D.I.Y.

Boring Sounding Things Like Net Neutrality Matter To All Musicians Using The Web

Virtual-freedomIf you're not on the web, if it's all face to face, then issues like net neutrality may not be that big a deal to you. But it is a big deal to DIY artists and small businesses who rely on the web to earn a living or promote their work whether or not they recognize it. In its most basic sense, net neutrality is the idea that all internet traffic should have equal treatment whether or not it's a big media company or a tiny music label. But that's not the future major internet service providers want to see and much will be decided in coming days.

In an article unavailable to non-subscribers, The Wall Street Journal is said to have revealed that despite President Obama's election-run promises to support an open internet and net neutrality:

"Obama’s chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, Thomas Wheeler, has proposed a new rule that is an explicit and blatant violation of this promise. In fact, it permits and encourages exactly what Obama warned against: broadband carriers acting as gatekeepers and charging Web sites a payola payment to reach customers through a 'fast lane.'"

There's some back and forth going on at the moment about what the FCC is actually up to but keep in mind that sometimes it's the uproar raised during the back and forth that speaks the loudest to politicians.

Net Neutrality Is Part Of A Larger Fight For A Democratic Internet

Some people will probably say we should let the market sort it out but that sort of thinking doesn't seem to be followed by America's major internet service providers which have blocked many local community efforts to provide high-speed, low-cost broadband through lobbying and lawsuits.

That's one of the reasons small towns like Morristown, TN have faster and more affordable broadband than most major U.S. cities. Those who might want to follow suit in states like North Carolina, where I live, have to just accept what we're given. Tennessee is a leader in municipal broadband. North Carolina politicians thought it would be better to deny us that option despite positive examples like Wilson, NC.

Not only is the U.S. no longer a leading nation for internet access speed, despite having created much of the original internet, but our mobile access also sucks in comparison to other countries who have less guns and money than do we.

Here's What Is Being Said About The FCC & Net Neutrality

Community-owned broadband is the area I know best but plenty of smart people are talking about net neutrality and what it means if the FCC falls down on the job:

The New Yorker: Goodbye, Net Neutrality; Hello, Net Discrimination

"This is what one might call a net-discrimination rule, and, if enacted, it will profoundly change the Internet as a platform for free speech and small-scale innovation. It threatens to make the Internet just like everything else in American society: unequal in a way that deeply threatens our long-term prosperity."

The Washington Post: Everything you should know about the FCC’s new net neutrality proposal

"Web services could have to pay a toll to reach you; those services could become more expensive as they pass those costs on to you; companies that don't pay up could suffer from slower service; and new firms with innovative ideas might die because they can't spare the cash to pay for the preferential treatment that the new net neutrality rules would allow."

The Economist: More equal than others

"The FCC’s draft would also permit ISPs—a sector dominated by giants such as Verizon and would-be mergees Comcast and Time Warner Cable—to charge content providers like Netflix, Amazon and Google (the picture shows one of the firm's data centres) for speedier, priority transmission of films, videos and other streaming services over the congested “last mile” to users."

In fact, the FCC itself said in 2010 that "fast lane" approaches were not a good thing.

What's The Solution?

A citizen's movement to ensure democracy would be nice but Occupy showed that U.S. citizens are currently not up to the task of stepping up and changing America. But you should make your voice heard and contact your elected representatives about your concerns. There will be more specific opportunities to speak out on this issue as well which you should seize. You don't have to wait for a mass movement to effect change.

It's possible the FCC will step up with a better proposal than leaks have suggested. They may also bypass the courts and focus on the internet as a utility since it has become incredibly important to our daily lives. Any positive moves they make should be strongly supported

The most interesting proposal I've heard to date, though I'm sketchy on the details, comes from Eric Klinker, CEO of BitTorrent, who discusses Content Centric Netowrking and technical approaches that would radically improve content delivery on the internet while creating a fair situation for all involved.

So there are potential political and technical solutions to this problem.

Want To Know More About Net Neutrality?

Obviously I need to learn some more and, if you're in the same boat, here are some places to start:

Electric Frontier Foundation: Net Neutrality

Common Cause: Keep the Internet Free and Open!

Wikipedia: Net Neutrality

I bet there's even more accessible material available to explain net neutrality.

Please share your resources and suggestions in the comments.

More:

Hypebot Senior Contributor Clyde Smith (@fluxresearch) posts music crowdfunding news @CrowdfundingM. To suggest topics about music tech, DIY music biz or music marketing for Hypebot, contact: clyde(at)fluxresearch(dot)com.

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1 Comment

  1. Well Obama is not going to get anywhere near Putin as one of the most influential people after Libya and Kiev in Ukraine along with attacking a free internet. Remember he failed to get FCC monitors into American newsrooms so now he has set his FCC to another task after objections to giving up the last internet controls got too loud.
    Ultimately Plan A was to give up the last internet controls so that he could work with Hollywood behind the scenes to shut down illegal content with E.U backing. Plan B are these FCC changes. Add to this the 500 million in illegal guns that he NATO and Sunni autocrats pumped into Libya in contravention of international law and you get the picture that his Nobel Peace Prize was just Brusselsmania and left wing activist groupthink run amok.
    These left wingers who despise custom..tradition and religion are not only warmongers but want to shut down a free internet. Try and comment on a E.U website. There is no place to comment. This administration and Brussels like to think they have already made up your mind for you.That equates to an end to a free internet and a clampdown on free speech and association.

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