[governance] Re: What is Network Neutrality

Ginger Paque ginger at paque.net
Wed Jan 14 08:23:28 EST 2009


From McTim:
Google offers a definition that I think we can adopt in our work going
forward:

"Network neutrality is the principle that Internet users should be in
control of what content they view and what applications they use on
the Internet."

Ginger says: I strongly second this suggestion--it addresses simply and
clearly the point that is important to users.

Also from McTim:
What do you realistically expect the IGF to do besides talk?

Ginger says: Exactly. The IGF is the Internet Governance FORUM. It is a
place to discuss and debate: to talk. But it can inform, teach, support and
foster principles it chooses, and we can affect those choices by our
statement to the MAG. 

Two points we can emphasize are NN, and Remote Participation, two areas that
are important right now, and affect the concrete function of users. I
suggest we work toward formulating a short concise statement to the MAG on
these two points. 

-----Mensaje original-----
De: McTim [mailto:dogwallah at gmail.com] 
Enviado el: MiƩrcoles, 14 de Enero de 2009 08:38 a.m.
Para: governance at lists.cpsr.org; Parminder
Asunto: Re: [governance] Re: What is Network Neutrality

On 1/13/09, Parminder <parminder at itforchange.net> wrote:
>
> I am forwarding the response of Steve Anderson who leads the
> Save-Our-Internet campaign in Canada, and to whom my original email in
> this long and interesting thread was addressed. He replied with cc to
> IGC list, but since he is not a member I am forwarding it to the list. I
> also wanted to share how civil society actors involved in democratic
> media issues look at the problem

We are all "civil society actors involved in democratic media issues".

, since I think the views in the present
> discussion on the list have been, if I may say so, dominated by a
> (unadulterated)  free market based economic framework.
>

You may say it, but you would be incorrect.  What Milton, Ralf and I
have been saying is that the Internet is not egalitarian in some of the
ways that you seem to think it is.

Google offers a definition that I think we can adopt in our work going
forward:

"Network neutrality is the principle that Internet users should be in
control of what content they view and what applications they use on
the Internet."

This definition doesn't open the can of worms (what is ok and what is
not), as Google does here:

http://googlepublicpolicy.blogspot.com/2007/06/what-do-we-mean-by-net-neutra
lity.html


>  From Steve's response, it looks like that the NN advocacy position I
> have been trying to formulate is not so obscure after all, as is made
> out by much of the discussion on this list.

Not obscure, just too specific.

On the other hand, everyone
> does realize that the whole area is quite complex, and evolving.
> However, from an action oriented advocacy point of view, which is what
> we are trying to do vis a vis the IGF, one needs to formulate advocacy
> positions as we go along based on our basic political and ethical
> convictions. One cannot just keep waiting for a danger to completely,
> and often irrevocably, envelop us, before thinking about doing anything.
>
> And, as we all know, not doing anything is an important political
position.
>
> It is my humble opinion that this is what is happening in many quarters
> vis-a-vis price-differentiated content transmission over the Internet
> which is the most direct violation of the original and the fundamental
> NN principle. To this extent, merely (and only) talking

What do you realistically expect the IGF to do besides talk?


-- 
Cheers,

McTim
http://stateoftheinternetin.ug
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