Why Obama is Wrong about Net Neutrality and His Scheme Must Be Defeated
As Capitol Confidential noted the other day, net neutrality is an issue that that is dear to the left, but has flown under the radar of most Americans. It’s a rather technical and arcane subject, but can be summed up rather simply: Net neutrality rules enforced by the Federal Communications Commission would allow government bureaucrats to micromanage the Internet — thus sucking out the lifeblood of the digital economy and threatening the dynamism and freedom we’ve come to take for granted online.

Proponents of net neutrality claim that Internet Service Providers (ISPs) abuse their position as “gatekeepers” to the Web, and the public needs government to establish strict “rules of the road” to protect us from their scheming. Trouble is, the evidence of abusive practices by ISPs is anecdotal and thinner than an iPod mini. The digital economy is currently so dynamic and cutthroat that free-market forces work quickly to correct any undesirable hiccups that arise — all without any micro-managing of the tech industry by government.
Net neutrality advocates insist we need government to preserve an “open” and “free” Internet and claim the market has failed. But they cannot point to any market failures that make the Internet less open or free. In short, the Internet isn’t broken. And it doesn’t need a government fix. No matter. The left presses ahead, because the facts are irrelevant. The goal is to put government in charge of digital policy, taking away your freedom as a consumer to shape the Internet with your own choices.
This would stifle the enormous private investment and innovation that has created the modern Internet — in part, because industries would be relegated to playing “Mother May I?” with the FCC before releasing its latest innovation. And that’s the best-case scenario. The Reason Foundation’s Steve Titch argues that if government-enforced net neutrality rules were in place five years ago, the iPhone as we know it wouldn’t exist. But on a more basic level, only a committed leftist could believe that more government involvement in … well … anything results is more economic dynamism and gains in personal freedom.
As noted in the video below, produced by The Heartland Institute, government isn’t in the business of preserving freedom, but of exercising power to regulate industries and control people. And this is an important thing to keep in mind — especially since President Obama recently reiterated his commitment to have government enforce a net neutrality regime on your Internet.
The video takes apart Obama’s statements on the subject in his Feb. 1 YouTube interview, and attempts to take the broader view so what’s at stake can be better understood by non-techies.
Larry Downes VS Free Press
I just had my first article published on Tucker Carlson and Derek Hunters new site venture The Daily Caller. The launch was yesterday and I think it has gone swimmingly.
The article is on a piece that Timothy Karr, the guy who runs savetheinternet.com a Free Press site, wrote that was just raunchy. Not in sort of a back alley, red light district sense, but from the unscrupulous, “you’ve got to be kidding me” sense. The piece was written to try and brush off some reporting Larry Downes had produced based on some policy perspective he had at CES, but instead of producing counter evidence to this reporting, Karr decides to attack Downes credibility. Stay classy. I’ve been reading Downes for a long time. The guy is a respected journalist and he has good things to say. That doesn’t mean he’s always right, or that I agree with him on every point he makes, it just means that if you have his portfolio it should buy you some respect to the point that just because you don’t agree with him you don’t try to throw his credentials under a bus.
This isn’t even to mention that all the people over at Free Press are socialists anyway and they should be sharing the love around.
So you can head over and see the post here. I’ll probably repost it here in a couple of days after I allow TheDC its due. Not like you are going to wait around for the posting here, but I’m just saying, for cataloging sake, it will be here eventually too.
-nick
Bart Stupak’s FCC Sunshine Legislation
You may have seen this posted yesterday, it was one of our lost posts…
You can swing over to digitalsociety.org and find some nice commentary on Bart Stupak’s proposed legislation that would allow more than two FCC commissioners to meet at one time. Something that has up till now been prevented to stop acts of collusion.
Check it out here.
-nick
Apple/AT&T/Google Still Fighting
Some thoughts I had on the fighting that continues mainly between AT&T and Google. “But Apple started it!” Posted over at DigitalSociety.org.
-nick
FCC & Net Neutrality: Part 2
As with Part 1, my comments in bold.
At a Crossroads
Notwithstanding its unparalleled record of success, today the free and open Internet faces emerging and substantial challenges. We?ve already seen some clear examples of deviations from the Internet?s historic openness. We have witnessed certain broadband providers unilaterally block access to VoIP applications (phone calls delivered over data networks) and implement technical measures that degrade the performance of peer-to-peer software distributing lawful content. We have even seen at least one service provider deny users access to political content. And as many members of the Internet community and key Congressional leaders have noted, there are compelling reasons to be concerned about the future of openness.
Without a doubt the FCC Chairman is correct on these points.? There have occurred violations to Net Neutrality over the years.? I can count them on my hand.? Some of these violations have been mistakes and rectified.? Others were corrected when public voices and other market forces corrected the problems within days or weeks.? Still other violations to neutrality occurred because of violations to the network administrators policy or because an end user was hijacking the network.? Traditionally, these few cases have been individuals using torrenting services that were receiving and distributing high amounts of data round the clock and causing other users at the node to experience low quality service.? In these cases, the private network makes a policy decision to either allow one individual to continue dominating the last-mile, or to violate Net Neutrality for the benefit of other paying customers.
One reason has to do with limited competition among service providers. As American consumers make the shift from dial-up to broadband, their choice of providers has narrowed substantially. I don?t intend that remark as a policy conclusion or criticism — it is simply a fact about today?s marketplace that we must acknowledge and incorporate into our policymaking.
This is an argument that has been used for the better part of a decade and was most likely true up until the last 18 months.? It is probably still true in many areas around the country.? The reason for this is simple.? With the switch to broadband in the early years of the new millennium telecoms were the most suited to make adjustments to their existing networks to corner the market.? One may not like this, but it’s simply capitalism.? And while the monopoly held fast for many years, the free market has allowed new technologies to give consumers more choice.? In my home town of Atlanta, several years ago one may only have 1-2 choices for broadband.? Now they have roughly 7 depending on the exact area of town they live in.? From fiber, to multiple cable and dsl choices, to the emergence of Sprint, AT&T, and Clear 4G wireless.? This progress will continue throughout the nation as these companies move into other cities and push into the suburbs.? Rome wasn’t built over night.? Neither is America the equivalent in size to Seoul, South Korea.? It will take some time.
A second reason involves the economic incentives of broadband providers. The great majority of companies that operate our nation?s broadband pipes rely upon revenue from selling phone service, cable TV subscriptions, or both. These services increasingly compete with voice and video products provided over the Internet. The net result is that broadband providers? rational bottom-line interests may diverge from the broad interests of consumers in competition and choice.
This line of argument must fall into line with a situation resultant from the previous paragraph. i.e. If Comcast provides OnDemand video services, they would be encouraged to block Hulu and Netflix because access to those sites keeps consumers from using the Comcast service.? The argument goes on to say that this can’t be prevented because the consumer couldn’t not choose a different ISP for it’s Internet services and would be forced to be cut off from certain Internet sites.? The reality is that this is bunk logic for multiple reasons.? First we have already established that there is market choice for a growing number of consumers.? Second, the market backlash to this sort of thing would jeopardize the companies reputation.? Thirdly, companies that offer multiple services have greatly benefited financially from “Triple Play” style packages that offer the consumer items like phone, Internet, and television in one bill.? Blocking specific Internet sites in an attempt to bring more revenue in from a competing service is not a successful business model.? For one reason, even in areas where there are limited Internet provider choices, there are always multiple phone and video solutions.? Losing revenue from combined service packages would would be worse than projected revenue lost from a competing service like OnDemand.
The third reason involves the explosion of traffic on the Internet. With the growing popularity of high-bandwidth applications, Internet traffic is roughly doubling every two years. Technologies for managing broadband networks have become more sophisticated and widely deployed. But these technologies are just tools. They cannot by themselves determine the right answers to difficult policy questions — and they raise their own set of new questions.
i.e. “We the government should also have a hand in determining how broadband networks handle their traffic.”? No, the government should not be doing this.? These guys are bureaucrats, not engineers.? Bureaucrats should have the authority to determine how money should be spent or how policy should be enforced when authority to do so is given to them.? Giving bureaucrats the authority to determine how network engineers manage their networks is the equivalent of telling NASA how to design a component on a space ship.? Does that sound like a good idea?
In acknowledging the existence of challenging competitive, economic, and technological realities for today?s Internet, I want to underscore that this debate, as I see it, isn?t about white hats or black hats among companies in and around the network. Rather, there are inevitable tensions built into our system; important and difficult questions that we have an obligation to ask and to answer correctly for our country.
The reality is that a company that has spent billion of dollars designing a private network should not have to answer any questions the government has about taking over regulatory control of something that is not owned by the government.? The FCC has no obligation.? The FCC wants control of the Internet in the same way they have control over radio and television.
When I worked in the private sector I was fortunate to work with some of the greatest innovators of our time. That taught me some lessons about the importance of innovation and investment. It also taught me the importance of developing clear goals and then being focused and practical in achieving them, making sure to have the best input and ideas from the broadest group possible.
Genachowski, look I’m sorry, but “working in the private sector” for IAC, a company that goes around buying up other people’s websites and web technology innovations, and working for Expedia, TicketMaster, and Hotels.com does not qualify you to understand the things that a network engineer understands.? You have a business degree from Harvard.? Fantastic! You understand the business aspect of the technology space.? The guys you are claiming to be on the same ground with have telecommunications engineering degrees from MIT, Carnegie Mellon, and Georgia Tech.? They aren’t trying to run the business side of the companies they work for, and you do not need to be running the engineering side of their businesses.
I am convinced that there are few goals more essential in the communications landscape than preserving and maintaining an open and robust Internet. I also know that achieving this goal will take an approach that is smart about technology, smart about markets, smart about law and policy, and smart about the lessons of history.
If this is a legit claim, then you can use 20 some odd years of history of the Internet as an indicator that what you are claiming to be a problem is not a problem.
We Must Choose to Preserve the Open Internet
The rise of serious challenges to the free and open Internet puts us at a crossroads. We could see the Internet?s doors shut to entrepreneurs, the spirit of innovation stifled, a full and free flow of information compromised. Or we could take steps to preserve Internet openness, helping ensure a future of opportunity, innovation, and a vibrant marketplace of ideas.
In all seriousness how does this make any sense?? Neutralians argue that ISP’s may violate some Net Neutrality code that will stifle innovation and information.? But how is this different from giving that control over to the government?? If – and the word “if” should come with great stress in its tone – any of this banter is true, then American consumers of broadband really have two choices.
1) They can continue under the status quo, with the risk that there would be an occasional violation to Net Neutrality by an ISP that would then be under the pressure of market forces to act swiftly in rectifying the problem; or,
2) Americans can cede control of Internet regulation to the FCC and whatever administration happens to be at the helm, for the “understanding” of network management to change with every change of the administration, and the ability of these regulatory forces to over see the content we send and received and determine if it is legal and if the network is operating under their “guidelines”.? Additionally, consider that regulation would occur under the guidance of individuals like Mark Lloyd and Cas Sunstein who wish to control media and information content from every angle, television, radio, and the Internet.
I’ll take the cautious approach for $500, Alex.
I understand the Internet is a dynamic network and that technology continues to grow and evolve. I recognize that if we were to create unduly detailed rules that attempted to address every possible assault on openness, such rules would become outdated quickly. But the fact that the Internet is evolving rapidly does not mean we can, or should, abandon the underlying values fostered by an open network, or the important goal of setting rules of the road to protect the free and open Internet.
Sure, you would just expect every new technology for network management to pass your “reasonable network management” smell test.? Whatever that means…
Saying nothing — and doing nothing — would impose its own form of unacceptable cost. It would deprive innovators and investors of confidence that the free and open Internet we depend upon today will still be here tomorrow. It would deny the benefits of predictable rules of the road to all players in the Internet ecosystem. And it would be a dangerous retreat from the core principle of openness — the freedom to innovate without permission — that has been a hallmark of the Internet since its inception, and has made it so stunningly successful as a platform for innovation, opportunity, and prosperity.
If openness whas established and respected this far along in the Internet’s history without the government, why in the world would natural openness need policy for openness?
In view of these challenges and opportunities, and because it is vital that the Internet continue to be an engine of innovation, economic growth, competition and democratic engagement, I believe the FCC must be a smart cop on the beat preserving a free and open Internet.
Anyone else see Minority Report?
What We Can Do
This is how I propose we move forward: To date, the Federal Communications Commission has addressed these issues by announcing four Internet principles that guide our case-by-case enforcement of the communications laws. These principles can be summarized as: Network operators cannot prevent users from accessing the lawful Internet content, applications, and services of their choice, nor can they prohibit users from attaching non-harmful devices to the network.
The principles were initially articulated by Chairman Michael Powell in 2004 as the ?Four Freedoms,? and later endorsed in a unanimous 2005 policy statement issued by the Commission under Chairman Kevin Martin and with the forceful support of Commissioner Michael Copps, who of course remains on the Commission today. In the years since 2005, the Internet has continued to evolve and the FCC has issued a number of important bipartisan decisions involving openness. Today, I propose that the FCC adopt the existing principles as Commission rules, along with two additional principles that reflect the evolution of the Internet and that are essential to ensuring its continued openness.
I think the problem here is that no one really understands is that the FCC can adopt this, but it still doesn’t give it governance over ISP’s without Congress passing a law providing regulatory governance over private corporations.? Which has me considering if all of this FCC nonsense is actually a smoke screen.? Most individuals don’t understand government, and don’t understand bureaucratic oversight and authority.? There is a slim chance the FCC is trying to pass these rules to appease the Neutralians who don’t understand that the FCC wouldn’t have any real power to enforce them without passage of a Congressional bill.
To be continued…
-nick
FCC & Net Neutrality: Part 1
The Net Neutrality issue has been hot the last few months, and it probably won’t be cooling with the Fall weather.? There is already one bill sitting in committee, and another from Byron Dorgan and Olympia Snowe on the way.? In addition to this, the big news toward the end of September was the FCC’s policy statement on Net Neutrality.? This was accompanied by the launching of the FCC’s new site OpenInternet.gov to go along with it’s sister site, Broadband.gov.
After reading over FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski’s speech and considering my comments, I felt that a lot of the nuances of what he talked about may get lost in a simple response.? So I decided that I would just break the whole thing down.? I’ll be splitting his speech up over several parts and providing responses to what he had to say.
If you’d care to listen to the speech in full first, then here you go:
You can also find the text of the speech unmolested by my comments here.
So here comes our break down, paragraph by paragraph.? My comments in bold.
Prepared Remarks of
Chairman Julius Genachowski
The Brookings Institution, Washington DC
September 21, 2009I?d like to thank Brookings for hosting me and this discussion about the future of broadband and the Internet.
We?ve just finished a summer of big-ticket commemorations, celebrating the 40th anniversaries of the Apollo landing and of Woodstock; 1969 was also a good year to be a kid in New York, with Joe Namath calling the Super Bowl, and the Knicks? season that ended with the legendary Willis Reed in Game 7. I grew up a long fly ball from Shea Stadium and soaked up every minute of the Miracle Mets? season. Maybe that?s why I tend to believe in miracles.
But perhaps the most momentous birthday from that famous summer of 1969 went by just a couple of weeks ago with little mention. Just over forty years ago, a handful of engineers in a UCLA lab connected two computers with a 15-foot gray cable and transferred little pieces of data back and forth. It was the first successful test of the ARPANET, the U.S.-government-funded project that became the Internet — the most transformational communications breakthrough since the printing press.
Today, we can?t imagine what our lives would be like without the Internet — any more than we can imagine life without running water or the light bulb. Millions of us depend upon it every day: at home, at work, in school — and everywhere in between. The Internet has unleashed the creative genius of countless entrepreneurs and has enabled the creation of jobs — and the launch of small businesses and the expansion of large ones — all across America.
Yes, the Internet has unleashed creativity and created jobs, and has done so without the help of the government or having any of its facets regulated.
That?s why Congress and the President have charged the FCC with developing a National Broadband Plan to ensure that every American has access to open and robust broadband.
There are several assumptions here.? First off, Congress has not charged the FCC with a National Broadband Plan, nor have they charged the FCC with regulating the Internet or determining that the Internet must exist under regulated, binding by law Net Neutrality rules.? The only thing Congress has done in regards to this issue was pass the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act which had two things in relation to these issues. 1) There existed monies in the stimulus package for the expansion of broadband into unserved and underserved areas.? The funding is limited, and less than half of what Verizon alone has spent on developing their entire fiber network.? It is the FCC who labeled and determined this to be a “National Broadband Plan.”? Congress simply provided money for the development of limited networks.? That is significantly different than being “charged” with accomplishing some mission that Genachowski apparently considers is his destiny as Chairman.? 2) Congress did not charge the FCC to ensure an open Internet.? Within the stimulus the language insinuates that grantees of stimulus funds must build networks under the guidelines of FCC policy statements.? It is therefore the FCC that determines what those policy statement conditions are, not Congress.
Additionally, this statement carries with it the assumption that access to the Internet is both desired by everyone and a right.
The fact is that we face great challenges as a nation right now, including health care, education, energy, and public safety. While the Internet alone will not provide a complete solution to any of them, it can and must play a critical role in solving each one.
These statements are a bit of a reach.? I understand that part of the job of the Chairman is to act as a pitchman for the Obama Administration’s platform and policy agenda, but these claims are weak at best.? I guess I can see where the Internet is a useful tool in research for health care and education, as far as ones ability to search out the best insurance policy or the ability to take an online class.? But as far as health care goes, one could just as easily open the YellowPages and make phone calls and write some stuff down.? But I certainly don’t understand how increasing Internet access will improve public safety and solve our energy issues in this context.? Is there by chance some Einstein-esque man with a secret energy solution that just cannot get his message out at the moment, and if only he had Twitter all our energy problems would be solved?? Something about beach front property in Colorado goes here.
Openness is the Key
Why has the Internet proved to be such a powerful engine for creativity, innovation, and economic growth? A big part of the answer traces back to one key decision by the Internet?s original architects: to make the Internet an open system.
Historian John Naughton describes the Internet as an attempt to answer the following question: How do you design a network that is ?future proof? — that can support the applications that today?s inventors have not yet dreamed of? The solution was to devise a network of networks that would not be biased in favor of any particular application. The Internet?s creators didn?t want the network architecture — or any single entity — to pick winners and losers. Because it might pick the wrong ones. Instead, the Internet?s open architecture pushes decision-making and intelligence to the edge of the network — to end users, to the cloud, to businesses of every size and in every sector of the economy, to creators and speakers across the country and around the globe. In the words of Tim Berners-Lee, the Internet is a ?blank canvas? — allowing anyone to contribute and to innovate without permission.
This is a fantastic paragraph.? Genachowski hits the nail on the head here.? Unfortunately he is too blind to see that government intervention is ubiquitous for not being hands off.? Regulated Net Neutrality is the exact polar opposite approach to what Genachowski has written here.? Government now has the power to pick winners and losers.? They have the power to know what data is being transferred by having the power to conduct deep packet inspection to determine the contents of data traveling across networks.? They will have the power to tell network operators how to manage their networks and how to manage the flow of data, slowing or speeding up the delivery of certain types of applications.? That is the essence of picking winners and losers right there.? Period.? Genachowski wants the Internet to be a “blank canvas” with a little FCC logo down at the bottom right hand corner.
It is easy to look at today?s Internet giants — and the tremendous benefits they have supplied to our economy and our culture — and forget that many were small businesses just a few years ago, founded on little more than a good idea and a no-frills connection to the Internet. Marc Andreessen was a graduate student when he created Mosaic, which led to Netscape, the first commercially successful Web browser. Mark Zuckerberg was a college student in 2004 when he started Facebook, which just announced that it added its 300 millionth member. Pierre Omidyar originally launched eBay on his own personal website. Today more than 600,000 Americans earn part of their living by operating small businesses on eBay?s auction platform, bringing jobs and opportunity to Danvers, Massachusetts, Durham, North Carolina and Lincoln, Nebraska, and many other communities in both rural and urban America. This is the power of the Internet: distributed innovation and ubiquitous entrepreneurship, the potential for jobs and opportunity everywhere there is broadband.
Yes, you too can create the next Amazon in your garage!? With all the grandeur of these statements, the fact remains that all of these massive Internet companies were established under current conditions.? Evidence of the success of the Internet without regulated Net Neutrality is evidence in support of the absence of regulation, not a promotion for regulation.? This paragraph is an argument for keeping the established norm, not for change.? The problem with Genachowski and Neutralians is that they are banking on some ridiculous cosmic notion that the Internet is currently neutral and that they must enact laws to keep it that way.? It is this notion of, “There isn’t a problem, but maybe, possibly, there might be in the future, so we have to do something about that at the risk of destroying the innovation inherent in the Internet and proper network management.”
And let us not forget that the open Internet enables much more than commerce. It is also an unprecedented platform for speech, democratic engagement, and a culture that prizes creative new ways of approaching old problems.
Then why mess with that system based on what essentially boils down to your bet that something bad may happen that the market itself could not correct, when actual case study shows that any violation to Net Neutrality principles has been met with swift action by market forces and immediately corrected within weeks or even days?
In 2000, Jimmy Wales started a project to create a free online encyclopedia. He originally commissioned experts to write the entries, but the project only succeeded after moving to volunteers to write them collaboratively. The result is Wikipedia, one of the top 10 most visited websites in the world and one of the most comprehensive aggregations of human knowledge in our history. The potential of collaboration and social media continues to grow. It is changing and accelerating innovation. And we?ve seen new media tools like Twitter and YouTube used by democratic movements around the globe.
Again, if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.
Even now, the Internet is beginning to transform health care, education, and energy usage for the better. Health-related applications, distributed over a widely connected Internet, can help bring down health care costs and improve medical service. Four out of five Americans who are online have accessed medical information over the Internet, and most say this information affected their decision-making. Nearly four million college students took at least one online course in 2007, and the Internet can potentially connect kids anywhere to the best information and teachers everywhere. And the Internet is helping enable smart grid technologies, which promise to reduce carbon dioxide emissions by hundreds of millions of metric tons.
This is obvious marketing speak for the promotion of Obamacare and administration policy objectives that has nothing to do with anything we are supposed to be hearing about in this speech, which is supposed to be an FCC position statement on Net Neutrality.
At the same time, we have also seen great strides in the center of the network. Most Americans? early exposure to the Internet was through analog modems, which allowed a trickle of data through the phone lines to support early electronic bulletin boards and basic email. Over the last two decades, thanks to substantial investment and technological ingenuity, companies devised ways to retrofit networks initially designed for phones and one-way video to support two-way broadband data streams connecting homes and businesses across the country. And a revolution in wireless technologies — using licensed and unlicensed spectrum — and the creation of path-breaking devices like the Blackberry and iPhone have enabled millions of us to carry the Internet in our pockets and purses.
Yes, Genachowski, and this is what makes the Internet the most wonderful creation man has ever made.? It is a world without you, the government.? It is the last remaining frontier of the Wild West.? And I don’t mean that in a way to reflect the “red light districts” of the net.? I mean that from the perspective that the Internet is a world of self regulation.? Even the regulation on certain websites is determined by the members or owners that inhabit those sites.? It is because of this unbridled nature of the medium that such creativity has flowed.? It is kin to the Age of Enlightenment.? Discovery blossomed when one mans quest for power over another man was finally somewhat extinguished.
It is said that early America buoyed The Enlightenment via the American Revolutionary War.? America thrust off the chains of its oppressor, those that wished to control it, and it blossomed forth.? This is why the Internet has proved successful.? The barriers to entry that exist in many brick and mortar and “meatspace” opportunities are much higher than those of small business and upstarts on the Internet.? Especially in the Internet’s earliest days.? To regulate that now, and possibly restrict innovation and economic development based on a whim is just dumbfounding to me.
The lesson of each of these stories, and innumerable others like them, is that we cannot know what tomorrow holds on the Internet, except that it will be unexpected; that the genius of American innovators is unlimited; and that the fewer obstacles these innovators face in bringing their work to the world, the greater our opportunity as citizens and as a nation.
Does this seem like backwards logic to anyone else?? Genachowski praises the lessons we can learn of success under an unregulated Internet, and then goes on to promote the idea that fewer obstacles improve innovator output and end user opportunity, but he wants to regulate the Internet.? You know that noise Scoopy-Doo used to make when he was confused?? I just made that noise.? How do you limit obstacles by introducing regulation that increases obstacles?? Baffling…
To be continued…Part 2
-nick
Genachowski Extending Net Neutrality to Cell Networks
The Wall Street Journal is reporting the FCC Chairman Genachowski is going to establish Net Neutrality rules for cellular networks.? The rules which he plans to produce on Monday will outline how cellular companies should manage their networks.? Similar to the recent Net Neutrality bill introduced to Congress, the FCC guidelines would allow for “reasonable” network management of Internet networks for cellular carriers.
This will be sure to rub carriers the wrong way, as many companies exclude certain applications on cell phones existing on their networks that would compete with those carriers ability to offer their own services.? For example, you have the recent Google Voice application being denied by AT&T/Apple from the iPhone because it bypasses AT&T’s ability to provide cell phone service.
There will also exist a concern by network managers on what exactly “reasonable network management” is.? As this implies that the government will be able to step in and examine and then determine whether a company is managing their own network up to government standards.? Whatever those standards may be.
We will be eagerly anticipating Genachowski’s comments on Monday.
-nick
AT&T: Time Sensitive Services Not Priority in Broadband Expansion
AT&T’s FCC comments from the Broadband Expansion Comment period are up. You can read them here.
In short, they believe that expansion into underserved and unserved communities should be about core Internet services.? The toys of the Internet, like gaming and streaming media, will have to take a back burner for the foreseeable future.
You can find our full post on the issue at gamelobbyist.net.
-nick
Net Neutrality For All, Part 4
You can read Part 1 of this article here.
You can read Part 2 of this article here.
You can read Part 3 of this article here.
Lessons from Previous Rural Expansion Programs
The project will most likely be modeled after the Department of Agricultures Rural Utilities Service Broadband Grant and Loan Program (RUS). This was a program designed to extend broadband services into rural areas of the country. The program was a one stop shopping solution to the broadband needs of any rural area, and was met with little or at least questionable success. An audit of the program reported that, ?During the 4 years the Rural Utilities Service (RUS) has administered Federal loans and grants for extending broadband service to rural America, the programs? focus has shifted away from those rural communities that would not, without Government assistance, have access to broadband technologies. This change in the programs? emphasis has occurred for two reasons. First, in its loan program, RUS has not satisfactorily implemented statutory requirements for serving rural instead of suburban areas, nor does it have a system that can guarantee that communities without preexisting service receive priority. Second, RUS? inconsistent administration of the programs has resulted in irregularities in approving and servicing grants and loans. Of the $895 million in loans and grants funded, we reviewed $599.1 million (67 percent) and questioned the use of over $340.4 million?almost 57 percent of the approved funds reviewed.?[31]
What occurred with the RUS rural broadband program was that there were no clear cut well defined statements of what a rural community was, what the requirements were for installation of services, and consistent adhering to the grant and loan requirements they had defined. This resulted in the program having, ??issued over $103.4 million in loans to 64 communities near large cities, including $45.6 million in loans to 19 planned subdivisions near Houston, Texas.?[32]
RUS was also funding competing service providers without adhering to program policy that stated that underserved or areas with no service were priority to receive funding. The audit also addresses the fact that the Office of the Inspector General is concerned about the ethicality of supporting competing service providers, stating, ?Furthermore, we question whether the Government should be providing loans to competing rural providers when many small communities might be hard pressed to support even a single company. In these circumstances, RUS may be setting its own loans up to fail by encouraging competitive service; it may also be creating an uneven playing field for preexisting providers operating without Government assistance.?
If the Obama administration?s desire is to extend broadband into rural areas, and this is their model, we have a problem. The taxpayer would be just as easily served to throw their wallet out the window as they are driving down the street. At least they would know where their money went in that case. This model needs serious work and accountability. And the ethicality argument is a very good one. Should the government reimburse service providers that go out of business in low volume user areas because the government chose to subsidize a competitor to come into their area and offer service? There is no scenario in which this should occur.
Recommendations Moving Forward
Broadband should be instituted in communities without a strings attached approach. The appropriate move would be to deregulate broadband industries making it easier and more cost efficient for them to expand into rural areas. If the only way the administration will promote broadband expansion is through public funding, operated via a set of rules and regulations determining how that network can be built and how it can be managed, then that is simply not in the best interest of the consumer, and that promotion should be discontinued.
Competition and community need should be the driving force behind expansion of services; giving the free markets a chance to appropriately solve any problem areas and the needs of rural communities. Ultimately, with passage of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, public funding is unfortunately assured. But there is still an opportunity to recommend a change in burdensome regulation and neutrality requirements during the creation of the National Broadband plan and implementation. With great emphasis it is recommended that there be reconsideration on forcing the implementation of FCC net neutrality requirements so that the impeding of technology and innovation that may interfere with wealth creation is avoided. Strict refinement of policies used in RUS with defined terminology of what is considered a rural area and plainly distinguish what is an unserved or underserved area. Additionally, ethics policies need to be both put in place and enforced in regards to awarding grants to companies that would use funds to move into areas already served by a service provider, or subsidizing one company over another in underserved areas where two providers may exist and one is seeking to expand services. It cannot be stressed enough that government should not be picking winners and losers; maybe even more so when it comes to technological solutions and innovation.
-nick
A full copy of this article including complete citations can be found here.
Net Neutrality For All, Part 3
You can read Part 1 of this article here.
You can read Part 2 of this article here.
Gateway Neutrality
Within the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 exists Title VI SEC. 6001(j).[26] This describes the non-discrimination and interconnection mandate which must be followed to obtain stimulus funds as a grantee, part of which is the adherence to the FCC Policy Statement on Broadband.[27] This FCC policy statement is a point-by-point description of the commission?s definition of net neutrality.? While there are no specific details regarding the rigidity with which these policies would be enforced, traffic shaping is generally considered a violation of net neutrality principle.? The result of which is that network operators will not be able to alter packet transfer to best suit the needs of their customer base.? An example of this is the recent announcement by Cox Cable to introduce a new traffic management system.[28] Neutrality proponents disagree with this type of active management because it does not treat each and every packet equally.? This is the common nature of the Internet.? As Richard Bennett, a network architect who has testified before the FCC, describes it, ?In its essence, the Internet is a resource contention system that should, in most cases, resolve competing demands for bandwidth in favor of customer perception and experience. When I testified at the FCC?s first hearing on network management practices last February, I spent half my time on this point and all other witnesses agreed with me: applications have diverse needs, and the network should do its best to meet all of them. That?s what we expect from a ?multi-purpose network?, after all.?[29] At some point in the neutrality debate, the lines of argument were confused, and neutrality in packet transfer became equivalent to protecting the end user and providing them the best experience.? In actuality, an ISP that can manage traffic in real time as they monitor their own network provides the best experience for the consumer.? Imagine if fire trucks and ambulances were regulated to obey the same traffic laws that standard commuters are forced to obey?? Obviously in those cases we are dealing with emergency situations, but the principle still applies.? A network manager can see traffic conditions in real time, and can prioritize those time sensitive packets like an ambulance through street traffic allowing the application to work correctly and seamlessly on the end users side.? Innovative techniques and technologies like these will be limited or disallowed under imposed net neutrality regulation that will be enforced in broadband stimulus legislation.? Furthermore, networks built with government funding could find themselves at the will of government censorship creating First Amendment violations.
Additionally this implementation could ease the enforcement of neutrality rules on other public or private networks acting as a ?gateway drug?.? This would be similar to the voluntary neutrality regulation passed in Norway recently.[30] At some point, when the voluntary policy has obtained enough big market player signatures, passage of enforced, involuntary regulation will quickly follow.
The Keynesian Assumption
At the root of the Obama stimulus, even in regards to broadband, the plan is still Keynesian.? The government will still be taking in taxes to pay for what it believes will stimulate the economy.? They will be dictating what areas networks should be built in, pre-determining that they will be successful promoters of economic stimulus and wealth creation, and ultimately determining the technological and innovation side future of the Internet in part or in whole.? When looking at the data, and the growing market saturation of broadband usage, it appears that the majority of those who desire broadband services and have access to them have joined.? ISP?s know this and recognize the consumer desire for those services.? They will, without a shadow of a doubt, extend their services into rural areas that show a need for broadband access when the market is suitable to expand into those areas.
To be concluded…
Part 4
-nick






