Be prepared to fight for internet freedom

nX1

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go to www.savetheinternet.com or www.moveon.org and find out what is going on through the halls of congress. The freedom of the internet is under attack by telecommunications companies. Heres an excerpt from savetheinternet

"Congress is pushing a law that would abandon the Internet's First Amendment -- a principle called Network Neutrality that prevents companies like AT&T, Verizon and Comcast from deciding which Web sites work best for you -- based on what site pays them the most. Your local library shouldn’t have to outbid Barnes & Noble for the right to have its Web site open quickly on your computer.

Net Neutrality allows everyone to compete on a level playing field and is the reason that the Internet is a force for economic innovation, civic participation and free speech. If the public doesn't speak up now, Congress will cave to a multi-million dollar lobbying campaign by telephone and cable companies that want to decide what you do, where you go, and what you watch online.

This isn’t just speculation -- we've already seen what happens elsewhere when the Internet's gatekeepers get too much control. Last year, Telus -- Canada's version of AT&T -- blocked their Internet customers from visiting a Web site sympathetic to workers with whom the company was having a labor dispute. And Madison River, a North Carolina ISP, blocked its customers from using any competing Internet phone service." here are some more examples

"In 2004, North Carolina ISP Madison River blocked their DSL customers from using any rival Web-based phone service.

Shaw, a major Canadian cable, internet, and telephone service company, intentionally downgrades the "quality and reliability" of competing Internet-phone services that their customers might choose -- driving customers to their own phone services not through better services, but by rigging the marketplace.

In April, Time Warner's AOL blocked all emails that mentioned www.dearaol.com -- an advocacy campaign opposing the company's pay-to-send e-mail scheme."
 
WTF? What are they thinking? If they pass this law they can bet their asses that they're gonna have riots on their hands. How can they even think of something like that? I'll ****ing visit what websites I want end of story.
 
the websites i listed have online petitions to sign
 
I hate moveon.org...but yes the internetz is under attack also AT&T make my ping in WoW suck
 
be sure to tell other people you know this must BE STOPPED
 
They would never do that, it wouldn't be good for the economy.
 
your right that it wouldnt be good for the economy.BUT THEY ARE DOING IT ANYWAY, and why are the lobbies for these corporations spending millions and millions of dollars for this exact purpose in congress
 
Wait, this is AT&T fighting for THEIR rights.

Government has no right to tell them what they may and may not do with their own property. Read what they actually want to do.

It's nothing about "censoring" sites, they want to optimize for sites that improve their business more. The internet will only get BETTER in the case, not worse, as it won't make other website blocked or make them function any worse.

Redneck said:
WTF? What are they thinking? If they pass this law they can bet their asses that they're gonna have riots on their hands. How can they even think of something like that? I'll ****ing visit what websites I want end of story.
It's not about this it's about optimizing sites they want to.
 
ok so your telling me that if there is a website that wants to expose at&t for doing something wrong, they will allow it to use their pipes with the same level of service as a megasite such as google?

"This isn’t just speculation -- we've already seen what happens elsewhere when the Internet's gatekeepers get too much control. Last year, Telus -- Canada's version of AT&T -- blocked their Internet customers from visiting a Web site sympathetic to workers with whom the company was having a labor dispute. And Madison River, a North Carolina ISP, blocked its customers from using any competing Internet phone service."
 
nX1 said:
ok so your telling me that if there is a website that wants to expose at&t for doing something wrong, they will allow it to use their pipes with the same level of service as a megasite such as google?

"This isn’t just speculation -- we've already seen what happens elsewhere when the Internet's gatekeepers get too much control. Last year, Telus -- Canada's version of AT&T -- blocked their Internet customers from visiting a Web site sympathetic to workers with whom the company was having a labor dispute. And Madison River, a North Carolina ISP, blocked its customers from using any competing Internet phone service."
It's up to them- they are free entities themselves. If you don't like the way they run THEIR business, switch to another ISP. It's called freedom.
 
I've heard enough, riot time:flame: .
 
too bad comcast, bellsouth, atat, and all the others want to do the same thing.
 
nX1 said:
too bad comcast, bellsouth, atat, and all the others want to do the same thing.
There are thousands of ISPs. Either way way to go painting this as completely horrible and bad, and not taking into account the obvious good that can come out. There has yet been no push to block/censor anything etc. Optimization is GREAT.

If I run a business I can do what I please with it. I won't have the government barging in and telling me in what manner I can and can't sell my products.
 
Redneck said:
I've heard enough, riot time:flame: .

RIOT TIME! *proceeds to beat people up with tactical shields and batons* :)
 
RakuraiTenjin said:
Wait, this is AT&T fighting for THEIR rights.

Government has no right to tell them what they may and may not do with their own property. Read what they actually want to do.

It's nothing about "censoring" sites, they want to optimize for sites that improve their business more. The internet will only get BETTER in the case, not worse, as it won't make other website blocked or make them function any worse.


It's not about this it's about optimizing sites they want to.


I'm sorry, but Internet providers don't get jack shit 'rights' in regards to preventing what people can and cannot look at on the internet. We're paying them for free access of the internet, which is public domain.
 
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