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Wikipedia The Internet

Net Neutrality Is Complicated: Wikipedia Founder Jimmy Wales (indiatimes.com) 149

In an interview, Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales backed the principle of Net neutrality, but added that enabling poor people to access the Internet is equally important. Wales also defended Wikipedia Zero, a project that aims to provide select services free of cost on mobile devices in developing markets. He said :Wikipedia Zero follows a very strict set of principles such as no money is ever exchanged and so on. Net neutrality is such a complicated topic, it is something that I am extremely passionate about and I think is incredibly important. And at the same time I think getting access to knowledge for poorest people of world is also very important. Sometimes those two things can be in tension and we have to be really careful about it. I think fundamental thing is that we maintain and open and free Internet.
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Net Neutrality Is Complicated: Wikipedia Founder Jimmy Wales

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  • by Hognoxious ( 631665 ) on Monday May 30, 2016 @12:45PM (#52211519) Homepage Journal

    Net Neutrality Is Complicated

    [citation needed]

    • It would help if we could agree just exactly what the slogan net neutrality means. Lots of people use it mean lots of different things. I feel like we're being divided and conquered.
  • ... getting poor people to access the Internet is equally important.

    "Getting" or "enabling" ? The former sounds like it's for your benefit [washingtonpost.com], the latter for theirs. Which is Jimmy - and Mark (Zuckerberg).

  • by AndroSyn ( 89960 ) on Monday May 30, 2016 @01:15PM (#52211701) Homepage

    Talk about a double talking weasel. Net neutrality(why don't we call it net neutering instead?) is great when it applies to somebody else, but fuck you if you want me to play by the same rules.

    Fuck you guy, just fuck you.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Oh and when I said "net neutering" what I meant was, is that is what Wales is trying to do here, neuter the internet. Still, he's a weasel.

  • by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Monday May 30, 2016 @01:58PM (#52211985)
    The fundamental problem here is that one group's wants and desires (the end-users') are being suppressed. This came about because nearly all local governments granted a monopoly to a single cable service provider. They were well intentioned - often making 99.9% coverage and bandwidth limits a condition of that monopoly. But at the same time they discounted or didn't believe in the market influence of competition, so didn't give much consideration to the harm that granting a monopoly - even a regulated monopoly - does.

    Once the cable companies had the monopoly, they could basically ignore end-users' desires, thus depriving them of their voice in the ISP market. On top of that, they are now empowered because they are the only means of internet access to those customers. All the power of those customers' dollars, none of the drawbacks of having to listen to what those customers want! And they chose to leverage that power by trying to extort additional money from websites to deliver content that their customers had already paid them for.

    Net neutrality is a band-aid to try to fix this problem. By prohibiting different pricing based on content source, it prevents this type of extortion. But like the original monopoly regulatory kludge, it kills off another aspect of the market - differential pricing based on the cost to actually deliver that content. If Netflix is streaming content to the ISP, that's a lot of bandwidth and so costs the ISP a lot of money. If Netflix installs content servers at the ISP, that eliminates the bandwidth consumption and so costs the ISP less money. But net neutrality essentially prohibits the ISP from passing that cost savings on to the customer. The ISP has to charge the same price for all content, regardless of source and the bandwidth cost to obtain data from that source. It's just one regulatory fix which mostly but not entirely works, trying to fix another regulatory fix which mostly but not entirely works.

    The ultimate solution is to restore market power to the end-user. Let them vote with their dollars. This has the advantage of pitting dynamic human minds against any tricks the ISPs try to come up with to increase prices or degrade service. Right now we're trying to fight the ISPs' tricks using static laws, which take decades to implement in response to their previous tricks, giving them plenty of time to figure out new tricks.

    Abolish the cable monopolies. Convert the monopoly into a tightly regulated service contact for the physical cable or fiber which runs to the homes, and only the physical cables. No content service allowed. The cable maintenance company then makes money by leasing bandwidth along that fiber to different ISPs at a fixed (regulated) rate. The ISPs then have to compete with each other based on quality of service and price. If an ISP tries to pull a Comcast and deliberately degrades Netflix, they will hemorrhage customers as they flee to a different ISP who isn't degrading Netflix. And they'll do it in a matter of weeks or months, not the years or decades it took to get Net Neutrality implemented. This is how we regulate utilities, and oddly enough this is how "socialist" Europe does it.
    • I was with you when you said 'Abolish the cable monopolies', but then you lost me when you said you want to replace that with regulation and price controls. In other words, when it comes to physical cables, you want to rely on static laws, instead of market power and dynamic human minds.
      • by tepples ( 727027 )

        That's because it takes "static laws" to get "physical cables" buried in the first place. Otherwise, an ISP can't run its layer 1 over or under city-owned roads or non-subscribers' land to reach subscribers.

        • The ISP could negotiate with land owners, instead of using eminent domain. If there is going to be regulation, then the regulation should be that cities cannot prevent healthy cable competition by refusing to allow multiple ISPs to run layer 1 over or under city-owned roads.
    • by MobyDisk ( 75490 )

      Fair enough. Eliminating the monopolies is a big step. But it is only about 1/3rd of the problem. There are 3 steps, including the one you listed, that are needed to make this work:
      1. Abolish the monopolies
      2. Split the ISP from the physical wire provider.
      3. Establish network neutrality laws

      The first is what you stated. Unchanged, full stop.

      The second part is an extension of your statement "No content service allowed." Many people just can't wrap their head around this concept any longer: There are 2 com

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Its the simplest possible way to operate network devices. Your home router is (for the most part) net-neutral and all you have to do is plug the thing in.

    The problem is that nobody actually wants net neutrality. And that's where it gets hard because service providers want neutrality broken in a different way than service users (and of course no two of anybody wants it broken in exactly the same way, but definitely some generalizations can be drawn.)

    Service providers want to be able to charge a premium for

    • by PPH ( 736903 )

      Service providers want to be able to charge a premium for every single bit

      Which goes to Wales' other argument: Providing access to the poor. They don't have the money to pay for the premium services. So the more network resources that are dedicated to some basic level of access for everyone aren't likely to provide a profit to the providers. The providers want to assign their resources in tiers and give the best service to people who are more likely to kick back profits from on-line sales to the service providers.

      It's also funny to see how the net neutrality argument suddenly c

      • by Altrag ( 195300 )

        Even funnier when you consider the fact that Facebook removing content has exactly as much to do with net neutrality as your local library taking a book off the shelf that they disagree with. Sure censorship sucks (at least if you're the one being censored) but its got nothing to do with network transport.

  • Wikipedia keeps demanding more donations despite sitting on a pile of cash. They don't use that cash to fix their flawed and disreputable editor network that leads to grotesquely skewed wikipedia pages.

    Wales now wants to use that cash to push that agenda ridden view of society onto people AND not provide them with access to alternate sources of information that might actually challenge the narrative and offer some semblance of truth?

    Fuck Jimmy Wales, fuck his view of net neutrality and fuck the idiots that

  • God dammit, is it time to donate again? I don't want to but I'm afraid of Jimmy.

The truth of a proposition has nothing to do with its credibility. And vice versa.

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