Why Im Against Net Neutrality
Opinion: The net neutrality debate is expected to pick up again. It should take a rest, since Congress action would only botch things.
The network neutrality debate, which is expected to surface again this fall, is a faux issue that if mandated by Congress is bound to become a mess. Count me in the camp that Congress do nada about net neutrality. "Net neutrality" is a term few can agree on. For Google, Yahoo and eBay, mandating net neutrality means that telecommunications giants will have to treat all Internet traffic equally. For net neutralitys staunchest supporters, the concept has become a quasi censorship issue (as if Verizon would tell its customers they couldnt use Google). For those telecom giants like AT&T and Verizon, net neutrality means they couldnt charge for enhanced services. For Internet users, profiled in eWEEK this week, the end of net neutrality would be downright scary because costs could go upor not. Perhaps startups would be shut outor not. No one knows what will happen, since the debate is really a fracas between Net and telecom behemoths battling over their interests and trying to prod Congress to fix a problem that doesnt exist yet. In other words, the histrionic levels in this debate are high. So why shouldnt Congress get involved? Here are a few reasons:1. Congress will screw it up. If techies cant agree on a definition of net neutrality, its highly unlikely that a bunch of pols understand the issue. Lets say Congress does mandate net neutrality. Great news, right? Not so fast. Once net neutrality is mandated, the laws of unintended consequences kick in. Suddenly, were locked into a Net architecture (the current one thats decades old). Suddenly, there are no fast lanes allowed. Suddenly, entrenched players become more entrenched into the current setup. Is it possible Congress could mandate net neutrality in a way that would allay all these concerns? Sure, but its unlikely. In fact, the only consensus on the net neutrality issue is that no one thinks Congress has a clue.
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