the Federal Communications Commission to study preferential 
practices of the top five Internet search engines by usage and the 
top five electronic sites by revenue.

The amendment was defeated, but the issue has been kept alive as the 
telephone and cable companies never miss a chance to make Google and 
other e-commerce companies defend their businesses. Search engine 
neutrality now comes up in conversations with Hill staff and 
legislators, requiring Google and others to get away from the main 
debate to point out that there are many search engines but only at 
most two broadband providers, that users willingly Google, and that 
many customers have little choice in how to get onto the Internet.

However, just as the Google non-issue is a diversion from the core of 
net neutrality, so the net neutrality debate is in a sense a 
diversion from other major flaws in the telecom bill.

The debate over net neutrality is certainly important, because it 
will in large part determine whether the free and open Internet will 
continue to exist as we have known it for the past 15 years or so. 
But by focusing all of the attention on the issue, many other 
important features of the telecom legislation the Senate Commerce 
Committee is scheduled to mark up June 22 will be completely ignored.

There is no meaningful net neutrality language in either the House 
bill or the current version of the Senate bill, so the telephone and 
cable companies come out ahead on that score.

But the main purpose of the bills was to create competition in the 
cable business by allowing telephone companies to get into that 
business more quickly. In theory, prices would be lowered for 
consumers if the telephone companies didn't have to obtain permission 
from 33,000 local areas that award franchises to cable systems to 
offer video services. And so the national franchise was born, in 
which all the telephone company has to do is fill out a form at 
either the FCC (House bill) or a local agency (Senate) and, voila, 
enter the business. No muss, no fuss, no negotiations that bogged 
down cable companies for years when they were starting out. Cable 
companies get the same deal when their franchises expire.

There is, of course, one little detail. The newly entered telephone 
companies are under no requirement to build out their systems to all 
the parts of a local area. 

Unlike the House bill, some states require the new telephone 
companies-as-cable-operators to build out their systems over an 
ever-increasing percentage of a state.  That type of requirement 
makes certain that eventually all parts of an area will have access 
to the new services and, presumably, the price competition that comes 
along with it.  The practice of providing service in some areas and 
not in others is called redlining, a term that first came from the 
practice of financial institutions literally drawing a red line on 
the map around some neighborhoods in which they didn't want to do 
business.

The House panel rejected the approach of setting build-out 
requirements.  Instead of having an affirmative requirement to serve 
everyone, the bill instead said a video service provider may not deny 
access to its video service to any group of potential residential 
video service subscribers because of the income, race, or religion of 
that group.

On the surface, that might sound feasible, until you look at the 
exceptions to the rule. According to the bill, it is not 

Re: [Biofuel] Net Neutrality Diversion

2006-06-24 Thread Jeff Lyles
I think that what some of the major isp's are wanting to do is akin to you 
buying a truck for $100,000. For that, you can go to the grocery store and 
buy some groceries and bring them back home. However, you have to spend 5 
hours at the grocery store and you can't go over 20mph going to and from the 
store. If you are willing to spend $200,000 for the same truck, you will be 
able to pull a rv down the road, doing 100mph and won't have to worry about 
getting a traffic ticket because there won't be any government intervention.
Then you have the issue of copy right and intellectual property laws. If 
some of the media companies get there way in saying you can only play their 
media on devices that they approve of, it would be like Exxon Mobil saying 
you can only use their gas in cars that they aprove of.

Jeff

- Original Message - 
From: Keith Addison [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: biofuel@sustainablelists.org
Sent: Saturday, June 24, 2006 11:37 AM
Subject: [Biofuel] Net Neutrality Diversion


 http://www.tompaine.com/articles/2006/06/21/net_neutrality_diversion.php

 Net Neutrality Diversion

 Art Brodsky

 June 21, 2006

 Art Brodsky is communications director for  Public Knowledge, a
 public interest group working at the intersection of information and
 technology policy.

 A couple of days ago in an auditorium at George Washington University
 here in Washington, former Clinton administration spokesman Mike
 McCurry trotted out the hottest talking point in the fight against
 keeping the Internet open. He accused the pro-openness forces of
 hypocrisy because search engines play favorites.

 What Google does, he said, looks suspiciously to me like exactly the
 sort of content-discrimination business model that advocates of the
 network neutrality are foisting off on the telecoms. What is the
 difference?

 As a logical argument, the issue is just silly. As a diversionary
 tactic, it is more valuable. For while this is being argued out, the
 telecom, cable, movie and recording industries are getting away with
 one big goodie bag.

 Google, of course, is a staunch advocate for a fair and open
 Internet. In his answer to what looked like a planted question during
 a debate with Amazon's Paul Misener, McCurry kept in play a great
 diversionary tactic that surfaced in April during the House Energy
 and Commerce Committee consideration of telecommunications
 legislation. Then, Rep. Charlie Gonzalez, D-Texas, who represents
 ATT's hometown of San Antonio, proposed an amendment that would have
 required the Federal Communications Commission to study preferential
 practices of the top five Internet search engines by usage and the
 top five electronic sites by revenue.

 The amendment was defeated, but the issue has been kept alive as the
 telephone and cable companies never miss a chance to make Google and
 other e-commerce companies defend their businesses. Search engine
 neutrality now comes up in conversations with Hill staff and
 legislators, requiring Google and others to get away from the main
 debate to point out that there are many search engines but only at
 most two broadband providers, that users willingly Google, and that
 many customers have little choice in how to get onto the Internet.

 However, just as the Google non-issue is a diversion from the core of
 net neutrality, so the net neutrality debate is in a sense a
 diversion from other major flaws in the telecom bill.

 The debate over net neutrality is certainly important, because it
 will in large part determine whether the free and open Internet will
 continue to exist as we have known it for the past 15 years or so.
 But by focusing all of the attention on the issue, many other
 important features of the telecom legislation the Senate Commerce
 Committee is scheduled to mark up June 22 will be completely ignored.

 There is no meaningful net neutrality language in either the House
 bill or the current version of the Senate bill, so the telephone and
 cable companies come out ahead on that score.

 But the main purpose of the bills was to create competition in the
 cable business by allowing telephone companies to get into that
 business more quickly. In theory, prices would be lowered for
 consumers if the telephone companies didn't have to obtain permission
 from 33,000 local areas that award franchises to cable systems to
 offer video services. And so the national franchise was born, in
 which all the telephone company has to do is fill out a form at
 either the FCC (House bill) or a local agency (Senate) and, voila,
 enter the business. No muss, no fuss, no negotiations that bogged
 down cable companies for years when they were starting out. Cable
 companies get the same deal when their franchises expire.

 There is, of course, one little detail. The newly entered telephone
 companies are under no requirement to build out their systems to all
 the parts of a local area.

 Unlike the House bill, some states require the new telephone