WHAT IS NET NEUTRALITY & WHY IS IT IMPORTANT?
What is Net Neutrality?
Net Neutrality is the fundamental principle that Internet Service Providers (ISPs) treat all data on the Internet equally. This means that there can be no attempt by the ISPs to slow down (“throttle”) the speed of access by discriminating against the websites, platforms, authors, users, content or the medium of content.
Net neutrality is hugely topical at the minute as it is considered under threat from government reform and corporate influence in the US.
Later in this article is the news of the launch of a peer to peer Blockchain Internet, called Decenternet, as a possible solution to part of the global problem.
{Image Source: https://twitter.com/dnet_official}
Discrimination on internet access can be manifest in various forms including: discrimination on preferential access, access based on charging for premium speed, censorship, website blocking and intentionally slowing down traffic.
Perhaps the best example of discrimination was the giant American telecommunications company, Comcast, who were found to have been blocking the ability for subscribers to upload files using the peer to peer sharing platform BitTorrent in 2008.
The Open Internet
Net Neutrality is an intrinsic part of the Open Internet philosophy where the full resources of the internet should be available to all users equally. The Open Internet philosophy is borne out of the utopian Californian computer ideologies from the 1970s and the Cypherpunk movement and now encompasses various facets including; decentralised networks, open source software, absence of censorship, transparency, open web standards and liberation from all forms of political and corporation control.
The Closed Internet
In stark contrast, a Closed Internet has features of internet censorship (through law enforcement in some countries), violation of the end-to-end principle, artificially slow connection speeds on selected websites, and other restrictions imposed by influential corporations or governments.
The Current Status in the US
The issues of Net Neutrality and “Open Internet” appear to vary dramatically from country to country.
It is also a huge issue in India, this week, where the latest news is that the 500 million plus population has the benefit of legislation supporting net neutrality for the first time and you can read more about this from the BBC here.
However, it is perhaps at the height of debate in the US at present following a June 2018 decision to repeal some of the FCC (Federal Communications Commission) Net Neutrality rules, most of which had been created under Obama in 2011 as a policy to preserve a free and open internet.
At the heart of the current debate in the US is the Trump Administrations repeal of Net Neutrality rules including a change in what is known as “Title II”.
Prior to 2015 the ISPs had been classified as “Title 1: Information Service” of the Communications Act 1934 and ISPs “voluntarily” abided by the principles of Net Neutrality.
In 2015 the Open Internet Order reclassified broadband providers under “Title II: Common Carriers” – meaning that the FCC could actually enforce Net Neutrality.
This put all internet content onto the same level footing, for example it meant that Netflix couldn’t get an advantage over any other streaming service by paying ISPs to stream their services at a super-fast rate. In essence with broadband providers classified as common carriers under Title II, the FCC had the legal authority to enforce net neutrality rules against blocking, throttling, and premium paid priority access.
On 11 June 2018 the classification was changed back so that ISPs were less regulated: here is an opinion expressed by the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation (ITIF):
As the FCC’s “Restoring Internet Freedom Order” takes effect today, eliminating the heavy-handed 2016 Title II net neutrality rules, the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation (ITIF), …… issued the followed statement …….:
The Obama Administration’s net neutrality rules, grounded in Title II of the Communications Act, put the United States on the path of regulating broadband like an unchanging public utility. It is time to put the Title II chapter in the net neutrality saga behind us.
[FCC] Chairman Pai’s efforts return broadband to a regulatory environment better suited to encouraging an innovative, evolving communications platform. The Chicken Littles claiming “the end of the Internet” will now be proved wrong.
However, there is still much to be done to achieve a stable, lasting legal framework that gives everyone in the Internet ecosystem confidence to invest in and use this crucial technology. Now is the time for policymakers to work toward bipartisan compromise legislation that will stand the test of time.
Source
Both sides of the debate have well known supporters:
Against rigid Net Neutrality:
The Trump administrations’ appointed FCC Commissioner, Ajit Pai, has stated that commonly perceived threats from Internet Service Providers to deceive internet users by degrading or discriminating content are non-existent:
" The evidence of these continuing threats? There is none; it’s all anecdote, hypothesis, and hysteria. A small ISP in North Carolina allegedly blocked VoIP calls a decade ago. Comcast capped BitTorrent traffic to ease upload congestion eight years ago. Apple introduced Facetime over Wi-Fi first, cellular networks later. Examples this picayune and stale aren’t enough to tell a coherent story about net neutrality. The bogeyman never had it so easy.
So what is there to fear? A sober reader might borrow from the father of Title II: “The only thing we have to fear is fear itself.” But the FCC instead intones the nine scariest words for any friend of Internet freedom: “I’m from the government, and I’m here to help.”
To put it another way, Title II is not just a solution in search of a problem—it’s a government solution that creates a real-world problem. This is not what the Internet needs, and it’s not what the American people want.”
Source FCC: Here
Advocates for Net Neutrality:
There are many famous advocates for Net Neutrality including Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak, Barack Obama and founder of the Web, Tim Berners-Lee.
Collectively supporters for Net Neutrality, including several of the world’s most popular websites (Amazon, Google, Reddit and Netflix), gathered behind the largest online protest in history on 12 July 2017 to object to the US government plans to relax Net Neutrality rules.
Perhaps the most pertinent quote in support of Net Neutrality comes in a joint open letter to the FCC from an impressive list of Internet Pioneers including Tim Berners-Lee and Vinton G. Cerf:
“We are the pioneers and technologists who created and now operate the Internet, and some of the innovators and business people who, like many others, depend on it for our livelihood. We are writing to respectfully urge you to call on FCC Chairman Ajit Pai to cancel the December 14 vote on the FCC’s proposed Restoring Internet Freedom Order….
This proposed Order would repeal key network neutrality protections that prevent Internet access providers from blocking content, websites and applications, slowing or speeding up services or classes of service, and charging online services for access or fast lanes to Internet access providers’ customers.
The proposed Order would also repeal oversight over other unreasonable discrimination and unreasonable practices, and over interconnection with last-mile Internet access providers.
The proposed Order removes long-standing FCC oversight over Internet access providers without an adequate replacement to protect consumers, free markets and online innovation.
Source: Here
Is there an Alternative Solution? Soon there will be:
Whilst researching Net Neutrality, internet philosophy, blockchain technology you might come across the website Decenternet also known as D-net which is an entirely ground-breaking alternative P2P neutral decentralized internet platform. The proposed solution, proliferates net neutrality, protects privacy and removes the influence of potentially biased corporations or centralised organisations.
How does Decenternet work?
Decenternet is a decentralised network which is to be built on the latest blockchain technology, and brings with it some interesting features including:
- Fast and secure browsing through the “Anuvys” Operating System. Anuvys is the free native default Operating System, which is Linux based and is derived from Open Source software. It is completely in alignment with the Cypherpunk philosophy about how the Internet experience was supposed to be.
- A Liberty Search Engine/ Osiris Web Browser created as a completely free web environment which delivers profits directly to the participating peers without the interference of an intermediary.
- A highly incentivised Spyce cryptocurrency which is the foundation of all trade and commerce on the d-net and is available to anyone meaning that both content producers and content consumers are rewarded. The node providers for the P2P internet will be rewarded with Spyce.
All of the above features are included in much more detail on the White Paper of this new project: further information: https://decenternet.com/ and ANUVYS website: https://anuvys.com/.
Decenternet has a presence on Social Media on:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Decenternet200962407141047/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/dnet_official
Decenternet Telegram Group: https://t.me/dnetofficial
Decenternet is vocal about securing net neutrality on social media, they have an ambition to help solve threats to Net Neutrality and Data Privacy:
Decenternet…… provides users with boundless access to different websites without interfering with the connection and internet traffic. It also treats all contents equally without any preferences.
There is much debate to be had! Let me know your thoughts?
DISCLAMER:
The information contained within this post shall not be taken as a financial advice. I am not a financial advisor and none of your investment decisions should be carried out based on any information presented here. You can lose all of your money by investing. The information presented in this article is for educational and entertainment purposes only.
The battle to keep the Internet open, neutral and free of censorship is a huge one. It’s very important that we have initiatives like Decenternet that aim to guarantee Net Neutrality.
I completely agree and with the serious amounts of effort deployed in the US in #saveNetNeutrality and #BattleForTheInternet type campaigns - it is hugely evident that those in favour of Net Neutrality will have to be battle hardy too! I've not heard of anything like Decenternet until these last few days so will enjoy reading your article about them and their solution, which for the benefit of the readers is published here.
Completely true! I am very interested to follow this and see how it performs. I wonder what the potential weaknesses of this approach are.
There is a really interesting angle, from a Humanitarian perspective. Net Neutrality rules would make it possibly difficult for "zero-rating" which is effectively re-imbursement to the user for data usage from certain web address. The three zero-rating practices I have heard are google-zero, facebook-zero and Wikipedia-zero. It is common in the developing world and could be seen as a good thing for acquiring education and knowledge at zero cost.
It sounds like positive discrimination and very noble: but a unilateral policy of neutrality without discrimination has a lot of merit.
Waooooo, a very good information..... Am not a IT professional, but i feel as google in searching,
gmail in mail,
youtube in video sharing and face book in social media have been dominating the internet for years.
We actually need blockchain alternative for all these things, which will replace their dominance and advertisement market.
Decenternet platform also seems cool, but need more research.
When these services are given to you for free, it means that you are the product.
yes sir, if we will look at our very friendly google.......Its free to use, but most of us dont know that google use our information and sell them.
they earn crores from advertisement, but we feel that they provide us everything for free...
These things can only be avoided with the help of block chain technology...... And most importantly as the early adopters we all are going to get higher benefit from that.......
Wishing a great future for the crypto world......
Thanking you @saswat036
Agreed! do your own research!
yes sir, once i ll do the research on the platform will post the analysis
Thank you for your interest - you have some good ideas and - I'm sure you have come across the dlive.io / @dlive and dtube / @dtube : you are clearly aware of grand plans with Steemit and now the new ambitious Blockchain Internet - Decenternet. Lots of items for reading and research - but all inspirational!
That is somewhat what's occurring in the Philippines, which right now is the main nation on the planet where internet fairness does not rule.
Thanks for the comment - I would be really interested to hear more about the status of #netneutrality in the Philippines. Please do share here if you wish. From speaking with people in the Philippines personally I realise that internet connectivity can be difficult at times.
Your balance is below $0.3. Your account is running low and should be replenished. You have roughly 10 more @dustsweeper votes. Check out the Dustsweeper FAQ here: https://steemit.com/dustsweeper/@dustsweeper/dustsweeper-faq
Hopefully it will do soon!
Great work!! really important to reduce threats to net neutrality! It will be very interesting to see how Decenternet will proliferate this project. if it grows steadily and slowly, it could revolutionize the internet!!
Thank you for your comment.
Interestingly, I will be looking into some of the founding principles of the internet from the conception of the Cypherpunk era in the 1970's, so I will be naturally looking at how projects like Decenternet might Revolutionise the current "centralised internet" BACK towards those founding pillars!
Awesome! I know you can do a far better job of this than I, so I will wait to read your analysis!
Hi @starkerz ! I imagine you have been very busy with @anarcotech with everything on @oracle-d !
Here is a post I made today about similarities of @oracle-d and @promo-steem with the KARMA APP on the eos blockchain that @dallasrushing is the founder, and @lukestokes is advisor.
On the post, I also encourage @dallasrusing to check the possibilities of @oracle-d to promote or share the word on the KARMA APP project. Also, a possible airdrop to Steem Holders.
https://steemit.com/karmaapp/@gold84/karma-app-dallasrushing-created-this-decentralized-app-on-eos-to-do-good-to-mankind-lukestokes-is-an-advisor-on-the-project
Looking forward to your thoughts on this!
Regards, @gold84
An excellent introduction into Net Neutrality. Balanced and fair, and very interesting info about Decenternet.
Thank you for the comment. There is a series of similar posts - so keep your eyes peeled for the next article!
You might have seen above in a comment - that there have been "noble humanitarian" projects like "Wikipedia-Zero" which would contravene Net Neutrality - so it has to be said there are some nuances to the debate!
Very interesting angle. I think however when some people see the words Facebook, Google and Wikipedia, it doesn't necessarily make them feel positive about any of these particularly. I think solutions like zero rating could potentially be used as less than positive ways in the debate on net neutrality. For example, I could imagine certain companies selling us the idea that because they provide something with zero rating that they SHOULD violate net neutrality. Perhaps there are interesting uses for it here, but it does have to be said that when you are dealing with names, particularly like GOogle and Facebook that are well known for issues surrounding privacy, then the cry of "corporate takeover" is left ringing in the ears.....
True true - I hadn't put wiki into the same bucket - but will look that up...
Wikipedia has many problems, not least that there is concern over the "power" that a very small group of the very top contributors/reviewers make to the overall ecosystem. There are some charges of some of these people being able to "create and write history" due to their influence on the platform. One of the things we need to consider is how the repository of information determines fact. And one persons fact could easily be anothers fiction. There's also the added issue of the psychology of how you write a thing. For example, right now, people who are being critical of government in my country, especially on issues of freedom of speech, are being labelled as "hard right", despite the fact that politically them may not at all align with certain political persuasions. It's a very clever and devious way to ensure that powerful lobbyists can create the idea of a particular viewpoint being distasteful without having to come right out and saying it. This whole Fake News meme, which has spread over the last few years is a very clever way of shutting down opinion which isn't your own. I'm not saying that Wikipedia do this, by the way, only that by having pure decentralization can we ensure freedom of expression. And wikipedia is far from decentralized in my opinion...of course, my opinion may be fake news! :)
There are "n" number of possibilities with DNet because it will fast forward us to the advanced technological age. Great blog @cryptocurator! You have explained the current problem in fine detail. In India, we are facing problems with Data Privacy and Banning of multiple P2P websites because our government thinks that its best for nation's interest yet they do nothing about Piracy. Also, they do censorship on truth seeking media websites which expose big corporations doing illegal things to make shit load of money. DNet will definitely change that!
Thank you so much for joining the debate. It is really interesting on this page now to get comments from technology advocates located in countries all around the world. I can see that you are also highly interested in DNet and will be following your blog posts on this project and associated ideas around the development of this decentralised technology.
Awesome. Let's educate Steem about this new Technology that Sean Kim is working on and bring him on the blockchain. He has been an advocate of No Censorship himself and I think it's highly beneficial for him to have a presence here ;-) Great times ahead @cryptocurator.
In my humble opinion, Decenternet may be the most exciting venture of 2018
I think you are right. The problem of net neutrality and privacy are hot topics right now. Unfortunately it doesn't seem to matter how often people are warned about these things, many carry on regardless without considering security, privacy, freedom of expression, and net neutrality as the very things that in the 21st century are bedrocks of individual liberty. At the moment, it's quite complicated to take these matters into your own hands and do something about them, and it's very much the domain of those with hardcore ICT and security skills. The Decenternet model offers a great opportunity to the masses to do something about it. The question i think is one of education, and making sure that people realise that solutions (such as decentralization of the internet) is available, and it looks to me as if Dnet is providing these solutions.
It certainly sounds like an intellectually challenging project for their team for the next year or two - and certainly a powerful vision is at the heart of the project.
Thanks for kind of good information @cryptocurator
Thank you - I appreciate that this must be a hot topic of debate for you in #India and that it will have been all over your news press. This article is also shared on Twitter.
Yes you are right..!!
Is it Danger? What I mean is, how safe it is?
The current status-quo is so unsafe and non-secure that it would be very difficult to come up with something even less secure, even if somebody wanted to do it on purpose.
I mean, do you have a machine that runs Windows? Are you using VPN server, when you surf the Internet? Or the TOR browser? What measures are you taking to stay safe online?
I am using KASPERSKY INTERNET SECURITY only...
Yeah, it won’t help you much, unfortunately…
It will completely depend from country to country - I suppose one of the fundamental principles is freedom and equality of information. There will be certain particular issues in the UAE. For example you might find that the Telecommunications Regulatory Authority restrict access to certain sites.
Correct @cryptocurator. Our move here is very limited. All transaction from outside is monitored even messages from Facebook or any messenger...
I'm sorry to hear that - that is quite an invasion of your privacy!
Yes, it is... We have VPN here but we need to buy in the right site the serial code and if we did not do that they can easily trace us and people here like me will have fine around 200 US DOLLAR. This is really true and it happens to other people here in UAE...