Anti Net Neutrality Crowd Reaches Deep For The Craziest Possible Response To President Obama's Call For Real Net Neutrality Rules

from the and-the-competition-is-on dept

Well, we already wrote about President Obama’s somewhat surprising decision to come out strongly in favor of Title II reclassification for broadband (with strong forbearance) to setup some real net neutrality rules. We also covered the unhappy response from the big broadband players who are just repeating the same talking points from the past year, claiming that they’ll suddenly stop investing in broadband and how this will kill the internet (ignoring that they already rely on Title II for a number of things, including internet infrastructure).

But the real fun is coming from the politicians and the pundits who seem to be trying to out-crazy each other in coming up with the most ridiculous analogy/description of what Title II means for the internet and the world. The one getting the most attention has to be Senator Ted Cruz who declared net neutrality “Obamacare for the internet.”

It’s not, of course. Not even close. Matthew Inman, over at TheOatmeal has penned a fantastic response to Cruz, explaining the basics of what net neutrality is really about, and why it’s just ridiculous to claim it’s “Obamacare for the internet.” You should read the whole thing, because it’s much funnier than just this snippet (and you’ll also understand the crab taco reference), but here’s a snippet:
But, honestly, the “Obamacare” line was just one of many crazy comparisons. Here’s Fox legal analyst Andrew Napolitano calling it “Orwellian” (I’d embed the video, but apparently MediaMatters still doesn’t realize how to use SSL, so we can’t) to refer to it as “net neutrality” saying that it’s really about taking “the choice of buyers and sellers out of the market.” And that’s in response to Fox’s Stuart Varney claiming (incorrectly) that the President’s proposal is “one speed for all, one price for all.” Neither of those statements are even close to true. There is nothing in the proposal that involves “one price for all” or “one speed for all.” It’s just about setting up a system where a broadband provider cannot discriminate and favor their own services over another’s. It’s the kind of thing you’d think the guys at Fox would appreciate, given that one of their main competitors, MSNBC, is owned by Comcast.

How do you think Fox’s Napolitano and Varney would feel about Comcast slowing down access to Fox’s videos and websites while pushing those visitors to visit MSNBC instead?

And if that wasn’t crazy enough, let’s take it up another notch. We got an unsolicited “statement of Roslyn Layton” in response to President Obama’s proposal. I have no idea who “Roslyn Layton” is and, and frankly, have no interest in doing the Google search to find out, but I know plenty from the fact that she’s actually claiming that this new plan to make sure that the internet is open and free from unfair blocking for all is somehow a victory for the Russians, Chinese and Iranians:

During President Obama?s official visit to China today, the White House issued a statement of support of government regulation of the Internet with the classification of broadband under Title II of the Telecommunications Act from 1934. The symbolism of this statement appearing while President Obama is in China could not be more Orwellian. The Chinese internet is everything that we don?t want in the US: state ownership of the enterprises that comprises the Internet, its infrastructure, content, and connectivity; top-down regulation of every aspect of the Internet experience; and government collusion with industry to create Internet companies. Should the US take the route of reclassifying broadband under Title II as Obama suggests, it would bring the the US dangerously closer to the Chinese model where the internet is ?government allowed?.

Title II is not only bad news for the US, but for the rest of world. Indeed foreign authoritarian governments have been looking for justification to monitor networks and users under the guise of net neutrality and the ?Open Internet?. Obama?s announcement could not be a better present to the leaders of China, Iran, and Russia.

Except that’s the opposite of fact. A plan that specifically calls for “no blocking, no throttling, increased transparency and no paid prioritization.” Does that really sound like a plan from China, Iran and Russia? Does Layton think anyone thinks that statement is even within the same area code as the truth? While some others are making similar statements, they at least admit that those countries will use “any action” by the US government as a supposed defense for seeking to regulate the internet.

But that includes any rules that would be put forth, including the rules under Section 706. So the fact that Russia, China and Iran would lie and totally misrepresent what rules under Title II mean doesn’t magically mean that Title II would give them any extra cover.

And that’s because it’s simply wrong that Title II is “regulating the internet.” As we’ve explained many times, there are legitimate concerns about using Title II — but these complaints above are hysterical and simply wrong. And by being so hyperbolic and apoplectic, they’re actually doing their side a disservice. Anyone who actually knows what’s going on knows for a fact that rules under Title II aren’t anywhere near as problematic as all of these claims are making it out to be.

Taking clear rules that are designed to keep the internet more accessible and more open and less susceptible to interference shouldn’t be seen as a partisan issue (a la Cruz) or “regulating the internet.” It’s not. It’s about defining the rules under which underlying infrastructure must agree to operate — to keep the internet itself free from dangerous interference by gatekeepers who have a long history of interfering. It’s certainly not about supporting totalitarian censorship-happy regimes, but the exact opposite. It’s about making sure that everyone can get their message or service out there, and not worrying about having a giant broadband player block access over its last mile monopoly.

To take an issue that is about keeping the internet open and free, and pretending it’s going to lead to a censored and “Orwellian” internet is just ridiculous and wrong.

Reacting like this just makes everyone making such claims look really, really silly.

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Comments on “Anti Net Neutrality Crowd Reaches Deep For The Craziest Possible Response To President Obama's Call For Real Net Neutrality Rules”

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126 Comments
Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re: Re:

I don’t understand how MSM considers Ted Cruz to be ‘grassroots’ with his connections to Goldman Sachs via his wife (Mid level VP) and campaign contributions. To top it all off his dad is best described as every possible stereotype of a racist old southern fundamentalist rolled into one horrible package. Normally I don’t use the ‘guilty by association’ logic but it’s incredibly obvious that the Senator is using his father as a proxy campaigner.

John85851 (profile) says:

Re: Re: Obamacare for the Internet?

This is politics: he doesn’t need take himself seriously as long as he knows how to get his constituents fired up. And nothing fires up people in the Republican base than comparing anything to Obama.
Don’t like something? Just say it’s just like Obamacare, even if there’s no evidence in reality. Then let Rush Limbaugh and Fox News run with it.

PaulT (profile) says:

Re: Obamacare for the Internet?

Well, someone elected him, and wasn’t he the lead proponent of the government shutdown a while ago?

Seems like far too many people take him seriously, even if to the outside world he’s just another Palin-style moron who inexplicably gets to be a lead international figure. (Yes, international – the rest of the world is caught between laughing at these morons and hoping that they don’t get put in a place where they cause real damage to the rest of us).

PaulT (profile) says:

Re: If you like your movie provider, you can keep it

Well, apart from the pathetic attempt at false equivalence, it should be noted that it’s the anti net neutrality side that’s pushing to take that choice away from you, not the pro side. Net neutrality is literally a fight to keep things the same, no matter how much misinformation idiots push out there.

JWW (profile) says:

Re: If you like your movie provider, you can keep it

This is what I don’t get. Republicans should be rushing to support Obama on this. This is their chance to get some bipartisanship credit AND stick it to Hollywood (mark my words, there are Hollywood folks making Obamas phone ring off the hook to try to back him down on this).

But the stupid Republicans fawn over Hollywood hoping to get some scraps from them.

This time you can do the same thing Obama is advocating AND support the actual “folks” who don’t want their Netflix to start moving at the speed of molasses. Thats the whole rub here an the angle.

Minus common carrier the screws will be turned on Netflix, Amazon Prime, and Hulu, until those services either become too expensive or too slow to be of use to people. This it the argument, this is the reason.

Republicans, get on the right side of this dammit!

nasch (profile) says:

Re: Re: If you like your movie provider, you can keep it

This is their chance to get some bipartisanship credit AND stick it to Hollywood (mark my words, there are Hollywood folks making Obamas phone ring off the hook to try to back him down on this).

Many of them consider bipartisanship a bad thing. Working with Democrats to get something done is seen as a stain, not an accomplishment.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re: If you like your movie provider, you can keep it

Same can be said of the Dems. Obama’s idea of a compromise is you do what he says. Now that the Repubs have the house and senate he suddenly starts talking cooperation.

I am all for net neutrality, but you cannot take O at his word so the Repbubs need to proceed with caution.

ambrellite (profile) says:

Re: Re: Just think

I thought that, too. The Republicans get to look like they’re fighting Obama, and the Democrats get to rebuild credibility with their base by “fighting” back, though of course not hard enough to stop a bill that Obama will be “forced” to sign because “at least we were able to pass vital cybersecurity legislation (CISPA)” and “we’ll fix net neutrality when a Democratic president is elected.”

Rich Kulawiec (profile) says:

Let's not dismiss Ted Cruz so quickly...

After all, remember the time he managed a 200-server operation single-handedly — well before puppet, chef, et.al?

And the time he debugged a PMTUD issue spanning two different ISPs and a firewall?

Or the time he wrote the definitive paper on congestion control for streaming content delivery?

Oh…wait. He’s never done ANY of those things. And that is why we should all pay rapt attention to what someone with no experience, no knowledge, no background, no expertise whatsoever has to say. Right.

David says:

Oh no!

Title II is not only bad news for the US, but for the rest of world. Indeed foreign authoritarian governments have been looking for justification to monitor networks and users under the guise of net neutrality and the “Open Internet”. Obama’s announcement could not be a better present to the leaders of China, Iran, and Russia.

Isn’t it enough for China, Iran, and Russia that they have taken over our streets, our water supply, our electricity, and whatever else is considered a utility?

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Media Matters vs Fox News

Given the history of Media Matters and their frequent attacks on Fox News, I’m inherently suspicious of any Fox content they post. An original source, directly from Fox’s video site or recorded off one of their channels, would be a better citation for claims that Fox has gone off the rails. If they are that nutty, they’ll be happy to have it published.

Anonymous Coward says:

It almost seems like all Obama has to do is come out and say something and a certain segment of politicians are obligated to come out and speak against it.

I’m waiting for Obama to come out and make a speech decrying murder and puppy kicking, and Ted Cruz will have to stand up and declare that he’s not sure if there’s enough murder and that not kicking puppies is Obamacare for our pets.

nasch (profile) says:

Re: Re:

I’m waiting for Obama to come out and make a speech decrying murder and puppy kicking, and Ted Cruz will have to stand up and declare that he’s not sure if there’s enough murder and that not kicking puppies is Obamacare for our pets.

As awesome as that would be, he would actually denounce Obama for not coming out against murder and puppy kicking sooner (despite the fact that Cruz hadn’t said anything about them either).

Pragmatic says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Re:

Obama is center right, Republican Lite. That’s why they’re so nutty about bringing him down. They’re trying to maintain the illusion that our two party system offers us an actual choice. It doesn’t.

One of them needs to fail real bad in the next election so the third parties have a chance to get their candidates in. It doesn’t matter that much who is president, he (or she) will always have to work with Congress to get anything done so we need to be aiming to get our candidates elected to Congress. We just need the numbers.

Anonymous Coward says:

This is what happens when the political system degrades to the point where everything the other side does must be opposed as the worst thing ever.

For some reason, I’m pretty sure that Dems would do the same thing if the Reps looked at the Net Neutrality, and saw the pro-business narrative that it provides, and ran with it first.

It’s not like it hasn’t been pointed out before. There are numerous businesses that exist today that couldn’t, or would be smaller, if their access was subject to the whims of telecoms. You might even say that preventing a neutral field of play for businesses is a “job killer”, a line that has been trotted out by the GOP for dem policies they don’t like, which today is all of them.

The GOP could have easily done that; say that Neutrality is a part of the engine that allows small businesses, and enterprising americans to thrive and make the country great (TM). Instead there must be strident and hyperbolic resistance, because the other side must never be credited with having a good idea.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

And you are right, what is bipartisanship if not political opposition? At the same time, when politicians see everything as a Manichean struggle between their version of absolute good and evil, then a lot of babies get tossed with the bathwater.

While I have my ideological lines, I also am becoming more pragmatic as this particular flavor of politics continues. I’m tired of everything being a fight to see who can exlude the middle the fastest, and would rather see some ideas at least tried out before being blocked out.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Re:

On this, I agree. Net Neutrality and the braoder idea of internet freedom is not just a good idea, but probably one of the best ideas going on. What I’m bothered about is how that that idea is being treated because of the usual partisan baloney.

That was the point of my original comment. I’m sorry if that came over poorly.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

Political campaigns funded by telcos. Telcos want net neutrality to be a vague, hated thing, because if it isn’t they lose some of their monopoly power. Politicians want to keep their patrons happy so they’ll fund their reelection campaigns. End result: ridiculous public statements from telcos’ pet politicians.

Possible solutions:
-Make political advertisements illegal (nearly impossible)
-Put forward candidates who are unwilling to compromise on their beliefs (completely impossible)
-Create an intelligent, well-informed voting public that demands excellent representation from their government (laughably impossible)
-Enact harsh universal term limits that restrict anyone who is elected to a political office from ever running for any other office (may have negative side-effects)
-Something else?

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re: Re:

Take inspiration from Guy Fawkes.

Why in the world would I want to engage in a failed terror attack, get tortured for multiple days, then be burned at the stake? I mean sure, he gets a holiday, and there’s candy involved, but it’s all about making effigies so they can burn him all over again.

I’ll take my inspiration from a group that succeeded in revolution, thank you very much!

tqk (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Re:

I’ll take my inspiration from a group that succeeded in revolution …

Succeeded? Your front runners for the presidency include Ted Cruze and Hillary Clinton, your corporations buy your law by buying your elected representatives, your 4th amendment has been gutted, your 5th amendment is on life support, your 1st amendment is contra-indicated by your educational system, your police think they’re fighting a war against the people they were hired to protect, your south pines for the days of slavery, the rest of you are damned near proud of your racism, there’s a revolving door between banks and corporations and their regulators, your FBI is trying to compete with your CIA, your supremes don’t even understand English any more, your MafiAA is dictating treaties for your trade representatives to impose in secret, …

I could go on, but I think I need to go throw up now.

tqk (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:4 Re:

Yeah, kind of sad, isn’t it? I didn’t used to have so much to complain about when I was younger, I think. My big brother pretty much filled that role (asshole) all by himself (still is, last time I checked, but I won’t be doing that again). Then I grew up and started to get into programming and systems analysis, and it was all downhill from there. Now, it seems everything I look at, I find myself wondering, “Why TF did they do it that way?!?”

Meh. Life.

Rapnel (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Re:

I read your post and got stuck on the word revolution for a second and it occurred to me that revolution is continuous in nature and so it must be when applied to society. Revolutions do not end. They can not because once power has been ceded it will invariably consolidate which will invariably limit or otherwise oppress the increasingly less privileged of larger society. Heat and pressure, expansion and contraction, wax on and wax off – the revolution is infinite and does not stop. Thus – Welcome to the Revolution – Long Live the Revolution. Indeed.

rebrad (profile) says:

Not Another Government Operation

All you have to do is look around and look at other government operations (post office, VA, Obamacare, NSA, IRS, EPA, etc) to understand why letting the government run the internet is a bad idea. Agreed, Big Business is no better. So how about all parties (gov, business and users) agreeing on a list of users rights that internet provider must guarantee and let the fed enforce only.

nasch (profile) says:

Re: Not Another Government Operation

All you have to do is look around and look at other government operations (post office, VA, Obamacare, NSA, IRS, EPA, etc) to understand why letting the government run the internet is a bad idea.

Such a bad idea that nobody is actually proposing that. If you think net neutrality is “the government running the internet” then you either didn’t read or didn’t understand the linked article. Here it is again if you want to take a look.

http://theoatmeal.com/blog/net_neutrality

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Not Another Government Operation

letting the government run the internet is a bad idea.

How about this – let me sue the individuals in Government who break the rules laid down.

An example – someone is letting in these counterfeit products. http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2014/nov/6/va-surgeons-risk-danger-by-using-unauthorized-pote/ To let me, the aware citizen, sue the administrator who approved it.

Standing? Bah, I have it because I paid taxes.

Anonymous Coward says:

anti-big government & zero tolerance

One of the chief concerns of the conservative/libertarian mindset is that once the government gets its foot in the door regulating any industry, it won’t end there, but will continue to slowly expand until every business is literally drowning in red tape and regulations, and a large bureaucracy has grown (like a cancer) conducting audits, enforcing rules, and in ins extreme, requiring a business to submit (and keep track of) so much additional paperwork that it needs to create and staff a dedicated department just for that.

Their opposition to network neutrality may be more a fear of the monster it might eventually grow into rather than what is currently proposed.

Ideally, ISPs, like any other business, should be allowed to do just about anything they want, and if customers don’t like it, they can go somewhere else. The problem is that, for broadband providers, there typically isn’t anyone else, so it’s either their local cable company or nothing at all.

nasch (profile) says:

Re: anti-big government & zero tolerance

Ideally, ISPs, like any other business, should be allowed to do just about anything they want, and if customers don’t like it, they can go somewhere else. The problem is that, for broadband providers, there typically isn’t anyone else, so it’s either their local cable company or nothing at all.

Exactly. Look at the European market, where there’s very strong competition. They don’t have net neutrality issues, because any ISP caught messing with it would get dropped immediately. Since the FCC/Congress is unwilling to do what’s necessary to ensure actual competition, Title II is the best alternative. But I’m pretty certain the same people making ridiculous claims about Title II regulation would flip out about letting companies compete on shared infrastructure as well.

tqk (profile) says:

Re: anti-big government & zero tolerance

One of the chief concerns of the conservative/libertarian mindset …

Oh FFS. Go read this. It’s short:

http://reason.com/24-7/2014/11/11/presidents-online-regulatory-scheme-is-o

TL;DR Libertarians are not the same as conservatives/Republicans. They’re as embarrassed by Cruze’s Obamacare for the Internet as pretty much all of we are.

Pragmatic says:

Re: Re: Re: anti-big government & zero tolerance

I was going to ask if you’d read the comments, @tqk.

http://reason.com/24-7/2014/11/11/presidents-online-regulatory-scheme-is-o#comment

Hilarity ensues. Please note:

There is no such thing as a free market and pretending that there is won’t free it up.

We can’t spend our way to freedom if we don’t have spending power.

Corporations will not willingly break themselves up to create consumer choice.

Government has a role in our society, but as our servant, not our master.

Namel3ss (profile) says:

Really disappointed w/ Cruz

I actually agree with him on some issues (Obamacare and immigration to name a couple) but he’s really screwing the pooch on this one. The ISP’s have demonstrated that they will f**k with the internet to no end if it means more $$$ for them, and they need to be reined in or the internet as we’ve come to know it will cease to exist.

Really really disappointed.

Roman (user link) says:

Not partisan

The net neutrality debate is not a partisan one. It is a debate between people who understand the technology and people who don’t. The fact that Obama supports it doesn’t mean much – his support of Title II reclassification makes him the broken clock that’s still right twice a day. Why did he appoint an industry lobbyist to head the group making the decision on this?

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Give something, take something

That and he has essentially nothing to lose at this point, which hopefully means he’ll start delivering on some more of those stump speech promises.

I think these last two years are going to be the most telling of his presidency. He has a real opportunity to make a few key things right, and doing so will help determine whether he actually meant the things he campaigned on or he was just a brilliant liar and panderer.

David says:

Re: Re: Give something, take something

I think these last two years are going to be the most telling of his presidency. He has a real opportunity to make a few key things right, and doing so will help determine whether he actually meant the things he campaigned on or he was just a brilliant liar and panderer.

Oh nonsense. What he did so far was quite contraproductive regarding the votes he could hope to gather with that, so he has less rather than more reason to behave honorably.

The powers that be don’t mind a Democratic president as long as he is in their pocket. They don’t assassinate presidents because they might get reelected but because they might stop behaving themselves.

Now that Obama does not need to look after voters any more, retiring peacefully with a big stack of cash will be more rather than less on his mind.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re: Give something, take something

Then why bother with the net neutrality position? You honestly think the powers that be as you call them are pro net neutrality?

It’s like John said in the parent, he’s trying to score some points by taking that position. According to your theory he wouldn’t even bother because he’s just fantasizing out his stack of cash.

How do you know he’s not making some kind of attempt at redemption? Do you have a crystal ball?

mister anderson (profile) says:

Not all wrong

Like everything, the detractors aren’t all wrong. Neither are they all right (I would say more wrong than right in the case of Cruz).

Title II is not an optimal solution for the current problem with ISPs and network neutrality. Unfortunately, it appears to be the best solution that can be readily implemented in the current time frame.

Perhaps we should take a longer look for this issue. Title II reclassification is a reasonable short term solution, but we will still have systemic problems with the ISP structure in this country, which mainly stem from the lack of players in the market and overall lack of competition. In my opinion, this lack of competition is the root of the net neutrality issue.

Even if title II reclassification happens, I think that we will still be left paying too much for substandard service. We need a solution that will deal with this issue, and I’m not sure what the solution will be.

What I know is that we cannot lose sight of the bigger picture in pushing for immediate term actions. We cannot afford to win the battle while we lose the war, not with something as critical as the open internet. We must engage in the longer term war of improving competition, lowering barriers to entry, and ensuring an open and neutral internet.

Anonymous Coward says:

This is what you get with rabid anti-Obama crowd. They’re like petty children who are oppositionally defiant due to their blind hatred of Obama. This is of course ironic since I’ve seen plenty of derisive statements claiming that Obama is trying to implement a Big Brother government, but they seem to have a 2 minutes hate fixation starring Obama as Emmanuel Goldstein. So whenever Obama comes out in support of something, they’ll reactively come out against it. Obama pursued the Affordable Care Act, which he copied from the Republicans, but suddenly they’re against their own plan when he comes out in favor of it. He could propose a bill to increase the punishment for kicking puppies and they would probably come out against it and try to spin the argument that kicking puppies is a God-given patriotic American freedom that should not be subject to more bloated, taxpayer-funded government regulation… Or else the terrorists win. If you believe that Obama is evil and everything he does or says is evil, you’ll likely find yourself opposing your own freedoms and self-interest at some point. That seems to be the case here.

Anonymous Coward says:

Our Society Is full Of Sheep

unfortunately facts mean nothing these days with enough money to spread fear even the most sound ideas get voted down.
take here in Oregon and the GMO debate those for the labeling only spent 7mil those against spent over 25mil guess who won, you guessed it the fear mongers with the deep pockets did.
o well who wants to know if that steak is from a real cow or a laboratory.I for one DO

Anonymous Coward says:

If this really was Obama Care for the Internet, then people would be required to buy an internet service plan every month. If a person refused to buy internet service every month, then they’d be forced to pay thousands of dollars in taxes at the end of the year.

Until that happens, net neutrality can’t possibly be considered Obama Care for the Internet.

Poorker says:

Express Toll

So you are cruising on the highway at 75 mph paying all your tolls, thinking you are getting to your detination on time, and you hit traffic 5 miles from your destination. After driving for two hours through that traffic yam you notice, one mile from your destination, that the three lane highway has a sign dividing the road into two express lanes with a $100 toll, and one lane with a $5 toll. The two lanes which used to cost $5, and now $100, are empty. How would you feel about that?

gamesmith94134 (profile) says:

Re: Express Toll

You may be right on necessity, but it is not safe. For the best and safest way to such application is then, you must buy the Volkswagon’s Jetta, now they had cruse control that bear no liability on accident and no accident allowed. Its operator is the remote; so you do not pay insurance yourself,blame it on the driver on any event; but GPS answer only direction and distance. Why pay toll? Evidently, it is the cruse control that you need—75 mph paying all your toll, try cruse control in Jetta only.

Anonymous Coward says:

When you posted an article a few weeks back announcing that you would be exploring NN in depth I hoped against all hope and experience that just once all sides of an issue quite difficult to easily understand would be presented in a sort of honest-broker fashion. Sadly, it seems my hope was mere wishful thinking as the tone, tenor, and substance of articles here have devolved into advocacy pieces for a specific outcome, with virtually zero examination of the merits and demerits of the multiplicity of relevant issues.

While I cannot vouch that other authors having different views are necessarily any better, at least I have found a few others who appear to be trying to articulate in an easily understood manner why they subscribe to approaches that do not represent what is being openly advocated here, and they do so in a manner that is largely devoid of snarky cheap shots at anyone who may harbor an opinion that differs from them. In short, they present information that appears to be quite relevant and convinces me that things are not as obvious and simple as you would have your readership believe.

Who makes the better arguments? I honestly do not know because I am still trying to assimilate a large amount of information. I do believe, however, that what people such as, inter alia, Chis Neuman, Geoffrey Manne, and Joshua Steimle are trying to do is inform, as opposed to propagandize.

If you truly want to help people understand what is taking place (and believe that your views are the far superior ones), then it seems to me you would want to provide them and others with similar views an equal opportunity for their views to be heard here and discussed respectfully and thoughtfully. Anything less and articles appearing here are nothing more that desired outcomes supported with cherry-picked information that all too often conveys non-objective data.

Frankly, I would enjoy a face to face debate involving persons such as you with your take on NN and persons such as them with their take.

BigKeithO says:

Re: Re:

What is left to debate? This topic has been debated to death. Pretty much the only option left to the US is to reclassify under Title II. You can either leave things as they are and turn the (US portion) of the internet into something more like cable TV or you can reclassify and keep the internet functioning like it has been forever.

The debate is over.

John85851 (profile) says:

People looking silly? But...

“Reacting like this just makes everyone making such claims look really, really silly.”
I disagree. The more people look “silly” with their outrageous claims, the more laypeople will believe them. After all, which sounds better on the 11:00 news:
“President allows expansion of Title II to provide more net neutrality” (boring)
or
“Net neutrality will turn the US into Russia or China” (alarmist and click-baiting)

It doesn’t matter if the second statement isn’t true or if the details will be explained later in the story: this headline is all people will see or hear.

sangaman (profile) says:

What about stronger arguments against Net Neutrality?

Picking on Ted Cruz tweets is easy. I’d be more interested in seeing proponents of net neutrality respond to more nuanced critiques. Here are two links for starters:

http://reason.com/archives/2014/11/12/net-neutrality-is-a-lousy-idea
http://reason.com/archives/2014/05/26/net-neutrality-dont-let-the-fcc-control

It seems to me that the risks and downsides of net neutrality outweigh any potential benefits. Most arguments in favor of net neutrality I’ve read seem to have too much faith in regulatory agencies like the FCC to handle something as complex as the internet responsibly and intelligently. Until I see any major and tangible harm coming from allowing ISPs to vary their speeds based on content, I’d be extremely hesitant to give regulators any more power.

tqk (profile) says:

Re: What about stronger arguments against Net Neutrality?

Yeah, I tried that yesterday. Was I surprised. Reason appears to have been bought by the telcos.

Their assumption is the industry is a free market and the big players aren’t mono/duopolies. Neither of these are true.

In most of north America, customers have one or two possible providers, if any. The industry is hardly a free market. The *opolists have bought protectionist laws that prohibit competition from counterparts or startups. State laws insist on referendums for cities who want to do municipal infrastructure despite the *opolists having no intention of rolling out their own there.

Guess who runs the agency that regulates this. A former lobbyist for the telcos.

Reason’s now a slut in my eyes. A whore. Apologies to sluts and whores. They provide far better service. If this is what it means to be libertarian, I’m going back to calling myself a classical liberal. The word’s now as valueless as liberal and conservative.

sangaman (profile) says:

Re: Re: What about stronger arguments against Net Neutrality?

If what you’re saying is true about the ISPs having protectionist laws & regulations to stifle competition – thereby allowing them to get away with egregious throttling of certain content – then why should more laws and regulation be the answer? State laws may be primarily to blame, but I am assuming that the agency that’s run by a former lobbyist you’re referring to is a federal one? Therein lies my largest fear with net neutrality proposal, if you give more power to regulatory agencies it’s just a matter of time before those regulatory powers are usurped by entrenched businesses and interests.

If a freer and more robust internet is the goal, why not target the anti-competitive laws and regulations and attack the problem at the root?

tqk (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re: What about stronger arguments against Net Neutrality?

… if you give more power to regulatory agencies it’s just a matter of time before those regulatory powers are usurped by entrenched businesses and interests.

What part of “the agency that’s run by a former lobbyist” didn’t you understand?

I would love to rip it all out and start over with a level playing field. I despise corps getting cozy with government to stick it to consumers. Unfortunately, that’s what we have to work with today. My plan (“rip it all out and start over”) isn’t going to happen in my lifetime, so we’re left with mitigating the damage and holding the rightsholders (in effect) to account.

“The market” has been corrupted and hamstrung via regulatory capture. IF the regulators have any power to make this mess work for consumers, that’s where we should look for redress. If it still can’t be fixed in consumers interest, perhaps emigration, or revolution, is the only solution.

nasch (profile) says:

Re: What about stronger arguments against Net Neutrality?

http://reason.com/archives/2014/11/12/net-neutrality-is-a-lousy-idea

That one had two main points, one that the free market should decide, which given the state of competition in the broadband market is a bad joke. And secondly, that if we give the federal government more regulatory authority, the broadband companies will cooperate more with the completely unrelated parts of the federal governments’ spying efforts. I don’t see how it’s possible for them to cooperate more than the giving them everything they want every time they ask that we have now, so I’m not too concerned about that fear.

He also pretends that nothing bad has happened yet, ignoring Comcast’s and Verizon’s bad actions that have already occurred.

http://reason.com/archi ves/2014/05/26/net-neutrality-dont-let-the-fcc-control

“Goodbye fast-moving innovation and adjustment to changing technology on the part of companies, hello regulatory morass and long, drawn-out bureaucratic hassles.”

What country is he talking about, because that doesn’t sound familiar to me. This guy also claims that nothing has happened yet.

He points out that the FCC basically tried to strangle cable TV while not really explaining why. It seems the most likely explanation is regulatory capture. The old guard didn’t like the new guys and tried to used the FCC to shut them down. How does that play into the current debate?

“(many of the strongest proponents for net neutrality represent bandwidth-hogging companies and services such as Netflix, YouTube, and Skype that ISPs would likely hit up for extra fees).”

Why is it necessary to use the loaded term “hogging”, which indicates that they’re using more than their fair share when in fact they’re delivering what ISP customers are asking for? Why not use the neutral term “bandwidth-intensive”?

“But if Netflix is increasing demand for bandwidth “

Wrong – customers are increasing demand.

“why shouldn’t an ISP tap them for extra money to build more capacity or help in managing it?”

If there were strong competition in this market, that would be no problem. Then ISPs could choose how to deal with Netflix, and customers could choose which ISP to use. With the situation we have now, the big ISPs have the ability to extort content providers even when there’s no reason they can’t easily and quickly accommodate the demands of the traffic.

“If letting a thousand flowers bloom online is a good idea (and it is), there’s no clear reason that ISPs offering fixed and mobile Internet access shouldn’t be allowed to experiment and innovate too when it comes to accessing and managing the Internet.”

Choking off Netflix traffic until they pay up is innovative?

I didn’t read page 2.

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