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US Lawmakers Propose New Net Neutrality Bill 173

An anonymous reader brings news that Net Neutrality legislation is making another comeback. A new bill, sponsored by Rep. John Conyers (D-MI), would make ISPs who fail to provide service in a non-discriminatory manner subject to anti-trust violations. From the NYTimes: "'The bill squarely addresses the issue of the enormous market power of the telephone and cable companies as the providers of 98 percent of the broadband service in the country,' said Gigi Sohn, president of Public Knowledge. But broadband providers and some congressional Republicans have argued that net neutrality legislation isn't necessary. The broadband market is becoming more competitive and net neutrality regulations could hamper investment in broadband networks, some Republicans said during a hearing this week."
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US Lawmakers Propose New Net Neutrality Bill

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  • Not necessary? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by rukkyg ( 1028078 ) on Friday May 09, 2008 @08:24AM (#23348554)
    If you think a law isn't necessary, and a bunch of other people do, then why wouldn't you just approve it? From your perspective, the law would have no effect, positive or negative. To the other people, you look like you agree with them. Win-Win.

    Therefore I conclude, that large companies and congressional Republicans are lying. Of course, that was really my thought before I read this article.
    • Re:Not necessary? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by JustKidding ( 591117 ) on Friday May 09, 2008 @08:41AM (#23348670)
      Indeed. Ofcourse, when they argue that it would "hamper investments in networks", they mean that the providers won't be able to extort money from content providers *and* consumers at the same time, money which, obviously, would be spend on improving the network.

      I would think not having such a bill would hamper investments. There is much money to be made in creating an artificially low supply of bandwidth.
      • by FatSean ( 18753 ) on Friday May 09, 2008 @09:50AM (#23349214) Homepage Journal
        You know, the ones repealed and/or not passed in the late 80's and 90's in order to help the economy grow...which then led to shady banking practices that begat our current 'credit crunch'.

        Yeah, I've heard this story before. I like the regulations, they are necessary for capitalism to work in the real world.
        • You know, the ones repealed and/or not passed in the late 80's and 90's in order to help the economy grow...which then led to shady banking practices that begat our current 'credit crunch'.

          It wasn't just 'shady banking practices' that led to the credit crunch, it was constant inflation in order to avoid recessions.
          • by FatSean ( 18753 )
            The lack of regulation which allowed commodities securities of dishonestly described risk to permeate the market was the final straw.
        • by DesScorp ( 410532 ) on Friday May 09, 2008 @11:33AM (#23350724) Journal
          "You know, the ones repealed and/or not passed in the late 80's and 90's in order to help the economy grow...which then led to shady banking practices that begat our current 'credit crunch'."

          Wow, put on the hipwaders. The bullshit is thick today.

          Our current "credit crunch" had nothing to do with banking deregulation of the late 80's and early 90's. It has everything to do with three issues.

          One, the subprime mess. That's the fault of people buying houses they knew they couldn't afford, and banks lending them money they couldn't pay back. But why were the banks lending them that money, then? Because politicians decided that it wasn't fair that people with bad credit couldn't get home loans, so they created laws authorizing subprime mortgages, and indeed pressed banks to give these loans to "disadvantaged" borrowers. That's right, your beloved government regulations helped create this mess. And now these same politicians are promising to spend taxpayer funds to bail out these irresponsible people and banks, while people that played by the rules... the ones that only bought houses they knew they could afford, or when they couldn't, rented instead... well, your beloved regulators are about to stab those people in the back. The ones that played by the rules? Suckers and chumps, apparently, because they could have gone hog wild and let Uncle Sugar bail them out. THATS the fruits of your nanny regulation, not true free market economics.

          The other two reasons are strictly because of monetary policy, not banking regulation. The Fed decided on too much liquidity, and the Bush Adminstration adopted a weak dollar policy, mainly because of complaints by people much like you that "our trade deficit is too high! Get the Chinese to buy more from US!". So Bush bought into that fraudulent thinking that if we made our domestic products cheaper via a weak dollar, foreign countries would come running to buy more of our products (never mind that in the US, throughout 400 years of our history, has had a trade deficit for 350+ of those years, and it hasn't retarded our economic growth. The trade deficit is a useless measure of overall economic health).

          "I like the regulations, they are necessary for capitalism to work in the real world"

          Ahh, the old bullshit that capitalism isn't "efficient" enough without government regulation.

          The only thing capitalism needs to work "in the real world" is a seller that has something a buyer wants, and a buyer that has the means to pay for that product or service. Period. Regulation that does anything other than prevent fraud is nothing more than a drag on markets.
          • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

            by SirGeek ( 120712 )

            One, the subprime mess. That's the fault of people buying houses they knew they couldn't afford, and banks lending them money they couldn't pay back. But why were the banks lending them that money, then? Because politicians decided that it wasn't fair that people with bad credit couldn't get home loans, so they created laws authorizing subprime mortgages, and indeed pressed banks to give these loans to "disadvantaged" borrowers. That's right, your beloved government regulations helped create this mess. And now these same politicians are promising to spend taxpayer funds to bail out these irresponsible people and banks, while people that played by the rules... the ones that only bought houses they knew they could afford, or when they couldn't, rented instead... well, your beloved regulators are about to stab those people in the back. The ones that played by the rules? Suckers and chumps, apparently, because they could have gone hog wild and let Uncle Sugar bail them out. THATS the fruits of your nanny regulation, not true free market economics.

            Go rent the movie Maxed Out [imdb.com] and you'll get even MORE disgusted with the banks because the KNOW that these people can't pay the bills but they make most of their profits from them.

            When they sue people Only $ 1 out of $ 3 is principle. The Other $ 2 are fees and charges.

            It even mentions a new type of Credit Card that will go against your pension plan !

          • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

            by hunterx11 ( 778171 )

            The only thing capitalism needs to work "in the real world" is a seller that has something a buyer wants, and a buyer that has the means to pay for that product or service. Period. Regulation that does anything other than prevent fraud is nothing more than a drag on markets.

            There is no categorical necessity that we prevent any evil at all "in the real world", but that isn't some sort of normative argument that we shouldn't do so, either. Regulation that promotes social welfare may be a drag on the markets, but this is acceptable if human beings are deemed more valuable than the market.

    • by JamesRose ( 1062530 ) on Friday May 09, 2008 @08:41AM (#23348674)
      Because it causes situations, an old man heckling at the back of a labour party conference gets wrestled to the ground and arrested under "unnecessary" anti-terror laws.
      • Re:Not necessary? (Score:4, Interesting)

        by digitig ( 1056110 ) on Friday May 09, 2008 @09:34AM (#23349050)
        Stricly, "detained" rather than "arrested" (it makes a difference -- he can still travel from the UK to USA under the visa waiver program, for instance, which I understand he couldn't had he been arrested). But your point stands -- unnecessary legislation does have a cost.
    • Re:Not necessary? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by m.ducharme ( 1082683 ) on Friday May 09, 2008 @09:08AM (#23348846)
      Passing unnecessary laws just to make people happy is inefficient, and causes the system to become over-burdened as people try to game the new law for their own benefit, can cause unintended consequences in relation to other, more well-established laws (over-riding certain parts of an older bill, for example).

      Let me ask you this, do you think it's a great idea to add a new procedure/function/module to a piece of software, that definitely interacts with the previously written and tested code, if you think that new code is unnecessary, just to make a PHB happy?

      For the record, I do think net neutrality laws are necessary. I don't think however, that unnecessary laws are harmless.
      • I'd agree with you that unnecessary laws aren't harmless and that the GP's conclusions don't logically follow from his arguments.

        But, I still don't trust that we have the experts necessary in the government to enforce this correctly and it may still end up hampering invesetments.

        If I'm an investor, I'd be less likely to put my money into a company constructing infrastructure resources that aren't in their power to control, especially when it's known up front that the benefit of the resources might not
        • Re:Not necessary? (Score:5, Insightful)

          by m.ducharme ( 1082683 ) on Friday May 09, 2008 @10:32AM (#23349798)
          I was going to write a long, thoughtful post in reply to yours, then I noticed the Ayn Rand quote in your sig. Sorry, I don't argue with religious fanatics.
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by RingDev ( 879105 )

          If I'm an investor, I'd be less likely to put my money into a company constructing infrastructure resources that aren't in their power to control

          So you wouldn't consider investing in Power companies? Or Oil/Gas production companies? or telecoms? You're cutting out an awful lot of highly profitable and stable investment opportunities. But I guess if you prefer the unregulated industries, there are a whole lot of penny stock options for you. I've got some SCO shares for sale if you'd like ;)

          Just trying to follow the dots here.

          You are an investor.
          Your local ISP provides an investment oppertunity.
          Your local ISP has a near monopoly on the market.
          The fed

          • "So you wouldn't consider investing in Power companies? Or Oil/Gas production companies? or telecoms? You're cutting out an awful lot of highly profitable and stable investment opportunities"

            Power companies are a steady income, by virtue of their monopolies. But they're not particularly exciting, due to their cost+ style pricing.

            Oil companies, post "windfall profits tax" would be a terrible investment.

            Telecoms.. Well, a few seem to have done okay so far, but quite a few have failed completely. Did you bet
          • by Fatal67 ( 244371 )
            Or.. try this..

            Your local ISP spent billions to build out an infrastructure to provide services.

            Your local ISP has a business model that works and allows them to provide services.

            Your not so local content company wants to be able to use that infrastructure 100% without paying a penny to the company that built that infrastructure or they may go out of business because they can't use someone else's resources for free.

            Your not so local government makes laws that forces your ISP to give their infrastructure to
            • by RingDev ( 879105 )

              Your not so local content company wants to be able to use that infrastructure 100% without paying a penny to the company that built that infrastructure or they may go out of business because they can't use someone else's resources for free.

              Uhh, not sure where that came from as it has nothing to do with net neutrality. And last I heard, local content companies have to lease last mile lines from the owning company. Those companies which were subsidies heavily by the government and our tax dollars.

              Your not so local government makes laws that forces your ISP to give their infrastructure to these other companies for free.

              Still curious on which law this is?

              Your local ISP can no longer afford to subsidize the youtubes and vonages of the world and goes out of business.

              How is my local ISP subsidizing YouTube? YouTube has it's own ISP, they pay hansomely to push their bandwidth out. My local ISP isn't paying YouTube. Sure, YouTube's traffic crosses my ISP's network, but I am payin

              • by Fatal67 ( 244371 )

                The argument has been that the amount users pay doesn't cover the new consumption levels of some users.

                The ISP's originally tried to make the argument that content providers should pay them, but that went over like a lead balloon and started the net neutrality debate. The ISP's at the time said someone had to pay for it, and they wanted it to be the companies, not the end users. You can argue whether you believe that statement or not, but they did say it.

                Since they, the ISP's, couldn't get the content to p
                • There are 2 ends to every connection, but only one end is paying. The content won't pay so now a way must be found to have the user pay. If, in the process of doing so, it also negatively impacts peer 2 peer usage, you won't see the ISP complaining.

                  Except that the other end does pay. Content providers pay their ISPs for bandwidth. ISPs have peering agreements [wikipedia.org] with other ISPs where either one end pays the other or neither pay. This happens until they reach your ISP, whom you are paying.

                  In other words, the

                  • by Fatal67 ( 244371 )
                    When it's customer to customer, both ends are paying.

                    If you are able to peer with the AT&T, Sprint's and level 3s, you would be accurate.

                    But the current state is that these large content companies buy their traffic from a company such as level 3.

                    Since level 3 won't peer with me, I have to pay them 20 bucks per meg (95th percentile) for that traffic. Why should I have to pay in order to get that you tube traffic to you? What if I decide I will not pay for that traffic any more? Shouldn't the content
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        Here's the missing piece of your argument:

        The broadband market is becoming more competitive and net neutrality regulations could hamper investment in broadband networks, some Republicans said during a hearing this week.

        It's easy to argue the market is becoming more competitive when the starting point is 0. It's also true that net neutrality regulations could hamper investment in the 1 or 2 broadband networks currently in place -- because people would be investing in the alternative networks instead.

        Talk about one-sided arguments. This is why unnecessary laws != net neutrality laws, and why net neutrality laws are necessary.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      In general, my "keep government small and out of our lives" sensibilities would be opposed to a Network Neutrality bill. I'd be afraid that they would muck things up too much. However, the only thing worse than government interference is giant corporations run amok. At least the government (somewhat) answers to the public. Giant corporations answer only to shareholders. In the case of ISPs, they also hold near-monopoly power. Want a broadband Internet connection? You can go with the Cable Company or
  • by CDMA_Demo ( 841347 ) on Friday May 09, 2008 @08:25AM (#23348558) Homepage
    Whats wrong with "Net Equality"? Oh, i know....
    • by ShieldW0lf ( 601553 ) on Friday May 09, 2008 @08:49AM (#23348718) Journal
      They're trying to get it passed by a bunch of conservatives. "Net Equality" reminds them of communism and sharing, which they don't like. "Net Neutrality" on the other hand, reminds them of Swiss bankers, which every rich conservative likes. Neutrality is a much easier sell than equality.
    • What's wrong with net neutrality? It's a network, it's completely neutral to any party. It has absolutely no influence over the data and its intended destination; it's just completely neutral. I really can't think how the word "equality" applies.
      • Net equality could be misread as making sure every [NIC/computer/process/meatbag] gets a cap on data transfer rates so that others get their "fair" share. Yay, we all have a 4GB/month cap, now we're equal! You wanted to download a free OSS OS DVD? Sorry, that's illegal per the net equality act. I'm sure there are more than a few groups that would like "net equality".
    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by redxxx ( 1194349 )
      What makes a man turn neutral? Lust for gold? Power? Or were you just born with a heart full of neutrality?
      • Lust for gold?
        As silly as Zapp Brannigan is, I think "Lust for gold" is a real motive for turning neutral.
  • The New York Times? (Score:3, Informative)

    by 19thNervousBreakdown ( 768619 ) <davec-slashdot&lepertheory,net> on Friday May 09, 2008 @08:29AM (#23348602) Homepage

    The legislation, introduced Thursday, earned praised from ...

    ... with Comcast saying it has slowed some customer access to the BitTorrent peer-to-peer protocol during times of network congestion, they say.

    Competition is happened ...

    That's just from a quick read-through. This is the New York Times?

  • Competition (Score:5, Insightful)

    by 77Punker ( 673758 ) <spencr04 @ h i g h p o i n t.edu> on Friday May 09, 2008 @08:35AM (#23348640)
    I don't know about their dream world, but I live in a metropolitan area with 1.1 million people. When I got broadband 8 years ago, Road Runner was the only option.
    There's DSL now, but it costs the same price for much lower speed. I'd like to have options, and I'm moving across the country to Tempe soon. Hopefully things are better there.
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by MBGMorden ( 803437 )

      When I got broadband 8 years ago, Road Runner was the only option.
      There's DSL now, but it costs the same price for much lower speed. I'd like to have options,

      That situation is actually MUCH better than many, many people in the country. I have slow, expensive DSL at my house. My choices are to use that and accept whatever they decide (which thankfully, they've not imposed bandwidth caps or any throttling yet, but the reliability of the connection can be spotty sometimes), or if I don't like that I'm SOL. Even if I went back to dial-up the only company with a local access number to me is the same company that I get DSL from.

  • by NoobHunter ( 1090113 ) on Friday May 09, 2008 @08:36AM (#23348644)
    WEe're currently experiencing the same issues up here in Canada. You guys have Comcast, we have Rogers and Bell. Also, I have to argue that Net Neutrality would hamper ISPs....if anything, it would promote MORE freedom do to whatever it is you do on the Net without having to worry about how much money is needed to guarantee that people can actually reliably access your website. In the US, the Gov't is by the people, for the people and of the people....who the hell in the US from the people want to give Telecorps more power? We, in Canada, are dealing with the same shite... http://www.michaelgeist.ca/content/view/2463/125/ [michaelgeist.ca]
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by porcupine8 ( 816071 )
      At least the argument that competition and free market will keep companies from abusing non-neutrality makes some kind of sense in Canada. I was checking out providers in Montreal recently, and it looks like you actually *gasp* get a choice of who to get broadband from! If one company is slowing things down, you might actually be able to get comparable service from another company! In the U.S. you are lucky if you have one cable provider AND one broadband provider in your area. I live in a neighborhood with
      • Sorry, that should say "one cable provider AND one DSL provider," not "broadband."
      • yeah. all the ILECs (bell, telus, sasktel, and whoever else) are required to lease out lines at a fixed cost. very nice for competition (i run out of fingers counting all the companies that i could get service from), though bell is/was screwing with throttling other provides.
  • Parse these lies (Score:2, Insightful)

    by PopeRatzo ( 965947 ) *

    The broadband market is becoming more competitive and net neutrality regulations could hamper investment in broadband networks, some Republicans said during a hearing this week

    One would think that after a while it would get to be a chore to have to lie day after day to millions of people, but I guess the payback for "some Republicans" is great enough that their willing to step up to the challenge.

    And I guess they're being rewarded richly enough by their corporate masters that they are able to say things li

    • by maxume ( 22995 ) on Friday May 09, 2008 @08:56AM (#23348758)
      Yes, the Carter era was a bonanza compared to the Reagan-Bush I years (things were pretty good under Clinton, but his economic policies were closer to Reagan than, say, Kennedy or Johnson).

      It's a ridiculous simplification to attribute the presence or lack of economic success to the man in office at the time, because there are policies that take many years to take effect or unwind, but the idea that taxing wealthy people at 90% is smart is just silly. Wealthy people pay ~25% taxes on their income at the moment, that could easily go north of 35% without really hurting anything, but there is a good debate somewhere near 50%.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Your So Wrong.

      First time poster, long term reader.

      "The periods in our history when we had the most stringent regulations (and the highest taxes) also happened to be periods of greatest economic and job growth, as well as the strongest and most wealthy middle class."

      Its well noted that reducing taxes on those that actually pay the bills in your country increases the amount of tax that they pay, i.e people stop running from the tax man and just start paying it because its less than the risk of getting caught.
      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • It's not the level of taxes, my criminal friend, it's the distribution of taxes.

        Tax burden in the USA has shifted significantly from the rich to the middle class. Sure, the tax rates tell one story but loopholes and dodges let the rich guys avoid most of their responsibility.

      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by rukkyg ( 1028078 )
        In the '90s, Clinton deregulated several industries. Among them: commercial power, media, and investment banking.

        Current situation in commercial power: deregulated markets are seeing huge increases in rates; there is little-to-no new-plant build, the infrastructure is crumbling, and brown-outs all over the country are likely to be necessary within a decade unless something changes.

        Current situation in media: there are 3 media companies, owned by even larger companies, that provide something like 85% of all
      • Explain this, then (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Travoltus ( 110240 )
        Show me one time in American history where conservatism (economic laissez-faire, in particular) has served us well.

        We de-regulated banks and got the Great Depression - that is, that whole economic collapse thing from unstable banks long before your Smoot-Hawley boogeyman ever came along. Oh and how was that Soviet grain production going around the 1970s? Compared to socialist America, I mean.

        Tell us, what ruin came of America from the New Deal? Oh noes, that preceded a nice long run of American prosperity.
        • But you forget about the great gains in manufacturing, aerospace, interstate commerce, and so much more that was a great boost to our economy. That stuff couldn't have been a driving force for our economic success? Do you really think all success comes down to policy? I don't.
        • How about showing you the history of it, and the good and bad that's come of it?

          http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/commandingheights/ [pbs.org]

          the downside from deregulation came from the fact that people's wages were artificially high from barriers to trade. when those barriers were removed they thought that they'd still be earning the same amount of money because people would naturally want to buy higher priced goods believing them to be higher quality.

          Turns out that reputations for quality have to be built, and tend to be si
      • by remmelt ( 837671 )
        > Why don't you go to graduate school? Or develop an innovation?

        Because someone has to mow the lawns of the rich. Someone has to paint their fences, pick up their trash, sell them services, assemble household appliances, etc. The economy is not about the rich against the losers who should have gotten an education.

        Your point is so completely besides reality that it hurts.
      • by Jaysyn ( 203771 )

        It's sad that a twenty-one year old psych nurse from Australia knows more about economics and YOUR history than you.
        Oh boy, another 20-something that has all of the answers. Don't be sad, I was right with you 10 years or so ago.

      • by SydShamino ( 547793 ) on Friday May 09, 2008 @11:15AM (#23350444)

        Most of your countries tax spending is footed by the rich. And why should they subsidize your lifestyle?
        The rich depend on public-school-educated police officers to keep them safe at home.
        The rich depend on public-school-educated employees to make them money.
        The rich depend on public-school-educated workers to build the products they buy with their money.
        The rich depend on public-school-educated professionals to fill their prescriptions.
        The rich depend on public-financed road networks to move their products.
        The rich depend on public-financed communication networks (like the subsidized phone system and the government-funded internet) to enable their businesses.
        The rich depend on public-financed military to protect their business interests overseas.
        The rich depend on public-financed military to protect their country from invasion.
        The rich depend on public-financed social, medical, and economic safety nets to prevent the type of discontent among the poor that create revolution.

        The poor depend on many of the above to survive, but, in absence of those things, the poor who have nothing to lose would revolt and restructure their society to provide them. Eliminating the safety nets and social programs would make things very bad for the poor for a time, then make things better after the revolution. Eliminating the safety nets and social programs would make things better for the rich for a time, then make things much, much worse after the revolution.

        The rich have gotten far more out of the system than the poor, and they have far more to lose if the system breaks down. It is only and truly fair that they pay their fair share to fund it. That fair share, proportionally, is much larger percentage of their income.
      • As a rule, I don't respond to ACs, but some of your comments are so ridiculous, they demand a response.

        Regulations only serve to raise prices.

        In the grand scheme of things, maybe. Companies always whine about being regulated and how much it will cost them to implement the regulations but they don't need an excuse to raise prices. Comcast does it all the time since it has a monopoly in the areas it serves. No new regulations have been passed requiring them to do anything more than they already do

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        You make a lot of dramatically incorrect assertions, many of which are figures that are simply wrong, but let's focus just on this:

        "Regulations only serve to raise prices."

        The last major deregulation we had in the US was an energy deregulation that led to tripling of power costs in California and frequent blackouts due to massive collusion among energy suppliers. $20 billion was flat out stolen from Californians, but since the Texan energy companies that did the stealing were controlled by friends of Mr. B
      • Its well noted that reducing taxes on those that actually pay the bills in your country increases the amount of tax that they pay
        "Well noted" by whom?

        You seem to have a higher estimation of your knowledge of US history and economics that is deserved. In fact, your "knowledge" seems to have come from one of the many Regnery Press books that are meant to teach "economics" to right-wing fools.

        Next time, find a book that has actual data in it.
    • by Zontar_Thing_From_Ve ( 949321 ) on Friday May 09, 2008 @09:13AM (#23348886)

      One would think that after a while it would get to be a chore to have to lie day after day to millions of people, but I guess the payback for "some Republicans" is great enough that their willing to step up to the challenge.

      I think you are right about the majority of Republicans. They've just been bought. However, some actually do believe that stuff. It is typical Republican mantra to say "Government bad. Business good." "All regulation bad. All deregulation good." "The free market solves all ills." So I can see that there might actually be a few Republicans who honestly believe that the free market is solving this problem, but I do think that most of the Republican opposition is simply because the big providers paid them enough to oppose it.
  • by jonwil ( 467024 ) on Friday May 09, 2008 @08:43AM (#23348688)
    Even if this passes, it wont necessarily help. The lawyers for the big telcos/cable companies will spend the next decade in courtrooms coast to coast trying to argue for their interpretation of what "provide service in a non-discriminatory manner" actually means.
  • Deny them common carrier status.
  • by erroneus ( 253617 ) on Friday May 09, 2008 @08:57AM (#23348762) Homepage
    "If you aren't [planning on] doing anything wrong, then you have nothing to fear from this net neutrality law."

    But ultimately the problem as I see it is that the telecoms don't think it's wrong to do what they have been doing and/or what they plan to do... especially since there is no law that identifies it as such.
    • by esocid ( 946821 )
      They probably don't think what they're doing is wrong, because they are so disillusioned it doesn't sink in. I think a more fitting quote would be:
      "If you aren't [planning on] doing anything wrong to millions of paying customers, contractually obligated to a service that you aren't providing, then you have nothing to fear from this net neutrality law."
  • by bleh-of-the-huns ( 17740 ) on Friday May 09, 2008 @09:02AM (#23348792)
    Competition is supposed to bring down the prices of products.. yet all I have seen in the last 6 months is 3 rate hikes (verizon fios)... and I have plenty of options..... oh wait, no I don't.. I have Cable (Comcast can go F themselves into oblivion so thats not an option), and Fios (if I was to include TV then I also have DTV or Dish as an option)..

    A duopoly is not competitive, and I have no options for DSL or any other landline based solution other then dialup. Sat internet is not an option, too much latency
    • by esocid ( 946821 )
      I have no idea in what world those people live who claim that the

      broadband market is becoming more competitive and net neutrality regulations could hamper investment in broadband networks

      . Last time I checked, like everyone else, I found out that I only had one (and if you're lucky 2 or 3) provider(s) in the area. The fact that we come out as 15/30 in the 2008 ITIF rankings [broadbandgenie.co.uk] should say something since costs increase and choices decrease, and bandwidths have been creeping so slowly, whereas Japan has the high

    • Well, competing on the free market was supposed to bring the prices down, _but_ only as long as certain preconditions are met. The whole free-market theory is based on the assumption that the market situation has:

      1. well informed buyers making the choices, from

      2. a choice of perfectly interchangeable products, from

      3. many suppliers for each product

      Basically it's like the market for, I don't know, almost anything in the 18'th and most of 19 century. Or like the market for sliced bread or orange juice nowaday
  • It might hamper THEIR investments, but if they did not invest, somebody else would. They are just being protectionist yet again. I am so tired of having to listen to their bull.
  • by sloth jr ( 88200 ) on Friday May 09, 2008 @09:15AM (#23348904)
    That's just the biggest crock of shit ever. Customers will demand service that doesn't completely suck, and that's going to drive broadband investment more than anything else.
  • by rkhalloran ( 136467 ) on Friday May 09, 2008 @09:26AM (#23349002) Homepage
    For most markets, you have either cable or DSL. In large markets, you probably have both. In some VERY major markets (Bos-Wash metroplex, California, etc), you may have fiber-optic and cable.

    Outside of that last group, you really don't have a choice of providers, so you're stuck with whatever crappy TOS they give you. Just look at the recent news about Comcast throttling P2P, and now talking about monthly traffic caps. Guess how long that would last if they actually *DID* have competition for customers?

    Sadly, the prospects of this bill getting anywhere in the current whores-for-corporations Congress is about nil, but it probably looks good for Conyers' re-election campaign.
  • by rnturn ( 11092 ) on Friday May 09, 2008 @10:05AM (#23349396)

    ... and spill my coffee.

    ``The broadband market is becoming more competitive and net neutrality regulations could hamper investment in broadband networks...''

    Oh really. In my town we have all of two options for "broadband": Comcast and At&T. Want a business class line from either of those? Prepare to pay through the nose. And I haven't checked out whether this is true with Comcast because, well, they're Comcast, but from AT&T a business class line is no indication that you'll be able to run servers on your broadband connection. You just get to pay more.

    These two have a captive market so they have little to no incentive to make a better offereing. Heck, from what I understand the area that we moved away from nearly eight years ago still doesn't even offer ADSL. And when we moved it was two years past its supposedly scheduled installation in the local office. So that is ten years for that area. So just how would net neutrality keep AT&T from installing updated equipment in their local office?

    There was a promising alternative to those two: a wireless provider that included a plan for small businesses for a pretty decent connection -- same bandwidth for upload and download -- for a price much lower than either of the two biggies. The catch? Well it turns out all that inbound bandwidth I'd get with a business class connection would be wasted since the local manager decided to prohibit businesses from running their own servers. I'll try again in a year and hope that their management has gotten smarter. Until then, we'll struggle along with our IDSL connection from Covad.

    I never thought I'd wind up living in a country that's turning out to be such a technological backwater.

  • by davide marney ( 231845 ) on Friday May 09, 2008 @11:03AM (#23350282) Journal
    The proper function of government is not to pick market winners and losers, but to look out for the common interests of the people. Most can agree that an open, freely competitive environment has a better chance at meeting our common interests than a closed, noncompetitive environment. (The catastrophic history of communism, alone, should be evidence enough of the truth of this proposition.)

    Do we have an open, freely competitive market for telecommunications services in the US? The answer is clearly, no. We have a marginally competitive market composed of government-granted monopolies.

    The problem isn't that we have "too much" government regulation. Without a grant of monopoly -- a government regulation -- the network operators wouldn't have a network to operate in the first place. The problem is we have the wrong kind of regulations. The government shouldn't be granting monopolies in the first place. Rather, it should be setting interoperability standards and requirements that keep the market as open and freely competitive as possible.

    Seen in this light, then, these bills are a welcome addition. They at least set a standard for openness and nondiscrimination, which is a good thing for a government to be doing.
  • Packets from different types of flows require different handling to share the network bandwidth under congestion without unacceptable degradation.

    A classic example is file transfer via FTP versus real-time audio streams (such as VoIP). Audio streams have a small and (depending on the codec) either limited or constant bandwidth requirement. But they are very sensitive to variations in transit time and to packet loss. FTP, on the other hand, can accept packet loss but has unlimited bandwidth. It will ramp
  • The Conyers bill didn't pass the last time for good reason. See George Ou's excellent analysis explaining why it would be very bad for the Internet, at http://www.formortals.com/Home/tabid/36/EntryID/34/Default.aspx [formortals.com]

The key elements in human thinking are not numbers but labels of fuzzy sets. -- L. Zadeh

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