Ted Stevens' forthcoming net neutrality "compromise" : what a joke

Summary: Reuters reports that U.S. Sen. Ted Stevens (R-Alaska) will introduce a "compromise" Net Neutrality bill this week that would also create a complaint process through the FCC if consumers believe their access rights to Internet content were violated .

Ted_Stevens.jpg Reuters reports that U.S. Sen. Ted Stevens (R-Alaska) will introduce a "compromise" Net Neutrality bill this week that would also create a complaint process through the FCC if consumers believe their access rights to Internet content were violated . The FCC would be empowered to hear complaints and assess penaltiesand the agency would be authorized to adjudicate complaints with penalties, according to the draft.

However, the FCC would be barred from issuing any regulations under the new law that would add to the obligations on Internet service providers.

This bill does nothing to ensure Net Neutrality. All it does is say in effect to consumers, well, if you think your ISP is slowing down your Google, well you have the right to complain to the FCC.

The same FCC that could, at least in theory, assess penalties to any ISPs that do this.

But the same FCC that won't be empowered by any new laws to assess any new penalties.

Now let me get this straight. Let's just say I am a Comcast subscriber in Seattle. I click on streaming multimedia content from Comcast content partners, and it looks beautiful. I try Comcast Digital Voice, and we're all clear. But then maybe I try Vonage, and I  hear static. Or I click on a video stream from a small digital film production house, and through no fault of their own, the stream constantly buffers and pixellates.

Then I call my lawyer, and he calls a few of his colleagues, and we all combine resources to write a formal complaint to that protector of the digital citizenry, this FCC.

And within days, this FCC strikes fear into the hearts of Comcast- from CEO Brian Roberts on down. Cease this non-neutrality or we'll fine you an amount so high your institutional investors will run fearfully based on the effect these fines will have on your bottom line.

Because you cannot play favorites, Comcast.

Right.

If you believe that, I don't only have to ask what planet are you on, but what solar system you live in. 

My fellow ZDNet blogger Mitch Radcliffe has this one down pat.

"Here is the simple explanation what net neutrality is: Any data packet will be equal to every other data packet, regardless of what kind of data it carries or where it came from," Mitch writes.

Ted Stevens' bill doesn't seem to recognize that fact.

Topic: Government US

Kick off your day with ZDNet's daily email newsletter. It's the freshest tech news and opinion, served hot. Get it.

Talkback

3 comments
Log in or register to join the discussion
  • Yeah, ignorance at its best

    "Any data packet will be equal to every other data packet, regardless of what kind of data it carries or where it came from"

    Right, and an ambulance us equal to a street racer. VoIP which uses 1% of the traffic somehow has to be equal to BitTorrent which uses 50% of all Internet traffic and get drowned out. You, Mitch, and all the other net neutrality lunatics illustrate ignorance at its best. You guys aren't just ignorant, but arrogantly ignorant.
    georgeou
    • George, you're name-calling, not debating

      It's really not a good idea to engage with people who start by calling one a lunatic, but George, you're just full of it.

      What does percentage of capacity used have to do with anything other than the carrier's capacity management challenges? It doesn't impact the user, who generally uses less than 10 percent of the total throughput they pay for each month. We pay for our connection and, until carriers decided to try to extract a premium for certain kinds of traffic, have had the right to use it as we choose. That's the principle involved, but you're just name-calling and avoiding the real question.
      Mitch Ratcliffe
      • Mitch, you're clueless

        The Internet does not operate on the principle that all packets are interchangeable, it never has, and it never should.

        It operates on the principle that you get what you pay for, always has, and always should.

        You're free to use your service it any way you want within the limits of your contract, and so is the guy down the street who pays more to get more.

        Don't be so silly.
        richardbennett