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3 Easy Ways to Support Net Neutrality in Canada
Published on 26/03/07
by willpate
- Talk about it: write a blog post, put a video on YouTube, send a letter to the editor; whatever works for you. The point is that our collective audience is large and influential.
- Send an email in support of Network Neutrality to your MP (search by postal code), cc Industry Minister Maxime Bernier (Minister.Industry@ic.gc.ca), Prime Minister Stephen Harper (Harper.S@parl.gc.ca), Leader of the Opposition Stephan Dion (Dion.S@parl.gc.ca) and Leader of the New Democratic Party Jack Layton (Layton.J@parl.gc.ca). If anyone wants to volunteer to write a standard letter, be my guest.
- File a complaint with the CRTC
And before anyone calls me out on it, no - I haven’t had a chance to do all of these myself yet. I’m just sharing my first steps with you as I figure them out ![]()
That's it. What Next?
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Comments on 3 Easy Ways to Support Net Neutrality in Canada
8 Responses
Sameer Vasta
26/03/07
Blogged it and wrote a letter to my MP and Jack Layton (I would offer mine as a standard letter, but seeing as I know them both, I think my letter would be too colloquial for a form letter).
Now, on to step three.
Rob Paterson
27/03/07
Will do Will - seems that this is a good first step
There must be more - thinking ….
Rob
Kevin O'Brien
28/03/07
Sometimes one can draw attention to an issue by creating irony. If the reason for wanting attention is sufficiently altruistic people will turn on to it instead of ignoring. And so I propose:
Join with me to create a media company which is directly associated with an Internet company (where’ve we seen that before?) but use the media company to ask government to make it illegal for a media company to be affiliated with, joined to, or subordinate to, an Internet company. There’s the irony, make something an argue against it’s right to exist.
My supervisor at the Federation of Agriculture used to have a fit every time I told farmers that the Internet is the “democratization of information technology”; she seriously thought farmers would feel threatened by someone speaking to them like that. I had a higher opinion of them, but that’s another matter. The point is, it has become clear that when media companies are doing the bidding of communication companies (or the other way around) democracy is rotting into soviet sludge (central control).
Being able to communicate with mass numbers is so economically powerful that underlying structures, including whole companies, will fall into serving the media interest. That’s fine if it’s a private company like, say, a print company serving a newspaper company — as long as there are other printers I can go to. But when the subordinate technology company runs everyone’s Internet it simply fails to be rational for the technology company to operate our Internet in our interests.
So why take issue with a media company being “subordinate to” an Internet company, but then go on to make the case that the media company will dominate? (I’m broadly defining “Internet company” as including telcos since they’re all in the game.) Well, it’s because that’s how it goes (that’s how it went, at least):
Island Tel used be a 50% partner in PEINet (PEI’s first Internet company). Island Tel had little or no interest in content, and about as much expertise. They wanted to rent wires and make money from using their infrastructure. On-Line Support (not the same company as the support company) was considered to be the “civilian” partner. OLS would look after marketing the thing and would, almost as a reluctance, have to be involved in creating some content for people to look at. I remember those early efforts as kindergarten-like ‘cut-and-paste’ sessions. No one had anything they wanted to say, and they had no one to say it to, but they did understand “we’d better give people interesting things to read and look at or we’re not going to sell much of this Internet stuff”.
Many think there was a “falling out” between J. Hill and Island Tel, and there may have been, but I’ll bet’cha if a falling out did exist it was engineered by what is now Aliant (a group of senior managers who were planning a full merger of all Atlantic telcos and full domination of communications infrastructure). Almost perfectly timed with their pull-out from PEINet, senior managers at Island Tel began talking about “content”. They never shut up about it. What happened? Well, clearly they’d all attended the same management seminar where they were told that “content” wasn’t something used to hold a person’s attention while they buy something (the PEINet model), but it was in fact something used to instruct them what to buy (the Bell Canada model).
We know the most effective economic system is regulated capitalism; perhaps it’s more that it’s the worst we have except for all the rest. Either way, as fast as collective resources, used cooperatively in an atmosphere of sharing, manages to create something, capitalism comes along and takes it away. Trouble is, capitalism, like a virus, is mutating into a resistant form which seems to be immune to regulation. It would appear it has developed a “protien” which looks for all the world like a senior telco official who warmly shares technolgy tips with over-streached government officials who posess no resistance.
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Digital Freedoms Threatened in Canada at Jason Dyok
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[...] Update: Visit Will Pate’s 3 Easy Ways to Support Net Neutrality in Canada [...]
Digital Freedoms Threatened in Canada at Jason Dyok
23/11/07
[...] For the inaugural post at http://jasondyok.blogsite.org/ I decided to write about something that every Canadian should be aware of…Network Neutrality (Internet Neutrality or ‘Net Neutrality). It is the notion that Internet users have the right to determine what content they view and the applications they use to view it on the Internet. Seems pretty logical, but this basic freedom is being threatened by the Bif Telco companies…the very companies YOU use to access the Internet. On October 31, 2007, Bell Sympatico, one of the largest ISPs in Canada, admitted to using traffic management systems to specifically target peer-to-peer (P2P) traffic. This, in effect, reduced the speed at which this type of data could transfer or blocks it entirely. A Sympatico manager later added, "…Bell is using Internet Traffic Management to ensure we deliver bandwidth fairly to our customers…". On the surface, this may seem ok. Sympatico is trying to provide better service to it’s customers. No, my friends, look a little deeper. They are controlling how and what you are accessing on the Internet. It is no different than your telephone provider telling you who you can call and at what time you can call them, or your power company specifying what devices you can plug into the wall and if you use something different, it will not work properly. Doesn’t seem too benign now… Why would these companies do this? Greed, my friends. Let’s say you are a company about to launch a new product. You could pay these ISPs large amounts of money to ensure your web pages load faster while your competition loads slower or not at all. The ISP collects money from these contracts, and they also continue to collect from YOU every month to access filtered content. This can not happen. I urge you to contact your local MP and tell them this is not acceptable. You can also visit http://www.neutrality.ca/ for more information and to sign their petition. Update: Visit Will Pate’s 3 Easy Ways to Support Net Neutrality in Canada Tags: network neutrality, net neutrality, sympatico, bandwidth filtering [...]
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12/06/08
[...] Internet for more information and to sign their petition. Will Pate has a great article on “3 Easy Ways to Support Net Neutrality in Canada“. While specific to Canada, these 3 steps can be applied [...]
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