Originally posted by: spidey07
I don't see why this is a big deal. The ISPs own the network, you are just using it. They should be able to do whatever they want with THEIR network.
No, it's not their network. It's mine. My tax dollars paid for it in incentives and kickbacks for rural broadband deployment buildout. In every state in the nation, telcos have fallen far short of what they've promised. Illinois was promised fiber to every home, 100Mbs synch. Now, they're saying it can't be done, and won't be cheap. Japan, meanwhile, has 40Mbs synch for $40 a month.
Think this won't affect you? Here's a list of what's *already* happened:
* In 2004, North Carolina ISP Madison River blocked their DSL customers from using any rival Web-based phone service.
* In 2005, Canada's telephone giant Telus blocked customers from visiting a Web site sympathetic to the Telecommunications Workers Union during a contentious labor dispute.
* Shaw, a major Canadian cable, internet, and telephone service company, intentionally downgrades the "quality and reliability" of competing Internet-phone services that their customers might choose -- driving customers to their own phone services not through better services, but by rigging the marketplace.
* In April, Time Warner's AOL blocked all emails that mentioned
www.dearaol.com -- an advocacy campaign opposing the company's pay-to-send e-mail scheme.
Telcos have monopolies because munipal governments intended them to provide universal service, at affordable rates, at substantial speeds. If they'd kept up their end of the bargain, we wouldn't have dropped from #1 to #16 in broadband deployment.
Handing them the ability to filter content is insane. They have already shown (read the list above) that they'll happily censor content that they don't like. If Bobby Rush is bought and paid for by SBC, does this mean anyone running against him in the next election will have the general public locked out of their website, unable to call their telephone numbers, and unable to view content critical of Rush? This is what we're allowing.
I read your longer post, and it explains things somewhat better, but I think your problem is that you are too familiar with the technology. You're thinking packet prioritization. This is more about control, and filtering. If ISPs are already abusing their position to stifle competition, then in an arena of government mandated monopolies this will allow ISPs to completely control what we access through their pipes.
It's like a road. You paid for your road (if you paid your taxes, property taxes, etc). The mayor doesn't come out and fill out the cracks in it...he hires a contractor to provide that service. Sometimes, those contractors have exclusive contracts, and operate in a monopoly situation.
Do you think it would be fair for the cops to show up at your door and say hey, you can't visit Store A or Community Organization B because Corporation C just bought access rights for the road, and wants all of your traffic, whether you like going to Corporation C or not? Should be able to pay the contractor, or the mayor, to make this happen?
Simplistic analogy, obviously, but a fair one, I think. Publicly mandated monopolies should not be under corporate control. The spirit of innovation that made the internet an incredibly egalitarian field for successful, creative enterprise will die with this.
Dave.