This
issue may be a little more complicated than previously thought. I am
sure it will lead to less freedom and more corporate control of
information. The net loser will be the consumer
The
TRUTH About the US Government Implementing Net Neutrality
AMTV
What
Both Sides Are Missing About Net Neutrality
16
December, 2017
Perhaps
it’s time we focus on creating a truly decentralized internet.
(ANTIMEDIA Op-ed) Washington
D.C. — On
Thursday, protesters rallied outside the Federal Communications
Commission as the agency voted to repeal “Net Neutrality” rules,
which govern how Internet Service Providers treat data that travels
over their networks. The rules state that ISPs cannot discriminate
against or favor certain apps, sites, and services. Supporters of net
neutrality fear the change will lead to ISPs charging more for
internet services, or “throttling” web traffic to small,
independent sites, potentially even alternative media. The FCC has
said the repeal of the rules will help spur innovation in the long
run.
“This
is not Thunderdome. The FCC is not killing the internet,”
Commissioner Brendan Carr said at
the hearing on Thursday. “We
are not relying on market forces alone. We are not giving ISPs free
reign to dictate your online experience,”
he also said.
When
developing the network neutrality rules, the FCC built on the concept
of “common carriage,” which says all common pathways (waterways,
roads, etc) should be open to all people without discrimination.
Businesses may choose their prices, but they cannot discriminate
against traffic.
The
FCC first adopted the
rules in 2010 as an effort to combat the apparent threat of ISPs
throttling web traffic, specifically, throttling internet service for
those attempting to download media from the internet. These rules
were eventually overturned in
2014 after a legal challenge from Verizon. However, the FCC continued
to develop rules for protecting what has come to be known as net
neutrality. In 2015, the Obama Administration classified ISPs as
public utilities similar to telephone service providers. This
effectively put the relationship between ISPs and consumers back into
the hands of the government via the FCC. As of Thursday’s vote,
that is no longer the policy.
The
supporters of net neutrality say the repeal of the rules means large
corporations with deep pocketbooks could potentially pay broadband
providers extra cash to ensure their sites and services stream in
excellent quality while viewers of smaller sites could suffer from a
lower quality internet experience. This would allow the big ISPs to
charge higher prices because they would be able to absorb potential
losses of customer revenue more easily than a smaller business or
startup.
Of
course, another segment of the debate argues that the repeal of net
neutrality will not cause “The End of the Internet,” as
some have proclaimed,
but rather, the absence of the rules could encourage ISPs to provide
more customer-specific packages for accessing the internet and cable.
For example, if your grandmother only gets online once a week to
check email and scroll Pinterest, perhaps she does not need to pay
the same amount as the guy down the street who is always online and
regularly uses cable television services. The argument is that now —
without burdensome government regulation in the way — the ISPs will
actually provide more diversity of services. Sure, some will charge
higher prices for certain packages, but in the long run, the prices
will come down because of competition.
Another
perspective is that the focus should not be on fighting the big cable
companies or the FCC, but on pushing back against regulation at the
local level by fighting city governments and public utilities. “The
real bottleneck isn’t incumbent providers of broadband, but
incumbent providers of rights-of-way,” a
2013 Wired opinion
piece stated.
“These
incumbents — the real monopolists — also have the final say on
whether an ISP can build a network. They determine what hoops an ISP
must jump through to get approval.”
However,
it seems that people on all sides of the debate are missing the
point:
Perhaps
it’s time we focus on creating a truly decentralized internet that
has no single point of failure or control.
While
the majority of internet users opt for the “mainstream” world
wide web and communication systems, there are obvious reasons to
pursue open source, decentralized solutions. The old systems rely on
centralized networks and authorities. By using, supporting, and
creating decentralized peer-to-peer networks, we help maintain the
internet as a safe and secure place to share information and educate
ourselves. What exactly would a decentralized internet look like? New
ventures like MaidSafe, Nexus Earth, and the OpenNic Project are just
a few of the examples of efforts that are beginning to stretch the
boundaries of how we access the internet.
Decentralizing the Internet
David
Irvine is the founder of MaidSafe, or Massive Array of Internet
Disks, Secure Access For Everyone. The idea behind MaidSafe is
to create a decentralized, distributed, secure, and private network.
Irvine and his team have worked
for a decade to
develop the algorithms that will allow the network to be
self-regulating by borrowing users free hard drive space. In return,
they offer an anonymous high-speed internet and cryptocurrency.
How
does it work? When a user logs into the MaidSafe network, their data
is split into many pieces and distributed to computers on several
different continents.
Those pieces of data are then encrypted at a
level higher than even the military’s encryption. The MaidSafe
platform also hopes to allow for ease of creation of applications for
phones and computers. Further, MaidSafe promises an uninterrupted
internet experience. By maintaining a distributed network dependent
upon many users around the globe (rather than on a centralized
network subject to attack or power failure), the network will be able
to maintain a constant connection.
The
eventual goal of MaidSafe is called ‘vaults,’ where users are
able to contribute resources to the network (in the form of spare
hard drive capacity) and earn a built-in cryptocurrency called
Safecoin. This structure means that without central servers, there’s
no centralization of data in concentrated storage units. Data is also
encrypted and the team hopes to eventually have a worldwide network
of SAFE users accessing the internet via a distributed network.
Taking the Internet to Space
Nexus
Earth is a three-year-old project that combines private space flight,
the internet, and cryptocurrency. The goal of their team is to launch
rockets carrying cube satellites into space with the eventual goal of
providing free peer-to-peer internet for everyone in the world. This
will also include the first blockchain and cryptocurrency based in
space. It’s an ambitious goal, but the team behind it has a bigger
picture in mind. According to their website:
“Nexus
seeks to Free humankind from centralized systems. Merely being
decentralized is not enough. We must decentralize the
decentralization. Using software and hardware, Nexus seeks to build
the foundation for the most decentralized system to ever be
developed: Nexus Earth. This network will empower everyone from the
first world to the third world. Not everyone has money, but everyone
has time. The time has come to decentralize everything. The
foundations of cryptocurrency should be built upon decentralized
principles. Nexus seeks to fulfill this mission.”
The
Nexus Earth website and the white
paper of
founder Colin Cantrell make it quite clear that the team has a desire
to change the world and level the playing field for the average
person. Cantrell says his goal is to create a “decentralized
democracy” that will “Decentralize
Decentralization, to where resources of computing and investment
won’t be the ruler, but the ruling will be given to the people.”
The team is currently building their rocket factory in Arizona and
will begin testing rockets in 2018. The first satellites are
scheduled to launch in 2020.
The OpenNIC Project
When
you access a site on the world wide web, you typically access it
through a .com or .net web address. These are known as Top-Level
Domains (TLD), the highest in the hierarchical system known as the
Domain Name System. The organization behind the governing of the DNS
and granting of web addresses is known as the Internet Corporation
for Assigned Names and Numbers, or ICANN. It is, in fact, another
aspect of the centralization of the internet that most people don’t
know about.
The
OpenNIC Project seeks
to change this centralization and allow alternative access points
outside the typical DNS. The project is described as a “user
owned and controlled top-level Network Information Center offering a
non-national alternative to traditional Top-Level Domain (TLD)
registries; such as ICANN.”
This non-profit also provides access to domains not administered by
ICANN. This means users could create websites not governed by this
centralized authority and use OpenNIC to access such sites.
These
ideas (and others) may be the ones that eliminate the effectiveness
of government regulation, including net neutrality. They could also
render any silly corporate takeover of communications largely
pointless. Instead of expecting the United States government to hear
our cries and save the internet, we should see this as an opportunity
to create new ways of using the infrastructure of the internet and
broadband services.
Of
course, those who choose to remain in the corporate mainstream
culture will be left with the dry, carbon copy versions of music,
clothes, technology, and yes, the internet. But once the clamping
down on individual expression and creation reaches a breaking point,
the population will seek a better alternative. With the growth of
peer-to-peer, open-source technology, it is only a matter of time
before the internet expands into a number of different, competing
webs of information.
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