It’s said that politics creates strange bedfellows. I was reminded how true this can be when I traveled to D.C. in recent weeks to figure out why several advocacy groups and legislators with histories of advocating for minority interests are lining up with big telecom companies in opposition to the FCC’s efforts to pass “Net Neutrality” rules.
Net Neutrality is the principle that prevents Internet Service Providers from controlling what kind of content or applications you can access online. It sounds wonky, but for Black and other communities, an open Internet offers a transformative opportunity to truly control our own voice and image, while reaching the largest number of people possible. This dynamic is one major reason why Barack Obama was elected president and why organizations like ColorOfChange.org exist.
So I was troubled to learn that several Congressional Black Caucus members were among 72 Democrats to write the FCC last fall questioning the need for Net Neutrality rules. I was further troubled that a number of our nation’s leading civil rights groups had also taken positions questioning or against Net Neutrality, using arguments that were in step with those of the big phone and cable companies like AT&T and Comcast, which are determined to water down any new FCC rules.
Most unsettling about their position is the argument that maintaining Net Neutrality could widen the digital divide.
First, let’s be clear: the problem of the broadband digital divide is real. Already, getting a job, accessing services, managing one’s medical care—just to mention a few examples—are all facilitated online. Those who aren’t connected face a huge disadvantage in so many aspects of our society. Broadband access is a big problem — but that doesn’t mean it has anything to do with Net Neutrality.
Yet some in the civil rights community will tell you differently. They claim that if broadband providers can earn greater profits by charging content providers for access to the Internet “fast lane,” then they will lower prices to underserved areas. In other words, if Comcast — which already earns 80 percent profit margins on its broadband services — can increase its profits under a system without Net Neutrality, then they’ll all of a sudden invest in our communities. You don’t have to be a historian or economist to know that this type of trickle-down economics never works and has always failed communities of color.
Whether the phone and cable companies can make more money by acting as toll-takers on the Internet has nothing to do with whether they will invest in increased deployment of broadband. If these companies think investing in low-income communities makes good business sense, they will make the investment. Benevolence doesn’t factor into the equation.
On my trips to Washington, I met with some of the groups and congressional offices questioning or opposing Net Neutrality. I asked them what evidence they had to back up claims that undermining Net Neutrality would lead to an expansion of broadband to under-served communities, or that preserving Net Neutrality would thwart expansion. Not one could answer my question. Some CBC members hadn’t yet been presented with a counter to the industry’s arguments; others told stories about pressure from telecom companies or from other members of congress. As one CBC staffer told me, many CBC members have willingly supported the business agenda of telecom companies because the industry can be counted on to make campaign contributions, and they face no political backlash.
I also heard from people who don’t consider themselves against Net Neutrality, but who say their issue is prioritizing broadband expansion over maintaining Net Neutrality—as if the two have some intrinsic competitive relationship. When I’ve asked about the relationship, again, no one could provide anything concrete.
To those taking positions against Net Neutrality, I ask what sense it makes to undermine the very power of the Internet, especially for our communities, in order to provide access to everyone, presuming for a second the two were even connected. It’s like what we have with cable — our communities are saturated with programming that they cannot control, with no benefit of empowerment for anyone. Again, no one with whom I talked had an answer to this point.
Thankfully, there are an array of grassroots, media and social justice organizations that have not followed this line of reasoning and are actively supporting Network Neutrality, such as the Center for Media Justice and the Applied Research Center. Black and brown journalists and media groups who understand the need for unconstrained expression on the part of our communities are on the same page as well: the National Association of Hispanic Journalists, UNITY: Journalists of Color, the National Association of Latino Independent Producers, the National Association of Black Journalists, and the National Hispanic Media Coalition have all been vocal supporters of Net Neutrality.
Prominent lawmakers, including CBC members Reps. John Conyers, Maxine Waters, and Donna Edwards are vocal supporters, as are House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and President Obama — who has pledged to “take a back seat to no one” on the issue. And last week, Mignon Clyburn, a commissioner at the FCC, called out advocacy groups entrusted by many to represent our communities, for making half-baked arguments that completely miss the boat on the importance of Net Neutrality to our communities.
As Clyburn pointed out, far from being just a concern of the digital elite, Net Neutrality is essential to what makes the Internet a place where people of color and marginalized communities can speak for ourselves without first asking for permission from gatekeepers, and where small blogs, businesses, and organizations operate on a level playing field with the largest corporations. Net Neutrality regulations are needed to protect the status quo, because the telecom industry sees an opportunity for profit in fundamentally altering this basic aspect of the Internet.
In the coming weeks I plan to head back to DC to continue to fight for Net Neutrality. I’m hoping that on my next trip some of the anti-Net Neutrality civil rights groups or CBC members will heed my call and explain their position. I would like to believe that there is more to the “civil rights” opposition to Net Neutrality than money, politics, relationships, or just plain lack of understanding. For now, I’m doing my best to keep an open mind. But I don’t think it will stay that way for much longer.



66 Comments







It’s a great question. I’ve got more than one email pointing me to LULAC’s op-ed from different people I’ve never met, saying it’s a good argument. It’s not.
Expanding internet access in the absence of net neutrality would be the essence of a Pyrrhic victory.
I’ve lived in what they might call “underserved” areas. Those people not only don’t give a crap about this, they have much bigger problems to deal with.
I have a better idea to reduce the costs of internet access to “underserved” areas. FUND MORE LIBRARIES. I hear internet is free there. Wacky!
Hey, nothing against more libraries, but expanded internet access and lower prices would indeed be a large boon to underserved areas, as James points out.
My best friend from way back works in the cable/telephony construction area. He told me 15 – 20 years ago that it cost roughly $25K per mile for construction. I’m sure those costs have gone up.
And there are a lot of rural areas of the country underserved for precisely this reason.
Now, I have no idea what justification the companies use to underserve minority areas of large cities.
That excuse might be worth getting some popcorn to see the executives do their dancing.
Yeah, that’s part of the problem. But the underlying argument that LULAC is making is that if cable/phone companies can charge, say, Google for the privilege of carrying Google content, they’ll lower prices for broadband as a result, putting it in reach of more people.
I don’t buy that argument, just like I don’t buy the argument that excise tax savings will go back into wages.
Yeah, given all the evidence of companies immediately pocketing any left over cash does seem to call into question the analytic and historic knowledge of the folks who think that this time will be different.
Where I was living, out in the country in West Texas, we weren’t going to be getting cable – too few customers, too far apart to make it economical.
But the power and phone co-ops got a discount arrangement with DirecTV, so people could get those. If there was a way to hook transmitters to satellite dishes, I think a lot of people would go for broadband that way.
(We had dial-up through one of the local BBS services; that was before high-speed was widely available. And we were too far away from any office for DSL even if it had existed then.)
Not to be an a** but has anyone checked the campaign coffers of those who oppose Net Neutrality?
Comcast, et. al. are corporations. Mass enacted a mandate to force everyone to purchase healthcare insurance reasoning that if everyone purchased it the premiums would go down.
Mass. premiums are the highest in the country.
I don’t think that the internet service providers will suddenly find ethics – the telecoms passed out personal info to Georgie and all he did was ask. It is just a way to bleed the u.s. citizen more, pass personal information onto the government (whichever alphabet agency wants it) and censor whomever they don’t like.
So when the Republicans are in control of the Federal government again and the precident has been set that the Federal government has the power to decide the fate of the Internet what is to stop the religious right from using the Federal government to mold the Internet to their liking?
I sure dont trust AT&T after what they did with the Bushies… but why should I trust the Federal government either?
Net neutrality isn’t about the government deciding content. It’s about NOBODY deciding content. All content must be given the same priorities. If you don’t trust the Federal government, you should be for net neutrality. Everybody with internet access gets equal access to everything on the internet.
This is a favorite topic of mine, but I often find each and every person has a very different definition of net neutrality.
Who here owns a business?
If you do, how many want the govt telling you what your prices and products should be regardless of the costs – in fact, sell a more expensive product at the same price.
Net neutrality is a pure economic business issue that the govt has no business sticking its nose into.
Yeah, the fact that the government totally funded the development of the internet in the first place has no bearing on the discussion since it’s obvious that the business community should be in charge of all things right?
Even though DARPA funded (via universities) the initial concept of the Internet doesn’t give it the right to then impose restrictions on the companies that have spend 1000x more on the expansion and operational costs.
They are not imposing restrictions. They are keeping the corporations from imposing restrictions. Right now, if you want to go to FDL, you can. If you want to go to Fox News site, you can. Neither costs more or less and neither is brought to you any slower or faster than the other. YOU get to choose what you want to look up on the internet. If net neutrality is not the law, then whoever provides your access can decide what you get to see and how fast. The people who tell you net neutrality is about restricting access are lying to you because they actually want the right to restrict access. Net neutrality means neutrality. No preferences, just access.
Such a simple concept but obviously too advanced for some folks to understand.
And who pays for the extra costs of high bandwidth sites?
Who pays for the fiber optic lines to BFE?
Who pays for the data centers to house and route all this traffic?
Corps that’s who.
I assume you are aware that the TelCos have been charging a monthly fee for years that was imposed precisely to give them funds to build out the Fiber Optic and all the necessary costs associated with the construction?
Yep, The Telecommunications Act of 1996 signed by Clinton layed that groundwork. Which BTW, I have no problem with.
You want something, then you have to pay for it. It is as simple as that.
So since consumers have been paying this fee to the TelCos for going on 14 years now with the TelCos pocketing the money, we’re just supposed to forget that and allow them to screw us again as they claim they can’t afford to do the work they’ve already been funded to do by consumers?
Seems they’ve collected far more than the cost of the build out would be over those years. So we’ve paid and must pay again because they’re either greedy bastards or incompetent business people? Is that your position?
Care to step up to the plate and start your own Telco?
Also, please do some research as to when those costs were allowed to be charged to the consumer before you toss out the 14 year number.
If you don’t like the cost of the service then as a free American you are free to not subscribe. Same as if you don’t like the price of gas, then don’t drive your car. If you don’t like the bus fare, then walk.
That is so foolish. It’s like Victor Hugo who praised the equality of the law which prohibits rich and poor alike from stealing bread when their children are starving or SCOTUS early in the last century who struck down child labor laws on the ground that if the kid didn’t want to work he didn’t have to. Have you no heart?
I’ve got news for you. You’re going to die. Anything you do in this life like accumulate money that makes you think yourself superior is literally madness. It’s a figment of your imagination. You may know people who think like you do which means they are just as crazy. Think about why you reject the notion we are all in this together. Differences we manufacture are meaningless in the infinite scheme.
Yes, I am going to die. I also am comfortable in what will happen to my soul when that happens. Not sure where you are trying to go with that line of reasoning.
Why the personal attack? This is a pure economical and political discussion.
GMAFB please.
It sounds like it’s VERY personal to you. You’re the one who started getting nasty, mister.
Please explain how I’ve gotten personal?
IMHO, I’ve tried to explain that there is no free lunch. Service providers have real dollar costs that have to be paid for. Those costs are embedded in the materials, services and labor they must pay for.
BTW, those service providers and their suppliers also pay the wages of many people.
You’re clearly ignorant of the history of the internet and of the phone companies.
Also you seem to think that ‘Corp-Rats Know Best’ what we should see when we turn on our computers.
Think of having Time-Warner cable, and the faster-loading sites being limited to their subsidiaries. Or think of Comcast, which has already slowed down connections that they didn’t approve of.
Paying for services is fine – but some providers are being paid multiple times for their services. I pay for my phone line, I pay my ISP for my use of the lines, and the sites on the other end also pay their phone companies and their ISPs. The phone companies are making money just fine.
Ahhh, the typical liberal response – go ugly early. Any more nastiness you care to bring to the debate.
If you don’t like Time-Warner, don’t visit their sites or subscribe to their service. After all, it is your money. While you are at it, please list for me any sites that any provider has blocked because they didn’t approve of the content. I’ll wait patiently for your list.
Please list the providers who are being paid multiple times for their services. I’ll be the first to join you in hammering them. Again, I’ll wait patiently for your list.
This is the fundamental difference in opinion at the core of this debate: Net Neutrality proponents see internet infrastructure as a necessary utility to meet one of peoples’ basic needs, the access to free and unfiltered information rather than looking at it as a business. It’s like telling them to stop turning on the light if they don’t like their local energy company.
I guess it’s late to continue the discussion, but I was not making a personal attack. By measuring everything by money, you demonstrate a common madness. You know the price of everything and the value of nothing. As for your soul, if you are honest, you have no more information about what will happen to it than I do. That goes for my soul, if any, also.
As for Telcos, is your point they don’t make enough money? How much is enough? Whatever the traffic will bear? Changing from a regulated public utility to supposedly competing enterprises was a huge mistake. It didn’t result in better service, lower prices or anything that can be considered a public benefit. As for wiring rural areas, in the thirties there was the same problem with electricity. The government created the Rural Electrification Administration. Why not? Rural people are entitled to electricity just as they are entitled to fiber optic service.
As for net neutrality, the internet is a great leveler, a major attack on hierarchy, expertise and the idea that someone is somehow better than someone else. The attack on net neutrality is an attempt by those with social position to protect their status. They want to force poor people back into their box. I don’t think it will happen, though you never know.
Yes let’s address price and value. Compare the amount of digital/communications services available today and the cost of said services. It was the free market that has driven down price while vastly expanding the offerings.
Just one case in point: Vonage. $24.95 a month unlimited calling to include overseas. My wife is British and now talks with her mother/family there every other day at no additional costs. For another $4.95 we pay for a local UK number that connects to number so her family calls us at the cost of a local call. This was created by or forced upon the market by any govt program or law. Demand was met by supply and everyone benefited. Prices/costs went down and the companies still made profits to continue the expansion and improvement of their services.
It is really that simple. Access to electricity or the Internet (high speed or not) is not a Right. And to quickly touch on “Rights” it is not the govt that grants Rights, in fact the Constitution specifically limits the govt powers to protect our inalienable Rights.
You really are quite wrong. If there were an internet in revolutionary times, the founding fathers might have made it a constitutional right. Citizen entitlements change with the times. Do you oppose unemployment compensation, welfare or other programs aimed at making lives a bit easier? What do you think of municipal golf courses, marinas, parks, museums, art commissions and a host of things governments fund but which impact a segment, sometimes a small segment, of the population? I don’t play golf, but I don’t begrudge golfers their municipal golf course just as I don’t begrudge people in rural areas electricity or internet service. No one has a “right” to a golf course, but the community is enriched and real estate values most likely go up.
Government provides these services because private capital is generally not inclined to generosity. Oh, you have your occasional philanthropist here and there, but most wealthy people invest in large homes and expensive cars. Your problem is you are selfish as are most capitalists. Relax. It’s ok if others are given what you provided for yourself. If you built a golf course for your private use, you might object to others playing the game without your outlay. When it comes to the Internet, the more the merrier and the more points of view the better. Attempts to restrict internet access should be resisted. Sorry you don’t see that.
Then why do we, in this country, pay more for slower broadband than other countries?
Test reply – apologies to you gensneri, but I’ve posted 5 responses today and all have been blocked.
And the corps make plenty of money with net neutrality to pay for it, and then some. If it’s really that burdensome, the free market will take care of it as other providers come in to provide services on an affordable basis if the current providers can’t do so without government giving them preferences like the ability to block your search for alternate internet providers if the one you have is abusive.
Obviously you are neither a business owner nor have never dealt with communications infrastructure costs.
Hint: There is not a money tree/forest that is delivered to you (via corp FedEx) when you start a company.
My guess is that btal knows exactly what is at stake.
I always considered the internet to be truly democratic . Anyone with internet access ,has equal access to all the worlds information. Rich , poor , black or white all have access and none are excluded.
Lack of Net Neutrality could create a system ,where only those who are well off could afford access to all sites
Listen to PaulaT at 4:21PM. If you are FOR Net Neutrality you are for everyone, or everything (content) on the internet being equal. Nothing else matters. Cost of networks, satellite costs etc. Unless you are building a network it doesn’t matter. Everyone who reads this site should be FOR Net Neutrality.Gov’t has same status under Net Neutrality as I do.
Just drive-by. Net Neutrality is DEAD after Citizens United. Soon corps will own interent. Nice knownin’ ya. (For those who argue that CU is pro-free speech, where will you go to speak after corp internet takeover?)
We’ll see. I’ve hear this fear for a while and we’re still here. If not. What? It is what it is.
I’m not saying it’s not an issue. But, I’ve had it with the Fear, Fear, Fear. It’s already a really long list. From the amount of comments here, or lack thereof, I must not be alone.
There might be a scarey possum under you bed, too.
It is a good question, but one that’s pretty deep and it ain’t going anywhere here.
For all you NN advocates, what say you to the New York Times decision to make you pay for their content?
Must be a real bummer to have to pay extra to read Krugman drivel.
Ah but I can choose to not pay for their content. And it’s my choice.
Doing away with net neutrality gives the “choice” of what I can see to those who have been paid to allow me to see it. If the content provider with the content I want to see has not paid the service provider, they (the service provider) can block MY choice.
And if that is too complex for you,… Well, nice straw man argument anyway.
Sorry you are incorrect. If you choose to pay for the bandwidth, then there are many providers who will supply you with whatever access (read cost of service) you desire.
If you want the providers to provide you T-1 access levels for dial-up costs, then you are delusional.
And I willingly pay the broadband cost rather than dial-up. That’s just another straw man argument.
The Service providers want the content providers to pay as well and will block you, me, and everyone else from that content if Net Neutrality is removed. Do you really want AT&T or Verizon determining which web sites you can visit and whose content you can see? Seriously?
AT&T and Verizon don’t give a tinker’s darn what you look at. They’re apolitical. What they do care about is the bandwidth and electricity you are consuming on their networks. NN is telling them, screw that expense for the sake of the populous. Sorry, life doesn’t work that way.
As for the service providers wanting the content providers to pay, look at what is happening to the AT&T network based on the iphone relationship. AT&T is getting screwed because the content providers coupled with the device providers are killing their network.
Interesting. You’ve morphed from “they need to do away with Net Neutrality because of the construction costs” to “they have to pay for the bandwidth and electricity consumed by the networks”
I think you just admitted that you gots nothing. (And I do have a computer science degree with a bit of electronics background to go along with it so I have vague idea of what I’m talking about.)
But of course, no one can compare with your knowledge of life and all its ways.
Sorry dakine01, I’ve been consistent.
Providers have BOTH installation and operational costs. Both are hard dollars paid to suppliers and labor. What part of business overhead are you missing?
Good for you for having a CS degree. I am also a programmer who also owns two technology companies – does that make us peers?
Alas with your last sentence, it is the typical liberal position, ad hominem. Shall we try the re-set button?
I’m an IT manager who’se been buying these services for 17 years.
You’re not making any convincing technological arguments, so far all I hear is a lot of ‘free’ market ideology which of course means you’re arguing for more control of the market instead of less.
What’s wrong with you?
I’ll call your 17 years and double it.
Please explain, based on your experience, what is the ROI for dragging fiber to the nether-regions for a monthly subscriber fee of ?? $40 a month. Then after you’ve amortized the infrastructure costs please explain the profitability of bandwith/data centers/electricity for that same $40 a month subscriber.
What is wrong with your elementary level math skills?
“screw that expense for the sake of the populous. Sorry, life doesn’t work that way.”
civilization is defined as coming together for the sake of the populous – those that try to get ahead by screwing that idea are called parasites, destroyers of the quality of life. Indeed claiming you have no obligations except to your bottom line is admitting you are not a human citizen and that you should not have rights covered by our Constitution.
As to ATT network, they made the assumption they could promise more than they could deliver and now have to invest to get the product they promised. Other countries do not have the “exclusive carrier” model and find it easier to meet demand – but even there problems occur like O2 London. The Internet was developed by DARPA and the build out was funded by the wisdom in the Al Gore Bill (indeed this is the way some say he invented the internet). Gores bill provided the funding for the backbone and the connections – the telco’s did nothing. Later cable and fiber was built on a different business model -TV – but it was interesting seeing you trying to include that expense in your post as a reason Telco’s should get multi-tiered monopoly pricing control.
See the post above regarding the Constitution and Rights.
I’ve had extensive contact with IT personnel from large and small telcoms over the years and the scenario you describe recurs over and over. The company simultaneously reduces the number of technical staff, hires more account reps and puts on a big push to sell new services that they cannot hope to deliver with their down-sized tech staff.
The orders for their wonderful new services pile up and frustrated customers cancel orders for the services because they aren’t delivered on time.
The company goes back to the market and finds that their previous, very experienced techs have now found something else to do, and so they must hire newbie technical staff to do installs for customers whose satisfaction and expectations have been lowered.
I like to tell people that the promises of the DotCom bubble were not just dreams, but the corporations started selling the products before they had any ability to deliver them.
Every fantastic promise of the DotCom economy was/is possible, you just have to be careful who you’re contracting with.
The one thing they did accomplish for real was the build-out of the backbone, now the big telcoms would have us believe that they need more money because they have to invest in infrastructure that already exists and that the taxpayer has already paid for.
And don’t forget that a lot of the service providers are de facto also content providers like, for example, Time Warner. Who do you think would they give preference to? They really aren’t as impartial as some here make them out to be.
This is the same old story that we have seen so many times: market consolidation and monopolies, yet again promoted in the self-serving disguise of a “free market” to the alleged benefit of the masses.
What I say to their decision is it’s been nice reading you in the past, too bad I can’t do it in the future. This also has nothing to do with net neutrality.
Just because someone is a staunch supporter of our civil rights doesn’t automatically means they’re also a staunch supporter of our civil liberties. Living just a stone’s throw away from the Black Belt, which can easily double as a Bible Belt, I can vouch for the fact that many southern blacks, despite being staunch civil rights supporters, run neck and neck with many southern whites when it comes to their indifference to our civil liberties. As for why this is so, my guess is, though it’s only a guess, that Bible thumpers also tend to be fascist in their thinking.
Net Neutrality would not be a issue if it wasn’t for the same problem we have with everything else in America: Monopolies . The “too-big-to-fail” companies have just a slash and burn mentality. Maximize profits at any cost, the hell with being a good corporate citizen. Once they are given freedom to control the contents of information on the internet,be it speed restrictions,contents filters, or just plain blocking sites it will be just like the MSM, you will only get to see what they want you to see. Given the very few big pipes that are under control of just a couple of companies now they can dictate terms to the government now,”give us what we want or we will crash the economy”.
Freedoms are never taken all at once, its just like boiling a frog, do it a little at a time and you’ll never notice until its too late.
Yes there are costs associated with getting on the internet. There are companies making bucks providing this service everyday. But that has nothing to do with NN. Dense. Some are dense.
What’s being missed in this conversation is the fact that the Internet provides a social good which transcends economic analysis – in the same way that public education does. It’s important for society in ways that can’t be measured in dollar and cents. Ultimately, this is a philosophical, not an economic debate.
well said
Net neutrality is even more important after the recent supreme court decision. Eventuality, the MSM will be totally bought by the corporations, so US citizens will need the internet to be informed about political issues.
eventuality was supposed to be eventually.
As an activist for the poor and for Net Neutrality, the digital divide is real I know it, I live it and see it every day. I am not sure who these activists are who see Net Neutrality as an issue different than the Digital Divide because corraling people into pre-concieved websites and forcing payments to access “outside” websites, is …well going to hurt the poor even more as they are in essence barred from the information that will educate them. That being said to say taking away Neutrality would somehow help the Digital Divide as if it is “either or” thing is ridiculous.
The issue is that broadband is unaffordable for most poor. Internet cost is prohibitive IF they even have a computer and most do not. Broadband is becoming essential to even access many websites because dial-up users can’t access them to download forms, etc.Kids growing up in a home without the Internet are at a distinct disadvantage as many classes require it and homework is not always easily done at the library for many reasons. This should be affordable in the home as many people already have.
The “myasterious” thing about all this is telecommunications companies who often have monopolies in the cities they contract with, do not seem to find the time, or equipment to create broadband in low income communities ~ except for the lame labs they provide to low-income housing communites and libraries but there is always a long line for them. Low wage workers are not always able to access them. Kids cannot access them if they are not conveniently located for them to safely get to the, the list goes on.
* The disabled often need extremely expensive special equipment and software in order to use the Internet (the blind and paralyzed need Dragon AND/OR Braille typing equiment, people with cerebal palsy need hand-held instruments to type with, the hard-of-hearing may not be able to hear important things and need typesets to relay the information that uses sound, etc).
At this time in the US there are exactly TWO, count ‘em TWO free labs for disabled persons West of the Mississippi with the equipment they need. One in Seattle and one in CA. That is IT. This is a long way to get to when you are living in Idaho in a wheelchair and on a breathing machine …
The elderly need special training because their learning abilities and styles change as they grow older and computers become intimidating for many reasons including physical access needs to becoming more right brained than they used to be. They also need access in order to stay in contact with their support commmunities, families, and medical information and many are unable to afford their medicines, are eating catfood and are lucky if they can get out of the house if they have one.
Net Neutrality is the beginning of making it harder for people to freely use the Internet, which was invented and belongs to We the People.
The cost of telephony has gone up with fiber optics and all, but it may come as a surprise to many that all of these mega-companies were given governemnt moneies to build them. The research that has brought them the technology was from our universities with guess what? Public money. The long list of taxes you see on your phone and Internet bill goes where? Back to the government to do what? Give back to these mega-companies to build more of the infrastructure.
Net Neutrality is a big issue because the Internet is no longer a toy, it is becoming a utility. To make it harder and more expensive to access it to its fullest when it is already communally paid with our taxes and then charge too much without consideration for ALL citizens is a deliberate contribution to the digital divide and should be disallowed.
My 2 cents
Cat In Seattle <—former Americorps volunteer from the UMass CTCs.
Jaun Cole from a week ago…
“…… a much greater danger to the republic than the anointing of corporations as persons with the right to flood our airwaves with propaganda is any attack on Net Neutrality. Net Neutrality is the principle that my blog is inexpensive to publish and to access, so that I and my readers have the same advantages in this regard as a corporation would. If the Right Wing ever manages to scale the internet and make me pay $70,000 a year to put up this blog and have it easily available to my readers, it will kill it and would signal a return to push media like the networks. And a push-media world where corporations own the Web and can push at us what they please, including their weird ideas about political reality, really would be Orwellian and dangerous.
This horrible ruling, bad as it is, is not the Waterloo of democracy. The abolition of Net Neutrality would be.”
The whole post is good…
http://www.juancole.com/2010/01/is-supreme-court-decision-so-important.html
This is a very important issue for everyone who uses the Internet. The telcos have not been completely honest about their reasons for abolishing Net Neutrality. Even if they get their way they will still not build out their networks to areas they consider unprofitable.
Their opposition to Net Neutrality conveniently ignores the fact that they are already collecting revenue from anyone who is connected to the Internet.
The culture of these companies is set to thinking and managing as monopolies. They will always look for ways to increase profits and to maintain their monopolies. It is much easier, and cheaper, to seek legislative relief in order to avoid innovation and competition and to obtain whatever additional fees they can charge muster.
For the most part, the baby Bells and the cable companies were very unsuccessful when they entered each others territories to compete.
There are number of ways they could be providing higher speed services to US citizens but it is in their best interests to just keep pushing for their issues to a willing/uninformed group of legislators and wear out the opposition through the advantages they maintain with their resources.
Net Neutrality is also very important to the creative and entrepreneurial engine that drives innovation in the marketplace. There is a reason for all of the innovation we are seeing centered around technology and social media. NN creates a level playing field for innovators and entrepreneurs.
Remember it is not the big guys who create lots of new jobs. It’s the small businesses that are growing that create most new jobs. The same companies we will need to create the jobs to replace the jobs that have been lost during this recession. These companies need NN to sustain and grow their businesses.
Why Are Some Civil Rights Groups & Leaders On the Wrong Side of Net Neutrality?
- Because its in their power and money interest to do so?
I am sure they can come up with a somewhat coherent argument, as all of them do. The fact remains citizens do not trust pols (and in ever greater number) for a reason.