1. Future of Internet
Debate Ignored by Media
Sources: Buzzflash.com, July 18,
2005, Title: Web of Deceit: How Internet Freedom Got the Federal Ax, and
Why Corporate News Censored the Story, Author: Elliot D. Cohen, Ph.D.
Student
Researchers: Lauren Powell, Brett Forest, and Zoe Huffman
Faculty Evaluator:
Andrew Roth, Ph.D.
Throughout 2005 and 2006, a large underground debate
raged regarding the future of the Internet. More recently referred to as network
neutrality, the issue has become a tug of war with cable companies on the
one hand and consumers and Internet service providers on the other. Yet despite
important legislative proposals and Supreme Court decisions throughout 2005, the
issue was almost completely ignored in the headlines until 2006.(1) And,
except for occasional coverage on CNBCs Kudlow & Kramer, mainstream
television remains hands-off to this day (June 2006).(2)
Most coverage
of the issue framed it as an argument over regulationbut the term regulation
in this case is somewhat misleading. Groups advocating for net neutrality
are not promoting regulation of Internet content. What they want is a legal mandate
forcing cable companies to allow internet service providers (ISPs) free access
to their cable lines (called a common carriage agreement). This was
the model used for dial-up Internet, and it is the way content providers want
to keep it. They also want to make sure that cable companies cannot screen or
interrupt Internet content without a court order.
Those in favor of net
neutrality say that lack of government regulation simply means that cable lines
will be regulated by the cable companies themselves. ISPs will have to pay a hefty
service fee for the right to use cable lines (making Internet services more expensive).
Those who could pay more would get better access; those who could not pay would
be left behind. Cable companies could also decide to filter Internet content at
will.
On the other side, cable company supporters say that a great deal
of time and money was spent laying cable lines and expanding their speed and quality.(3)
They claim that allowing ISPs free access would deny cable companies the ability
to recoup their investments, and maintain that cable providers should be allowed
to charge. Not doing so, they predict, would discourage competition and innovation
within the cable industry.
Cable supporters like the AT&T-sponsored
Hands Off the Internet website assert that common carriage legislation would lead
to higher prices and months of legal wrangling. They maintain that such legislation
fixes a problem that doesnt exist and scoff at concerns that phone and cable
companies will use their position to limit access based on fees as groundless.
Though cable companies deny plans to block content providers without cause, there
are a number of examples of cable-initiated discrimination.
In March 2005,
the FCC settled a case against a North Carolina-based telephone company that was
blocking the ability of its customers to use voice-over-Internet calling services
instead of (the more expensive) phone lines.(4) In August 2005, a Canadian
cable company blocked access to a site that supported the cable union in a labor
dispute.(5) In February 2006, Cox Communications denied customers access
to the Craigs List website. Though Cox claims that it was simply a security
error, it was discovered that Cox ran a classified service that competes with
Craigs List.(6)
Court decisions
In June of 1999, the
Ninth District Court ruled that AT&T would have to open its cable network
to ISPs (AT&T v. City of Portland). The court said that Internet transmissions,
interactive, two-way exchanges, were telecommunication offerings, not a cable
information service (like CNN) that sends data one way. This decision was overturned
on appeal a year later.
Recent court decisions have extended the cable company
agenda further. On June 27, 2005, The United States Supreme Court ruled that cable
corporations like Comcast and Verizon were not required to share their lines with
rival ISPs (National Cable & Telecommunications Association vs. Brand X Internet
Services).(7) Cable companies would not have to offer common carriage agreements
for cable lines the way that telephone companies have for phone lines.
According
to Dr. Elliot Cohen, the decision accepted the FCC assertion that cable modem
service is not a two-way telecommunications offering, but a one-way information
service, completely overturning the 1999 ruling. Meanwhile, telephone companies
charge that such a decision gives an unfair advantage to cable companies and are
requesting that they be released from their common carriage requirement as well.
Legislation
On
June 8, the House rejected legislation (HR 5273) that would have prevented phone
and cable companies from selling preferential treatment on their networks for
delivery of video and other data-heavy applications. It also passed the Communications
Opportunity, Promotion, and Enhancement (COPE) Act (HR 5252), which supporters
said would encourage innovation and the construction of more high-speed Internet
lines. Internet neutrality advocates say it will allow phone and cable companies
to cherry-pick customers in wealthy neighborhoods while eliminating the current
requirement demanded by most local governments that cable TV companies serve low-income
and minority areas as well.(8)
Comment: As of June 2006, the COPE
Act is in the Senate. Supporters say the bill supports innovation and freedom
of choice. Internet neutrality advocates say that its passage would forever compromise
the Internet Giant cable companies would attain a monopoly on high-speed, cable
Internet They would prevent poorer citizens from broadband access, while monitoring
and controlling the content of information that can be accessed.
Notes
1.
Keeping a Democratic Web, The New York Times, May 2, 2006.
2.
Jim Goldman, Larry Kudlow, and Phil Lebeau, Panelists Michael Powell, Mike
Holland, Neil Weinberg, John Augustine and Pablo Perez-Fernandez discuss markets,
Kudlow & Company CNBC, March 6, 2006.
3. http://www.Handsofftheinternet.com.
4. Michael Geist, Telus breaks Net Providers cardinal rule: Telecom
company blocks access to site supporting union in labour dispute, Ottawa
Citizen, August 4, 2005.
5. Jonathan Krim, Renewed Warning of Bandwidth
Hoarding, The Washington Post, November 24, 2005.
6. David A. Utter,
Craigslist Blocked By Cox Interactive, http://www.Webpronews.com,
June 7, 2006.
7. Yuki Noguchi, Cable Firms Dont Have to Share
Networks, Court Rules, Washington Post, June 28, 2005.
8. Last
week in Congress / How our representatives voted, Buffalo News (New York),
June 11, 2006.
UPDATE BY ELLIOT D. COHEN, PH.D.
Despite the
fact that the Courts decision in Brand X marks the beginning of the end
for a robust, democratic Internet, there has been a virtual MSM blackout in covering
it. As a result of this decision, the legal stage has been set for further corporate
control. Currently pending in Congress is the Communications Opportunity,
Promotion, and Enhancement Act of 2006(HR 5252), fueled by strong telecom
corporative lobbies and introduced by Congressman Joe Barton (R-TX). This Act,
which fails to adequately protect an open and neutral Internet, includes a Title
IIEnforcement of Broadband Policy Statement that gives the FCC exclusive
authority to adjudicate any complaint alleging a violation of the broadband policy
statement or the principles incorporated therein. With the passage of this
provision, courts will have scant authority to challenge and overturn FCC decisions
regarding broadband. Since under current FCC Chair Kevin Martin, the FCC is moving
toward still further deregulation of telecom and media companies, the likely consequence
is the thickening of the plot to increase corporate control of the Internet In
particular, behemoth telecom corporations like Comcast, Verizon, and AT&T
want to set up toll booths on the Internet If these companies get their way, content
providers with deep pockets will be afforded optimum bandwidth while the rest
of us will be left spinning in cyberspace. No longer will everyone enjoy an equal
voice in the freest and most comprehensive democratic forum ever devised by humankind.
As might be expected, none of these new developments are being addressed
by the MSM. Among media activist organizations attempting to stop the gutting
of the free Internet is The Free Press (http://www.freepress.net/), which now
has an aggressive Save the Internet campaign.