Why The Net Should Stay Neutral 260
Dino wrote to mention a BBC opinion piece on why tiered Internet setups are a bad idea. From the article: "What is being proposed is more like building two roads into every town and up to every house, one smooth and well-maintained tarmac and the other a dirt track, and then letting Tesco and Waitrose bid for the right to use the good road. This issue just the latest round of a long-running debate about how much government - of whatever type, in whatever country - should be involved in the growth and development of the internet."
Bad analogy for this argument (Score:4, Interesting)
public utility (Score:5, Informative)
We generally strived to avoid two tierer public power or phone service in their early days. Of course deregulation did take place in the phone arena eventually did make sense but only after ubiquitous access had been achieved and was affordable.
So we have to be careful about two tiered proposals for the internet. It might be okay but it should be scrutinized from a public policy perspective not a bussiness perspective.
Re:public utility (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:public utility (Score:3, Informative)
Re:public utility (Score:2, Interesting)
I think that telecoms are going to find that in dropping common carrier status they are going to lose a lot more than they gain; naming them in kiddy porn suits is going to be the next
They want their cake & to eat it (Score:2, Interesting)
I could be wrong, but as I undestand it, they desire to keep common carrier status while acting quite the opposite. What do you suppose 535 Congress-creatures cost? Not much compared to the profits they expect to be able to suck out of the 'net.
On the other hand, they may be somewhat delusional as to the rea
Re:Bad analogy for this argument (Score:3, Interesting)
Regards,
Steve
Re:Bad analogy for this argument (Score:3, Insightful)
This problem is not about "wising up". It is praying on people who are A) new to the area B) commuters on their way to work after having just woken up and indeed C) people who run red lights. Gee it sounds t
Re:Bad analogy for this argument (Score:3, Insightful)
Most people try to avoid running a yellow light. Sometimes they can't. Those who intentionally run a yellow light deserve to get a ticket, but when you shorten the yellow light, you are gambling on people having shorter reaction times. Practically speaking, the roads already demand swifter reaction times than people have. Occasionally they demand swifter reaction times than an idealized robot would
Re:Bad analogy for this argument (Score:2)
we arent talking about offering the option of a 2nd set of dirt roads everywhere and if you want to pay you get pavement.. It will end up being either you pay more, or your dirt road may lead you nowhere..
Closer, but here's one closer yet. (Score:5, Insightful)
Closer. But the premium lanes are still doing "best effort" delivery.
Here's one closer yet:
Think of what they're building as a multi-lane highway - with railroad tracks down the lanes. Each house gets a multi-lane driveway with a couple sidings running up the lanes.
Driveway/sidings come in several standard lane counts. Theaters, arenas, and factories have very wide ones, houses narrower ones (but still plenty wide), businesses, restaurants, and so on have something in between. The wider the driveway, the more you pay (in taxes or "driveway rent" to the "road company").
You can runs trains, cars, motorcycles, trolleys, people-movers, delivery busses, computerized delivery carts, you-name-it, on the pavement or the rails.
There's a fancy computerized signaling system telling every car which lanes it can use. Lots of switches tied in with it (and signaling BACK from the trains and such), so rail vehicles can be switched around as easily as cars make lane changes.
You've got two ways to use the road:
- You can pay a small toll and schedule a non-stop run or a scheduled stream of them (if there's capacity for it). The computers controlling the signaling system moves all the other traffic out of your way when it's your slot. If you got your reservation your trip is guaranteed. No stops, no traffic jams (for you), limited number and duration of red lights, getting you to your destination when promised.
- You can pay nothing (besides your flat-rate driveway rental) and use it like a regular road. Usually you get through. Sometimes there's a traffic jam and it takes a long while, or you have to make a detour. Once in a while it's so bad you give up and go back home. Big point: You have to guess how long the trip will take, and whether it's possible.
With this road in place you call a restaurant to cater your big party: The restaurant schedules a set of reserved road slots, cooks up the courses in his central professional kitchen, puts each on a little automated cart, and the cart brings it to your house: fresh, piping hot, and just in time to be served. Course after course, just on time, guaranteed to make it.
Meanwhile, the lane the caterer's carts were using is being used by lots of other traffic, mostly flat-rate, take-your-chances-with-traffic-jams traffic, whenever there wasn't a scheduled cart/train/bus/limousine/whatever using it.
THAT's the combined system.
What's the alternative?
You build a road AND a railroad. Separately. Each with its own infrastructure. This costs a LOT more than building one system, so its total capacity is smaller for a given investment. But even worse: Cars only get to use the road, trains only get to use the railroad - cars can't run down the rails when there are no trains in sight. So much of the capacity is unused.
Maybe you rented a siding from the railroad company. If so, you only get their trains. You don't get catered parties unless you buy them from the railroad company. Your local restaurant might try that stunt using waters on motorcycles - but he can't guarantee the main course won't be caught in a traffic jam while the soup gets cold. Some shippers might use trains to haul containers cross-country and transfer them to truck beds - but once they're on the trucks they're back in the traffic jams.
THAT's the "no favorites" scenario some posters keep whining for.
The problem is that some internet services, like streaming audio and video or VoIP, REQUIRE guaranteed bandwidth, limits on packet latency, and/or delivery reliability ("Quality of Service" (QoS)). Others (like file transfer) don't - "best effort" is good enough. If you want to serve both on the same net and do a good job of it, you have to give some packets preference over others.
If some packets ar
Re:Bad analogy for this argument (Score:2, Insightful)
This is about chopping the internet into smaller
Re:Bad analogy for this argument (Score:3, Insightful)
What they're proposing is to get paid twice by the provider and once by the consumer.
Health Care; minimum service levels; fair use (Score:2)
The government provides some basic services to get buy, but you should pay for more to get more.
Compare to Canada where a single health tier exists. It essentially splits the cost of health care across everyone.
Roads are just the same. They provide a basic service, and if you want something a bit more, you should be willing to pay. How is it different from a toll highway? You _could_ save money and take other roads but you want to
Re:It's already happened (Score:2)
Your problem seems to be a clueless provider that doesn't provide you with internet access, just their own little 'intranet'. It has however nothing to do whatsoever wit
Re:It's already happened (Score:3, Informative)
Here, we get rock-bottom service at deluxe prices, including the aforementioned limited access.
Alignment (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Alignment (Score:2)
Nice conclusion (Score:5, Funny)
Hopefully it won't come across as sarcasm.
I hope they just go out of business (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I hope they just go out of business (Score:2)
Re:I hope they just go out of business (Score:2)
Like the big telcos, they can build them. And before you talk about double-build of the last mile, what about new housing? Anyone can build there, and everyone's cost is the same.
A lot of these small companies just want to live off the backs of the existing telcos - they don't have to invest in building and running the network, but they demand ultra-cheap rates and no committment to invest in the infrastructure.
Re:I hope they just go out of business (Score:2)
Re:I hope they just go out of business (Score:2)
Re:I hope they just go out of business (Score:2)
afaict the cost of building out cabling to a street or group of streets dwarfs the cost of dropping a bit of wire from the local pole to someones house and plugging them into the ex
Re:I hope they just go out of business (Score:2)
Your statement implies that for one reason or another, you feel that the rates I'm being charged are too low. Care to justify your position? Do you feel that the rates I'm being charged are inadequate to maintain the integrity of the network infrastructure?
Have you actually
Re:I hope they just go out of business (Score:2)
You misunderstand. I am talking about the rates that carriers pay other carriers under regimes such as UNE in the US or LLU in the UK. That is the basis for much CLEC-ILEC competition. I am not much of an expert in the area of retail rates.
Have you a
Municipal Wi-Fi (Score:3, Insightful)
That opinion piece uses arguments similar to those being used to ram government funded Wi-Fi down our throats. I'm sorry, but no one has the right to have broadband. Some people pay for it themselves, others have dial-up, and others choose to not have any internet access.
A major problem with this line of thinking is that after they establish that everyone has a right to use the internet at max speed, the next thing on the list will be the huge social injustice caused by not everyone having a tax payer supplied computer.
Re:Municipal Wi-Fi (Score:5, Insightful)
If a mayority in a town wants to have municipal WiFi, then let them have their way. If it gets too expensive for your wallet to pay the taxes, move somewhere else. Sheesh!
Re:Municipal Wi-Fi (Score:2)
And no one has the right to have a green park or cleaned streets in downtown or whatever public services are there. And don't tell me you don't live downtown and have to pay your gardener or the cleaning lady! Sometimes it's just a good idea from a town to offer a service for free, even though you don't use it.
If a mayority in a town wants to have municipal WiFi, then let them have their way. If it gets too expensive for your wallet to pay the taxes, move somewhere else. Sheesh!
Well sure, if by "fre
Re:Municipal Wi-Fi (Score:2)
No? Never driven on a private road? Never been in a privately owned park?
I can't just understand why you want to forbid a certain entity to provide a service. A town is in charge to maintain a certain quality of life within its bounds. Quality of life means lots of things: having clean streets, attracting business, create zones for recreation, plan urbanization, provide s
Re:Municipal Wi-Fi (Score:2)
Plus whatever you pay for your phone line. I know several people who have cheap cell phone plans that actually cost less per month than a landline, and have no landline, so for them it would be more like $35/mo. to get dial-up.
Re:Municipal Wi-Fi (Score:2)
There's no such thing as free. Selling the idea that there is was the best marketing effort for unrestricted government growth that ever existed.
Re:Municipal Wi-Fi (Score:2)
Re:Municipal Wi-Fi (Score:5, Interesting)
I think we can all agree that telephones are essential to modern day living. If we want all our citizens to be in a level playing field (i.e. such that it's not the case only rich people get the benifits), then it's a good service to provide. Additionally, it can *help* make money for the municipalities as a whole. It makes people actually go outside more, and more likely to spend money. Finally, it's not something that companies will ever do -- in NYC Verizon does have WIFI hubs in all of their payphones, but then you have to use Verizon's services, which I completely, and utterly, refuse to do. Why? Well, to get back to the original subject of this story, it's because they are the type of company to do tiered payments.
It's an unnecessary evil. It doesn't cost them anymore, they aren't partcularly hurting for money, so the only reason for them to do so is to make even more money. I understand that's what companies do. But it doesn't mean I should be happy with it, or help feed their addiction. I will do everything in my power, as an informed consumer, to pay what I actually value the service for. But it's difficult to do with near monopolies like Verizon and SBC.
So, is it a right? Well, if the US is a capalist country, then the free market is supposed to help decide what we 'have a right to'. But, unfortunately, with the FCC relaxing it's definition of monopolies, it's not exactly a free market anymore.
Re:Municipal Wi-Fi (Score:2)
I'm sorry, but what? What are you on about? What do you think a free market is? Unbridled competition without state intervention (which, for the avoidance of doubt, includes the FCC), is exactly what the free market is. This is not a defence of it, you understand - I firmly believe that unrestricted, unfettered capitalism, rapacious as it naturally is, does more harm than good, and tends inevit
Re:Municipal Wi-Fi (Score:2)
I remember hearing someone once describe two types of freedom: personal freedom, and societal freedom. I, as a person, should be free to do whatever I want, including playing my music as loudly as possible. My neighbors, as part of society, should also have their freedom, and not have to listen to my crap.
Thus, not a
Re:Municipal Wi-Fi (Score:4, Interesting)
Then the "owners" of that infrastructure start yelling, "It's mine, mine, all mine. I'm a greedy little miser."
If you don't want the government meddling in your infrastructure, don't rely on it to create it in the first place, particularly if you live under a government of, by and for the people who have paid money and sacrificed rights for the supposed benefit that infrastructure will create for them.
KFG
Internet Co-op (Score:2)
Wow, I couldn't have said it better . It all about the money
This proves the Telcos motives => http://www.newnetworks.com/Scandalreslease13006.ht m [newnetworks.com]
I think a Co-op is needed, basically all ppl that want internet services get together and
start funding locally controlled metro LAN's
It could be part Fiber, part Wireless, and part Ethernet
It would not be controlled by any government, but instea
Re:Internet Co-op (Score:2)
Re:Municipal Wi-Fi (Score:2)
The beauty of the Internet as it is now is that anyone can publish for next to nothing. A change where it is tiered such that providers pay each ISP to allow their traffic priority breaks this, and jus
Re:Municipal Wi-Fi (Score:5, Insightful)
It's the same as with public transportation by bus - it's not something that is a right that has to be given to everyone, but rather a sound logistical choice that builds a stronger, freer society than would exist otherwise.
Now, it is true, if government-provided WIFI is seen as important to people, it could become established as a service people are unwilling to let goverment drop, but that's another issue. It still wouldn't be a right. The only right people would have to WIFI is the right to use it as they see fit, however they get it, so long as they are not violating others rights in doing so.
Remember the 9th and 10th ammendments to the bill of rights -
Amendment IX
The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.
Amendment X
The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the states, are reserved to the states respectively, or to the people.
Rights are the freedoms of mankind, not something they are granted by government. Don't let your fervor against goverment action blind you into making strawmen arguments against those you disagree with. There's may be valid arguments for government services, and they don't have to involve government granting new rights.
Ryan Fenton
Re:Municipal Wi-Fi (Score:5, Insightful)
While your statement has some truth, it is also like saying why don't we do away with
municipal libraries . If people want books they can buy them !!!
You may be thinking I have taken this too far as a case and point, but here is why
you may have that perception, your own personal usage of the Internet .
Some people do their homework via the web, some do business via the web, some do research and our send e-mail instead of letters . The internet is slowly replacing the way we do a lot of things .
We can print thousands of text books for school, or we can make it a torrent on the net .
We can print millions of voting cards, or we can make it an encrypted multi-point user
verified voting system that works much better than the current corporate model .
We can pay per minute voice charges, or we can use VoIP .
We can pay postage on each e-mail we send , or we can mass e-mail all our family members photos of our newborn child, wedding, or graduation .
We can choose to realize its fiber with light pulses being turned on and off and using
VERY little electricity, or we can say it costs TWICE as much to send 2 meg as it does 1 meg .
We should all easily realize the cost of sending 2 meg of data vs. 1 meg of data is not simply double all expenses .
Why did an OC-3 from chicago to washington cost 3 million per month in the late 90's ???
I understand recouping the cost of implementation, but that OC-3 was but one virtual channel
of many signals being sent down a DWDM fiber line that was a OC-192 as a single strand
of fiber that had been laid for long distance phone calls over a decade before .
The glass and putting it in the ground had long been paid for .
$36 million USD a year for less than 2% of the pipe means that the pipe would make them over 50 times that a month at that rate, roughly 1.8 billion .
They never laid just single strands, they laid bundles of multiple strands .
But we must recognize one pricing scheme of long haul fiber, quadruple the bandwidth, half the price per Mbit cost .
But then you come to the consumer, the more you want the more we are going to charge .
Also consider the dark fiber situation
Some areas have 30 times the fiber they need , and it just sits dark and has for years .
With better and better DWDM and other compression technologies this just becomes even more pronounced .
US taxpayers shelled out $200 Billion, yes billion, not million , to the major Telcos
for a deployment of fiber to all homes in the US .
This is what we got => http://www.newnetworks.com/Scandalreslease13006.h
The telcos much like bernie ebers of WCOM are nothing but a bunch of corrupt , crooked
scam artists , and my uncle worked as a union steward for one for 30 years, so
I have heard ALL the inside dirt from SBC .
I got one word for the corporate whoring of the internet
Other countries who were further behind us are now far ahead of us, and citizens have 100 Mega-bit fiber to their homes for reasonable prices .
In the country that made the internet possible our corporate pimps are too wrapped in
greed, and our politicians take 200 billion of tax payer dollars from us to give to the
corporate pricks to just screw us all and want more money thru
Excuse me but this is Horseshit
Ex-MislTech
Re:Municipal Wi-Fi (Score:2, Interesting)
Do you have a right to good roads? clean air? power lines strung to your home? a crime-free neighbourhood? Come on, I am as much of a minarchist as the next man, but this is ridiculous.
The point of progress is that conglomerations of people create more and better services for themselves. A hundred years ago it was New York getting wired to the elecric grid, why should it not be wired (or unwired) to the Internet today?
Re:Municipal Wi-Fi (Score:2)
While I don't think broadband should necessarily be free, I wonder how many people in the 30's said that no one has a right to affordable telephone service or electricity. Wiring the USA for power and telephone was a significant but worthwhile investment that helped the post WWII booms. As it is, most of the nations that are ahead of the US in broadband acceptance were from state controlled telecomm that manages to be less regressive than the US telecom
Re:Municipal Wi-Fi (Score:2)
Nobody has the right to use a nice paved road to get from A to B, either. Some could pay to use it, others could plod up muddy trails, and still others could hack their way through the bush with a machete.
But we do pave the roads, and we do make them freely available to everyone. You know why? Because it's better for society as a whole to let everyone be easily mobile than to set up toll booths everywhere and slow the whole system down. That's why w
Re:Municipal Wi-Fi (Score:2)
Re:Municipal Wi-Fi (Score:2)
That's interesting. Prior to this, the only people I'd heard of who didn't like municipal wifi were companies who wouldn't be able to charge you $20/day for access at Starbucks (et. al.) Next time I move, the presence of municipal wifi will be a major attractor. I love the ability to sit down in a park or in a coffee shop or wherever I am that I might otherwise be just waiting, and be on the net
Re:Municipal Wi-Fi (Score:2)
Re:Municipal Wi-Fi (Score:2)
Re:Municipal Wi-Fi (Score:2)
What to expect (Score:2, Funny)
http://politics.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=06/01
Re:What to expect (Score:2)
That wasn't the GOVERNMENT messing with the wikipedia entries (as a government action). That was some INDIVIDUAL POLITICIANS and/or their staff messing with the wikipedia entries.
Meanwhile the reason you have an essentially unregulated and untaxed internet is that some FCC commissioners, over more than a decade, have had a bee up their butts about keeping the government's hands off the internet
The money quote (Score:5, Insightful)
"After all, once we get away from the idea that the pipes just move bits around without really caring what data is being transmitted, it's a small step to discriminating against some forms of content and then targeting specific sites, services or users."
What if all the big ISPs start charging $0.10/min for VOIP? Or $1.00/mb from "long-distance" sites? Where does it end?to put it bluntly (Score:2)
Re:The money quote (Score:2)
if that did happen how would it affect.... (Score:5, Interesting)
I like how you've divided the world (Score:4, Funny)
As opposed to all those other US-countries?
Re:if that did happen how would it affect.... (Score:2)
It is just the US waking up and finally realising that instead of throwing good money after bad you can use your network intelligently. In fact not even US. Baby Bells. Homo Telephonicus. The scientists are unsure if it qualifies as a subspecies of Homo Sapiens. Most likely not. Other US companies like Level3 and Global Crossing have had QoS and possibility to pay for QoS since 2001 or so.
All in all the Baby Bells are gate
Paradigm (Score:5, Insightful)
The problem with your analogy is that there is some New Business-man reading that and saying. "Hey! That's a fucking GREAT idea! (If I weren't a opportunist monkey, I might have thought of it myself!)"
Tunnels (Score:5, Insightful)
any marginal advantage to the bandwidth carrying their segregated service, somebody will devise a way
to tunnel other services through the "premium" bandwidth. If I can send you bits, I can code my data
into those bits, steganographically if necessary, but there's no way the channel can stop me from
sending whatever I want.
So I say, bring it on. We'll have fun writing ironic tools like IPOV -- IP tunneling over Voice Channels -- betcha we can send up to 56K bits/sec on a 3 kHz analog voice link.
Re:Tunnels (Score:2, Insightful)
That's the way it will go again if traffic becomes controlled by type. The only things that should have special attention paid to them are priority headers.
can anyone argue against this? (Score:2)
Let's not pay twice (Score:3, Insightful)
This will undoubtedly usher in a wide variety of subscriber fee based sites and services. I'm not looking forward to shelling out another $20+ a month to view streaming content on the handful of sites I like to visit.
On a side thought, how would this affect Internet2? [wikipedia.org]
Digital Divide (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Digital Divide (Score:2)
That's a good question
Pay to play (Score:3, Interesting)
This is the same reason why I don't buy CD's, I know that at the same $14.99 that they have been charging for the last 15 years, that they are making obscene amounts of money. So I don't buy CD's and I just listen to the radio. But they see that change in my spending and decide I must be pirating music because no one is allowed to change habits in their worldview. Their marketing machine says that once a customer always a customer. So if you aren't buying from them, you must be stealing. This is the same worldview that the telecom networks that built the backbone of the net have, if they want more money from the system, they should just ask for it and people should give it to them. They think they are entitled to it.
So let's all just cancel our internet access for a month. No one use the internet at all for anything.
Re:Pay to play (Score:2)
Problem: We have to pay huge severance fees if we do. If we change the agreement we have with our ISPs, we have to pay them for the inconvienence. If they change the terms of service on us, we have to deal. Yeah, it blows.
Ambiguity (Score:2)
The first I have no problem with: it's the same difference we have now between broadband and dialup. The second I find a lot more troubling. For
Re:Ambiguity (Score:2)
Have you looked at the taxes and license registration fees on that Rover as compared to that Ford?
getting to the point. (Score:2)
To see this from a matter of communication lines that can carry whatever transmission they might carry...
What happens when some party tries to restrict a language? Another party breaks the rules in order to advance beyond the limitations of the restrictions.
And of course you have those who play the markeing game in effort to distort the meaning so as to dishonestly gain market share (thanks
Translation for Americans (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Translation for Americans (Score:2)
Verison, ISPs and Napster (Score:5, Interesting)
And now they want the customer's to not only not use it, but they want the content providers to pay them as well!
It must be nice to have a business where everyone pays you, but you don't let them actually use your service! Now wait a minute, what exactly are we paying them for?
I work at a small WISP and it's brought up constantly to filter out traffic. I always say, we sold this person high-speed internet...and this is what they want to do with it, why should we filter it?
Usurper_ii
The market for bandwidth (Score:2)
Charging Google for their bandwidth usage is as silly as a State Department of Roads sending Walmart a bill for their customer's highway usage. That's because Google isn't the the user of the bandwidth.
Way back in the beginning of internet time, if things had coalesced so that individual users paid for their individual bandwidth use, there wouls
Wrong. (Score:2)
But think about the long term.
Will Google, Microsoft and the others pay Bellsouth's extortion? NO! Google is already building their own network and toying with ISPeeing in San Francisco. This attempted extortion would result in t
The right approach seems very obvious (Score:5, Interesting)
... to me, anyway.
There's a conflict here between private companies, who should be allowed to structure their pricing and services any way they like, and the public good, which seems best served by undifferentiated transport. The author of the article believes that regulation is the right approach, that the government should tell ISPs how they can and cannot structure their business. I'm not so libertarian as to deny that government regulation is sometimes necessary, but I prefer to see it as a solution of last resort.
In this case, I don't think it's necessary at all. It seems to me that we already have this notion of a "common carrier", which is a carrier of information who is not responsible for the nature of the information transported. If we simply establish the rule that ISPs that attempt to favor one sort of traffic over another lose their common carrier status and become liable for the content that flows across their networks, I really doubt that many will want to take that route. Non-common carrier ISPs will be a target for copyright lawsuits, defamation lawsuits, criminal charges for child pornography, etc. Any ISP that wants to provide preferential access to specific content had better carefully control *all* the content.
Problem solved, IMO.
If only the world were that simple...
It can be simple. (Score:2)
An easier answer is to end government protection of cable and telco companies by opening up the public servitude to more than a single telco and a single cable company. This eliminates the monopoly abuse problem
Actually, it is fine if they tier it, except (Score:2)
The Author lost me right about here: (Score:2)
What he then forgets to mention is that TelCos and Cable companies are constantly on the recieving end of massive tax breaks + various incentives.
Verizon would scream bloody murder if you messed with their tax
Limited access? Does this mean... (Score:3, Insightful)
On a more serious note, I think the Internet is fine as it is. Would you not agree that as it is, the internet is a very succesful thing? Why make such radical changes to it that could shake it up?
Oh, whoops, this is capitalism.
"Previous attempts to set up a two-tier net have failed"
Does this say anything to anyone else? Yeah yeah, it's probably like people saying to the Wright brothers, "Previous attempts at flying have failed," but this is something of a totally different scope and I think that failure is imminent.
The internet itself is a revolutionary public communications system. It is my opinion that the internet is far greater than the postal service or the telephone service. Not so much from a technical standpoint, but the fact is, so much of it is user-created and comes at little expense. It's a public form of communication, and it should be left as it is for the good of the people.
Let it be tiered (Score:2, Interesting)
If the networks you're using aren't what is your ideal image of it, create your own. - I'm pretty sure nations like China will soon introduce their own version of the Internet. They're not too happy about the idea that the US still dominates it.
This tiering idea has many good aspects, if you have a certain corporate stand to look at it. Of course, we would then have these corporation owned networks, as well the good old Internet.
I think we already have a tiered system, alternative root nameservers and s
2-Tiered or it won't happen (Score:3, Interesting)
The answer depend on whether you can get enough new revenue from the service to pay for that total cost. If you are limited to getting the revenue from your subscribers, will that affect your decision? After all, the more you charge, the fewer people will want the higher-speed service.
Telephone companies are in the same boat as cable providers -- they want to use the network to roll-out television as well.
Also recognize that video is much less tolerant of network problems than web-browsing -- if you miss a video packet, the video quality diminishes. If you miss an HTTP packet, it'll get retransmitted and you won't even notice. There has to be some way of distinguishing who gets the higher quality. If it's free, then everybody will mark their traffic as high priority and nobody will get priority.
I don't think that's going to catch (Score:3, Insightful)
Has anyone stopped to think what would happen if that idea suddenly became law, and it was adopted all over the world? Well, the German telcos, for example, would tax Google to allow a moderately good access. And then the French, and the Chinese, the Zambian, you name it. Everybody would partake into Google profits, and then Yahoo, and Amazon, Ebay, etc. The US would be taxed from foreign telcos. Of course that would be a two-way street, but the balance I think would be bad for the US, as it has so many content providers.
I don't think US lawmakers would find the idea of US companies' profits being siphoned away to China, for example (think about how much the chinese could charge, if rates are by user) at all funny. So I don't think this is going to become law, ever.
Telcoms should charge per bit per mile (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Government (Score:5, Insightful)
If you were paying a little more attention to the debate you would know that Google is the one asking the government to ban this type of discrimination.
The FCC regulates the Internet, of course there needs to be some oversight. The question is whether that oversight is going to be for the benefit of Internet users or whichever corporation paid the party who appointed the regulators the biggest bribe, sorry campaign contribution.
There could be value in two tier pricing but the carriers are too greedy to make it work. see my blog essay i wrote earlier.
Regulating the internet is regulating information (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Regulating the internet is regulating informati (Score:2)
Re:Regulating the internet is regulating informati (Score:2)
I don't want to go to a private library and ask for a book that they don't have because their religious sponsors don't condone the contents. No thanks. Give me a government run library which has no limitation on the topics and have to bend over backwards for special interests (read money and relgion).
Just because the US goverment is the most corrupt in the world, doesn't mean that it doesn't work fine in other countries.
Re:Regulating the internet is regulating informati (Score:3, Insightful)
In an unregulated world you could then go next door to the unregulated competitor and get your material instead. It's in your regulated world that allows those with influence to control what everyone else gets to see and do.
Re:Regulating the internet is regulating informati (Score:3, Insightful)
What competitor ? We are talking about libraries here, not bookstores. Libraries aren't business ventures and don't have competition in the "free market" sense.
If, on the other hand, you were talking about going to a nearby bookstore to buy the book that the library doesn't have, you can do that right now. So what is the problem ?
Re:Regulating the internet is regulating informati (Score:2)
Re:Regulating the internet is regulating informati (Score:2)
Troll much? But seriously you havn't traveled much have you?
Re:Regulating the internet is regulating informati (Score:2, Insightful)
Public libraries are funded by municipal governments through tax dolars, university libraries are funded by the universities (and their corporate sponsors), religious schools have libraries that they fund. Each type of library is free to buy or not buy whatever books they want. Governments may not want books critical of their policies, religious schools may not want books with sexual content, univerisities may keep out books that
Re:Regulating the internet is regulating informati (Score:3, Insightful)
Very nice.
Now you have your liberflame off your chest perhaps you will take the trouble
Re:Government (Score:2)
If anyone should have any control I would hope it would the the universities atlest.
ROFLMAO...The universities are government owned
Ex-MislTech
Re:Government (Score:2, Insightful)
...because university politics never get nasty, right?
If it ends up like the medical schools in the US then if you sold a brand X router to university A then you wouldn't be able to sell them to university B because the two universities are in competition with each other. Eventually you'd end up with a two-tiered internet again.
I for one would welcome our robotic/alien/insect overlords, if only
Re:Government (Score:2)
Actually, in this case I hope the government does have control, as in legislating some form of internet neutrality act.
Re:I don't like this guy (Score:2)
I agree. I am not sure that people who are against free markets look around much. My favourite example is China. It was a serious backwater under Mao who tried to make everyone equal and have his own nanny state with the disasterous Cultural Revolution (I'm leaving the deeper issues of power and the sharing of it in the Communist Party aside, as it only complicates this point and is only germane to the cause
Re:I don't like this guy (Score:2)
It's a