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The Internet Communications Government Network United States

100 US Mayors Sign Pledge To Defend Net Neutrality Against Crooked ISPs (gizmodo.com) 91

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Gizmodo: More than 100 U.S. mayors have signed a pledge to hold internet service providers accountable for net neutrality violations, despite the FCC's vote to repeal the regulations late last year. The pledge, initiated by Mayors Bill de Blasio of New York City, Steve Adler of Austin, and Ted Wheeler of Portland, promises that cities will refuse to do business with ISPs that violate net neutrality standards. The mayors, brought together by a coalition of open internet advocates, including Free Press, Demand Progress, and Daily Kos, have accused FCC Chairman Ajit Pai of caving to corporate interests by giving companies such as AT&T and Verizon the power to "block, throttle and slow access to sites and services at will." A complete list of the cities taking the pledge is available on the campaign's website. At time of writing, nearly 80,000 letters have been sent urging mayors across the country to participate.
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100 US Mayors Sign Pledge To Defend Net Neutrality Against Crooked ISPs

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  • by DeplorableCodeMonkey ( 4828467 ) on Saturday April 28, 2018 @08:08AM (#56518713)

    Has pledged to open up their jurisdiction to unlimited local competition. They'll grant the franchises and then "hold them accountable" instead of giving the people a chance to vote with their feet and easily switch to a competitor.

    • by goombah99 ( 560566 ) on Saturday April 28, 2018 @08:32AM (#56518779)

      The ISPs will just set up partner relationship with local companies that will preferred for govt bussiness, such as the carve outs for supporting local, small, minority or women owned bussness many cogt have. Those shell companies will not violate net neutrality but their only customers will be the local govt. They will only have one peer and that will be verizon or whomever.

      problem soved for ISP, and govt' gets to claim success too.

      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by Anonymous Coward

        Did you bother to read the pledge? Because what you wrote doesn't even apply.

        Here it is: [openinternetpledge.org]

        Net Neutrality
        I will support legislation and measures that ensure the protection of net neutrality principles and that remove any registration or other restrictive requirements on the provisioning of Internet content or services.

        Ethical Campaign Donations
        I will never accept campaign contributions from any company or individual that has lobbied for the removal of net neutrality regulations or for restrictions on municipalities to create broadband networks.

        Municipal Broadband
        I will support legislation and measures to create publicly-owned and managed municipal fiber networks, built to serve the residents and businesses of my community.

        Government Transparency
        I will support legislation and measures that promote the availability of government data to residents, as well as the usage of open formats and open standards in government.

        Open Access to Knowledge
        I will advocate for freedom of communication and access to knowledge, and I will support initiatives to ensure that publicly-funded intellectual property is made available in the public domain.

        Freedom from Surveillance
        I will not support any proposal for storage or surveillance of communications data that has not been subjected to credible, independent assessment for necessity and proportionality or that is not subject to regular review to ensure compliance with these criteria.

        User Privacy and Data Protection
        I will support legislation and measures that promote and protect the fundamental right of individuals to privacy and data protection, and the use of encryption and other privacy-enhancing technologies.

    • I see you waving that red herring.

      Local jurisdictions grant monopoly franchises because corporations insist upon them. The (land) phone lines, electricity, water, sewer, natural gas, roads/sidewalks and cable TV connections to YOUR house (and everybody else's) are Natural Monopolies [wikipedia.org], where the capital costs are so high for last-mile coverage that "easily switching to a competitor" isn't possible because there aren't any and never will be. A corporation isn't going to wire every house in a city on the o
      • The (land) phone lines, electricity, water, sewer, natural gas, roads/sidewalks and cable TV connections to YOUR house (and everybody else's) are Natural Monopolies [wikipedia.org], where the capital costs are so high for last-mile coverage that "easily switching to a competitor" isn't possible because there aren't any and never will be.

        I can choose between half dozen ADSL ISPs, and about the same number of electricity providers, despite only having a single fixed line for either.

        • Unfortunately, most of the US does not have such a model, and tends to have duopoly competition between [monopoly phone company] and [monopoly cable company].
          • I see the big ISPs putting up a dirty fight. How long before they start charging everyone more, and call attention to it as *additional mandatory local regulatory requirements fees, while simultaneously slandering the officials that are costing them more on their monthly cable bills.

            FAQ:
            Q: Why are there changes to my bill / plan?

            A: We'd love to give you more affordable internet packages, but unfortunately the political climate in your area prevents us from being able to give you a custom tailored plan th

      • Some governments think it is their duty to step in if the market fails. For instance: when our state-owned PTT went private, they were forced to open up their last mile to competitors for a fixed fee. At first they didn't like it and there was some sabotage of colocated equipment, and access badges of competitors' repairmen mysteriously breaking, that sort of thing. But in the end everyone got used to the situation, and we had some seriously healthy competition. Of course in the end the big fish ISPs ju
    • by Kohath ( 38547 )

      They love the money they get from the cable franchise monopoly rights too much. Signing a meaningless pledge costs them nothing.

    • Sounds good in theory. But there are some areas where these local governments are begging for anyone to provide services to their area. The United States has a lot of low populations towns, even in States Like New York, you go past New York City, Some towns are just farm communities. These communities need High Speed internet to do their business, and stay connected to the world, but ISP don't want want to lay miles of cables just to support dozens of customers, if these dozens of customers can pick and

      • by umghhh ( 965931 )
        There are known solutions to this problem - gosh they have been used to enable competition on other markets with natural monopolies. The only thing one has to do is to have government fixing access to the last mile - in case of internet it is even easier than with power lines or water as you can have one tower delivering microwave etc links to many farms decreasing costs. There are problems with freeing access to last mile but they can be resolved.The problems USians have are with law and not with technol
      • by dryeo ( 100693 )

        I'm rural (Canadian, but not much different then the US), and locally at the best had perhaps 3 dial-up providers, all charging about the same price, to choose from. At the end of my dial-up days, there was only the phone company providing it and the price was $45 a month (plus the phone line that was officially $20 but seemed to have crept up to $40) for unlimited.
        The phone company finally built a cell tower (and layed fibre over much of the town) but as they didn't want to update the lines where I am, th

      • Just how does a farmer or the owner of a general store need high speed internet?

        Alternately, if you accept the fantasy that high speed internet is a necessity, there's HughesNet. It's available anywhere there is sky.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Has pledged to open up their jurisdiction to unlimited local competition.

      You are right, none of them did. Because that's already the law. Its been federal law since 1992 when the Cable Television Consumer Protection and Competition Act outlawed the granting of exclusive franchises.

      The problem isn't with the government (sorry delusional libertarians!) its with natural monopolies caused by high costs to enter the market (a cable planet is expensive AF) and collusion between competitors who have secret agreements to stay out of each other's territories. - sometimes they don't eve [arstechnica.com]

      • by umghhh ( 965931 )
        Again - this problem has been resolved in many countries. It is true the last mile constitutes natural monopoly but state can tell the companies to rent them for a fair price to whoever wants to rent. Gosh the last mile can be even built by city councils or groups of citizens and connected to the grid in one point - this of course will not work in US for some reason. So coming back to main point - yes there are countries where I can as a consumer switch between suppliers in such natural monopoly markets li
    • They'll grant the franchises and then "hold them accountable" instead of giving the people a chance to vote with their feet and easily switch to a competitor.

      Invest a fortune in infrastructure, and then attempt to gain market-share by undercutting the competition in a saturated market? Thing is, at some point you'll want to make your investment back, and a profit on top of that.

      Why go through all that expense and trouble, when you can just sit back and start a nice easy cryptocoin ICO?

  • More political grandstanding. DeBlasio and the others know the FCC regulations and Federal law in general supersedes any and all State and local laws. As soon as some local or State court rules against some ISP on local/State "NN" laws or regs, the first Federal court they appeal it to will dismiss it rule the laws/regs in question as not within State or local powers.

    Strat

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      They're not charging them with a crime, they simply won't do business with them. Happened in Glasgow Kentucky about 40 years ago. Local provider was price gouging. Local utility had set up monitoring system for power. Someone noticed that it had the bandwidth to handle cable, so the utility erected a headend. Provider sued, claiming an exclusive contract. Utility countersued, Federal court, claiming interference in interstate commerce. Guess who won? Electric Plant Board still operating, with better prices

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • So I take it itâ(TM)s not ok to ban conservatives anymore? Great!

    • by PPH ( 736903 )

      not ok to ban conservatives

      That's backwards. It is now OK to ban them. Or anyone else. And all other aspects of Net Neutrality aside, I think I'm going to enjoy all the GOP and evangelical fund raising web sites being blocked.

      • by dryeo ( 100693 )

        Huh? They have the money to pay for their sites not to be blocked and to block other sites.

        • by PPH ( 736903 )

          They have the money to pay for their sites not to be blocked

          Fine. Pay up.

          and to block other sites.

          I don't think any sane CEO would expose their company to the legal fallout from antitrust and restraint of trade suits.

          • by dryeo ( 100693 )

            When was the last time that the American government used antitrust or restraint of trade against an American business?

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Honestly telecomm infrastructure is a near textbook ideal example of a "natural monopoly", i.e., something where it is totally essential to have unfettered access for all and benefits most from having a single standard implementation.

    If "the people" owned all the pipes and they were used in a fair manner to provide service to all, then we could sidestep all these concerns. The gov't could charge for access based on usage to everyone to make it self-supporting.

  • by FudRucker ( 866063 ) on Saturday April 28, 2018 @08:54AM (#56518853)
    and NOBODY obeys it, not even the armed forces, then all it is going to be is a handfull of crony fascist politicians in washington trying to brow beat the nation with paperwork,

    this needs to happen more often and to more unjust laws and policies the federal government impose on the nation

    Stop the Machine
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
  • What happens if the only ISP in town is one of the duopoly which violates the net neutrality pledge? Will city government just go completely dark and off the internet? No, that probably won't happen. So this is just symbolic, at best. At worst, it's a waste of time and the mayors should probably go back to doing real work to help better their constituents.
    • Such an ISP would stand to lose its franchise with the city come renewal time, and the city would instead switch to a competitor that agrees to refrain from abusive routing.

      • And here's the critical point. You assert that Net Neutrality is the opposite of abusive routing, when in fact Net Neutrality is an attempt to prevent cost recovery of abusive bandwidth hogging.

        The effect of Net Neutrality is to discourage ISPs from expanding and improving their networks.

        • Penalize bandwidth hogs for hogging bandwidth, not for accessing servers that happen not to have signed a zero-rating agreement with a particular ISP, and not for using dispreferred application protocols. An all-encompassing monthly cap that covers all traffic, as commonly implemented by satellite ISPs, is net neutral.

  • That a straw man argument.... pure posturing for political points.
    * Being net neutrally is dead, there are no laws, rules or regulations that bind any ISP to any standard. Thus there's no rule to enforce or law broken. Municipalities can not enforce non-existent regulations.
    * So they "promise" not do business with ISP's who violate non existent standards... who's left to do business with? nobody. every single ISP does it. All the big ones anyway, and they are ultimately the ones who supply all up st
    • In the interest of full transparency.
      "Lastly - Funny how the author wrote "Pai caved to corporate interests"... Pai was a lawyer and lobbyist for the communications cabal prior to his appointment by Humpty-Trumpty. This was NOT a 'cave', it was THE GOAL - deliberate and premeditated. ."

      He was first appointed to the FCC by then-President Obama in May of 2012 and received unanimous consent in the US Senate..
      He was made chairmen of the FCC in Jan 2017 by President Trump.

      Just my 2 cents ;)
  • these 2 faced Mayors and City Councils. These are the same individuals who sold monopoly rights to the same companies for campaign contributions.

    Now they distract and confuse everything, saying oh we will fight for you, Right!

    How do you know you should not trust a government bureaucrat or politician? Their lips are moving.

    Just my 2 cents ;)
  • The pledge really bears commenting on, point by point:

    > Net Neutrality
    > I will support legislation and measures that ensure the protection of net neutrality principles and that remove any registration or other restrictive
    > requirements on the provisioning of Internet content or services.

    Now, this is a fine-sounding statement, and it's something that even the top execs at the biggest ISPs could support sincerely, without so much as a twinge of conscience, or concern for the next stockholder's meeti

The 11 is for people with the pride of a 10 and the pocketbook of an 8. -- R.B. Greenberg [referring to PDPs?]

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