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3 Lies of Net Neutrality
Charting Course ^ | 12/31/14 | Steve Berman

Posted on 12/31/2014 6:25:01 AM PST by lifeofgrace

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The closest my mother and stepfather ever got to the Internet was a WebTV set top box we bought for their kitchen TV.  Like most non-technical people, if I talked to them about technology and policy, I lost their attention immediately.  This is the reaction people get when I mention “Net Neutrality”.  It’s a technology and policy issue, and it’s not well understood, so we have to fight the MEGO (my eyes glaze over) factor.

Net Neutrality is about a lie.  Three lies, in fact.

Three lies that lead to one bad policy conclusion:  you didn’t build this; you don’t own this; and we (the government) are taking it over.

The first lie is that you didn’t build this.  The Internet companies didn’t build a huge infrastructure just to sell you a little driveway onto the information superhighway.  The government didn’t build the information superhighway—the Internet companies built it.  The government didn’t pay for it with tax dollars either—you did by paying service fees.

And your connection to Netflix is only as fast as the slowest link in the chain.  When you pay your ISP, you’re paying for them to maintain every connection in that chain, and for them to connect to every other ISP.  You’re paying them to connect to the services and companies you use every day.  Just because you’re limited right now in your broadband options because of “the last mile” problem doesn’t mean you’ll be limited tomorrow, but the Net Neutrality supporters want you to believe that.

The second lie is that bandwidth is a finite quantity.  This is nonsense.  Connection speeds have increased 27-fold and more in the last 20 years, without ISPs having to dig up every foot of wire and fiber in their networks every time they upgrade.  We haven’t even approached technical bandwidth limits, never mind the physics behind them.

The Net Neutrality supporters would have you believe that ISPs want to limit bandwidth to popular services just to make more money from you, as if bandwidth were like beachfront real estate.  If ISPs want to charge for large bandwidth users, it’s to provide better service to their customers, and ultimately, to improve their network.  Remember, you’re paying for all of this.

You.  Not the government.  Not your neighbor.

The third lie is that the Net has always been “neutral” and Net Neutrality is somehow preserving that neutrality.  The Net has never been “neutral” in this way.  You can only believe the third lie if you buy into the other two.  If an ISP wants to attract more customers, all they have to do is offer more bandwidth.  Voila.  Faster service.  Or connect to more ISPs, or allow more services to host their data directly on the ISP’s network, closer to you.  Voila.  More reliable connections.

All of the reasons Net Neutrality supporters use to justify the government taking over the Internet are absurd unless you are an anti-corporate, anti-business activist.  Like the disaffected hippies who crashed FCC hearings.

Before your eyes glaze over, hear this one thing:  the ISPs, phone and data carriers, cell networks, and cable companies who run most of the Internet can function and adapt in either a non-regulated or a regulated environment.  They know how to play the game of grease-the-pig politics and pay high-priced lobbyists to curry favor with government fiefdoms who pick winners and losers.

They also know how to market to consumers like you and me, and how to make customers happy and keep them happy.  Right now, you have the power to make or break these companies, because you’re paying the bills and (mostly) calling the shots.  Net Neutrality fundamentally changes that balance of power toward the government.  Government (fatcat elites, lobbyists, and power hungry bureaucrats) wins, and you lose.

That’s what this battle is about.  Let the FCC know that they have to stop this monster by clicking here and submitting your comments before it’s too late.


TOPICS: Computers/Internet; Government
KEYWORDS: governmenttakeover; lies; netneutrality
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To: ifinnegan
Did you write the article?

Yes, I wrote it.
21 posted on 01/01/2015 8:36:27 AM PST by lifeofgrace (Follow me on Twitter @lifeofgrace224)
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To: lifeofgrace

Nothing personal. Don’t take it that way if you did.

Heed my comments.

Answer simple questions such as what is the actual law being proposed and what would it change?

Who are the politicians for it, who oppose? What committee is working on or?

What are their arguments for it? Against it?

Etc...


22 posted on 01/01/2015 11:05:28 AM PST by ifinnegan
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To: lifeofgrace

I would start with this sentence which you have near the end of the piece:

“Net Neutrality fundamentally changes that balance of power toward the government.”

And then explain how and why the Act would change the balance of power.


23 posted on 01/01/2015 11:11:54 AM PST by ifinnegan
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To: ifinnegan
Answer simple questions such as what is the actual law being proposed and what would it change?

If Net Neutrality were a law Congress was considering, that would be easy. But several attempts at Congress legislating it were defeated (good thing too). Then the Supreme Court also struck down some elements. So now the FCC wants to try again. Read about it here. This is just another brazen attempt for the Administrative State to take more of our market power as consumers and transfer it to the government.
24 posted on 01/02/2015 11:38:24 AM PST by lifeofgrace (Follow me on Twitter @lifeofgrace224)
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To: ifinnegan
explain how and why the Act would change the balance of power.

It's not legislation: it's a proposed FCC Rule. The FCC wants to regulate the Internet like it does cable and telephone carriers. This means user fees (like the Universal Service Fee garbage), and all kinds of red tape. The balance of power is simple: market-driven industries must serve the MARKET (customers like me and you), while regulated industries serve the REGULATORS (the government). Would you like to keep the power you have over ISPs or cede it to the government?

I thought so.
25 posted on 01/02/2015 11:44:45 AM PST by lifeofgrace (Follow me on Twitter @lifeofgrace224)
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To: lifeofgrace
I live in a small town, the only Internet we can get is either dialiup/dsl or satellite. The only TV we get is Antenna or Satellite. I don't really have a choice of what I get. The Cable company pulled out and removed all their coax from the telephone poles.

The phone company is one of those smaller companies and is given an exemption so I can't change who I get my Phone service from. I tried changing my Phone service a couple of years ago, and we told I couldn't.

I think the fastest speed here is 6mb, with Sat Internet it REALLY sucks, this means there FAP policy would be illegal.

So IF they want to REALLY fair about this, they should require we ALL get fiber Internet, after all my ISP/phone company is restricting my bandwidth.

26 posted on 01/03/2015 5:12:01 AM PST by amigatec (The only change you will see in the next four years will be what's in your pocket.)
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To: lifeofgrace
My rule of thumb has been that, if Obama is pushing for it, then it must be bad for the rest of us. I have no doubt that Obama has something up his sleeve should the FCC adopt net neutrality.
27 posted on 01/07/2015 9:18:26 PM PST by Major Matt Mason ("Journalism is dead. All news is suspect." - Noamie)
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