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Tech at Night: Net Neutrality, Free Press, FCC, Google, Verizon

Tech at Night

We’re very late “tonight” for Tech at Night on “Friday,” but that’s because the time I normally spend on these posts I instead spent setting up my new iPad, which I will need for next month’s RedState Gathering. So apologies all around, and here we go.

Net Neutrality news is picking up steam. While the official story is that the FCC has cowed before Free Press‘s complaints and has ended its meetings with industry leaders to plan its Net Neutrality action, that’s not the center of the action anymore, necessarily.

Not when industry, both for and against Free Press’s Net Neutrality, is going its own way.

When Amazon.com proposed a flexible Net Neutrality compromise, I Said it was a step in the right direction. I still say that when now Google and Verizon are reportedly in talks. The Net Neutrality left is alarmed, judging by this passages from an OpenLeft.com newsletter:

The New York Times is reporting that Verizon and Google have cut a deal to be announced next week that “could allow Verizon to speed some online content to Internet users more quickly if the content’s creators are willing to pay for the privilege. The charges could be paid by companies, like YouTube, owned by Google, for example, to Verizon, one of the nation’s leading Internet service providers, to ensure that its content received priority as it made its way to consumers. The agreement could eventually lead to higher charges for Internet users.”

That would mean the end of the Internet as we currently know it.

Translation: Google is realizing that innovation is important, and if the FCC gets the power it’s trying to take, through Title II Reclassification, then disastrous consequences like price controls and censorship would soon follow.

Plus, as I pointed out before, as Google’s YouTube uses ever more bandwidth on services like the planned “4k” super HD videos, the firm must work with ISPs to ensure the data gets from Google to the viewers in a smooth and orderly way.

So this puts in a new light, the reports that Chairman Julius Genachowski has abruptly ended all of the Net Neutrality meetings, even those with Free Press, going as far as to pull his Chief of Staff Ed Lazarus out of a meeting in progress. Doesn’t it?

If Google is telling the Obama Administration “Hey, we’ve got this,” and makes a big arrangement with one of the leading ISPs in America, with investment in wired and wireless broadband, then this could leave Free Press entirely in the cold.

The pressure may be working, but we must keep it up. We must let people know just how much of a radical extreme group Free Press is, with its neo-Marxist aims of single payer “Media Reform.” We must shout that the FCC’s plans are meeting strong, bipartisan opposition in the Congress, are in defiance of the law and the courts, and would represent an unprecedented power grab online. And we must educate people about how new technology and competition, not regulation and restriction, are what we need for the best Internet access we can get.

What’s more reliable: your power company, with heavy government regulation, or your wireless Internet company, with light Telecommunications Act protections?

COMMENTS

  • fpete13527

    …..except for the progressive king of tax evaders and all round dim bulb -
    John (I dodge taxes but you can’t) Kerry.

    H/T Michelle Malkin
    http://bit.ly/ailiqw

    Great post Neil.

  • http://www.redstate.com/etcartman Kenny Solomon

    http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=D9HEIKUG0

    A Saudi telecom official says an agreement between the authorities and the Canadian maker of the BlackBerry smart phone has been reached averting a ban on the service.

    He said the deal would involve Canadian firm Research in Motion installing a server inside the kingdom allowing the Saudi government to monitor BlackBerry data.

    ===========

    Hey Research In Motion, this is Saudi Arabia.

    This is the deal we’re offering: You will install systems and software in our nation’s wireless grid that only we in the government will be able to access for command and control of our people, looking for anyone searching for even a modicum of freedom, or worse, communicating with an Eeeeevil Jooooooooooo.

    The GPS section must be accurate to within one meter and never ‘go down’ except for when we schedule maintenance (which we will not inform anyone of that kind of time frame).

    You will train our people on all aspects of programming and maintenance of the system, including making the source codes available if and whenever we deem it ti be necessary for the security of the kingdom.

    ————

    R.I.M. responds:

    We’re a private company and believe in everyone’s right as a human being to free speech without government monitoring or intervention. What you’re asking us to do is be an accessory to the the destruction of a basic human right, with the distinct possibility of private citizens ‘getting disappeared’, possibly imprisoned and maybe even murdered at the hands of your government.

    ————

    The Saudis reply:

    Yes, you are totally correct. You WILL comply, because it would be a real shame if anything would happen to your company, the facilities, all your executives and their families…… and besides, we’re paying you to do this.

    ————

    R.I.M.:

    Hey, no problem, we’ll see you tomorrow to take measurements of the rooms where you want the gear installed.

  • Next93

    It seems to me like a big part of the problem is that we’re using the internet protocol in a way that it was never intended for. The protocols are, what, about 20 years old at this time?

    These protocols were created at a time when no one had even heard of streaming video, or thought that it would be a good idea to send voice over IP. It’s a non-deterministic protocol that actually looses effective bandwidth under high traffic conditions (exactly when it’s needed most).

    Isn’t it time we looked at doing a basic overhaul of the system, with some sort of hybrid of TCP/IP and token ring? That would allow the TCP/IP traffic to continue to operate under net neutrality rules and the hot, sexy services that need high bandwidth, time-sensitive deterministic delivery can operate under a pay-for-play arrangement.

    Just an idea.

  • deciminyan

    http ://www.deciminyan.org/2010/08/net-neutering.html

  • fpete13527
  • Scope

    a week or so ago when we talked about a Charlie Cook report that said the Dems were gaining? Well, he now concedes that it was a 2 week aberration, and claims it can happen in the best of polls. Read the very last sentence.

    http://www.nationaljournal.com/njmagazine/cr_20100807_9955.php

  • joshuapkraft

    “What?s more reliable: your power company, with heavy government regulation, or your wireless Internet company, with light Telecommunications Act protections?”

    Actually, that might be a bad example. My power company is way, way more reliable than AT&T’s wireless. And Verizon was just as bad (although it did have the advantage of being just as unreliable over a much larger chunk of the US, but it had the problem of incessant incorrect bills, and random nickel and diming…)

    My power company? Reliable as can be.

  • http://www.ArchitecturalShots.com mdyou

    They are exposed 24-7 and sooner or later, their kingdom will crumble. The king is dead. Long live the king.

  • http://www.hakubi.us/ Neil Stevens
  • http://www.hakubi.us/ Neil Stevens

    Your post was left up way too long today because I had a long week to catch up from.

  • http://www.hakubi.us/ Neil Stevens

    There are solutions. There are full Quality of Service protocols implemented.

    Free Press, and their pet FCC Commissars, effectively want to ban their use.

  • http://www.redstate.com/etcartman Kenny Solomon

    Transparency:

    The benevolence is dripping from every seam in the kingdom.

    The kingdom’s Communications and Information Technology Commission said in a statement late Saturday it is giving telecom companies a grace period of 48 hours ending Monday to test “proposed solutions” aimed at averting a ban.

    ============

    My guess is the only thing in the way is the accuracy of the GPS setup – The Shari’a Police need to be sure they have the right ‘criminal’ in their hands….. Not that it matters in the long term – But just in case the ‘criminal’ happens to be a third cousin nine-times removed from the goat washer of the assistant to the King’s fifty-seventh wife – can’t have any of the royal family going down for the count, now can we ?

  • http://www.redstate.com/etcartman Kenny Solomon

    Bahrain’s foreign minister said Sunday the country has no plans to follow its Persian Gulf neighbors in banning some BlackBerry services because security fears do not outweigh the technological benefits.

    Bahrain’s Sheik Khaled bin Ahmed Al Khalifa told The Associated Press the handheld devices raise legitimate concerns, but that his nation has decided that banning some of the phones’ features is “not a way of dealing with it.” “We’re not saying there is no security concern,” Sheik Khaled said in an interview. But, he added: “There are many other ways for the criminals or terrorists to communicate, so we decided we might as well live with it.”

    —————-

    Things that make you go hmmmmmmmmm.

  • Next93

    It’s always seemed to me that political solutions to technical problems work about as well as technical solutions to political problems. That is, they simply wrap one problem in an outer layer.