It's here, and watered down. The big question = how will it be enforced?http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2010/12/its-here-fcc-adopts-net-neutrality-lite.ars
12/21/2010 1:59:07 PM
But what does this mmmeeeeaaaaaannnn?
12/21/2010 4:57:19 PM
12/21/2010 5:04:37 PM
I don't think it means anything yet, except to confirm that the government will attempt to do 'something' when an issue like net neutrality gets enough media attention.It hasn't been proven in court that the FCC has authority to regulate and enforce this.
12/21/2010 5:19:06 PM
I can't wait until they start doing things like setting prices and further overstepping their authority.
12/21/2010 5:54:47 PM
It seems reasonable the FCC can regulate this considering current and past rulings.But i can't see anything that this would really fix/enhance right now. I'm sure it will change the long-term landscape to make it less likely that there is a "tiered" Internet experience, but it might not have come to that anyway.[Edited on December 21, 2010 at 5:55 PM. Reason : ]
12/21/2010 5:55:05 PM
Competition does a lot to prevent that kind of thing. Services like Uverse, Fios, etc. make it unlikely that cable companies would go that route without some serious collusion.What I fear is that now that the FCC is involved, they will inevitably become more involved. The internet, which has been a bastion of informational freedom will get regulated, sites shut down, etc.
12/21/2010 5:57:57 PM
Official FCC Press Releasehttp://www.fcc.gov/Daily_Releases/Daily_Business/2010/db1221/DOC-303745A1.pdf*ahem* Corporate Bias *ahem*http://www.engadget.com/2010/12/21/fcc-we-didnt-impose-stricter-net-neutrality-regulations-on-wir/
12/21/2010 9:04:28 PM
http://www.theopeninter.net/
12/23/2010 5:41:49 PM
So, is this going to stop ESPN360 from blocking ISPs that don't pay a premium?
12/23/2010 6:26:02 PM
12/23/2010 8:09:43 PM
12/23/2010 8:59:06 PM
12/24/2010 12:43:44 PM
12/24/2010 1:37:24 PM
12/24/2010 1:45:33 PM
12/24/2010 3:09:45 PM
^ At first glance, I don't agree with your last three points.Can you go into some more detail?
12/25/2010 5:24:46 PM
On the Google side, they get two benefits -- (i) they're high-bandwidth products (YouTube, Picasa, etc) receive government protection since providers can't throttle bandwidth consumption based on content type/usage, and (ii) net "neutrality" institutionalizes pre-existing disparities in content speed, since if you want faster content you'll have to buy more+faster servers that you can locate in warehouses closer to the backbones (like Google has done already) instead of innovating to come up with more desirable content for the end user.That's why Google was such a big and early supporter of net neutrality: they get to use government power against potential competitorsRe the "being at the mercy of everyone else", it's basically the same issue as with Google's high-bandwidth services -- since providers are now banned from throttling bandwidth for disproportionately high users and can't discriminate against "legal" traffic (even if it's swamping the network), the casual users and low-bandwidth users are at the mercy of people who want to fire up a torrent to share their latest mixtape and then walk away from the computer while it seeds. If you've ever tried playing a game on Resnet and had to give up because lag was so bad while everyone was sharing music or other sh*t, basically imagine that applied everywhere and protected by the government.As for the lawyers, any time you've got a reference to "reasonableness" in a new area, no one knows what "reasonable" actually means until someone's been sued and the court makes a decision -- and even then, there's always a new attorney to argue that what used to be "reasonable" is no longer "reasonable" for some reason or another. Net "neutrality" is going to be a field day for IP lawyersThe federal government created the "mess" of monopolist-acting ISPs by promoting telecom monopolies years ago... and yet now they think more federal government action will fix the problems the federal government created...
12/26/2010 12:06:48 AM
^ Thanks for the follow-up!Regarding (i), I don't see this as more of a benefit to google than any of their major (or minor, really) competitors for the respective products. How does this give them a heads-up relative to competing products? That is unless you're assuming that ISPs launching a la carte access plans will only have a 'youtube' plan, and not a 'video' plan that greylists all of the online video providers of any consequence? If ISPs can get away with this, I see no reason to believe they will simply target the top one or two services in each market. That would most certainly draw the ire of lobbyists and law-makers alike.Regarding (ii), I'm pretty familiar with edge caching deployment (google's included), and I still don't see this as a competitive advantage for them relative to any of their major competitors, assuming you buy into a greylist and not a you-tube package. An edge cache (whether supported directly by google as15169) or being operated indirectly by google while existing inside of a major ISP will still need its bits to disseminate between the cache location and the end user. Google, of all the major video (or content in general) providers, is one of the strongest proponents of edge caching as close to the users as possible both for client experience reasons as well as easing the amount of traffic they exchange between their network to ISPs, thereby passing along the obligation of bit delivery.Regarding "being at the mercy of everyone else", it was my understanding that under the new regulations carriers were banned from differentiating traffic between 'legal' services, but that doesn't at all read the same as what you wrote. I would argue (and while I don't have statistics on-hand, I'd wager that they agree) that the majority of the sustained outliers that you're referencing are driven predominantly by illegal traffic, not legal traffic. There will absolutely be high bandwidth consumers using predominantly legal traffic (hi-def youtube, netflix, hulu, etc), but those aren't exactly outlier services or users, then. Getting back to your original point, why is the recent regulation going to perpetuate joe-schmoe and the 99th percentile user situation in a negative way?Regarding the lawyer point, I do agree that 'reasonable' is an unfortunate term. That said, I have to assume their word choice was intentionally vague. I don't think it's fair for anyone on this board or in any courtroom in america to assume that they're savvy enough to understand all of the fiscal and technical nuances of such a complicated and modern dilemma. I'm certainly not an expert on law, but is this an IP issue? Unless you meant 'internet protocol' instead of 'intellectual property', in which case- punny. How about the opposite case? If no ruling is passed, and this tiered system is allowed to be put into place, would you expect more class action and monopoly lawsuits to follow? I certainly would, and I'd wager there would be far more lawyers and associated fees involved.That's a lot of words, but in general my point is that while this (and the hopeful prevention of any type of commercially driven service differentiation between multiple content providers) is good for Google, I think it's just as important to all of their competitors and the internet as a whole. I think the real issue here is driving up the level of quantity and quality of competition in the broadband subscriber market, which as you probably already know both google and the fcc have taken stabs at with varied real and potential success. I've been saying this for a while, and admittedly I may be wrong. I'm starting to feel like a lonely voice
12/26/2010 2:04:36 AM
12/26/2010 4:03:08 AM
It was a lot of words, but not nearly as many as the 194-page FCC opinion -- if I can gag my way through that (most of it anyway), I can make it through this ---
12/30/2010 10:11:24 PM
12/31/2010 5:33:45 PM
1/1/2011 2:20:46 AM
^^^ agreed on most of your clarifying points.
1/2/2011 3:30:27 AM
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2011/01/verizon-sues-fcc-says-net-neutrality-lite-rules-illegal.arsVZW sues FCC, no surprise here.
1/20/2011 6:23:54 PM
New rules were enacted, now cue the GOP spin about how a rule that enhances freedom for ordinary people is somehow anti-freedom: http://tinyurl.com/qyp8w6k[Edited on February 27, 2015 at 8:05 AM. Reason : let's try this long link again
2/27/2015 8:03:19 AM
I'm shocked how many people automatically take a stance just because the President spoke up about NN.I wish he didn't give his opinion. Now 45% of the population automatically is against NN.This makes me wonder what other issues are full of shit since most people have no fucking clue about NN. It actually pisses me off to a point where I can't read comments from the right wingers. My heart rate jumps and I want to strangle these people. THEY HAVE NO FUCKING CLUE!!!!!!Obama isn't going to take away your internets.
2/27/2015 12:42:55 PM
2/27/2015 5:01:32 PM
I hadn't even heard of Net Neutrality when I turned 18 (no regular Internets until college).
2/27/2015 5:51:43 PM
When you look at the graveyard of companies that have failed because of the artificially depressed network infrastructure, I can't see how anyone could argue for the status quo, or not want a drastic shakeup in the ISP business.
2/27/2015 11:53:08 PM
Really good info: http://www.reddit.com/r/IAmA/comments/2xdsdw/the_internet_is_safe_we_are_a_group_of_a_few_net/
2/28/2015 3:01:06 AM
The republicans on facebook want Net Neutrality overturned. They think Time Warner and Comcast are going to fuck them over less than the FCC.
3/9/2015 7:44:53 PM
no one with a college education truly things republicans are in touch with reality
3/9/2015 7:46:41 PM
Welp
1/25/2017 11:09:18 AM
?
1/25/2017 1:39:48 PM
Trump is about to completely stomp on NN.Putting that shitclown Verizon lawyer in the FCC chair is all he needed to do.
1/25/2017 2:34:15 PM
Either we end up like Canada with really high costs for crappy service because of monopolization.Or businesses really do have super secret innovative products that have been held back by net neutrality. I guess we'll find out.
1/25/2017 4:54:59 PM
$0.10 / MB domestic browsing (incl Canada and Mexico)$0.15 / MB international browsing
1/27/2017 10:29:38 AM
Thank goodness the Internet will soon be out of the FCC's hands, and safely out of reach of Donald Trump. I'm sure by his 4th year he would have been pressuring the FCC to censor all the "fake news" coming out of the media.
7/19/2017 1:57:06 PM
https://np.reddit.com/r/technology/comments/6odans/fcc_now_says_there_is_no_documented_analysis_of/dkgxguo/
7/20/2017 2:50:15 PM