Net Neutrality: 'both sides are off their rocker'


The "Net Neutrality" debate is confusing, and I'm not the only one who thinks so. Andy Kessler from The Weekly Standard calls the issue "bizarre" and "hard to understand" and opines: "both sides are off their rocker." He argues that the answer is not regulation. The telcos and cable companies, he says, are loathe to upgrade their networks -- it's expensive, and, why would they without the government stepping in? They want neutrality regulations to be quelled because "without the ability to extract money from the webbies for the use of their not-so-fast Alexander Graham Bell-era wires (forget that you and I already overpay for this), AT&T or Verizon might not have any business model going forward."

Kessler's "modest proposal" is creative and a little diabolical (ergo: I love it). "Maybe the incumbent network providers--the Verizons, Comcasts, AT&Ts--can be made to compete; threatening to seize their stagnating networks via eminent domain is just one creative idea to get them to do this. A truly competitive, non-neutral network could work, but only if we know its real economic value. If telcos or cable charge too much, someone should be in a position to steal the customer. Maybe then we'd see useful services and a better Internet. Sounds like capitalism."

What does the blogerati think about the idea of seizing broadband in the name of eminent domain?

"A compelling idea, but one that's sadly unworkable, property rights being what they are today," says John Paczkowski of Good Morning Silicon Valley. "Net neutrality is a solution that doesn't fix the root cause problem - the lack of competition in broadband," says Scott Karp of Publishing 2.0, calling both sides of the debate "disingenuous." Mike from TechDirt may have been the first to take up the battle cry over the "silliness" of the bickering between telcos and webbies and says, "Slowly, but surely, people are starting to figure out what's really going on with the network neutrality debate."

Sounds like the blogerati agrees. And I love it. Now who's ready to go lobby against... well, everyone? Yeah. It probably won't happen. But it's certainly worth wishing for.

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Last updated: February 13, 2012: 06:50 AM

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