The latest issue of Canadian Dimensions is out, with a nice story on Net Neutrality.
The latest issue of Canadian Dimensions is out, with a nice story on Net Neutrality.
Newsfactor.com reports that the FCC has sent letters of inquiry to Comcast regarding complaints about Internet Filtering. The complaints came about in the Fall of 2007 when the Associated Press reported that
Comcast Corp. actively interferes with attempts by some of its high-speed Internet subscribers to share files online [ex. by using BitTorrent technology], a move that runs counter to the tradition of treating all types of Net traffic equally.
Proof of interference was divulged in a report published by the Electronic Frontier Foundation.
More information about Net Neutrality:
Save the Internet Coalition
What is net neutrality.ca
- DD
The Daily Show with Jon Stewart has put up over 13 000 segments going back to 1999. That’s pretty cool…or at least it would be if I could get any of the videos in the archives to load.
Maybe the site’s just being hammered with traffic because it’s so new. But it almost makes you wish some of these media giant properties would skip the proprietary site designs and media players and just put it all up on YouTube instead.
(via MetaFilter)
- JH
Net Neutrality: A Public Discussion on the Future of the Internet in Canada
February 6, 2007 , 7 pm
Admission: Free
Ottawa Public Library Auditorium
120 Metcalfe St.
Moderated by: Pippa Lawson, Executive Director, Canadian Internet Policy and Public Interest Clinic (CIPPIC) at the University of Ottawa
Panelists:
Please join us for a an important public discussion on the future of the Internet in Canada. Network neutrality recently became a major issue in the United States when telecommunications companies issued public statements asking for the ability to charge Internet content-providers for preferential access to Internet users. That meant that big corporations, especially media conglomerates, would get to Internet users fastest while smaller ones, which would be unable to pay the “tolls”, would be left trailing. Meanwhile, Internet users could be restricted from using certain applications, and would likely have to pay more to access content of providers that weren’t part of the telecommunications company’s exclusivity deals.
Net neutrality has been an issue in Canada for at least two years, but the release in March 2006 of the Telecommunications Policy Review Panel’s Final Report renewed both corporate and public interest in the topic. In the United States, net neutrality is currently on hold as legislators debate the issue; in Canada, the federal government is considering major changes to telecommunications regulation and its commitment to network neutrality is uncertain - hence the need for public debate before more decisions are made.
We are also inviting politicians to attend this panel discussion, and we hope that with a good turnout, our policy-makers will understand what an important issue network neutrality is for Canadians, and that the separation of telecommunications companies from content providers is in the interest of all Internet users. While the Internet has largely been managed as a democratic commons there are hints that it can become a privately-controlled medium. The 2005 move by Telus to block customer access to the “Voices For Change” Telecommunications Workers Union website is but one example of a private-sector threat to network neutrality.
For more information on the topic, please visit the following websites and online news articles:
If you are unable to attend, please note that a video of the event will be made publicly available. Please contact us for link information.
[…] 2007
Net Neutality Panel in Ottawa
My pal Danielle Dennie, formerly the Librarian Activist, is organizing a discussion about Net Neutrality […]
[…] cy and Public Interest Clinic (CIPPIC) at the University of Ottawa) sera la modératrice. Voir les détails dans le carnet de nos amis à LibrarianActivist.org. […]