Archive for the ‘Network neutrality’ Category

OK Go Singer’s Brilliant on Net Neutrality

Saturday, April 5th, 2008

I'm stoked by Damian Kulash's New York Times opinion calling for mandated network neutrality. It's a far more accessible, engaging piece than almost anything written on the subject, and he makes a compelling case. Kudos to him. P.S. On a personal note, it's been a metric year since I blogged, and ...

FCC Hearing: Comcast Hired Seat Warmers

Wednesday, February 27th, 2008

At yesterday's FCC hearing into Comcast's practice of blocking BitTorrent traffic in Cambridge, Comcast hired several dozen seat warmers to reduce the number of critics who could get into the hearing. The hearing was held at Harvard's Berkman Center for Internet and Society. When Catherine Bracy, the Center's administrative manager, opened ...

Comcast to FCC: Why Regulate? We Have the Blogosphere

Thursday, February 14th, 2008

In a filing with the FCC (pdf), Comcast claims that, thanks to market competition and blogging watchdogs, there is no need for regulatory intervention to protect net neutrality. The company's recent discrimination against peer-to-peer traffic is the cause of the hearing. Last August, Comcast denied the charges (which were first documented ...

Net neutrality bill reborn

Tuesday, February 12th, 2008

Today, Reps. Ed Markey (D-MA) and Chip Pickering (R-MS) introduced HR 5353, the Internet Freedom Preservation Act (pdf). For more, see SaveTheInternet.com or CNet.

Comcast’s New ToS: Company Admits to Tampering with P2P Traffic

Saturday, February 9th, 2008

In Comcast's new Terms of Service, the company explicitly admits that it degrades peer-to-peer traffic as a means of reducing their network load. The company also admits that they will kick off end users who use (what they determine to be) too much bandwidth: The Service is for personal and non-commercial residential ...

Comments to FCC Blast Comcast

Tuesday, January 29th, 2008

ArsTechnica has an excellent summary of the eloquent, biting critiques of Comcast being aired in an FCC proceeding. End users with an exceptional understanding of the underlying technology provide pretty damning evidence that the broadband service provider is deliberately degrading certain kinds of internet traffic.

Supercapitalism Really Is Super

Saturday, January 26th, 2008

Robert Reich's latest book, Supercapitalism, is a fantastic analysis of the current relationship between corporations, citizens, and politics. I put Supercapitalism on my wish list after Prof. Lawrence Lessig's glowing recommendation. While I make no pretense of being such a gifted writer as either of these scholars, here I attempt to ...

700 MHz Auction Starts Today

Thursday, January 24th, 2008

While the process will drag through late February or early March, today marks the kickoff of the FCC's auction of the 700 MHz spectrum, in which TV channels 50-69 will be sold to the highest bidders in four blocks. For background on the process, see the Public Knowledge page on spectrum ...

Why Time Warner’s Bandwidth Pricing is Good Short-Term Solution

Friday, January 18th, 2008

David Isenberg has a great post on why Time Warner's bandwidth-sensitive pricing plan is good. The very short version is that it's honest and a reasonable substitute for non-neutral packet discrimination, but the details will matter tremendously. (Isen.blog link via Berkman Buzz) UPDATE: I failed to mention the important caveat that bandwidth-sensitive pricing ...

Best Blog Post Ever: Why Google’s Serious About Spectrum

Tuesday, December 4th, 2007

Many folks have wondered how serious Google is about winning a slice of the 700 MHz spectrum in the upcoming auction. Harold Feld answers this for us in the best blog post ever. Specifically, they're bent on destroying the current business model of the mobile industry and preserving the last vestiges ...