Posted on 03/02/2015 10:10:21 AM PST by E. Pluribus Unum
By the way, the FCC's Internet power grab is a bigger deal than executive amnesty.
If it seems insane that Google at one point lobbied hard for so-called "net neutrality," you have to realize that the biggest and most influential players always figure they can benefit when a market becomes more political. That's because they figure they're in a better position to manipulate the market to their benefit.
So imagine Eric Schmidt's horror when he realized that last week's power grab from the FCC was no ordinary bit of regulatory meddling in an otherwise free market. The heavy-handed move of three FCC commissioners to put the Internet under the same federal regulatory structure as decades-old telephone companies will have an absolutely devastating effect not only on the free use of the web, but on innovation and the free working of markets.
And no, Google, you won't be able to use your influence to make sure it works in your favor. Because these people answer to no one and don't even care if what they do makes any sense. Way to create a monster:
FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler justified Obamanet by saying the Internet is simply too important to be left without rules and without a referee. He got it backward: Light-handed regulation made todays Internet possible.
What if at the beginning of the Web, Washington had opted for Obamanet instead of the open Internet? Yellow Pages publishers could have invoked harm and unjust and unreasonable competition from online telephone directories. This could have strangled Alta Vista and Excite, the early leaders in search, and relegated Google to a Stanford student project. Newspapers could have lobbied against Craigslist for depriving them of classified advertising. Encyclopedia Britannica could have lobbied against Wikipedia.
Competitors could have objected to the fast lane that Amazon got from Sprint at the launch of the Kindle to ensure speedy e-book downloads. The FCC could have blocked Apple from integrating Internet access into the iPhone. Activists could have objected to AOL bundling access to The Wall Street Journal in its early dial-up service.
Among the first targets of the FCCs unjust and unreasonable test are mobile-phone contracts that offer unlimited video or music. Netflix , the biggest lobbyist for utility regulation, could be regulated for how it uses encryption to deliver its content.
Until Congress or the courts block Obamanet, expect less innovation. During a TechFreedom conference last week, dissenting FCC commissioner Ajit Pai asked: If you were an entrepreneur trying to make a splash in a marketplace thats already competitive, how are you going to differentiate yourself if you have to build into your equation whether or not regulatory permission is going to be forthcoming from the FCC? According to this, permissionless innovation is a thing of the past.
I say this is a bigger deal than executive amnesty simply because it will have a greater and more direct day-to-day effect on more people. Everyone uses the Internet. Everyone benefits from the innovations that drive it daily. And everyone will pay the price when they're much harder to develop because things get bogged down in regulatory permissions and approvals. What if online streaming had to be approved by federal regulators, who operated at the same pace as those doing that "comprehensive review" of the Keystone XL pipeline - all because they were being lobbied by someone who wants it delayed and made the right campaign contributions to the right people?
The knuckleheads who thought net neutrality was about making the Internet "equal for everyone" about to get bitchslapped by reality. With the Obama Administration, everything is about putting whatever you can under political control.
Congress could stop this, by the way. And if they're as effective in that effort as they've been stopping executive anmesty, God help us all.
After I read this, I copied and pasted and then I sent it to everyone in my e-mail Contact List.
Those ultra libs (one a russkie) at Google have been 0bamabots from day one, so it is schadenfreude.
BTW - Isn't it interesting that a regime that couldn't build a website has now taken over the internet.
Bing is somewhat better than Google, but neither is what it once was.
Try searching Google for terms such as “Holocene Optimum” or “Younger Dryas” or even “Pleistocene Glaciation.”
Good luck finding anything but the approved “Climate Change” websites.
Ah, but liberals historically have been willing to take a hit (ie, Obamacare hurting them) in order to support the longer term agenda.
I don’t look for them to actively oppose this.
I was at Drudge and clicked on IRS defends giving refunds to Illegals and the story is Redacted ,greyed out , LOL
Remember the Google executive in Egypt that was part of the Arab Spring to help overthrow the Egyptian government? He was sort of a hero for Google but then that quickly faded when it turned out that the Arab Spring/muslim brotherhood wasn’t such a good idea for the people of Egypt.
Google was involved with the overthrow of a government. Yep, Google is far too political for me.
I use Ixquick
Frustrating article. Doesn’t say specifically what is so bad in the bill.
For the record, I’ll oppose such a bill until the internet industry is proven to be doing unfair things.
Oh sure! They just happened to realize this the day AFTER it was approved! No. They were just pretending before so the fools would keep quiet.
Stupid people don’t learn lessons.
We live in a Totalitarian State and under Obama, the powers-that-be are starting to flex their muscles. The Democras are controlled by power mad communists and the Republicans have morphed into fellow travellers. Expect more, much more from Obama in his ongoing grab for power.
“”I tried the search on Startpage which uses Google “”
I always use startpage.com and didn’t have a problem finding info on tomorrow’s speech...It’s right there...
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.