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Net Neutrality

I've been talking to several people / blogs / myself about Net Neutrality. It might be handy to get all of the pieces in one place, in case anyone is interested.

Bruce Stewart at O'Reilly has a brief piece on the opening shots. Sort of a playbill.

NRO has a good editorial which is terse but helpful.

Hillary has weighed (ahem ...) in. 

Ars Technica here and here. These are excellent pieces.

Here is a pretty good wrap up of Senator Stevens speech on regulation vs. non-regulation, with responses.

CNET's search engine on Net Neutrailty - there are 3 or 4 good pieces here on the pro-neutrality position.

My take is this. Net Neutrality is a manufactured issue, aka a solution in search of a problem. It would appear that it started as an effort by AT&T and other ISPs to get legislative protection for their bandwidth. This makes sense: as Michael was saying, the internet doesn't support the kind of nano-economics that are required to siphon money away from end users for users. There's too much content and no way to meter it. The counterattack was an attempt by businesses / freedom activists / internet anarchists to lay claim to other company's infrastructure.

The anarchists are pretty much of the opinion that the Internet is free, or should be free, or is at least free to use, and that the usage trumps any costs (which they only acknowledge in the negative). Google, Amazon, and other companies and individuals who have created successful businesses and have future plans are rightly threatened should the companies that own the pipes begin to restrict them for whatever reason. But of course, the Internet was (and is) not free to build - there was a huge infrastructure cost.

The flip side is this - AT&T want you to believe that the Internet was created out of some altruistic notion that their board came up with over the weekend, and only now are they realizing their mistake. The truth of the matter is that the Internet was the necessary buildout for what are now known as ISPs because they were in the same spot 30 years ago as Amazon is in now. Faced with mediocre revenue models and stellar technological plans to improve communication, they deemed it worthwhile to create their own markets. You can't have VOIP without the IP, you know? The Internet for them is a sunk cost. They opened it up so that government regulators couldn't break up Ma Internet the same way they destroyed Ma Bell, salving the pain of that decision by thinking that they would be near the top of the food chain as the iNterthingy proliferated.

Instead, as so often happens in America, business models and revenue models grew that were a step ahead of the intended target. Where ISPs felt that they were the top of the food chain, companies that were content specific, instead of delivery-driven, sprang up, effectively shortening the usage model. The Internet is an aside to Amazon's business - it could work on a LAN if the LAN was only big enough. So the next round of AT&T execs, faced with falling revenues and a lack of innovation, are trying to put the monster back in the box to attract revenue for the next ten years.

That's not to say that the Internet should be free, and in fact, it is not. No more infrastructure is built that isn't tied to revenue and/or income. AT&T, Qwest, et al make money by delivering the "last mile" (cable modems for the home and business), which is revenue that wouldn't exist without the first 999 models. As router and server hardware has come down in price, the cost of delivering service has consequently fallen, the more so because there is more demand. And, off the top of my head, I can think of three or four other models that are pushed by ISPs that are similarly leveraging their previous sunk cost in building the Internet.

That's where we stand now. So why do I call this a manufactured issue? First, because net neutrality is a shibolleth for both sides to save their business models. Second, because indeed, everyone's revenue models are safe and secure. Third, and much more importantly, this is an issue that the market will respond to. If bandwidth is truly the problem, some megalithic company will come up with a way to make money on increased / dedicated / metered bandwidth. In fact, the stirrings are already out there.

In other words, the government is once again being lobbied to "do something" (hands waving frantically). Now the trick is to make sure they don't screw something up in the drive to take credit.
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