A federal appeals court on Tuesday struck down the Federal Communications Commission's net neutrality rules, the regulation that stops broadband Internet providers from blocking or prioritizing traffic. One of the reasons the court cited for its ruling was that consumers can switch between providers, arguing:
Without broadband provider market power, consumers, of course, have options; they can go to another broadband provider if they want to reach particular edge providers or if their connections to particular edge providers have been degraded.
Essentially, the court is saying that the rules aren't really necessary because if a provider blocks access to Youtube, for example, consumers can always just change to a provider that doesn't block access to Youtube. Matt Wood, the policy director at media and technology advocacy organization Free Press, says such reasoning is wrong. For one, he says, "we don't have enough competitive broadband options, period."
While broadband has become more widely availabile across the country over the years, some areas still don't have access to wireline broadband service. According to the FCC, about 15 million Americans live in areas still unserved by wireline broadband. As of the FCC's Eight Broadband Progress Report in 2012, that included nearly a quarter of American living in rural areas. But even when people do have access to wireline broadband, they don't necessarily have access to a competitive marketplace.
Here's a U.S. map showing where people have access to at least one wireline broadband provider:
And here's where they have access to two or more providers:
That's a significant difference. And it shows just how much of the country actually does not have the option to switch providers as the court envisions.
That's not the only problem Wood has with the competition aspect of the ruling: He argues that it doesn't account for the way communications networks are supposed to work because it allows firms to determine what a customer is and isn't able to see on the Web.
"It's also fundamentally wrong because the company that carries your messages shouldn't have the right to block your speech or choose where you go online," he says. "We've had wireless voice alternatives to wired telephones for more than two decades now; but nobody thinks that Verizon should have the right to block the calls on your home phone because hey, you can always just switch to your cellphone."
cutters are screwed...
http://mankabros.com/blogs/chairman/2013/10/25/old...
They are all corporate shills leading us to corporate enslavement.
http://blandinonbroadband.org/2013/01/19/north-dak...
Federal appeals court strikes down net neutrality rules
BY BRIAN FUNG
Brian Fung covers technology for The Washington Post, focusing on electronic privacy, national security, digital politics and the Internet that binds it all together. He was previously the technology correspondent for National Journal and an associate editor at the Atlantic. His writing has also appeared in Foreign Policy, Talking Points Memo, the American Prospect and Nonprofit Quarterly.