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Do you trust telecommunications companies?
1/18/2007
There was a time, less than a year ago, when a lot of us thought that the telecommunications dinosaurs were plotting against us. Net neutrality is essentially the status quo, and they wanted to change that. I don't know about you, but I pretty much wake up every morning ecstatic about the development of the Internet and the Web so far. (If we could solve the spam problem, I could drop the "pretty much" part of that statement. And, no, I don't buy that dropping net neutrality would get rid of spam. Not for a second.)Network neutrality is the phrase that defines the traditional practice on the Internet in which all traffic is delivered at the same price and level of service. Recent court and regulatory decisions have allowed the phone and cable companies to change that practice by creating preferential delivery deals in which they could charge content creators more for better or faster service. Activists lobbied heavily last year to maintain the traditional "neutrality" of the Internet, creating a national debate on its future.We were reassured by telecommunications company spokespersons that we had nothing to fear, that they had no intent to create tiered networks that would discriminate, eventually, against smaller content providers. Sure. They said that tiered networks would provide higher speeds for those who could pay extra and that prices for everyone else would go down. Sure.
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