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The Internet Businesses United States

Cisco, Motorola, and Other Companies Take Aim At Net Neutrality Rules 239

angry tapir writes "FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski announced last month that he would seek to develop formal rules prohibiting Internet service providers from selectively blocking or slowing Web content and applications. However, 44 companies — including Cisco Systems, Alcatel-Lucent, Corning, Ericsson, Motorola and Nokia — have sent a letter to the FCC saying new regulations could hinder the development of the Internet. A group of 18 Republican US senators have also sent a letter to Genachowski raising concerns about net neutrality regulations."
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Cisco, Motorola, and Other Companies Take Aim At Net Neutrality Rules

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  • by skirtsteak_asshat ( 1622625 ) on Thursday October 15, 2009 @08:12PM (#29764469)
    No, new regulations could hinder THEIR DEVELOPMENT of price per byte structure which they've been salivating about for a LONG TIME. Greedy pricks. Green-wash as you are able, we will see through it and hold you accountable.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday October 15, 2009 @08:13PM (#29764479)
    Well, it would make their more expensive traffic filtering, blocking, and shaping equipment less valuable and harder to sell.
  • by Philip K Dickhead ( 906971 ) <folderol@fancypants.org> on Thursday October 15, 2009 @08:16PM (#29764493) Journal

    Simplify?
    The meter-makers want a customer. Otherwise, the old stuff still works fine.

  • by fuzzyfuzzyfungus ( 1223518 ) on Thursday October 15, 2009 @08:16PM (#29764499) Journal
    Passing packets freely is, relatively speaking, computationally cheap. Deep packet inspecting, and QoSing, and sorting, and ranking, and grading, and whatnoting packets as they pass by is computationally expensive.

    It sure would be bad for business if potential customers (er, I mean, "the future health of the internet") didn't need sophisticated networking gear dedicated to price discrimination...
  • by wizardforce ( 1005805 ) on Thursday October 15, 2009 @08:22PM (#29764535) Journal

    When there's little choice in what providers are available in your area, there's very little reason for ISPs to provide better service. Internet users need to be able to move to viable alternatives when Comcast and friends implement anti-net neutrality measures. If you don't like your p2p being throttled, there should be somewhere else to take your money. Get rid of those local monopolies; they are more trouble than they are worth. There are a lot of changes to the current system that would improve the situation that involve little more than discouraging monopolies and stronger enforcement of current laws.

  • by Odinlake ( 1057938 ) on Thursday October 15, 2009 @08:23PM (#29764541)
    Well if both the Corporations and the Republicans are against it it must be a good thing for the Public.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday October 15, 2009 @08:26PM (#29764563)

    When government picks winners, groups that get called "lobbyists" and "special interests" exercise their Constitutional RIGHTS to petition the government and try to affect the outcome of the government rule making.

    Don't like it?

    Don't give the government the power that attracts those groups.

  • by FooAtWFU ( 699187 ) on Thursday October 15, 2009 @08:34PM (#29764617) Homepage
    I don't think it's so much price-per-byte structure. The technology for that is simple and readily available and still permissible under most net-neutrality schemes under suggestion. Which is possibly just as bad as anything else: when your ISP is your cable company, and they don't want you to use Internet video (YouTube, iTunes video store, BitTorrent) which competes with their cable offerings, then charging you by the byte is a perfect way to abuse their local monopoly.

    It's the whole ISP-level QOS "google please pay us extra for people browsing YouTube for it not to suck" deal that's tricky and takes fancy hardware.

  • by JustinRLynn ( 831164 ) on Thursday October 15, 2009 @08:35PM (#29764629)
    On the other hand it would ensure the demand for ever more bandwidth carrying capacity and faster equipment. This essentially means that all of their deployed equipment will need to be upgraded sooner. So now, instead of developing new products, they just get to make old ones faster and bigger. How is that bad for them?
  • Must be right... (Score:2, Insightful)

    by MasterLock ( 581630 ) on Thursday October 15, 2009 @08:39PM (#29764651)
    If a chunk of the GOP is against something from the start, it's probably the right thing to do.
  • So be it (Score:5, Insightful)

    by TopSpin ( 753 ) * on Thursday October 15, 2009 @08:39PM (#29764661) Journal

    Then let the "development" of the Internet it be "hindered". If IPTV takes another decade because new business models have be created to adapt to a neutral network, then so be it. I am happy to wait. If the capacity available to me grows more slowly because there are fewer deal making opportunities for ISPs and content producers then so be it. I've got enough bandwidth. Corrupting the relatively simple model of the existing network by letting Disney et al. carve it up into lucrative morsels to be passes among the elite is not appealing. Whichever content providers don't like it can just keep their stuff on cable until we drop our cable service as we've dropped our landlines. Their stuff just isn't that important to me.

    The capitalist claims the market is agile. Adaptation is supposed to be swift. I believe this. I therefore believe we should permit the market to prove this by preventing the aforementioned companies from molding the Internet into models they are already comfortable with. Let them adapt to a neutral network. The Internet isn't broken and doesn't need to be fixed by Time Warner. The Internet will not fail if Ted Turner doesn't get a cut of my ISP's revenue.

    There you go; an argument for Net Neutrality from the conservative perspective.

  • by wizardforce ( 1005805 ) on Thursday October 15, 2009 @08:52PM (#29764727) Journal

    That is the crux of the problem... The last mile is the major reason why infrastructure such as this tends toward a natural monopoly. However, there are a few ways to address the problem. Utilize wifi instead of underground infrastructure, allow cities/localities to build the last mile themselves and lease the infrastructure at market rates to competitors.

  • by Jerry ( 6400 ) on Thursday October 15, 2009 @09:04PM (#29764799)

    Being able to extract more cash from the user base without adding anything of value by using artificial scarcity.

    They've already stolen $300B in the fiber optic debacle.

    Now they need to do bandwidth shaping on an antiquated US Internet trunk so they can charge for fast tracking the fat cats and slow tracking the peasants, but at higher prices, of course, because all that shaping requires new, EXPENSIVE equipment which will require higher access fees to get an ROI on that expensive equipment.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday October 15, 2009 @09:09PM (#29764833)

    There is no way to make open, high speed connections more profitable than filtered slow connections. None what so ever. So while you may not want a band aid legislated onto the system, you probably do want a fast, unfiltered internet connection. I sure do, and I don't think I should have to pay hundreds of dollars a month to get it. I have no problem paying for my connection, even paying more than I currently do, upto roughly 100$ a month. As long it's fast and unfiltered. Anything else is a sham at best.

  • by Adrian Lopez ( 2615 ) on Thursday October 15, 2009 @09:13PM (#29764859) Homepage

    Net Neutrality rules could hinder development of the Internet in directions that are harmful to the public. Unlike the parties mentioned above, I feel that hindering harmful business practices is actually a Good Thing.

  • by joocemann ( 1273720 ) on Thursday October 15, 2009 @09:16PM (#29764865)

    Not everything that corporations are against is good for the public.

    Be realistic; just because something is not absolute does not mean it isn't generally true. What was said was by no means at all a statement of ignorance or hasty generalization.

  • by GaryOlson ( 737642 ) <.gro.nosloyrag. .ta. .todhsals.> on Thursday October 15, 2009 @09:17PM (#29764879) Journal
    This whole discussion and the concept of network neutrality has a bipolar disorder syndrome. This or that, network neutrality or filtered access,monopoly ISPs or carrier choice. I say let's have it all: proprietary ISPs and municipal networks side by side, neutral networks and filtered networks, fiber and coax and copper and wireless. Any network, proprietary or municipal, can implement any network service level as long as a neutral network of equal or better bandwidth is available at an equal or lower price and equal service reliability. Then we would really see which business model survives, which needs financial support, and which is just ineffective. And remove this whole unhealthy bipolar debate.
  • by interkin3tic ( 1469267 ) on Thursday October 15, 2009 @09:30PM (#29764959)

    Anything the government does is evil, restricts freedoms and is inefficient by definition.

    Well I mean, it DOES restrict the freedom of telecos to make you pay more for sites that haven't paid their protection fees. I'm sure the RIAA would argue that this will make blocking illegal child-porn terrorist activities much more inefficient. And obviously the senators who have had sizeable campaign contributions from various concerned sources (the same two as above) would characterize net neutrality as evil. Some of them could post on slashdot. And even slashdotters who don't own telecos, work for the RIAA, or recieve bribes from them, there are probably a few who are so convinced their political fortune cookie knowledge applies absolutely to every situation that they could rationalize those guys' viewpoints.

  • by GrpA ( 691294 ) on Thursday October 15, 2009 @09:35PM (#29765003)

    No... If the Internet gets bigger, the legacy US hardware suppliers are more likely to lose.

    Their real value-added stuff is corporate not carrier. Smart boxes that do more with less bandwidth... People need to get QOS and traffic conditioning just to make their VOIP work over internet connections without issues. If bandwidth is scarce, it becomes a valuable resource. Managing it becomes a market.

    But the Chinese companies ( Huawei, ZTE etc ) are doing more and more in the high bandwidth area and it's cheap equipment, so you can afford to spend more on fiber rollouts. Some of that stuff is beginning to displace US manufacturers now.

    And then when you have masses of un-restricted bandwidth and you don't need special routers anymore... Voip just works because you have lots of capacity and nearly no jitter. You don't need complex setups anymore - just cheap equipment.

    So the legacy manufacturers lose out in both markets...

    They could compete I'm sure, but that takes innovation and progress. It's much easier to deal with the status quo. Especially when you dumped all your best developers to concentrate on selling existing product a year ago... Damn that pesky R&D.

    GrpA

  • by falconwolf ( 725481 ) <falconsoaring_2000 AT yahoo DOT com> on Thursday October 15, 2009 @09:38PM (#29765023)

    "When the government picks winners and losers in the marketplace, the incentive to invest disappears,"

    By granting monopolies government has already picked winner and losers. There is no competition in broadband and the lucky few who have a choice in broadband providers has the choice between the cable company and the phone company. A duopoly isn't competition.

    I wish the letter with the name of those 18 Republican senators had been linked to if nothing else, I bet these politicians don't believe in competition or free markets either.

    Falcon

  • by ekimd ( 968058 ) on Thursday October 15, 2009 @09:41PM (#29765043)

    "A group of 18 Republican US senators have also sent a letter to Genachowski raising concerns about net neutrality regulations."

    They make it too easy to figure out who's in the pocket of big business.

  • I agree charging by the amount of bandwidth used may, just may, be better but for years broadband providers sold unlimited service. The contract I signed with Time Warner for my cable, now it's Comcast, did not have any sort of limits. Now it did say the speed would be up to, I think though I don't recall for sure, 1.5MB. There wasn't anything about traffic shaping, blocking, or redirecting though. If ISPs oversold capacity it's not the fault of the users, it's the ISPs own fault. When I go to an all-you-can-eat buffet I refuse to accept the restaurant from preventing me or anyone else from eating all we can.

    A price-per-byte structure, if properly implemented, could result in reduced monthly payments for grandma and a higher portion for the guy with the strange habit of downloading "Linux ISOs" all the time.

    The problem with this is that incumbent broadband providers try to prevent any competition that will offer more bandwidth. How many tymes has news articles been summarized and linked to on slashdot because some incumbent provider tried to stop competition whether cable, fiber, wireless, or any other broadband? An example was in northeastern Utah a few years back. A group of communities got together to build their own Broadband Utopia [ieee.org]. Of course the incumbents did all they could to stop it and they were finally successful in having the state government pass a law barring local governments from selling access, instead they have to sell to other service providers. The 14 cities that make up the Utah Telecommunication Open Infrastructure Agency built an infrastructure that will provide "100 megabits per second" to start with. That infrastructure can be used to deliver cable TV, net access, phone services, or whatever a person could think of. Because of it Comcast [dslreports.com] was "forced" to bundle "broadband, digital cable, and VoIP service for $90 a month in all of Utopia's footprint" and I doubt they are losing money. I say "forced" because they only had to do it if they wanted to continue to provide services in the area otherwise people would not have been willing to pay the higher costs.

    perhaps content directly delivered by the ISP would fall under this category. But I don't see why that is -inherently- wrong.

    You don't see what's wrong? Try this, say only Company X provides broadband in your area, so you have no other choice for broadband, and you want to search the web. So you head over to Google and if you can connect it is slow because Google didn't pay your ISP. Or your ISP supports one political party and blocks traffic from all other parties? Do you still not see a problem?

    Falcon

  • by NeutronCowboy ( 896098 ) on Thursday October 15, 2009 @10:50PM (#29765371)

    The discussion is polar because either a market is dominated by a monopoly, or it isn't. Any monopoly that exists next to another business in the same market isn't a monopoly. Furthermore, once you get away from the concept of smart nodes and dumb pipes, you are right where ESPN360 plays: content tied to carriers.

    It's a bipolar syndrome because we have both ends of the polar discussion being a reality: monopolies in the carrier area, and smart nodes on dump pipes. One of the two will have to give. It doesn't take a genius to figure out who is working for what.

  • by Darkness404 ( 1287218 ) on Thursday October 15, 2009 @10:56PM (#29765391)
    Ok, then tell me where are you going to get your CPU? Neither AMD nor Intel have Anti-DRM stances (http://www.infoworld.com/t/hardware/content-in-lockdown-199) and (http://www.pcworld.com/article/121027/intels_pentium_d_equipped_with_drm_capability.html) and even if these plans weren't 100% realized, the fact that the company would invest R&D resources into it assures you that they are not anti-DRM.

    If you don't buy products from companies with DRM chances are you won't have a game console (Ok, you might have the Pandora if it ever ships or the GP2x Wiz, but all the Wiz is good for is playing emulators), good luck finding an MP3 player that doesn't have some built-in DRM (even if it is only that the company paid MS, Apple, or another company to play DRM-d tracks) unless its a cheap Chinese clone with questionable build quality. Etc.
  • by Attila Dimedici ( 1036002 ) on Thursday October 15, 2009 @11:07PM (#29765443)
    The concern I always have when we discuss the idea of government regulation designed to enforce "net neutrality" is how neutral will these regulations actually be? My experience with this type of government regulation is that it usually favors some group (usually a corporation or group of corporations) over some other group (often individuals and groups of individuals). The other thing these regulations almost always do is strengthen the government at the expense of the common man. I favor the idea of net neutrality that is most often supported on this board, but I have no confidence that that is what we will get from government regulation.
  • by tlambert ( 566799 ) on Thursday October 15, 2009 @11:12PM (#29765463)

    I had a nice ISP...

    They were bought by EarthLink.

    So I changed ISPs to another nice ISP.

    They were bought by a different company.

    That company was then bought by EarthLink.

    I changed to a third ISP.

    A while later, they were bought by EarthLink.

    In any unregulated market, natural monopolies will arise as bigger players buy out the smaller players, and they will go after smaller and smaller players as their marginal ability to increase their business is eroded by their own success in controlling the market.

    Unless you are suggesting regulating ownership of ISPs in a given area in the same way that newspaper and media ownership was regulated by market so that there was not a single monopoly news source, I don't see this changing in such a way that your "everyone should have a choice of providers" utopia will ever come about.

    -- Terry

  • by Eravnrekaree ( 467752 ) on Thursday October 15, 2009 @11:25PM (#29765521)

    No. Wireless is slow and expensive. The best way is to require competition by forcing the companies to lease their underground lines at cost. This is the only way you will get real competition. Even more so, municipalities should own the last mile, and you could subscribe to many ISPs that would offer service on that. On top of that, we should have net neutrality that would simply requires ISPs to pass all data from third parties through unmolested.

  • by grcumb ( 781340 ) on Friday October 16, 2009 @12:11AM (#29765707) Homepage Journal

    I favor the idea of net neutrality that is most often supported on this board, but I have no confidence that that is what we will get from government regulation.

    You have every reason to doubt the motives of vested interests and their influence on government. But the problem is this:

    How else can you get Net Neutrality except by regulation?

    Net Neutrality is in essence a set of basic rules that say, 'Play fair; however you treat them, treat everyone the same.' The role of government is to enforce these rules. Nobody else can.

    The fact that much (but not all) of government has been co-opted by moneyed interests is, IMO, largely because people let it happen. The name of the game for politicians is to get re-elected. One criterion for this is to go into every election with a big war chest. The other is not to piss off your constituents. Unfortunately, the electorate these days is so complacent that the moneyed side wins almost every time. Were the voters a little more attentive, no amount of money would suffice.

    So, your assignment today is: If you see the government failing in its responsibility to enforce real Net Neutrality, get pissed off and stay pissed off until they fix it. There is, alas, no other way (unless you're a billionaire).

  • Like all of us (Score:1, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday October 16, 2009 @12:52AM (#29765895)

    I generally support a more libertarian (small 'l') view of government intervention - less is more. But the ideas of 'Net Neutrality, when it was being proposed, seemed to me to be one of those "necessary evil" things that government needs to do.

    We all support less government intervention, except in the matters that are important to us. Upholding order (making murders illegal, etc.) and some sort of contract laws falls into that category for nearly all of us but aside from that, the priorities differ. You find net neutrality a necessary evil, I also do but find it a lot less necessary evil than, for example, providing food and shelter to those who aren't able to earn it themselves.

    And somewhere between us is the line between left and right wing. And everyone on the other side of it is evil, ignorant, hasn't thought things through, is certain to ruin our country and will lead it to destruction if they win the next elections.

  • by CodeBuster ( 516420 ) on Friday October 16, 2009 @01:08AM (#29765945)
    Part of the problem is ISPs advertising false promises of "unlimited use" plans for flat monthly rates in conjunction with eye-popping speeds and then hiding what "unlimited use" really means in pages of contract fine print which states that speeds are not guaranteed, throttling or packet shaping may be used, etc. Perhaps it is time to start regulating some basic statistics of the data plan being offered; as for example with credit cards contracts where the annual percentage rates are printed front and center in larger fonts and conspicuous boxes. That way everyone will better understand what is being bought and at what price. At the very least, they should not be allowed to use the word "unlimited" in combination with any sort of advertised speeds unless they can get within some acceptable margin (i.e. 90%+) of that speed all of the time.
  • by mcrbids ( 148650 ) on Friday October 16, 2009 @02:18AM (#29766129) Journal

    Anything the government does is evil, restricts freedoms and is inefficient by definition.

    So please, stop this evil FCC man in his tracks.

    Moderated funny, I don't think that was your intent.

    And it's bullsh-7. Take your bullsh17 anti-gubbmint sentiment and cram it up your backside. Spreading this kind of toxic poison can only serve to get people hurt, and it's clearly starting to undermine the United State's ability to maintain it's position of power.

    If "da gubbmint" sucked at everything, why is it important to have one? If "da gubbmint" wasn't necessary, then Rwanda (which effectively has no government) would be a fscking paradise. Yet, despite having no evil gubbmint holding down the people, there's hardly a better example of hell on Earth. Rapes and crime are so rampant, basic infrastructure like roads, water, and power are almost nonexistent. Starvation is the order of the day for those who haven't already been killed by the nearest tyrant.

    Contrast that with YOUR privileged life: The glorious cell phone at your hip that work so well do so because of gubbmint regulations that standardize their broadcast signals, and make those frequencies available. FCC police keep it that way, too. Aircraft don't typically fall out of the sky because of stiff gubbmint regulations that require frequent mechanic reviews so well that an otherwise very dangerous activity has become one of the safest means of transportation... period.

    And I can go on and on.

    1) Roads that cost $1,000,000 per mile that are so extensive that you generally expect to go anywhere you like, anytime you want.

    2) Public education available for nearly your entire childhood that made it possible for you to read this post,

    3) Military that protects your interests very effectively.

    4) Police that keep "bad guys" from robbing you, raping you, or killing you.

    5) Fresh, pure, clean water so cheap that it's often not even measured. You walk to the sink. You jigger a handle and voila! A virtually endless supply of clean, cheap water so pure that you can pour it straight into your car.

    6) Cars that are safe to drive! You'd think it was in the interests of the car companies to make safe cars, but paradoxically, they've bitterly opposed every single measure introduced by the "gubbmint" to improve either safety or fuel economy. You can get into a car crash at highway speeds and total the car, and even in these circumstances it's most likely that you'll live and suffer only minor to moderate injuries. You get 250 or more miles on a tank and it doesn't break the bank.

    7) Food that's safe to eat. Go to China and you don't really quite know what's in your baby food. It might be good, protein-rich baby food, or it might be Melamine. How do you know? Well, it's the US "gubbmint" that identified the problem and stopped the flow of melamine-infested food before too many people got hurt. I buy my chicken at the local grocery store without having to worry about much more than the price because of strict "gubbmint" regulations on food handling. And China is a pretty good country - it's far worse elsewhere.

    How much longer should I go on? Talking like gubbmint is somehow universally bad is just idiot talk. Sure, it's got it's problems, but the idea that it's somehow the definition of evil is... wrong!

    Get lost, and come back when you have something intelligent to say!

  • by skirtsteak_asshat ( 1622625 ) on Friday October 16, 2009 @02:20AM (#29766139)
    Net neutrality _means_ internet access to the whole internet, unfiltered, uncensored, ungoverned, including all ports, protocols, and pr0n therein. Amen. We pay the local connection fee to the ISP. The content handling is mostly paid for by advertising and click-thru-purchases, as I understand it. Shouldn't they be mandated to explain EXACTLY how they are throttling the service we are paying for, instead of obfuscating that information? What, exactly, is the difference between throttling something to the edge of usability and flat-out denying access? Please, tell me. Money trickles down, or companies go out of business. That's how it works currently, and you can see LOTS of revenue being made as-is. The internet is not going bankrupt under the current management. Mind you, 18 Republicans support deregulation. REPUBLICANS! When you begin to charge a fee for any larger segment of the internet, you are sliding headlong down the slippery slope towards information control. When you begin to throttle the connection of those deemed 'undesirable' where EXACTLY do you, sir, draw the line of desirability? Aha. Are the corporations and lobbyist groups the guarantors of online rights and privileges? Or is the internet a greater entity, a medium, which must be protected as speech is? We are deciding these tenets of our future society now. I would prefer a world of equals to a world of powerful tyrants, but perhaps you'll sell me something shiny instead. These corporate lobbyist groups and their Republican handlers don't have a great track record when it comes to honesty or altruism. "you and I are not much different than they are" - MindlessAutomata indeed! You are an apologist for the corporate excesses that have bankrupted our world economy. I'm not damning ALL corporations, I'm damning the IDEA that corporate rights are synonymous with human dignities and that they are granted the rights in our constitution. They are not living beings. They are not citizens. They are profit motivated collections of groupthink consumerist elites hell bent on world domination. Spin it as you like. A corporation cannot vote, cannot be drafted, cannot own a firearm or be shot dead by one. They do not require, and should not be granted, such inalienable rights as we are. Our only hope is in rallying behind organizations like the EFF to fight for our future rights online and the very shape of our future society. They are our champions. Not congress. NOT Comcast! They are willing conspirators of control, if for different motives. They cannot be trusted to act benevolently, now or in the future. As for the mindless automata, willing to trade freedom for convenience, may your simple dreams be the nightmares of those who went before. Repeat history as you will.
  • by Wildclaw ( 15718 ) on Friday October 16, 2009 @06:23AM (#29766949)

    and they were finally successful in having the state government pass a law barring local governments from selling access, instead they have to sell to other service providers.

    It is no wonder the USians consider the government inefficient. It is so corrupt that it convicts its uncorrupted parts for the crime of performing a public service.

  • so that is then (Score:3, Insightful)

    by unity100 ( 970058 ) on Friday October 16, 2009 @12:48PM (#29770119) Homepage Journal

    you are one of those morons who mods people down just because they express VALID points in their own style.

    morons like you are causing a lot of good comments getting modded down because you spot a few 'foul' or 'hard' words among a whole bunch of text and then downmod it as 'troll'.

    well, i have two words for that kind of attitide :

    fuck that.

    enjoy.

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