Mortal Wombat

Digital Ramblings of an Internet Policy Geek

Thursday, August 28, 2008

Internet Politics: The Good (re: network neutrality)

Last week the FCC issued an order demanding that Comcast stop degrading the performance of BitTorrent over their network. Importantly, the FCC is indicating that ISPs cannot block or degrade the performance of legal applications or network services.1

To quote Lessig, “the Commission has clearly recognized the importance of the Internet as a platform for technological growth and innovation.” To me this reads as the FCC recognizing at least to some extent that ISPs should be regulated more like utilities than like entertainment providers. The order does not establish law requiring network neutrality, but it establishes FCC jurisdiction over ISPs, and it shows that the FCC intends to enforce its 2005 non-binding Internet Policy Statement — which states that the FCC doesn’t want companies to interfere with access to content or competing services. Furthermore, as Harold Feld points out, the FCC clearly states its belief that government regulation to protect the open and vibrant character of the Internet furthers First Amendment values.

This is a Very Good Thing.

Further analysis:
/ Lessig’s letter to the FCC
/ Harold Feld — ‘Why This is A Huge Win’


1An exception exists if an ISP must target an application or network service for “network management” purposes. However, the FCC’s order makes clear that an ISP cannot run everything through this exception. If an ISP does contend targeting is necessary for network management, the ISP must inform customers of what they are doing rather than secretly degrading customers’ Internet.

posted by celebdu at 6:28 pm  

Friday, September 7, 2007

Thoughts on DoJ’s Opposition to Network Neutrality Regulations

The Department of Justice yesterday submitted a filing to the FCC regarding that body’s ongoing consideration of Network Neutrality regulations. I’m not quite clear why the DoJ is in fact commenting on this issue at all, but the department made it very clear that they oppose network neutrality regulations. Here are my thoughts after reading the filing:

First, two somewhat valid points they make:

+ The DoJ says that no evidence has been shown of “systematic or widespread” abuse in the USA that would require a remedy. They are ignoring abuse outside our borders as “irrelevant”, and they say that abuse in the states was quickly remedied by reactive steps. This seems like a somewhat legitimate point, but only if we can actually trust the government to step in effectively when abuses do occur.

+ They say that not everyone agrees on exactly what network neutrality regulations should entail. That may be a valid point.

And now their two nonsensical arguments:

- They pull out the entirely irrelevant comparison to the USPS. It’s difficult to tell if they’re being intentionally dense or if they are actually that confused about the topic. They say that, like the USPS, ISPs should be able to charge differing amounts to end-users based on how fast they want their connection to be. I agree, of course. No one is saying that ISPs shouldn’t be able to offer differential pricing to end-users based on speed / bandwidth!

- And the DoJ suggests an absurd concern that if we don’t allow end-user ISPs to charge various content providers, then end users may be footed with the entire bill for network upgrades. They fail to note that the current network has in fact been built without end-user ISPs charging content providers, and yet the entire bill has not been footed by end users. Because content providers already pay their own ISPs lots of money for a fast connection, and that money filters down to the end-user ISPs (broadband providers) via peering arrangements, etc.

Nate Anderson, on Ars Technica, describes the actual issue best:

“Companies and consumers both currently pay to access the Internet; the money comes from both ends of the connection. And both groups are paying for complete access to the “cloud.” If network operators attempt to go after extra revenues from web operators, it would create a huge group of people “inside the cloud” that want to be paid. Instead of setting up a hot new web site, paying for plenty of bandwidth, and launching your business to the public, web site operators would need to pay not only their hosting provider but also Comcast, AT&T, Verizon, and a gazillion other networks that sit between them and their potential customers. Getting on the information superhighway thus becomes only the first stop on a very long toll road.”

posted by celebdu at 10:18 pm  

Wednesday, June 6, 2007

Fodder for Libertarians: Thoughts on the Spectrum Auction

I’ll start this blog out by posting something I actually wrote up a few days ago.

So I went ahead and joined the “I want national wireless Internet” Facebook group the other day. I had been sitting on it for a bit, but it seems like it could be turning into a real movement of sorts. I was hesitant to join because neither the group nor the linked MoveOn petition contain information about exactly what they’re asking. [ed: MoveOn has since posted a letter to the FCC with details and lots of important endorsements!] Anyways, the idea is good. And I think I know what the actual Save Our Spectrum movement is about, even if I’m unclear as to what the Facebook and MoveOn groups are about. It’s about applying the following rules to the major upcoming spectrum auction. (This is the auction for the spectrum that will be released when traditional analog TV goes off the air.)

  • establish a service rule for broadband services operating in the 700 MHz band that protects the consumer’s right to use any equipment, content, application or service on a non-discriminatory basis without interference from the network provider.

  • allow third-party access to spectrum owned by other companies. This “open access” plan to include wholesale access to networks would enable more competitors to offer services
  • institute anonymous bidding in auctions to lessen the possibility of bid signalling and bid rigging that studies found to have taken place in prior auctions.

So I’m curious what any Libertarian readers have to say to this. You must admit that the current broadband market could hardly be considered a “free market”. It is built on government giveaways and government protection. I really hesitate to see a few large cell phone companies controlling all of the potential wireless broadband spectrum. (Sprint already controls most of it, iirc.) Of course I don’t think the government should be its own ISP either, because that’s just asking for trouble. I wouldn’t mind the government providing the spectrum if it is able to somehow apply a fair policy allowing companies access to it. (This would work great if open (shared) spectrum really works, which I don’t know enough about yet.) But anyways, since the government has already announced that they are auctioning off the PUBLIC spectrum, is it really too much to ask that they require the highest-bid purchasers to follow certain rules that protect the PUBLIC interest. If there are no regulations, Sprint & co. will simply sit on it (blocking competition) or add it to their proprietary 3G / 4G networks.

Tangentially, and more generally, what do Libertarians have to say about the current tradition of treating wireless spectrum, ideas and creativity (so-called “IP”) as property? What about when these could operate as a commons, thus allowing more freedom and individual autonomy? Got to go or I’d write more now.

posted by celebdu at 4:07 am  

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