Sometimes, the internet works a little bit


What the hey…the good guys won on Net Neutrality? Just like that?

Senior Republicans conceded on Tuesday that the grueling fight with President Obama over the regulation of Internet service appears over, with the president and an army of Internet activists victorious.

The Federal Communications Commission is expected on Thursday to approve regulating Internet service like a public utility, prohibiting companies from paying for faster lanes on the Internet. While the two Democratic commissioners are negotiating over technical details, they are widely expected to side with the Democratic chairman, Tom Wheeler, against the two Republican commissioners.

But if happy news isn’t enough for you — you also need the bite of some piquant schadenfreude — the ex-operator of a revenge porn site is unhappy that Google links to his name now all declare him a sleazy scumbag, and he’s suing Google to have them removed.

Heh.

Let’s all give him some more attention as a bucket of slime!

Craig Brittain—the former operator of revenge porn site IsAnybodyDown.com—is invoking the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) in a bid to remove 23 links in all—an irony-filled DMCA takedown request that Google is ignoring. One of the links renders the FTC’s press release in January about its enforcement against Brittain. Another is a link to Ars’ story about the FTC’s move: “Sleazy ‘revenge porn’ site is banished to settle federal charges.”

Comments

  1. gijoel says

    I’d be happy to help him remove those links for a reasonable fee. But give me few minutes to set up a sleaze bag revenge site first.

  2. says

    Meanwhile, voices from the ragged fringes of the rightwing are certain that Net Neutrality undermines the First Amendment.

    Sandy Rios of the American Family Association once again badly distorted the facts surrounding net neutrality […] this time during an interview with Americans for Limited Government president Rick Manning. […]

    Rios claimed that net neutrality will give government bureaucrats the power to determine who can start a website, even though that claim is completely false. “I want to set up a website and then bureaucratic regulators will have to give me permission and I will have to pay and they will also see if my content is o.k. to be put out there on the internet,” Rios said.

    “There is no doubt in the long term when the government takes control over not just the capacity to deliver internet services but also gets into the content monitoring game, which every indication is that they are doing that, at that juncture we have a real opportunity for free speech violations,” Manning said. “This net neutrality is just one area that President Obama has been engaged in a wholesale assault on First Amendment rights.”

    Link

  3. EnlightenmentLiberal says

    Hooray for good-governance!

    However, as a computer science professional, I hate the way that this is being discussed in the media. Ex:

    The Federal Communications Commission is expected on Thursday to approve regulating Internet service like a public utility, prohibiting companies from paying for faster lanes on the Internet.

    I hope that’s wrong. That’s not the net neutrality we should be fighting for.

    I already wrote up something on Mano’s blog here:
    http://freethoughtblogs.com/singham/2015/02/05/fcc-chair-comes-out-strong-for-net-neutrality/#comment-4298517
    Not sure if I should copy-paste.

  4. Nerd of Redhead, Dances OM Trolls says

    AFA doesn’t ever use facts. They just use their paranoia, of what they would do to others, to imagufacture pseudofacts, that meets their agenda.

  5. robro says

    Good for now, but there were stories today that Sen. Thune was still working on alternatives for the future. It ain’t never over.

  6. zmidponk says

    EnlightenmentLiberal:

    ,blockquote>Hooray for good-governance!
    However, as a computer science professional, I hate the way that this is being discussed in the media. Ex:

    The Federal Communications Commission is expected on Thursday to approve regulating Internet service like a public utility, prohibiting companies from paying for faster lanes on the Internet.

    I hope that’s wrong. That’s not the net neutrality we should be fighting for.

    It’s phrased a bit oddly, but yes it is. What that’s talking about is ISPs creating ‘fast lanes’ by placing an artificial cap on all their customers connection speeds, then asking other companies to pay a premium to have their content exempted from that cap. With net neutrality, this is impossible – the only time content hits an artificial speed cap is when the customer is paying for a slower service than their line is capable of, in which case, all content is slowed, regardless of source.

  7. zmidponk says

    And a blockquote fail. Only the last paragraph above is me, the rest should be a blockquote of EnlightenmentLiberal.

  8. EnlightenmentLiberal says

    @zmidponk
    Yes, the two values of net neutrality you identified are: neutrality w.r.t. to content, and any service offer must be available to all.

    However, the pithy summary “prohibiting companies from paying for faster lanes on the Internet” is just plain wrong. ISPs can and should be allowed to charge by the bit. ISPs should be allowed to offer services with different up-time guarantees, different latency guarantees, different bandwidth caps, etc. Of course a company should be able to pay more for better service. Again, all subject to the rules of net neutrality, which include: ISP services must be neutral w.r.t. content (but not size of content), and all ISP services must be made available at the same cost rate to all potential customers. E.G. what it means to be a common courier as I understand it.

    I go into further details in my rant in the above link.

  9. Rick Pikul says

    @EnlightenmentLiberal:

    You have misunderstood what that description is about: The companies in question aren’t the customers, most of the companies having to deal with this so far are big enough that they don’t get their service from ISPs at all but rather from NAPs, (if they aren’t linking in as a peer in their own right).

    What happens is that some guy at home has internet service from some ISP, his service is, let’s say 2MiB/s. However, since RandomVideoService, (which gets its network access from a completely different company), hasn’t coughed up the protection money, any time our guy at home goes to watch a video from them he only gets it at 1MiB/s.

  10. EnlightenmentLiberal says

    @Rick Pikul
    I tried to make it short, but I lost something in the translation from long to short. I’m fully aware of what you speak. I stand by my full comment here:
    http://freethoughtblogs.com/singham/2015/02/05/fcc-chair-comes-out-strong-for-net-neutrality/#comment-4298517

    I stand by my assertion that framing this as a “fast lane vs slow lane” completely misses the point, and is actually factually incorrect.

    Let’s talk about your specific example.

    I think the following blog posts by Level 3 spokesperson are informative:
    http://blog.level3.com/open-internet/chicken-game-played-child-isps-internet/

    More cynically, these ISPs simply view these arbitrary tolls as new sources of revenue for their last mile bottleneck monopolies or as a way to unfairly discriminate against content that competes with the content the ISPs themselves supply.

    http://blog.level3.com/open-internet/observations-internet-middleman/

    What we have are several well known and hated residential ISP companies who own lots of content providers and who purposefully sabotage the internet traffic of rival content providers. This has absolutely nothing to do with a “fast lane” or “slow lane”. This is simply an anti-competitive business practice because network maintainers should be regulated as common carriers.

    Consider this scenario: The Post Office is privately owned, and that company also owns a Netflix-like service which ships DVDs of TV shows through the mail, and the Post Office as a matter of course regularly purposefully loses packages that belong to a rival Netflix-like company. That’s the accurate parallel. It has nothing to do with whether this hypothetical Post Office offers overnight service for a higher fee. It has everything to do with the hypothetical Post Office violates the rules of being a common carrier, such as purposefully penalizing the service of a particular customer, or offering a special deal to a particular customer.

  11. anym says

    For a nice old example of the sort of thinking that triggered the net neutrality arguments in the first place, see this interview with a gentleman by the name of Edward Whitacre who was responsible for undoing all of the hard work of the people who dismantled the old Bell monopoly.

    http://www.bloomberg.com/bw/stories/2005-11-06/online-extra-at-sbc-its-all-about-scale-and-scope

    How concerned are you about Internet upstarts like Google (), MSN, Vonage, and others?

    How do you think they’re going to get to customers? Through a broadband pipe. Cable companies have them. We have them. Now what they would like to do is use my pipes free, but I ain’t going to let them do that because we have spent this capital and we have to have a return on it. So there’s going to have to be some mechanism for these people who use these pipes to pay for the portion they’re using. Why should they be allowed to use my pipes?

    It isn’t about fast and slow lanes so much as hydraulic despotism. What Mr. Whitacre decided was that even though the customer was paying for their internet connection, and all the internet companies have to pay for transit (or set up peering agreements) from their datacentres, it isn’t enough. Somebody has to pay an additional fee on top of all that if they want their traffic to flow over “his” pipes, and because there’s no other route to “his” customers, he gets to write the rules.

  12. anym says

    (and obviously, the whole issue of net neutrality in the US is just a distraction from the underlying problem… if most people actually had a realistic choice of ISP a lot of these issues would never have arisen in the first place, but the FCC is all about granting and supporting monopolies and that’s not going to go away as a result of this decision)

  13. brasidas says

    Mr Brittain had better be careful. Using the DMCA to have content taken down can be dangerous if, for example, he doesn’t own the copyright of that content.

    I seem to remember that you have to claim that you own the content and if you actually don’t you can be charged with perjury.

  14. =8)-DX says

    @anym #13

    Internet upstarts like Google

    I LOL’d. Darn tootin’ upstart peepsqueek internetters!

  15. anym says

    Yeah, it seems a strange sort of description even in the dark ages of 2005, as google was already valued at over 80 billion dollars.

  16. says

    Lynna, well since Citizens United demonstrates that the right, particularly the corporate right, considers money speech, I am not surprised they consider maintaining net neutrality a free speech violation.

  17. says

    @EnlightenmentLiberal and related upstream discussion:

    I spent a chunk of my career in the equipment-provider end of the network biz, and while I know very little about how tariffs and usage rights are actually negotiated, technically we already have (and have long had, and routinely use) exactly what you want. It’s called “Class (or Quality) of Service”, and it’s expressed in terms of bit rate and traffic characteristics like constant vs. bursty, tolerance for propagation delay and jitter, etc.

    So yes, if Netflix wants a video-streaming-capable channel to my TV, then they should pay for the appropriate CoS (which will be charged back to me in the subscription). And the intervening carriers will get a cut of that — but my ISP (say, Bell, who also have a movies-on-demand service) has no business fucking with that stream just because it’s Netflix, and they want me to sign up for Fibe.

    And the American politicians bloviating about this are demonstrating the same damned ignorance they routinely demonstrate on evolution, gynecology & obstetrics, and every other subject.

  18. says

    Sen. John Thune (R-SD) says this net neutrality regulation could result in China and Russia forcing the UN to take over the internet. Really. He says that.

    Yes, conspiracy theories are sprouting all over the place. Senator Thune’s is … um … creative.
    Link

    More details on Thune’s theory in the National Journal.

    Appreciation for Strewth’s summary in #18 that money is speech, according to the corporate rightwing.

  19. Pierce R. Butler says

    Enlightenment Liberal @ # 12: Consider this scenario: The Post Office is privately owned, and that company also owns a Netflix-like service which ships DVDs of TV shows through the mail, and the Post Office as a matter of course regularly purposefully loses packages that belong to a rival Netflix-like company.

    We need not make up hypothetical scenarios for this situation, we have them from history. Back when Benjamin Franklin ran the Post Office, his magazine, the Saturday Evening Post, tended to get the fastest delivery, and other publications had noticeably slower transits before reaching their subscribers’ boxes.

  20. Rick Pikul says

    @Enlightenment Liberal

    Consider this scenario: The Post Office is privately owned, and that company also owns a Netflix-like service which ships DVDs of TV shows through the mail, and the Post Office as a matter of course regularly purposefully loses packages that belong to a rival Netflix-like company. That’s the accurate parallel. It has nothing to do with whether this hypothetical Post Office offers overnight service for a higher fee. It has everything to do with the hypothetical Post Office violates the rules of being a common carrier, such as purposefully penalizing the service of a particular customer, or offering a special deal to a particular customer.

    Where your analogy falls down is in how it is treating the content provider as if it were the ISP’s customer. With ISPs, it’s the recipient who is the customer, not the sender. The parallel would be having someone who is paying for having everything sent to him via overnight, but anything from the rival ends up taking two days unless the rival, (who, as I pointed out, is not a customer of the ISP _AT ALL_), is making extra payments.

  21. EnlightenmentLiberal says

    @Rick Pikul
    IIRC, aren’t there ways to ship parcels by snail-mail where the sender pays nothing, and the receiver has to pay for the parcel upon receipt? A quick google search later and I found this:
    http://pe.usps.gov/text/dmm/s921.htm

    Any mailer may use collect on delivery (COD) service to mail an article for which the mailer has not been paid and have its price and the cost of the postage collected from the recipient. The recipient has the option to pay the COD charges using either cash or personal check.

    I fail to see why we should enforce by law that the person who sends the parcel should pay and the person who receives the parcel should never pay.

    The content providers are not customers of your residential ISP. (Mostly.) Instead, content providers are customers of other network providers, such as Level 3. Level 3 and other providers connect to data centers. Some data centers lease out their services. Other data centers are actually owned by certain content providers. For example, I recall a story about Yahoo and how they own a whole data center, and they own their own (electrical) power plant just to power their data center. IIRC, like 250 MW too. And it’s one of several.

    These network providers, not the residential ISP providers, connect to each other through peering arrangements. As explained by the Level 3 blog post above, oftentimes the interconnects are just made without a cost on either side. Sometimes there is a payment schedule.

    So, if you use Comcast internet at your house, you are right that Netflix is not a customer of Comcast. However, Netflix is a customer of another network provider, such as Level 3, and Level 3 connects to residential ISPs like Comcast.

    So, the question then becomes how to negotiate the interconnect between network providers such as Level 3 and Comcast. Should these interconnects be free? Should all network providers be forced to connect to any other shmoe’s network for free? That’s not reasonable. Again, for example, some interconnects with Level 3 involve regular payment – one way or the other – and these interconnects are not bogged down and killing the performance of your home internet experience. Rather, it’s free interconnects with companies like Comcast who refuse to upgrade their interconnect equipment until they extort sufficient money from customers (ex: Netflix) of the other network provider (ex: Level 3).

    The interconnects is where IMHO the complex and hard problems of net neutrality lie. I consider myself not sufficiently educated to give specific solutions.

    I understand the problem well enough to describe it though, and it has absolutely nothing to do with fast lanes or slow lanes. It has everything to do with ensuring that network providers, both providers like Level 3 and providers like Comcast, are treated as common carriers, and that they cannot and will not give preferential treatment to one kind of content (but discriminating on mere volume is ok), and definitely no special treatment to data based on mere destination or source. To do so is an anti-competitive business practice, and that is why they should be regulated as common carriers.

    What is needed is regulation on interconnects – how much you can charge, rules for enforcing proper capacity upgrades, stuff like that.

  22. EnlightenmentLiberal says

    To continue, in an “ideal free market world”, the problem would be sorted out because customers of Comcast would just leave to another ISP because Comcast is playing these games. However, in the real world, Comcast and the other network providers (not just residential ISPs) are a utility, just like roads, phone wires, and electricity wires, and they should be regulated as such.

    PS: This is further compounded by further anticompetitive business practices I’ve read about where companies like Comcast will make special deals with local towns to put in cable, and the deal includes the town forbidding any other company from putting down cable. Complete bullshit.

  23. EnlightenmentLiberal says

    What is needed is regulation on interconnects – how much you can charge, rules for enforcing proper capacity upgrades, stuff like that.

    Oh, and of course plus regulation on the network providers themselves (including ISPs). Such regulation should that they may only sell a “all or nothing” access to their network and connected networks. No bullshit where they sell access to sections of their network, or offer deals that give better access to part of their network over another part. E.G. cannot require special deals to access Netflix. Or something like that least.

    Again, I know I am too ignorant to actually spell out specific policy proposals. I know the general shape of what they should look like (see else-thread) but not the specifics. Still, the pithy summary of “fast lanes vs slow lanes” has very little to do with the actual problems. The actual problems can best be summed up as “the ISPs and network providers don’t want to be regulated as common carriers”.

  24. Rick Pikul says

    @EnlightenmentLiberal

    First of all, COD is not simply about paying for the shipping. When you send something COD, the post office is acting as your accounts receivable office. What you are thinking of is the old practice of sending something postage due. Note also that if the payment isn’t made, the recipient doesn’t actually get the package. Not that I said anything about enforcing a ‘sender pays’ model for physical shipping, instead I was pointing out that your analogy didn’t work because it involved an assumption of the sender being the one who pays for the transmission.

    Remember that someone _HAS_ paid for the traffic to be sent at full speed by the ISP, that’s what your monthly bill from Bell/Rogers/Comcast/Verizon/whoever is for.

    It’s also not an issue of refusing to upgrade: If it were about holding off on upgrades the speeds wouldn’t come up literally overnight once the protection money is paid. It’s an issue of imposing artificial speed caps to extort payment from non-customers. That it involves speed caps being imposed based on where the ISP’s users are getting their traffic from is why it is described as ‘fast’ and ‘slow’ lanes.

  25. EnlightenmentLiberal says

    @Rick Pikul

    Remember that someone _HAS_ paid for the traffic to be sent at full speed by the ISP, that’s what your monthly bill from Bell/Rogers/Comcast/Verizon/whoever is for.

    I am still confused. Are you talking about a legally enforceable contract between you and your ISP? Or are you talking about some new regulation to enforce this particular payment model?

    It’s also not an issue of refusing to upgrade:

    For many cases, it is. Please educate yourself on the topic. You seem to have a very naive view of how the internet actually works, including the above point about how “someone has paid”, and this topic too. I included several very informative blog posts by Level 3 above.

    For this point about “not just an upgrade issue”, I should have included this blog post earlier. It explains the issue in terms that a layman can understand.
    http://blog.level3.com/open-internet/verizons-accidental-mea-culpa/
    (Bolding added)

    So let’s look at what that means in one of those locations. The one Verizon picked in its diagram: Los Angeles. All of the Verizon FiOS customers in Southern California likely get some of their content through this interconnection location. It is in a single building. And boils down to a router Level 3 owns, a router Verizon owns and four 10Gbps Ethernet ports on each router. A small cable runs between each of those ports to connect them together. This diagram is far simpler than the Verizon diagram and shows exactly where the congestion exists.
    [diagram]
    Verizon has confirmed that everything between that router in their network and their subscribers is uncongested – in fact has plenty of capacity sitting there waiting to be used. Above, I confirmed exactly the same thing for the Level 3 network. So in fact, we could fix this congestion in about five minutes simply by connecting up more 10Gbps ports on those routers. Simple. Something we’ve been asking Verizon to do for many, many months, and something other providers regularly do in similar circumstances. But Verizon has refused. So Verizon, not Level 3 or Netflix, causes the congestion. Why is that? Maybe they can’t afford a new port card because they’ve run out – even though these cards are very cheap, just a few thousand dollars for each 10 Gbps card which could support 5,000 streams or more. If that’s the case, we’ll buy one for them. Maybe they can’t afford the small piece of cable between our two ports. If that’s the case, we’ll provide it. Heck, we’ll even install it.

    But, here’s the other interesting thing also shown in the Verizon diagram. This congestion only takes place between Verizon and network providers chosen by Netflix. The providers that Netflix does not use do not experience the same problem. Why is that? Could it be that Verizon does not want its customers to actually use the higher-speed services it sells to them? Could it be that Verizon wants to extract a pound of flesh from its competitors, using the monopoly it has over the only connection to its end-users to raise its competitors’ costs?

    To summarize: All of the networks have ample capacity and congestion only occurs in a small number of locations, locations where networks interconnect with some last mile ISPs like Verizon. The cost of removing that congestion is absolutely trivial. It takes two parties to remove congestion at an interconnect point. I can confirm that Level 3 is not the party refusing to add that capacity. In fact, Level 3 has asked Verizon for a long time to add interconnection capacity and to deliver the traffic its customers are requesting from our customers, but Verizon refuses.

    It is a simple matter of a natural monopoly using its natural monopoly to do anti-competitive business practices. Stopping that is AFAIK basically the goal of the movement called “net neutrality”.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_monopoly
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-competitive_practices
    Specifically
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tying_%28commerce%29
    (For example: Tying together internet service and service to the content providers of Verizon, without tying together the service of the content provider of Netflix.)
    The problems here are well known problems of monopoly regulation. AFAIK, nothing about net neutrality is novel. The particulars of the internet business are novel, but the needed regulations are mostly not AFAIK. (Again, the peering arrangements are a little novel, and the regulation of those is where the large difficulty lies IMHO.)

  26. EnlightenmentLiberal says

    Also this:
    http://blog.level3.com/open-internet/not-neutrality/

    In early May, my Internet Middleman post described how a tiny number of very large broadband network operators, mostly in the United States, are using their market power to try to extract arbitrary access charges, and in so doing, are degrading the service they sold to their paying broadband customers. They achieve this degradation by refusing to add bandwidth at the interconnect points between their networks and other very large global networks, like Level 3’s. Despite this, some of them claim that they are unconditionally committed to Net Neutrality. They can do this because, as Mike Mooney pointed out, the old Net Neutrality rules had a gaping hole in them: since these rules did not explicitly include Internet interconnection in their scope, they allowed broadband providers to discriminate against third-party Internet traffic by causing bottlenecks at Internet interconnection points – and hurting consumers in the process.

  27. Rick Pikul says

    @EnlightenmentLiberal

    The very material you quote is describing it as an intentional slowdown of traffic from particular sources: i.e. A “slow lane”. That one of the goals of having ‘fast’ and ‘slow’ lanes is to increase the costs to competitors does not change the fact that ISPs are demanding payment by third parties to have content delivered at the speeds that the ISPs’ customers are paying for.

    Also note that those blog entries were talking about the rules being proposed six months ago not the more general ones that ended up being adopted.

  28. EnlightenmentLiberal says

    @Rick Pikul
    Are you suggesting it should be illegal for ISPs to offer both DSL and cable residential internet services? I mean, that’s a slow lane and a fast lane. Are you suggesting it should be illegal for other network providers, like Level 3, to charge its customers based on how much traffic they actually send/receive? Again, that’s many different lanes of many different “speeds”.

    You don’t know what you’re talking about. This is coming from an actual expert with a respected college degree in the field. Shut up and listen. Do some more reading.

  29. Azkyroth Drinked the Grammar Too :) says

    This is coming from an actual expert with a respected college degree in the field. Shut up and listen. Do some more reading.

    Argument from authority is a fallacy. You are clearly not communicating the superior information and perspective you claim to possess.

    Actually, you appear to have latched onto an artificially Shit-Stupid-Literal interpretation of colloquial phrasing and are now petulantly trying to hold everyone else to it. I find that difficult to reconcile with claims of understanding the subject. Knowing some facts about it, maybe….

  30. Azkyroth Drinked the Grammar Too :) says

    Are you suggesting it should be illegal for ISPs to offer both DSL and cable residential internet services? I mean, that’s a slow lane and a fast lane. Are you suggesting it should be illegal for other network providers, like Level 3, to charge its customers based on how much traffic they actually send/receive? Again, that’s many different lanes of many different “speeds”.

    No one is this stupid, let alone a “respected expert.”

    WE ARE STATING THAT IT SHOULD BE ILLEGAL TO ALTER THE SPEED AT WHICH A GIVEN CUSTOMER, PAYING FOR A GIVEN QUALITY OF SERVICE, IS ALLOWED TO RECEIVE CONTENT SENT FROM A GIVEN SERVER, BASED ON WHO OWNS THE SERVER AND WHETHER THEY’VE GREASED THE CUSTOMER’S ISP’S PALM.

    Jesus Blue-Balled Christ. Do some reading for comprehension. Not “more.” Any at all.

  31. Azkyroth Drinked the Grammar Too :) says

    …actually, given who and what I’m apparently talking to, make that:

    WE ARE STATING THAT IT SHOULD BE ILLEGALFOR AN ISP TO ALTER THE SPEED AT WHICH A GIVEN CUSTOMER OF THAT ISP, PAYING FOR A GIVEN QUALITY OF SERVICE FROM THAT ISP, IS ALLOWED TO RECEIVE CONTENT SENT FROM A GIVEN SERVER, BASED ON WHO OWNS THE SERVER AND WHETHER THEY’VE GREASED THE CUSTOMER’S ISP’S PALM.

  32. EnlightenmentLiberal says

    @Azkyroth

    WE ARE STATING

    I’m sorry. I don’t recall seeing you in the conversation before.

    I was talking mostly to Rick Pikul, who made several clearly wrong points, such as:

    It’s also not an issue of refusing to upgrade: If it were about holding off on upgrades the speeds wouldn’t come up literally overnight once the protection money is paid.

    And several points which at best are confusing, such as:

    The very material you quote is describing it as an intentional slowdown of traffic from particular sources: i.e. A “slow lane”. That one of the goals of having ‘fast’ and ‘slow’ lanes is to increase the costs to competitors does not change the fact that ISPs are demanding payment by third parties to have content delivered at the speeds that the ISPs’ customers are paying for.

    Because I am an expert, and because it’s a pet peeve of mine, I’ve been trying to educate readers as to what net neutrality is all about.

    When you say:

    No one is this stupid, let alone a “respected expert.”

    WE ARE STATING THAT IT

    I agree that people informed on what is going on do not hold such positions. However, the very naive and pithy description is how it’s being constantly described in the media. Further, I’m still not quite sure if Rick is defending that naive view. It is unclear IMHO. I am not a mind reader, and further I want to educate the public on this issue. To say “it’s about fast lanes and slow lanes” is so overly simplistic as to be completely wrong. Again, it’s about ensuring that any fast lanes and slow lanes are made equally available to every content provider plus every ISP customer, e.g. ensuring that ISPs and other network providers are treated as common carriers.

    PS:

    Argument from authority is a fallacy.

    Appeal to authority is not always fallacious. Sometimes it is. Sometimes it isn’t. Example: It is not fallacious to cite in an argument the fact that 99%+ of climate scientists agree that global warming is real.

  33. says

    I suspect that net neutrality only passed because corporations realized it wouldn’t be profitable. People would surf less, or just as likely, make themselves less dependent on speed (e.g. downloading sites or videos with WGET and watching offline or by caching.).

    Remember the last time companies dominated unregulated utilities in certain US states (e.g. Enron)? Now just imagine that situation nationwide with internet and ISPs. The whole system could collapse and companies go bankrupt or abandoning the market. States might end up taking over and restarting,charging much less than the companies ever did with better service.

  34. Rick Pikul says

    @EnlightenmentLiberal

    Are you suggesting it should be illegal for ISPs to offer both DSL and cable residential internet services? I mean, that’s a slow lane and a fast lane. Are you suggesting it should be illegal for other network providers, like Level 3, to charge its customers based on how much traffic they actually send/receive? Again, that’s many different lanes of many different “speeds”.

    Are you dishonestly ignoring the context of the discussion?

    Why yes, yes you are. I accept your concession.

  35. EnlightenmentLiberal says

    @Rick Pikul
    Do you agree that offering cable and DSL for different rates to residential users is “fast lanes” and “slow lanes” at different costs?
    Do you agree that other network providers such as Level 3 a variety of deals to various companies, like Netflix, which vary on cost, bandwidth, etc.?
    Do you thus agree that it’s woefully incorrect to talk about net neutrality by describing the concept as outlawing fast lanes and slow lanes?

  36. Azkyroth Drinked the Grammar Too :) says

    Do you thus agree that it’s woefully incorrect to talk about net neutrality by describing the concept as outlawing fast lanes and slow lanes?

    ….Yeshua Pedantic Fuck, was that all?

  37. EnlightenmentLiberal says

    ….Yeshua Pedantic Fuck, was that all?

    Another thread where people have reading problems, and people are surprised that I’m defending a point I made very clear in my very first post in the thread. The lack of intellectual honesty is getting annoying. Quoting my first post: (Bolding added)

    EL:
    However, as a computer science professional, I hate the way that this is being discussed in the media. Ex:

    The Federal Communications Commission is expected on Thursday to approve regulating Internet service like a public utility, prohibiting companies from paying for faster lanes on the Internet.

    This thread exploded because someone (several people) can’t read, not because I’m being a dishonest pedantic fuck.