Verizon Wants To Kill The Internet

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  • Nickdfresh
    SUPER MODERATOR

    • Oct 2004
    • 49181

    Verizon Wants To Kill The Internet

    Verizon's diabolical plan to turn the Web into pay-per-view
    By Bill Snyder
    Created 2013-09-12 03:00AM

    Think of all the things that tick you off about cable TV. Along with brainless programming and crummy customer service, the very worst aspect of it is forced bundling. You can't pay just for the couple of dozen channels you actually watch. Instead, you have to pay for a couple of hundred channels, because the good stuff is scattered among a number of overstuffed packages.

    Now, imagine that the Internet worked that way. You'd hate it, of course. But that's the direction that Verizon, with the support of many wired and wireless carriers, would like to push the Web. That's not hypothetical. The country's No. 1 carrier is fighting in court [1] to end the Federal Communications Commission's policy of Net neutrality, a move that would open the gates to a whole new -- and wholly bad -- economic model on the Web.

    [ With worker retirements looming, IT starts to prepare for a workforce exodus [2]. | For quick, smart takes on the news you'll be talking about, check out InfoWorld TechBrief [3] -- subscribe today. ]

    As it stands now, you pay your Internet service provider and go wherever you want on the Web. Packets of bits are just packets and have to be treated equally. That's the essence of Net neutrality. But Verizon's plan, which the company has outlined during hearings in federal court and before Congress, would change that. Verizon and its allies would like to charge websites that carry popular content for the privilege of moving their packets to your connected device. Again, that's not hypothetical.

    ESPN, for example, is in negotiations [4] with at least one major cellular carrier to pay to exempt its content from subscribers' cellular data caps. And what's wrong with that? Well, ESPN is big and rich and can pay for that exemption, but other content providers -- think of your local jazz station that streams audio -- couldn't afford it and would be out of business. Or, they'd make you pay to visit their websites. Indeed, if that system had been in place 10 years ago, fledglings like Google or YouTube or Facebook might never have gotten out of the nest.

    Susan Crawford, a tech policy expert and professor at Yeshiva University's Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law, says Verizon wants to "cable-ize the Internet." She writes in her blog [5] that "The question presented by the case is: Does the U.S. government have any role in ensuring ubiquitous, open, world-class, interconnected, reasonably priced Internet access?"

    They argue that because they spent megabucks to build and maintain the network, they should be able to have a say over what content travels over it. They say that because Google and Facebook and other Internet companies make money by moving traffic over "their" networks, they should get a bigger piece of the action. (Never mind that pretty much every person and business that accesses Google or Facebook is already paying for the privilege, and paying more while getting less speed than users in most of Europe.)

    In 2005, AT&T CEO Ed Whitacre famously remarked [6] that upstarts like Google would like to "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."

    That's bad enough, but Verizon goes even further. It claims that it has a right to free speech and, like a newspaper that may or may not publish a story about something, it can choose which content it chooses to carry. "Broadband providers possess 'editorial discretion.' Just as a newspaper is entitled to decide which content to publish and where, broadband providers may feature some content over others," Verizon's lawyers argue in a brief (PDF) [7].

    That's so crazy I won't bother to address it. But the FCC has done such a poor job of spelling out what it thinks it has the right to regulate and how that should work that the door is wide open for the carriers' bizarre -- not to mention anticonsumer -- strategies and arguments.

    I don't want to get down in the regulatory weeds, but there is one bit of legalese that's worth knowing: common carrier. Simply put, it means that the company doing the shipping can't mess with the contents. A railroad is a common carrier, and as such it can't decide whose cargo it will carry and whose it won't.

    Verizon: the new Standard Oil
    Verizon and other carriers answer that question by saying no.

    Before railroads were common carriers, they did things like favor products made by John D. Rockefeller's Standard Oil, which made him even richer and also led to the creation of a wildly out-of-control monopoly. (Yeshiva's Crawford has an in-depth but readable explanation of these issues in her book "Captive Audience: The Telecom Industry and Monopoly Power in the New Gilded Age [8]."

    But the FCC has never ruled that ISPs are common carriers, partly because it's afraid of the power of the lobbyists to influence Congress and partly because its directors lack spine. And now that lack of spine is about to bite the butt of everyone who uses the Web.

    According to people who follow this stuff closely, because ISPs are not common carriers the judges on the U.S. Court of Appeals in Washington, D.C., are looking askance at the FCC's defense against Verizon's lawsuit, although a verdict isn't likely for months.

    Here are the stakes: "If Verizon -- or any ISP -- can go to a website and demand extra money just to reach Verizon subscribers, the fundamental fairness of competing on the Internet would be disrupted. It would immediately make Verizon the gatekeeper to what would and would not succeed online. ISPs -- not users, not the market -- would decide which websites and services succeed," writes Michael Weinberg, vice president of Public Knowledge, a digital advocacy group.

    A taste of the Web's future: The Time Warner vs. CBS dustup
    You don't have to wait for the Verizon verdict to get a taste of what the New Web Order would be like. Time Warner Cable and CBS just had a dustup over how much Time Warner would pay CBS to carry its programming. When the pair couldn't agree, the cable giant stopped carrying CBS programming in New York City, Los Angeles, and Dallas. CBS then retaliated by stopping Time Warner subscribers from streaming its programming over the Internet.

    They settled after about a month. Staying true to form, Time Warner refused to give customers a rebate as compensation for lost programming.

    That's not exactly the same issue that we're facing in the fight over Net neutrality, but it should give you a sense of what life is like when the giants fight it out over what you're allowed to access and for how much. Users get caught in the middle, and the rights we've taken for granted simply disappear.

    This article, "Verizon's diabolical plan to turn the Web into pay-per-view," was originally published by InfoWorld.com ....
    Last edited by Nickdfresh; 09-13-2013, 10:35 AM.
  • Nickdfresh
    SUPER MODERATOR

    • Oct 2004
    • 49181

    #2
    Soulless corporate whores now trying to appropriate what the American people developed with their tax dollars through DARPA?!!

    Comment

    • chefcraig
      DIAMOND STATUS
      • Apr 2004
      • 12172

      #3
      I wonder what "Basic Internet" would look like? Probably a bunch of Spanish language sites I won't be capable of understanding, some unwanted home shopping sites offering dubious "deals" on jewelry and cookware, about a dozen or so sites that never program anything, some pretty damned lame reality sites, and to add insult to injury, FOX.









      “The greatest enemy of knowledge is not ignorance, it is the illusion of knowledge.”
      ― Stephen Hawking

      Comment

      • twonabomber
        formerly F A T
        ROTH ARMY WEBMASTER

        • Jan 2004
        • 11193

        #4
        Don't forget a couple Jesus sites...
        Writing In All Proper Case Takes Extra Time, Is Confusing To Read, And Is Completely Pointless.

        Comment

        • Zing!
          Veteran
          • Oct 2011
          • 2363

          #5
          Originally posted by twonabomber
          Don't forget a couple Jesus sites...
          FOX was already mentioned.
          My karma just ran over your dogma.

          Comment

          • FORD
            ROTH ARMY MODERATOR

            • Jan 2004
            • 58777

            #6
            Framing the Net Neutrality debate around the fucked state of cable TV is perfect, because maybe we can solve both.

            What ever happened to McCain's senate bill about "TV Neutrality" anyway?

            Considering the majority of the country probably gets their internet access from the same company they get their TV from ($cumca$t/Time Whorener/Verizon/AT&T/etc) it's not like the battles aren't related.

            And the real problem is that these corporations are too goddamned big, and that there are too few of them, usually only ONE per any market, making them functional monopolies. Theoretically a duopoly around here, since I have the choice of $cumca$t or slow as fuck 1.5 mbps DSL from Century Link (which I would need to bundle shitty landline phone service with just to get in the first place)
            Eat Us And Smile

            Cenk For America 2024!!

            Justice Democrats


            "If the American people had ever known the truth about what we (the BCE) have done to this nation, we would be chased down in the streets and lynched." - Poppy Bush, 1992

            Comment

            • FORD
              ROTH ARMY MODERATOR

              • Jan 2004
              • 58777

              #7
              Eat Us And Smile

              Cenk For America 2024!!

              Justice Democrats


              "If the American people had ever known the truth about what we (the BCE) have done to this nation, we would be chased down in the streets and lynched." - Poppy Bush, 1992

              Comment

              • FORD
                ROTH ARMY MODERATOR

                • Jan 2004
                • 58777

                #8
                This guest is the typical Clinton/DLC lying corporatist shill.

                If what he said about competition were true, prices might actually be lower. Problem is that there is NO competition. Comca$t, Time Warner, Cox, and the other cable companies do not compete with each other. They are regional monopolies. And in most markets, DSL is only available from the local phone monopoly, and they only offer the lowest speed, 1.5 mbps, which is barely better than dial-up
                Eat Us And Smile

                Cenk For America 2024!!

                Justice Democrats


                "If the American people had ever known the truth about what we (the BCE) have done to this nation, we would be chased down in the streets and lynched." - Poppy Bush, 1992

                Comment

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