Vint Cerf Speaking Out on Internet Neutrality 121
penciling_in writes "CircleID has reported on a U.S. congress hearing held on November 9th, where "significant focus was projected on 'network neutrality' and a new telecommunications bill affecting the Internet. 'This bill could fundamentally alter the fabulously successful end-to-end Internet,' says Alan Davidson in a related post on Google blog." Vint Cerf was not able to testify because of the Presidential Medal of Freedom award ceremony at the White House, but submitted a letter: "The remarkable social impact and economic success of the Internet is in many ways directly attributable to the architectural characteristics that were part of its design. The Internet was designed with no gatekeepers over new content or services. The Internet is based on a layered, end-to-end model that allows people at each level of the network to innovate free of any central control. By placing intelligence at the edges rather than control in the middle of the network, the Internet has created a platform for innovation. This has led to an explosion of offerings - from VOIP to 802.11x wi-fi to blogging - that might never have evolved had central control of the network been required by design." CircleID post includes full text of the letter."
Neutrality (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Neutrality (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Neutrality (Score:1)
Re:Neutrality (Score:4, Insightful)
Wait a second... (Score:5, Funny)
It'd obviously be denied, but you have to wonder.
Re:Wait a second... (Score:2)
Re:Wait a second... (Score:2)
Oh, thanks Ester. I knew I could trust you two to be honest and open.
Re:Wait a second... (Score:1)
Re:Wait a second... (Score:2, Insightful)
That's gotta rate down there was one of Bush's slimiest moments.
Re:Wait a second... (Score:1)
Just gotta leave that part out, and bring up the "greatest fighter who ever lived" and parkinson's things. Then it'll be a popular move.
Now just don't do something that makes you look stupid, like throwing a punch at the guy. Oops, too late.http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4425474.s tm [bbc.co.uk]
Re:Wait a second... (Score:1)
Re:Wait a second... (Score:2)
Where did you get that idea that it was for "heroism"?
Per Executive Order 11085 [umich.edu], issued by JFK in 19
Re:Wait a second... (Score:2)
Re:Wait a second... (Score:2)
That would require a backbone.
Re:Wait a second... (Score:2)
Easy to arrange, tough to prove. Given how badly the Bells would like to control the internet, I think it's a reasonable suspicion.
Considering the S [slashdot.org]
Central Control (Score:5, Insightful)
They want to centralize so they can control. Without centralization it is expensive to control. Nobody cares that centralization causes problems for legitimate users. They want to enforce their control, so you can present convincing argument after convincing argument that decentralization is best
OFFTOPIC RANT:
So yeah
Even anonymity is being shunned on the net. For example, even the leftist hypocritical website moveon.org takes comments but they dont want you to be anonymous or use a pseudonym. How many letters did Ben Franklin write with the pseudonym "Silence Dogood" claiming to be an old widow? Anonymity and pseudonimity are essential. If an anonymous source spouts out info, you can simply disregard it because they are not staking their reputation. But sometimes they may need the anonymity to avoid persecution, especially when they say something that can stand alone on its own merit.
Law is law (Score:3, Insightful)
While social speech is more vibrant on the net, and there are those who want to control it, it is no differant than the tug-of-war over cival liberties faced in the real world every day. As is often said here: Nothing to dee, please move along.
As criminals use the net, the law enfor
Re:Central Control (Score:2)
I fear you may be correct, but I hope you are not.
(Off-topic rant: I'm one of those folks who wish porn were a little more difficult to find, and I don't like spam any more than you do. But I don't want bloggers chilled, dissidents persecuted, or any of that. Free speech is free speech, and I don't know, and wouldn't want to decide, where to draw the line. I certainly don't want the government deciding, when no one is forced to go to
Re:Central Control (Score:4, Insightful)
Indeed the government has always wanted to control the infrastrcture, but it won't necessarily happen. What they mostly want is to ban things that are already illegal -- and we should give them that to keep the infrastructure safe. We can late ask why consensual porn is illegal at all -- but not with the republicrats in power.
Re:Central Control (Score:2, Insightful)
Because the net isn't the same as the street. It's OK to regulate selling porn in the street because the street is a public place, so putting porn there effectively forces it on people who are offended by it. Web sites, OTOH, are strictly voluntary. Nobody has to visit a porn website if they don't want to, so there's not the same degree of coercion involved. In that respect web sites are like windowless shop
Re:Central Control (Score:2)
Of course, these problems are generally solved by using a little thing called the back button....
Re:Central Control (Score:1)
Re:Central Control (Score:2)
Control may happen. The simple fact of the matter is that control only lasts so long. It is a matter of perspective. Whether you talk about civilizations, forms of government, economies, business models, controls only work so long as there are no disruptive variables in play that subvert the system.
Controls also can be useful. Monopoly control for infrastructure for electrical power and telephone services fueled their adoption. Some argue that the centralized economy of Communist Russia was instrumen
Re:Central Control (Score:2)
Re:Central Control (Score:1)
Re:Central Control (Score:2)
If the Internet is damaged to much by these idiots it'll just create an economic chance for an alternative network to be set up and capitalized on. A lot of publishers and users would choose this less restricted Internet even if it was smaller. Most likely this new network would be even less centralized as it'd probably start as a grass roots project by people who are pissed at the control. Rather than being built on a backb
Re:Central Control (Score:2)
None o
Re:Central Control (Score:2)
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8r9BfjlCrGkW7Z+PLI4zVKepNvqGAK29tVULaAcABRG0I01pa2 hhaWwgRm9vIDxh
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And central control will break the network... (Score:2)
Albert Laszlo Barabasi [nd.edu] explains it all clearly and succinctly in his book, Linked [amazon.com], which should be required reading by everyo
Re:Central Control (Score:2)
I'm not sure. Central control is possible only because of a quirk of technology and economics, not of design. In the ideal world, the internet would be mostly peer-to-peer and all services and connections would be equal. However, because it used to be expensive to run the sort of bandwidth, power, and storage that that connectivity requires, only certain institutions did it, and then resold access (or gave it away) to the little people.
Howe
Text of the letter (Score:3, Informative)
Be sure to read the paragraph concerning the bill.
Re:Text of the letter (Score:2, Funny)
Vinton Cerf
Chief Internet Evangelist
Google Inc.
I wish they had a position name _Chief Internet Evangelist_ at my workplace.
Control RFC (Score:4, Funny)
Re:No central control? (Score:2)
Coordination != control.
IANA never controlled anything, it just coordinated lists of names and numbers. This was seen by people that didn't understand how IANA worked as "control". It's not.
Re:Information wants to be free (Score:1, Interesting)
Shut off the internet access of morons who get pwned, and charge them a slightly steep reconnection fee once they get their computer un-fucked. That's how the electric and gas companies where I live deal with deadbeats.
You'll probably say that people will just find themselves a new ISP, but first off, switching ISPs is a pain. Second, you can only do it so many times before you run out of new ISPs to use. I highly d
Re:Information wants to be free (Score:2)
You are all being gamed by the convicted monopolist.
Taking over the Internet will take away your freedom to prevent a takeover by the darkside.
It is your weapon to defend yourself from hell.
Pbpbpbpbp (Score:2)
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Keep going. The propoganda you got from your classmates was really turning me off. Calling him a moron is what really gets my attention and holds it.
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*applause*
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One can agree with you and yet still think that your grade-school name calling is an embarrassment and is counter-productive to your goals. When you scatter moronic insults like "preznit" in your comment you're just encouraging people to disregard what you're saying as unreasoned and ill-conceived. People who have legitimate and considered complaints ra
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You are not being vitriolic, truthful or not. You're being adolescent.
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He should have turned down the medal. (Score:4, Insightful)
freedom of speech (Score:1)
hmmm.... (Score:2)
Was this by design....?
--
Santa, Satan. coincidence? I think not.
Re:hmmm.... (Score:1)
See also...(Lawmakers:Do ask law scholars as well) (Score:3, Informative)
Let's Rewind Time (Score:2, Insightful)
Congress should NOT regulate the Internet (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Congress should NOT regulate the automobile (Score:2, Insightful)
Who are they to tell us how fast we can drive, when and where we need to stop, and whether I have the right of way? They probably don't even change their own oil!
Re:Congress should NOT regulate the automobile (Score:2)
Hey, judging by the fact that I almost need to disassemble my front suspension to change the oil filter on my car, I'm pretty sure the engineers who designed the thing don't change their own oil anymore...
Re:Congress should NOT regulate the automobile (Score:2)
If government regulation of the Internet is anything like their regulation of other things, we have big problems on our hand! Do you want the same people responsible for the War on Drugs, or the Hurricane Katr
Re:Congress should NOT regulate the automobile (Score:2)
Re:Congress should NOT regulate the automobile (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Congress should NOT regulate the automobile (Score:2)
You don't say... (Score:2, Funny)
Important correction (Score:4, Insightful)
It should read as:
"This bill could fundamentally alter the USA's section of the fabulously successful end-to-end Internet"
Unless of course you want to give yet another reason for why the USA should relinquish control over root dns to some truly international entity.
Re:Important correction (Score:4, Insightful)
I mean look at the critism that most Europeans have over the U.S.
The trouble is, as bad as U.S. starting to regulate the Internet would be, the people who want U.N. control want it because they feel the U.S. has been neglecting the Internet. It is not that they don't like U.S. regulations, it is that they don't feel the U.S. has been doing enough to regulate. In fact many think this drive by the U.S. government to regulate the Internet more is being done as a concession to ease the fears of the people who want the U.N. in control of the Internet... that this is a plan to make big reforms to highly control the internet, allowing cencorship, eliminating anonymity, and showing the world community that the U.S. government agrees with their plans to censor, centralize, and control. It is a sort of peace offering if you will.
Show us the truly international entity that have a deep and abiding love for Anarchy and freedom, and those of us against U.N. control would likely fully support an international system (or, more likely, a truly decentralized system where no-one is in control). But the U.N. is not promising to keep the Internet free, the U.N. is promising the strict controls they feel that the U.S. is negligent in providing.
So while we will work to stop the U.S. government from controlling the Internet, we have no illusions that the U.N. is going to be any better.
Re:Important correction (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't think so. See below.
I mean look at the critism that most Europeans have over the U.S.
The problem isn't so clear cut, restrictions doesn
Re:Important correction (Score:2)
Re:Important correction (Score:1)
If you're not Christian (or at least Jewish), you're persona non grata,
I've never seen evidence of this in public life. I'm sure there are instances of this in the US, but it's more of a case of individuals being assholes than Americans being assholes. The government does a pretty good job of not descriminating by religion.
if you don't want to salute a piece of graphic design de
Re:Important correction (Score:1)
* All critic officially labeled "anti-american"
No, they're not. If anything they may be called so by the administration, but that would be nothing more than name-calling. There is no official label.
* Journalists imprisoned for not using right to speak names of sources
Journalists were imprisoned for obstruction of justice. I don't agree with this, but it's not like Judith Miller's testimony helped the Bush administration, so I don't know what you're bitching about.
* Our military and CIA capturing c
Re:Important correction (Score:1, Insightful)
No.
Europe is complaining how freedom of press [rsf.org] is [wikipedia.org] killed [guardian.co.uk]. Europe is complaining how f
He's Against It (Score:5, Informative)
Here's what Cerf says: My fear is that, as written, this bill would do great damage to the Internet as we know it.
Whats going on? (Score:1)
Re:He's Against It (Score:2)
I don't know what they have to say,
it makes no difference anyway -
whatever it is, I'm against it!
No matter what it is or who commenced it,
I'm against it!
Your proposition may be good,
but let's have one thing understood -
whatever it is, I'm against it!
And even when you've changed it or condensed it,
I'm against it!
I'm opposed to it.
On general principles I'm opposed to it.
For months before my s
Anarchy is good (Score:2, Informative)
Deaf ears... (Score:5, Funny)
"A little control won't hurt anybody, and it will line my pockets a bit." That's the mentality we're faced with, only multiplied by a couple 100's of thousand of greedy PHBs.
The only real way to fight that, that I've come up with at least, is spaid or neutering your local politician. Then electronically tag them.
Please, think of the children.
How things have changed (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:How things have changed (Score:3, Insightful)
Researchers can no longer use their computers as web servers.
Most researchers I know don't have the technical knowledge to run any web server, let alone a secure one, and they have no desire to learn. Even if they did, the web is a different place today than it was in the early 90's. When the web was started at CERN, the Internet was still a relatively closed network, where people behaved themselves
My inet provider ... (Score:4, Interesting)
Dear Gods.... (Score:3, Insightful)
And I don't mean just the universities in the west, all of them from Iran to Iran (sorry, but it is a sphere). Let them sort it out because if we leave it to any government, its a lost battle.
Don't get me wrong, the U.S.A. has done a fine job of inventing and managing the system so far, but unfortunately now they appear to have turned into a pack of paranoid, power grabbing, business controlled, idiots.
Its turning from, "Government for the people, by the people, and of the people" to, "Government of the people, by the corporate, behind the lobby group".
Vint Cerf (slightly offtopic) (Score:1)
People in power don't like the internet (Score:2)
Revolution (Score:1)
From cheap 1-800 numbers to stealing neighbours bandwidth to emo kids crossing the street instead of walking down the road...
Re:What's a Vint Cerf? (Score:5, Informative)
Along with being one of the patron saints [wikipedia.org] of the Internet, he's the current chairman of ICANN.
Re:What's a Vint Cerf? (Score:2)
Here's a hint: in The Jungle, Upton Sinclair, writing a book by, for, and about socialism, spent two pages describing the maggots going into the sausage, and fifty-seven pages quoting inspiring, Socialist "Wonderful (thanks STNG fans) Speeches". Today we have the FDA, but no American Socialist party. Sinclair was quoted as saying "I aimed for their minds, but I got their stomaches".
As to your statements about the French governmant, I understand that their five-color alert status is as f
Re:What's a Vint Cerf? (Score:1, Flamebait)
Perhaps, but Cerf left his mark... (Score:2)
What? You mean you've never "Cerfed" the web?
Re:What's a Vint Cerf? (Score:2)
Dumbass Troll.
Troll a politician or something. Whatever happened to respect for those that deserve it? I may have ideological disagreements with both Mr Cerf and Mr Stallman, but I'd never show either of them any personal disrepect. They are both incredibly intelligent and talented, and were both absolutely essential in building the world in which I live today; one that would be far worse without their past efforts.
Re:What's a Vint Cerf? (Score:2)
*rimshot*