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Reason: How To Break the Internet (in a Bad Way) 489

Widespread public sentiment favors the FCC's move to impose rules intended to establish "net neutrality"; an anonymous reader writes with a skeptical viewpoint: "No decent person," write Geoffrey Manne and Ben Sperry in a special issue of Reason, "should be *for* net neutrality." Across the board, the authors write, letting the FCC dictate ISP business practices will result in everything they say they're trying to avoid. For instance, one of the best ways to route around a big firm's brand recognition is to buy special treatment in the form of promotions, product placement and the like (payola, after all, is how rock and roll circumvented major label contempt for the genre). That will almost certainly be forbidden under the FCC's version of neutrality.
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Reason: How To Break the Internet (in a Bad Way)

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday April 09, 2015 @01:42PM (#49440241)

    Reason(tm) is the reason I do not call myself a libertarian.

    • by swschrad ( 312009 ) on Thursday April 09, 2015 @02:06PM (#49440513) Homepage Journal

      bad writers paid by bad people to promulgate bad policies to screw almost everybody. that is the billionnaires trying to take back the plantations from the 99%.

      if you read that fishwrap, do exactly the opposite.

    • by quintessencesluglord ( 652360 ) on Thursday April 09, 2015 @02:14PM (#49440623)

      This is one of the areas Reason (and quite a few libertarians to boot) have shot themselves in the foot.

      They don't cite specific instances of where Title II will bring about the doomsday scenarios they paint, and instead engage in FUD over any regulation (which, contrary to popular claim, libertarians should be for as long as they are sensible and fair and needed).

      Instead of railing against the corporate welfare telecos have gotten or that they have gotten immunity for illegal wiretapping, they planted their flag here, which apparently works for this illiterate brand of libertarianism, and have completely omitted the question that brought this about in the first place: customers not receiving their advertized bandwith.

      I mean, they open with a quote from Hayek. Except Hayek was also a proponent of basic income and land value taxes.

      Imagine Reason discussing that other aspect of libertarian thought.

      Not bloody likely.

      • by nobuddy ( 952985 ) on Thursday April 09, 2015 @02:21PM (#49440685) Homepage Journal

        FUD is all the Libertarians have. History shows their ideals wrong every time they are tried.

        Like any idealism, the ideal is a pure form. Nothing survives first contact with humanity. Our inherent greed, selfishness, and lazyness will corrupt it.
        Socialism looks like a utopia on the surface. In reality the lazy people do only as much as they absolutely have to and take all they can get in return. The greedy rise to the top and siphon off the lion's share for themselves.
        Capitalism looks like a great economic option. but again, the lazy sink to the bottom and drag down the economy while the greedy hoard all the resources while trying to get the high score on their bank accounts.
        Libertarianism looks like a great way for selfish people to kill off the poor and handicapped. But in reality the poor and handicapped are reluctant to be killed off.

        • "Socialism looks like a utopia on the surface. In reality the lazy people do only as much as they absolutely have to and take all they can get in return."

          s/lazy people/corporations/g

          Done for you.

        • by Firethorn ( 177587 ) on Thursday April 09, 2015 @02:44PM (#49440907) Homepage Journal

          Like any idealism, the ideal is a pure form. Nothing survives first contact with humanity. Our inherent greed, selfishness, and lazyness will corrupt it.

          Which is pretty much why I'm only willing to call myself 'libertarian leaning', not a full-up member of the party that agrees with the entire platform.

          As quint mentioned, I DO rail against the corporate welfare, the exclusive monopolistic deals signed with various levels of governments, the states forbidding local governments from setting up networks to compete with the local cable/telephone company.

          In my view internet service at this point is equivalent to a utility. My favorite form of utility is a cooperative. If the communication companies manage to piss off a a local government such as a city or township to the point that they're willing to vote for a bond initiative so set up their own ISP, then by golly they should be allowed to set up said ISP. It's a way to set up said cooperative utility.

          • the states forbidding local governments from setting up networks to compete with the local cable/telephone company.

            It depends on what you mean by compete.
            1. If it means "set up a separate company that must be self sustaining and pay back any funds loaned to it by local government" then I would call that competing.
            2. If it means "set up a department where any income shortfalls will be made up out of general revenue and all initial infrastructure expenditures will be paid for by local government" I would not call that competing.

            How can any private company compete with a government organizations who is subsidized by taxes

            • by Half-pint HAL ( 718102 ) on Thursday April 09, 2015 @05:04PM (#49442051)
              On the other hand, if the private companies are going to cherry-pick the neighbourhoods they feel are worth investing in, then they shouldn't be protected from a council-owned public service, if that public service is going to offer universal coverage.
            • Ideally, it'd be the former, but I've seen initiatives where it's more like the latter. Like I said though, if it's a voter led initiative, then it's what they voted for.

              Right now we're doing something very similar in setting up a natural gas distribution company in my town.

        • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday April 09, 2015 @02:59PM (#49441073)

          FUD is all the Libertarians have. History shows their ideals wrong every time they are tried.

          If you want to see the Libertarian Party and Republican Party vision for America, look at H.O.A.s

          What is there about governance, by an unregulated private corporation, under the guise of contract law, with no consumer protections, for a Tea Partyin' disciple of Ayn Rand and Ronald Reagan not to love?

          @ColoradoHOA [twitter.com]

        • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday April 09, 2015 @03:00PM (#49441081)

          As a self-avowed Anarchist (from which Libertarianism descends), I disagree. Even though I know Anarchism as a general philosophy is completely incapable of viable application in any significant context.

          The problem is ideologues. Political philosophies like libertarianism are useful. They distill specific, beneficial perspectives, often informed by historical experiences. They're schools that teach how to use a particular tool, or set of tools. For example, market capitalism, which despite the obvious problems has proven to be the best tool for increasing the _absolute_ wealth of everybody.

          But anybody who let's their political philosophy dictate policy, divorced from pragmatism or other considerations, is just plain stupid.

          I fully support net neutrality because we have plenty of evidence and experience that suggests we need it in this case. Reality should always trump ideology. Of course, maybe net neutrality will lead to a parade of horrible, unintended consequences. But, again, when we have substantial real-world evidence counseling a particular policy, that should trump almost every other consideration.

          (Some people will shout, "slippery slope!" But that's an informal fallacy. I've never seen somebody argue slippery slope and back it up with the necessary points which could make it a proper argument.)

        • by diamondmagic ( 877411 ) on Thursday April 09, 2015 @03:04PM (#49441119) Homepage

          I don't think I've heard this before, that's kind of incredible.

          Why was the United States so successful?

          Why is Hong Kong so much more prosperous than mainland China?

          Can you explain away the sudden increase in output of New Zealand and Switzerland?

          Why is China implementing more private property protections and cheap business startups? (They're also dumping massive amounts of money into fruitless projects, mind you, an area that has clearly failed, e.g. the world's largest shopping mall, and it's completely empty.)

          It's impossible to 100% fully implement any ideology, but looking on a scale, economically free countries, almost uniformly, are more prosperous.

          • by pixelpusher220 ( 529617 ) on Thursday April 09, 2015 @03:34PM (#49441417)

            It's impossible to 100% fully implement any ideology, but looking on a scale, economically free countries, almost uniformly, are more prosperous.

            Economies that balance free market with regulations are the ones that do the best.

            Full scale anarchy is the only truly 'free' market. I.e. whatever I want to do is justified since I want to do it.

            Too many libertarians and other supposedly 'free market' proponents conveniently forget the role regulations play in creating a level playing field...like net neutrality.

          • by SuricouRaven ( 1897204 ) on Thursday April 09, 2015 @04:01PM (#49441589)

            "Why was the United States so successful?"

            Huge tracts of empty land and unexploited resources, after disposing of the former occupents. Isolation from European politics allowing for rapid expansion. A market-driven economy may have been a big help, but it's certainly not the only factor in play.

        • by mellon ( 7048 ) on Thursday April 09, 2015 @03:32PM (#49441405) Homepage

          "The lazy" sinking to the bottom is a commonly-held belief, but in fact being at the bottom is a lot more work than being at the top. It's not because people are "lazy" that they remain at the bottom. It's because most of the value their work produces is taken as profit by their employers, and they are paid the absolute minimum that their employers can get away with. If they were getting a decent cut of the value they create, they wouldn't be poor. That's not to say that there aren't lazy people at the bottom living corruptly, but the claim that if you are at the bottom, you are lazy, is a fallacy.

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by epyT-R ( 613989 )

        DMCA ring a bell? how about SOPA/PIPA? or the old SSSCA? How about all this recent wrangling over 'hate speech' and 'online harassment' that conveniently silences views criticizing 'progressive' expression? Obama's 'kill switch'? Bush's 'there ought to be limits on freedom'? The state's current view on public use of crypto? The behavior of the NSA learned from the snowden leaks?

        I haven't read 'reason' so I can't speak to their views, but the above is certainly something a libertarian would have problems

        • by quintessencesluglord ( 652360 ) on Thursday April 09, 2015 @03:11PM (#49441203)

          Which, again, is libertarians unable to differentiate between bad regulation and no regulation, and engaging in FUD.

          So please, enlighten me: how will Title II regulation lead to DMCA, SOPA, or hate speech codes? If anything, Title II ensures those things won't happen because, get this, the internet is already regulated (now) under some of the loosest standards under law. Any new regulations coming down the pike will affect much much more than the internet, since it will have to cover all of Title II, and will be a bigger fight.

          In fact, I'm rather interested in how Title II will affect mass surveillance, as the laws concerning are much more stringent.

          As with most anything, it's a question of tradeoffs. As libertarian utopia isn't coming any time soon, it might behoove libertarians to consider which ones they are willing to make, instead of this thinly veiled corporate pandering of a very narrow reading of libertarian philosophy.

      • by Comrade Ogilvy ( 1719488 ) on Thursday April 09, 2015 @02:55PM (#49441019)

        The article is a really painful read that takes forever to get to the heart of its points, which seem to be:

        In fact, ISP price discrimination is as likely to help new entrants as hurt them. Non-neutrality offers startups the potential to buy priority access, thus overcoming the inherent disadvantage of newness. With a neutral Internet, on the other hand, the advantages of incumbency can't be routed around by buying a leg-up in speed, access, or promotion.

        That an incumbent content provider might enter into an agreement with an ISP to gain advantage over its smaller competitors in a non-neutral environment may be a reason to scrutinize such agreements under existing antitrust laws. For instance, if an ISP with dominant market share refused to give access to online content that competed with its own, antitrust law might look askance at such conduct. But it doesn't justify presumptively hamstringing an ISP's commercial arrangements when such conduct isn't remotely typical."

        These are actually gobsmacking arguments for any serious libertarian to make. First of all, the idea that a new service should rightly throw money at the problem because new guys cannot compete by merely being simply better on an even playing field completely demolishes the heart of libertarian theory. Second of all, "gee, the gov't might save us from this abuse with antitrust laws" is an endorsement of the idea gov't should solve these kinds of problems. If antitrust law is good, perhaps net neutrality rules would be better? You cannot fall back on gov't competence in an argument against gov't oversight.

        But for me, neither argument matters, even if they were correct. The real problem is the ISPs are making clear promises to their customers, and then they are trying to shake down the content providers with the threat of failing to meet the customer's reasonable expectations, based on what is written in the contract. When I pay for a promise for bandwidth, I want that bandwidth. I do not want the ISP to make secret re-negotiations about what bandwidth really means.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Precisely. Listen: the implication that payola scams were somehow a *good* thing is such a gross misunderstanding of history and so completely backward I don't even know where to start - that practice and all that it subsequently engendered is PRECISELY why the music industry is in the toilet today, it is a freaking case study in how to destroy an industry. They basically discredit their entire piece with that one ignorant statement, ridiculous.

      • libertarians' fundamental thesis seems to be that anything that doesn't harm others freedom's and rights should be allowed. This is a fantastic belief, but in practice there are a lot of things you can do as an individual that can adversely affect society, and end up being regulated. If there is some stupid law on the books prohibiting practice 'X', it is quite likely that at one time someone was doing that very thing and that pissed off enough people that a law got passed.

        On one hand, government trying
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by epyT-R ( 613989 )

      "why I don't call myself a socialist" also applies in this case. This is because we're damned either way. We get network balkanization due to monopolies squabbling for control of the backbone or we get increased state control of the network. Neither are good for liberty, rights, or hell, even a relatively free market.

      We had a brief window of what liberty could be like on the network, but that died awhile ago.

    • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

      by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Thursday April 09, 2015 @02:28PM (#49440743)
      Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • I stopped reading the stupid article when the third paragraph quoted F A Hayek, a fucking idiot economist, as if he ever had anything useful to say about anything. Obvious bullshit propaganda.
  • Screw that (Score:5, Insightful)

    by afidel ( 530433 ) on Thursday April 09, 2015 @01:44PM (#49440271)

    I don't want ANYONE buying promotions into my IP stream! I want my ISP to do their freaking job and shift packets from the source to me, without molestation and without interest or undue visibility into the contents.

    • by Adriax ( 746043 ) on Thursday April 09, 2015 @01:51PM (#49440349)

      Decent people should be against having control of their own information stream.
      Decent people shouldn't trust themselves to have their best interests at heart.
      Decent people should submit to obvious superior corporate control.
      Are you a decent person citizen?

      • Re:Screw that (Score:4, Interesting)

        by RavenLrD20k ( 311488 ) on Thursday April 09, 2015 @02:08PM (#49440543) Journal

        I am indecent, profane, and absolutely obscene... and goddamn proud of it! You can take your goddamn corporate authoritah and shove it up your ass sideways with razorblades then be made to clean up the ensuing blood pool off the floor with your tongue you goddamn corporate bastard!

        *Please note that this is not a personal attack against Adriax and nor is the intended sarcasm completely lost on me... nor is the irony of posting this goddamn disclaimer... but this is seriously what these corporate/PC bastards that think this way need to be told.

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by jeffmeden ( 135043 )

      I don't want ANYONE buying promotions into my IP stream! I want my ISP to do their freaking job and shift packets from the source to me, without molestation and without interest or undue visibility into the contents.

      Sadly, this is impossible. The problem is that there isn't one big pool of "internet" and a bunch of ISPs out there finding ways to sell it to you. Instead, a massive and intricate network of peering agreements exist just to make the internet function at the basic level, and THEN they figure out how to get it to your house. So, it's impossible for the FCC to say "hey verizon treat netflix with the same respect you would any other peer" because peering agreements work both ways, cost both companies money, a

    • Re:Screw that (Score:5, Informative)

      by Crashmarik ( 635988 ) on Thursday April 09, 2015 @02:04PM (#49440503)

      This.
      As long as the isps to my home are monopolies I don't want them engaging in "value added" services.

      Take a look at Comcast and cable TV.

      They have 100%+ markup on the service.
      Then they charge the channels to be on the lineup, which you cant avoid.
      Then they pop their commercials into the programming, usually poorly.

      These people have already demonstrated they are unfit to be trusted with a monopoly. Absolutely no reason to let them monopolize.

  • by Zeek40 ( 1017978 ) on Thursday April 09, 2015 @01:45PM (#49440287)
    "(payola, after all, is how rock and roll circumvented major label contempt for the genre)" It's difficult to take someone's opinions about net neturality seriously when they don't understand the difference between broadcast media and on-demand media.
    • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday April 09, 2015 @01:54PM (#49440391)

      It's even worse when their argument is based around the assumption that Payola is a good thing.

      • It's even worse when their argument is based around the assumption that Payola is a good thing.

        Yeah, I laughed at that as well. It's not like the record industry is the type of business anyone should want to encourage

        http://www.theguardian.com/mus... [theguardian.com]

    • by rnturn ( 11092 )

      There are people/companies that are trying as hard as they can to turn it into something similar to broadcast media or, even worse, cable. It's something they understand. IMHO, it's similar to the way the Web changed once magazine designers started dictating what constituted good web page design -- squinty/headache-inducing text that can't be enlarged, horrible color schemes (including my newest least favorite: gray text on white background.). It wasn't ways pretty for the web user but it's something the de

  • Idiot (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday April 09, 2015 @01:45PM (#49440291)

    Wrong level of abstraction. The constraint is imposed on ISPs not web service providers.

  • Payola (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Chacharoo ( 977107 ) on Thursday April 09, 2015 @01:50PM (#49440347)
    Payola was and is a clearly illegal practice. If corporations are choosing to perpetrate something like payola and say its "because of net neutrality", that would be their rationalization for having broken the law, rather than evidence of a bad law. If there were no payola in radio, God forbid, then DJs would themselves have to choose music based on how cool or groovy or mellifluous it is, rather than on who was kicking them back the most.
    • Learn some history.

      Payola was record companies paying disk jockeys to play specific music. It was made illegal to pay disc jockeys. The job of 'program director' was invented. There is no law against record companies paying program directors to play specific music. Never has been.

  • This is crap (Score:5, Insightful)

    by John.Banister ( 1291556 ) * on Thursday April 09, 2015 @01:53PM (#49440385) Homepage
    The observable behavior of the anti-net neutrality companies speaks very clearly for the reason to have net neutrality rules.
  • by Ichijo ( 607641 ) on Thursday April 09, 2015 @01:59PM (#49440449) Journal

    If lack of competition is the disease and we use regulation to mask the symptoms, won't we end up with more regulation while the disease persists?

    "Whenever faced with a problem, some people say `Lets use regulation.'
    Now, they have two problems."
    (With apologies to D. Tilbrook)

  • by clovis ( 4684 ) on Thursday April 09, 2015 @01:59PM (#49440453)

    1) net neutrality is pushed by a coalition of commies and rent-seeking aristocrats, so you should be against it
    2) no one in government understands the Internet, so whatever they do will be wrong
    3) even if you are a commie, you should know that the market always responds to what the consumers want in spite of corporations attempts at anti-competive practices, so we can trust the ISPs to always do what is best for us

    • by grimmjeeper ( 2301232 ) on Thursday April 09, 2015 @02:13PM (#49440603) Homepage

      #3 is what mystifies me about the libertarian mindset. They believe that everything the government does will fail in one way or another (in spite of evidence that it doesn't always screw up and sometimes produces positive net outcomes) yet they think that private industry is universally benevolent and will always do what the consumer wants in the face of overwhelming evidence to the contrary.

      I just don't get the disconnect from reality there.

  • Oh god the stupid... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by bmo ( 77928 ) on Thursday April 09, 2015 @02:20PM (#49440681)

    I went to Sperry's twitter page.

    The amount of Libertarian derp is stunning.

    Didn't bother with the other author.

    Title II is in effect because the ISPs decided to not play nice with their customers. If everyone liked Comcast, for example, instead of calling it the absolute worst company in customer service, we would never be here.

    The days of the mom-and-pop ISP with direct personal service and "organic growth" of the Internet has been over for more than a decade. And what has taken their places are large customer-fucking entities with abysmal customer service and that absolutely refuse to upgrade infrastructure but instead put caps on use to deal with the demand. And for that they demand ever higher payment. This is after we threw billions at them to install last-mile fiber that they never installed, but instead handed out to the shareholders.

    In the People's Libertarian Paradise of Concord, NH, we have exactly *two* "broadband" providers, both of which suck massively, one of which doesn't even offer broadband as currently defined (=>25Mbps). Comcast and Fairpoint (unfairpoint, fairly bad point, etc)

    That's why we are here. This is "why we can't have nice things."

    Screw both of these guys and Reason magazine too. If not outright corporate shills, they are at least useful idiots.

    Quislings come in all forms.

    --
    BMO

  • by jythie ( 914043 ) on Thursday April 09, 2015 @02:28PM (#49440737)
    Ahm.. is not payola illegal and one of the major reasons cited for corruption and anti-competitive behavior within the music industry which gives us our limited consumer choice and lock in?

    There is also the minor issue that music is an optional cultural consumption, while internet access is a core piece of our infrastructure which no modern business can operate without?
    • Re:Payola? (Score:4, Insightful)

      by gstoddart ( 321705 ) on Thursday April 09, 2015 @02:41PM (#49440881) Homepage

      Clearly, the authors of the paper feel that payola, corruption, and a lack of competition are good things.

      Which is kind of the problem with articles from reason.com, which is so droolingly and un-flinchingly geared to a particular kind of fantasy economics as to make it something bordering on religious dogma.

      Those who believe it are 100% convinced that it is perfect, complete, and any disagreement with it is heresy.

      In fact, as someone who got over the flavor of the Ayn Rand koolaid and saw it for what it was, that's pretty much how it works. It's irrational, it defies both logic and evidence, totally ignores human nature ... but somehow it's holy fucking writ.

      But you just keep acting like the other guy is beneath contempt and loudly saying things like "ah, but you would say that because you're a leftist who hasn't yet realized governments are tyranny, and our fictonal free market will solve all problems."

      There is really nothing more irrational than someone defending this kind of crap.

      This is the base of Rand Paul, which means they've drank so damned much of the koolaid there simply is no alternative, and they'll just go apoplectic trying to use their circular logic to defend it.

  • Bullshit ... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by gstoddart ( 321705 ) on Thursday April 09, 2015 @02:28PM (#49440739) Homepage

    letting the FCC dictate ISP business practices will result in

    The internet not being beholden to ISP business practices.

    ISPs are, and should be treated as, conduits of data which has nothing at all to do with their damned business practices.

    Egged on by a bootleggers-and-Baptists coalition of rent-seeking industry groups and corporation-hating progressives

    Or, you know, supported by corporate ass kissers who would have us believe that whatever the fuck corporations want is somehow good for us, when it's only good for corporations.
    But the net neutrality movement has had less to do with class struggle than with the familiar delusion of technocrats everywhere: that government can "design" a better future if only it pulls the right levers.
    Ah, here goes more bullshit and antigovernment everyone-but-me-is-elitist crap which suggests that preventing companies from acting like douchebags is crippling to companies who want to be douchebags.

    Look, this is libertarian economic drivel which says corporate rent-seeking assholes should be able to extort a cut of someone because they have a successful product, and that it is really important for ISPs to be able to spy on your content to maximize their ad revenue.

    For instance, one of the best ways to route around a big firm's brand recognition is to buy special treatment in the form of promotions, product placement and the like (payola, after all, is how rock and roll circumvented major label contempt for the genre). That will almost certainly be forbidden under the FCC's version of neutrality.

    Yes, because we don't want a fucking internet where you have to be kicking up some payola to some greedy asshole who did nothing other than say "nice innovation you have there, shame if something happened to it".

    You know what needs to change? Companies who sell the newest stuff as if they really have it, refuse to invest in upgrading their infrastructure to keep it relevant, and then piss and moan when their outdated business model of "do nothing and keep charging more" proves to be useless.

    This whole article is written by a corporate apologist who is changing the definitions of "innovation" and "stale business model" to make it sound like encumbant ISPs who are too lazy/cheap to be able to to charge a toll (in the form of payola or blocking traffic) so they can piggy back on the success of companies who actually make stuff.

    This is entirely about saying "we should be able to gouge NetFlix, because they've come up with something cool and we haven't".

    This is arguing for the right to be a parasite middleman, by companies who are otherwise collapsing under their own crushing weight of incompetence, laziness, and the feeling of being entitled to revenue they do not generate.

  • Interesting article (Score:5, Interesting)

    by MobyDisk ( 75490 ) on Thursday April 09, 2015 @02:42PM (#49440893) Homepage

    The article is full of colorful language about network neutrality advocates, but also some sound reasoning that is unfortunately based on technical misunderstandings or misinformation. Once you look past the mischaracterizations (it's a political piece, after all - you speak to your audience and insult everyone who disagrees with you before you even consider making a point!), it's actually not that bad. There are lots of items in it that I'd like to respond to, as if I could fix the author's misunderstandings, but I'll just pick a one:

    The more good content that providers make available, the more consumers will demand access to sites and apps, and the more ISPs will invest in the infrastructure to facilitate delivery.

    That's what we want, but that isn't what is happening. The ISPs have little economic incentive to invest in infrastructure since they are mostly monopolies. That's why Comcast chose, instead of upgrading their bandwidth when customers started watching Netflix, to pressure Netflix into co-locating servers within Comcast's network. They only could do that because they are a monopoly. Comcast customers could not choose to switch to another provider, and Netflix cannot choose to route around Comcast.

    One would think that after 10 years of political teeth-gnashing, regulatory rule making, and relentless litigating, there would by now be a strong economic case for net neutrality—a clear record of harmful practices and agreements embodying the types of behavior that only regulation can pre-empt. But there isn't.

    This sounds like someone citing their ignorance on a topic as evidence that something didn't happen. In general, the authors need to recognize that:
    - ISPs are tied to cable/telecom monopolies.
    - ISPs can't pick different "business models" without impacting individuals' free speech.
    - We learned these lessons from what came before the internet. :-) Clearly they never had to dial-up to Prodigy to see one "web site" and then use Compuserve to see another one, then dial AOL to email someone else.
    - We've had real issues without Network Neutrality.

    It will be interesting to see how "broken" the internet is in 10 years. Usually those predicting doom and gloom fade away. We shall see, eh?

  • by pesho ( 843750 ) on Thursday April 09, 2015 @03:20PM (#49441287)
    Whoever put together their web site forgot the <Irony> tag. Otherwise it is hard to explain how a site calling itself "Reason" so blatantly demonstrates complete lack of the stuff.
  • by Seor Jojoba ( 519752 ) on Thursday April 09, 2015 @03:21PM (#49441295) Homepage

    1. Pick a problem, any problem.
    2. Claim it can be solved with laissez faire capitalism and will be worsened with any form of government intervention.
    3. Ignore any evidence to the contrary.

    In this article, the author acts as though the threat of data discrimination from cable and phone companies is fantastical speculation. But it's already happened, and so many times. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/D... [wikipedia.org] In most markets, people only have one or two choices for a broadband connection, so they can't vote with their dollars effectively to resolve the problem. Much as I enjoy the elegance of free market principles, the Invisible Hand is not gonna fix this one.

  • by wonkey_monkey ( 2592601 ) on Thursday April 09, 2015 @03:21PM (#49441301) Homepage

    "No decent person," write Geoffrey Manne and Ben Sperry in a special issue of Reason, "should be *for* net neutrality."

    No decent person? You might want to try not insulting people if you're trying to win them round to your point of view.

  • by blang ( 450736 ) on Thursday April 09, 2015 @03:23PM (#49441311)

    would you be willing to bet against these guys not being paid lobbyists for Comcast?
    NON-PROFIT NON-PARTISAN think tanks don't earn their money for salt on the bread by submitting stories to Reason.
    They depend on generous sugar daddies to fund their thinktankery.
    Comcast has a vast network of lobbyists.
    Thyey clearlyt hate net neutrality, and you can bet your sweet ass that it has nothing to do with th e"fear of breaking the internet", and everything to do with not wanting government at all to regulate thewir business, just as Wall street don't want SEC to regulate them, or the oil companies not wanting the EPA to regulate them.
    Corporations since the dawn of industry ALWAYS claimed that they don't want regulations, that they are good guys that can self-regulate, and that the invisible hand of the market will make everything OK.

    We KNOW that if Comcast was to control the internet, it would very soon look like someone invented broadcast TV anno 1955.
    Comcast would want to block skype, netflix, pandora etc. They want the option to start cutting off or hamnstringing third party services in order to better place their own service. They would love to play highway robbers or "toll gate" bandits extracting a toll for users.
    They want the content providers to share ad or royalties revenue with them. And they want more flexibility to charge for "premium" content, under the giuse of quality of service. And who know what else they want around the corner. Maybe we wont really know what they want until they have a near monopoly so that they can start gouging folks with no alternative provider to escape to.

  • by goodmanj ( 234846 ) on Thursday April 09, 2015 @04:35PM (#49441851)

    The argument, and the Payola example, boil down to this: the way to prevent people from censoring your content is to pay them not to.
    Counterargument: the way to prevent people from censoring your content is to make it illegal to do so, rather than buying in to their extortion racket.

    Payola worked because the station owners controlled what got broadcast. But that's not how an open communications network is supposed to work.

  • by kheldan ( 1460303 ) on Thursday April 09, 2015 @04:52PM (#49441961) Journal
    What the ISPs want is the equivalent of buying a Cisco brand ethernet switch, wondering why the speed is only 10Mb/s for some of devices plugged into it compared to others, only to find out that if you're not using 'devices made by Cisco or Cisco's partner companies' that the flow of data through the switch will be limited to 10Mb/s instead of the full 1Gb/s the switch is rated for. You'd return it to where you bought it and demand a full refund, wouldn't you? There is no sane Universe where anything other than Net Neutrality makes sense, unless these ISPs want to provide the connection and equipment for FREE to everyone, which is like 'free lunch' if you get my drift. We are PAYING for the connection, we demand to GET the connection, unfettered, not filtered, not slowed or accelerated for anyone, anywhere, for any reason. Them, them, fuck them, and fuck these 'Reason' idiots, too, they need to STFU and GTFO, stop shilling for Crapcast and whoever else.

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