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Comment Re:Non news (Score 1) 145

Why this bill is important:

1. IT IS THE RIGHT BILL FOR RIGHT NOW.
There is an urgent need for legislation that protects against efforts by phone and cable companies to block the free flow of information online. Recent examples include Comcast blocking peer-to-peer applications; Verizon censoring NARAL's text messages; and AT&T's plans to start filtering all Internet traffic for copyright violations. We must send a strong and clear message that telco and cable discrimination will no longer be tolerated.

2. THE BILL MAKES NET NEUTRALITY THE LAW OF THE LAND.
The bill is a major first step in a forward-thinking communications policy. It modernizes the Communications Act -- the foundation of media policy -- to ensure that Net Neutrality protections apply to new broadband services, just as they did to dial-up. It ensures that economic innovation, democratic participation and free speech will continue to flourish on the Internet by stopping would-be gatekeepers from discriminatory blocking or interfering with content. It gives the FCC a clear mandate to protect Net Neutrality everywhere.

3. THE BILL OPENS UP A NATIONAL CONVERSATION.
It calls for a nationwide series of public hearings. For too long, communications policy has been made behind closed doors without public input. By taking the debate beyond the Beltway, we have a unique, grassroots opportunity to tell Congress that high-priced phone and cable lobbyists will no longer set the agenda.

The Internet

Journal Journal: All Your Broadband Are Belong To US

You may have missed it this week. In the dead middle of a Business Week interview with SBC chief Edward Whitacre is a comment that foretells the future of broadband. At least, the future incumbent broadband providers are planning for. But it's not a pretty picture for the rest of us. When asked whether he was concerned about Google, MSN, Vonage, and other companies plans to get into broadband services, the CEO of the
The Internet

Journal Journal: Municipal Broadband Spreads Like a Prairie Fire

Mediacitizen reports that Free Press has just unveiled an online broadband map showing the vast extent to which "Community Internet" projects have overtaken towns across the country. In recent years, dozens of communities have started providing broadband service to their citizens through a variety of wired and wireless technologies. Hundreds more have munici
The Internet

Journal Journal: Broadband Through a Rose Tinted Lens

Despite the rosy picture painted by FCC Chairman Kevin Martin, access to affordable, high-speed Internet in America lags far behind the rest of the digital world. A new report released today at Free Press shows that Martin's recent and glowing appraisal of broadband in America glossed over the serious problem of our ever-widening digital divide.
Communications

Journal Journal: Verizon Lies = Media Truths 1

Here's latest update in MediaCitizen's ongoing coverage of attempts by major telecoms and ISPs to squash homegrown broadband initiatives. Now they've bought off think tanks (such as the Cato Institute) and spun journalists (such as the NYT's James Dao) to regurgitate their lies as though they're the unvarnished truth.

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