Net Neutrality, including: Why were Facebook Google & Amazon so quiet about it?

Recent Forum Topics Forums The Public House Net Neutrality, including: Why were Facebook Google & Amazon so quiet about it?

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  • #70935
    zn
    Moderator

    Net Neutrality Is About Much More Than the Internet

    Will the voice of the people be drowned out by a flood of corporate cash?

    link: https://www.thenation.com/article/the-debate-over-net-neutrality-is-a-debate-over-the-whole-of-the-future/

    There is no question that the American people favor net neutrality. They are literally flooding the Federal Communications Commission with pleas for preservation of “The First Amendment of the Internet.”

    Americans know that without net neutrality’s guarantee of equal treatment of all content, the balance will be tipped toward messages from the billionaire class that already dominates too much of the national—and international—debate. The people are aroused and engaged with this issue. They are speaking up as never before: voicing objections to Trump administration schemes to barter off the digital discourse to the highest bidder.

    But that does not mean that the American people will get what they want. Donald Trump’s chairman of the FCC, Ajit Pai, has repeatedly signaled that he wants to dismantle the net-neutrality protections that were put in place during the Obama years after a massive campaign by democracy advocates, consumer groups, and defenders of a free and open Internet.

    July 12 must be a day of action not just for the future of the Internet but for the whole of the future.

    If Pai’s FCC votes later this summer for that dismantlement, the future of personal communications, education, commerce, economic arrangements, and democracy itself will be radically altered. The fight over net neutrality is about much more than the fight over whether telecommunications companies will be able to create “fast lanes” for paying content from corporations and billionaire-funded politicians while relegating the essential informational sharing of civil society to “slow lanes” on the periphery of what was supposed to be “the information superhighway.” Because our lives are now so digital, and because they are becoming so automated, the fight over net neutrality is really the fight over the whole of the future.

    It comes down to a simple question: Will that future be defined by civic and democratic values? Or will it defined by commercial and entertainment values?

    The telecommunications companies have an answer. They want to colonize the Internet, as they have other communications platforms, with an eye toward reaping immense and unwarranted profits. And they are willing to pay almost anything for that privilege. According to a fresh study from the nonpartisan MapLight project to reveal the influence of money in politics: “Three of the largest internet service providers and the cable television industry’s primary trade association have spent more than a half-billion dollars lobbying the federal government during the past decade on issues that include net neutrality.”

    The MapLight analysis explains that “Comcast, AT&T, Verizon and the National Cable & Telecommunications Association (NCTA) have spent $572 million on attempts to influence the FCC and other government agencies since 2008. The FCC, a five-member independent panel, is considering the abolition of ‘net neutrality’ rules, or regulations that require internet companies to treat all content equally. The amount represents more than $100 for each of the 5.6 million public comments on the FCC’s proposed elimination of net neutrality rules.”

    Communications by citizens with the FCC have over the years been overwhelmingly supportive of net neutrality. And there is no reason to doubt that when the current comment period ends, the message from the American people will have been one of absolute support for a free and open Internet. As Free Press’s Tim Karr notes: “The irony [is that] despite $572 million spent by the telecom lobby, the majority of FCC comments oppose their position and favor net neutrality.” Polls confirm the sentiment: a Civis Analytics survey released Monday found that, nationwide, 73 percent of Republicans, 76 percent of independents, and 80 percent of Democrats want to maintain the existing open-Internet rules.

    The issue that will be resolved in coming weeks is whether the voice of the people will be drowned out by a flood of corporate cash.

    WRITE TO THE FCC TODAY AND DEMAND THEY LEAVE NET NEUTRALITY ALONE
    TAKE ACTION NOW

    Only the loudest and most sustained objections will save the Internet as we know it—and shape a future in which the digital promise is shared by all.

    To that end, civil-society groups have organized a July 12 “Day of Action” to mobilize support for the open-Internet protections that are now threatened by the Trump administration. “The day of action, led by Free Press Action Fund, Fight for the Future and Demand Progress, will focus on mass participation as public-interest groups across the country activate their members and major web platforms provide visitors with tools to mobilize locally, contact Congress, and submit more pro-Net Neutrality comments to the FCC,” explains Free Press, which adds that, “So far, more than 70,000 websites, online services, and internet users are participating in the day of action, including companies like Airbnb, Amazon, Etsy, Facebook, Google, Kickstarter, Mozilla, Netflix, OKCupid, reddit, Spotify, and Twitter.”

    The FCC’s ultimate decision on net neutrality will, as MapLight suggests, provide “a clear indicator of the power of corporate cash in a Trump administration.”

    If corporate cash wins this one, telecommunications conglomerates will define the Internet in their interest—and the “paid content” messages of powerful and privileged elites will define debates about politics, economics and society itself.

    That’s not a prospect that any citizen should welcome, or accept.

    That’s why July 12 must be a day of action not just for the future of the Internet but for the whole of the future.

    #71129
    zn
    Moderator

    Why were Facebook, Google, and Amazon so quiet about net neutrality?
    We are in danger of replacing one set of conglomerates for another

    https://hackernoon.com/facebook-google-amazon-net-neutrality-b00cf8c5920e

    In the weeks leading up to Wednesday’s day of protest over net neutrality in the U.S., big tech names signed on to join the fight to keep it. Among them were some of the biggest names on the internet, including Amazon, Google, and Facebook, all of which have a vested business interest in all Americans being able to access their sites quickly and frequently. But those sites did not go dark Wednesday. They didn’t slow down in an effort to mimic what life might be like for some were net neutrality to end. Instead, they mostly pointed users to other, pro-net neutrality pages.
    Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg wrote that he and the rest of his team “strongly support” net neutrality regulations. “We’re also open to working with members of Congress and anyone else on laws to protect net neutrality,” he wrote, and linked to the Internet Association’s site for the day of action. Google’s statement was similar. A post at its public policy blog noted that “today’s open internet ensures that both new and established services, whether offered by an established internet company like Google, a broadband provider, or a small startup, have the same ability to reach users on an equal playing field.” Google linked to the same Internet Association page.
    It was a muted protest, to say the least. Maybe with good reason.

    Ultimately, the fight over net neutrality is about who controls the internet: users or major corporations. In that regard, there is only a degree of difference between the 20th century giants of the telecommunications sector and the those of 21st century Silicon Valley. It’s not too difficult a leap to make from wondering why your online access shouldn’t be free from walls erected by your cable company, to wondering equally why your online access shouldn’t also be free from limitations created by a social media platform, search engine, or e-commerce behemoth.
    “Thanks in part to net neutrality, the open internet has grown to become an unrivaled source of choice, competition, innovation, free expression, and opportunity,” Google’s blog read. “And it should stay that way.” Few would disagree. Yet, it was just last month that the European Union slapped Alphabet, Google’s parent company, with a €2.4 billion fine for giving “prominent placement in searches to its own comparison shopping service and demot[ing] those of rivals in search results,” according to Reuters.
    In 2016, ProPublica revealed that Amazon’s search algorithm “substantially favors Amazon and sellers it charges for services.” And the same year — 2014 — Comcast was throttling internet speeds as it negotiated with Netflix for streaming access (something it was unable to do after the FCC upheld net neutrality), Amazon was fighting with publisher Hachette, which refused to give Amazon pricing control over its ebooks. As the negotiations went on, Amazon prevented “customers from being able to pre-order Hachette titles, reduc[ed] the discounts it offered on Hachette books and even delay[ed] shipments of some of the publisher’s titles for up to a month, all of which had a huge impact on sales,” the Guardian reported.
    For its part, Facebook would like to be an internet provider of its own. The social media’s free internet project seems to jive with Zuckerberg’s assertion Wednesday that “the internet should be free and open for everyone,” but Facebook’s free service — wherein it partners with a mobile provider to allow customers to access Facebook, even without a data plan — would only allow free access to an internet experience curated by Facebook. As it happens, in India, Facebook’s “free basics” internet sparked a debate on exactly the thing Zuckerberg promoted Wednesday: net neutrality. The opposition it encountered there, based on the limitations it set and the questions it raised about internet freedoms, contributed to its difficulties in launching the service in that country.
    The role of the new tech conglomerates is important to both Americans and internet users outside the U.S. — even somewhere like Canada where net neutrality remains protected. Maybe especially so. We have been insulated from the debate over how our internet access might be curtailed or curated beyond our control, to a point where we may never have that debate before things change dramatically without our input. We may retain net neutrality, but our choices once we’re on the web are not necessarily becoming any freer; by the looks of it, just the opposite.

    There is another aspect to consider as this debate moves forward.
    Following the news that Amazon had moved to acquire grocery chain Whole Foods, Lina M. Khan, writing in the New York Times, raised the spectre of the 19th Century railroads in an effort to describe a way to conceptualize what Amazon is doing. “In several key ways, Amazon uses its power as the railroads did. By integrating across business lines, Amazon now competes with the companies that rely on its platform. This decision to not only host and transport goods but to also directly make and sell them gives rise to a conflict of interest, positioning Amazon to give preferential treatment to itself,” she wrote. As for future innovation? “Start-ups will be less likely to enter the field against such an integrated competitor,” she wrote.
    The point is: even if start-ups were given equal preference by U.S. internet providers, there might be no point. So much for the proliferation of online competition, one of the key issues at the heart of net neutrality.

    The battle for net neutrality is for Americans to fight, but the one over who controls the internet, and thus more and more of our society, is something we will share no matter where we live. Asking how we want to experience the web is only one part of it. More pressing is: How do we want to experience the world? The time to answer that question is now.

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