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Sir Tim Berners-Lee Makes a Last-Minute Plea To Save Net Neutrality in Europe (theverge.com) 44

An anonymous reader shares a report on The Verge: Sir Tim Berners-Lee, the man who created the world wide web, is calling on regulators in Europe to protect net neutrality and "save the open internet." In a letter released this week, Berners-Lee, Stanford law professor Barbara van Schewick, and Harvard law professor Larry Lessig urged European regulators to implement guidelines that would close loopholes in net neutrality legislation that the European Parliament approved in October 2015. They also called on internet users to voice their opposition online, before the public consultation period on the guidelines ends on July 18th. "Network neutrality for hundreds of millions of Europeans is within our grasp," the letter reads. "Securing this is essential to preserve the open Internet as a driver for economic growth and social progress. But the public needs to tell regulators now to strengthen safeguards, and not cave in to telecommunications carriers' manipulative tactics."
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Sir Tim Berners-Lee Makes a Last-Minute Plea To Save Net Neutrality in Europe

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  • EME (Score:1, Offtopic)

    by SkunkPussy ( 85271 )

    Well we've already lost an open web due to Encrypted Media Extensions. Do we even need net neutrality any more?

    • I regard EME much less as loss than as workaround needed to abandon proprietary plugins like adobe flash. Yes, EME is evil, but flash is even more evil.

    • Well we've already lost an open web due to Encrypted Media Extensions. Do we even need net neutrality any more?

      Completely different issues altogether. I can personally choose not to visit a website that uses EME, just like I personally choose not to visit a website that condones Holocaust denial and the like. If net neutrality dies, my ISP can deny me the bandwidth necessary to go to certain websites.

      Here's an analogy that might help. Imagine it's about 1950 or so. EME is like a locked vending box for a newspaper stack, you have to put a quarter in the slot to be able to read a copy. Net neutrality is like a polic

      • by Anonymous Coward

        > Completely different issues altogether. I can personally choose not to visit a website that uses EME

        Just like you can avoid public surveillance cameras by choosing not to leave your house.

        Sure today EME is not widely deployed. But that's only because its not even a finished standard. It can and will be used far beyond Berners-Lee's imagination. Just like the DMCA is now regularly used to censor speech that offends powerful people and corps. It isn't just about having some restricted content, its ab

    • by GuB-42 ( 2483988 )

      It is because we have things like EME that net neutrality is important.
      EME in itself is not bad, it is just another DRM system that can be used by content providers. Those who don't want to use it don't have to use it, and this is where net neutrality comes in : it makes sure that content providers who chose not to use it get their fair share of bandwidth.

  • Most people don't want "neutrality", they want priority...

    Net neutrality means dumb pipe. If your bits aren't getting through fast enough, you get a fatter pipe, not restrict other peoples' traffic.

    • by 110010001000 ( 697113 ) on Friday July 15, 2016 @12:06PM (#52518443) Homepage Journal
      People do want "dumb pipes". They just don't realize it. It is in their best interest to do so. The vast majority doesn't even know how networks work.
    • NN usually allows QoS.

      As it should. NN is tricky.

      Good thing we put it in the hands of our wise and incorruptible politicians, they are sure to do a good job and efficiently correct any mistakes they make. (Does that really need a /sarc?)

      • NN usually allows QoS.

        As it should. NN is tricky. (I can't tell, did the sarc tag apply here also? If it did, ignore my post)

        I'm sorry, but that is a mistaken belief. NN and QoS are in direct opposition to each other. You can have one, but never both. The internet must be made agnostic to be neutral. QoS is just the cheap way out of building robust infrastructure. It is done for expedience, not to raise "quality". It can serve well in a private intranet, but on the WAN QoS is pure politics to prioritize b

  • Whether your note gets heeded by EU parliamentarians is mostly dependent on how many other notes you attached to it, and what denomination those notes have.

  • EU does not care about elections (Remember referendums in France, Netherland, Ireland, Greece?). Mr Junker even openly said there was no democratic alternative to EU treaties.

    So why EU would care about public opinion from a public consultation? Be sure they will discard anything they did not want to hear.

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