
	by Jeff Chester 
	February 3 2006
	
	from
	
	PrisonPlanet Website
	
	
	The nation's largest telephone and cable companies are crafting an alarming 
	set of strategies that would transform the free, open and nondiscriminatory 
	Internet of today to a privately run and branded service that would charge a 
	fee for virtually everything we do online. 
	
	
	Verizon, Comcast, Bell South and other communications 
	giants are developing strategies that would track and store information on 
	our every move in cyberspace in a vast data-collection and marketing system, 
	the scope of which could rival the National Security Agency. 
	According to white papers now being circulated in the cable, telephone and 
	telecommunications industries, those with the deepest pockets--corporations, 
	special-interest groups and major advertisers--would get preferred 
	treatment. 
	
	 
	
	Content from these providers would have first 
	priority on our computer and television screens, while information seen as 
	undesirable, such as peer-to-peer communications, could be relegated to a 
	slow lane or simply shut out. 
	
	
	Under the plans they are considering, all of us--from content providers to 
	individual users--would pay more to surf online, stream videos or even send 
	e-mail. Industry planners are mulling new subscription plans that would 
	further limit the online experience, establishing "platinum," "gold" and 
	"silver" levels of Internet access that would set limits on the number of 
	downloads, media streams or even e-mail messages that could be sent or 
	received. 
	
	To make this pay-to-play vision a reality, phone and cable lobbyists are now 
	engaged in a political campaign to further weaken the nation's 
	communications policy laws. They want the federal government to permit them 
	to operate Internet and other digital communications services as private 
	networks, free of policy safeguards or governmental oversight. Indeed, both 
	the Congress and the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) 
	are considering proposals that will have far-reaching impact on the 
	Internet's future. 
	
	 
	
	Ten years after passage of the ill-advised 
	Telecommunications Act of 1996, telephone and cable companies are using the 
	same political snake oil to convince compromised or clueless lawmakers to 
	subvert the Internet into a turbo-charged digital retail machine. 
	
	
	The telephone industry has been somewhat more candid than the cable industry 
	about its strategy for the Internet's future. Senior phone executives have 
	publicly discussed plans to begin imposing a new scheme for the delivery of 
	Internet content, especially from major Internet content companies. 
	
	 
	
	As Ed Whitacre, chairman and CEO of AT&T, 
	told Business Week in November, 
	
		
		"Why should they be allowed to use my pipes? 
		The Internet can't be free in that sense, because we and the cable 
		companies have made an investment, and for a Google or Yahoo! or Vonage 
		or anybody to expect to use these pipes [for] free is nuts!" 
	
	
	The phone industry has marshaled its political 
	allies to help win the freedom to impose this new broadband business model.
	
	
	 
	
	At a recent conference held by the Progress 
	and Freedom Foundation, a think tank funded by Comcast, Verizon, AT&T 
	and other media companies, there was much discussion of a plan for phone 
	companies to impose fees on a sliding scale, charging content providers 
	different levels of service. 
	
		
		"Price discrimination," noted PFF's resident 
		media expert Adam Thierer, "drives the market-based capitalist economy."
		
	
	
	 
	
	 
	
	Net Neutrality
	
	
	
	To ward off the prospect of virtual toll booths on the information highway, 
	some new media companies and public-interest groups are calling for new 
	federal policies requiring "network neutrality" on the Internet. 
	
	 
	
	Common Cause, Amazon, Google, Free Press, Media 
	Access Project and Consumers Union, among others, have proposed that 
	broadband providers would be prohibited from discriminating against all 
	forms of digital content. For example, phone or cable companies would not be 
	allowed to slow down competing or undesirable content. 
	
	
	Without proactive intervention, the values and issues that we care 
	about--civil rights, economic justice, the environment and fair 
	elections--will be further threatened by this push for corporate control. 
	Imagine how the next presidential election would unfold if major political 
	advertisers could make strategic payments to Comcast so that ads from 
	Democratic and Republican candidates were more visible and user-friendly 
	than ads of third-party candidates with less funds. 
	
	 
	
	Consider what would happen if an online 
	advertisement promoting nuclear power prominently popped up on a cable 
	broadband page, while a competing message from an environmental group was 
	relegated to the margins. It is possible that all forms of civic and 
	noncommercial online programming would be pushed to the end of a commercial 
	digital queue. 
	
	
	But such "neutrality" safeguards are inadequate to address more fundamental 
	changes the Bells and cable monopolies are seeking in their quest to 
	monetize the Internet. If we permit the Internet to become a medium designed 
	primarily to serve the interests of marketing and personal consumption, 
	rather than global civic-related communications, we will face the political 
	consequences for decades to come. Unless we push back, the "brandwashing" of 
	America will permeate not only our information infrastructure but global 
	society and culture as well. 
	
	
	Why are the Bells and cable companies aggressively advancing such plans?
	
	
	 
	
	With the arrival of the long-awaited 
	"convergence" of communications, our media system is undergoing a major 
	transformation. Telephone and cable giants envision a potential lucrative 
	"triple play," as they impose near-monopoly control over the residential 
	broadband services that send video, voice and data communications flowing 
	into our televisions, home computers, cell phones and iPods. All of these 
	many billions of bits will be delivered over the telephone and cable lines.
	
	
	
	Video programming is of foremost interest to both the phone and cable 
	companies. The telephone industry, like its cable rival, is now in the TV 
	and media business, offering customers television channels, on-demand videos 
	and games. 
	
	 
	
	Online advertising is increasingly integrating 
	multimedia (such as animation and full-motion video) in its pitches. Since 
	video-driven material requires a great deal of Internet bandwidth as it 
	travels online, phone and cable companies want to make sure their television 
	"applications" receive preferential treatment on the networks they operate.
	
	
	 
	
	And their overall influence over the stream of 
	information coming into your home (or mobile device) gives them the leverage 
	to determine how the broadband business evolves. 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	Mining Your Data
	
	
	
	At the core of the new power held by phone and cable companies are tools 
	delivering what is known as "deep packet inspection." With these tools, AT&T 
	and others can readily know the packets of information you are receiving 
	online - from e-mail, to websites, to sharing of music, video and software 
	downloads. 
 
	
	These "deep packet inspection" technologies are 
	partly designed to make sure that the Internet pipeline doesn't become so 
	congested it chokes off the delivery of timely communications. Such products 
	have already been sold to universities and large businesses that want to 
	more economically manage their Internet services. They are also being used 
	to limit some peer-to-peer downloading, especially for music. 
	
	
	But these tools are also being promoted as ways that companies, such as 
	Comcast and Bell South, can simply grab greater control over the Internet. 
	For example, in a series of recent white papers, Internet technology giant 
	Cisco urges these companies to "meter individual subscriber usage by 
	application," as individuals' online travels are "tracked" and "integrated 
	with billing systems." 
	
	 
	
	Such tracking and billing is made possible 
	because they will know "the identity and profile of the individual 
	subscriber," "what the subscriber is doing" and "where the subscriber 
	resides." 
	
	 
	
	Will Google, Amazon and the other companies 
	successfully fight the plans of the Bells and cable companies? Ultimately, 
	they are likely to cut a deal because they, too, are interested in 
	monetizing our online activities. After all, as Cisco notes, content 
	companies and network providers will need to "cooperate with each other to 
	leverage their value proposition." 
	
	 
	
	They will be drawn by the ability of cable and 
	phone companies to track, 
	
		
		"content usage...by subscriber," and where 
		their online services can be "protected from piracy, metered, and 
		appropriately valued." 
	
	
	 
	
	
	Our Digital Destiny
	
	
	
	It was former FCC chairman Michael Powell, with the support of 
	then-commissioner and current chair Kevin Martin, who permitted phone 
	and cable giants to have greater control over broadband. Powell and his GOP 
	majority eliminated longstanding regulatory safeguards requiring phone 
	companies to operate as nondiscriminatory networks (technically known as 
	"common carriers"). 
	
	 
	
	He refused to require that cable companies, when 
	providing Internet access, also operate in a similar nondiscriminatory 
	manner. As Stanford University law professor Lawrence Lessig has long 
	noted, it is government regulation of the phone lines that helped make the 
	Internet today's vibrant, diverse and democratic medium. 
	
	
	But now, the phone companies are lobbying Washington to kill off what's left 
	of "common carrier" policy. They wish to operate their Internet services as 
	fully "private" networks. Phone and cable companies claim that the 
	government shouldn't play a role in broadband regulation: Instead of the 
	free and open network that offers equal access to all, they want to reduce 
	the Internet to a series of business decisions between consumers and 
	providers. 
	
	
	Besides their business interests, telephone and cable companies also have a 
	larger political agenda. Both industries oppose giving local communities the 
	right to create their own local Internet wireless or wi-fi networks. 
	
	 
	
	They also want to eliminate the last vestige of 
	local oversight from electronic media - the ability of city or county 
	government, for example, to require telecommunications companies to serve 
	the public interest with, for example, public-access TV channels. The Bells 
	also want to further reduce the ability of the FCC to oversee communications 
	policy. 
	
	 
	
	They hope that both the FCC and Congress - via a 
	new Communications Act - will back these proposals. 
	
	
	The future of the online media in the United States will ultimately depend 
	on whether the Bells and cable companies are allowed to determine the 
	country's "digital destiny." So before there are any policy decisions, a 
	national debate should begin about how the Internet should serve the public. 
	We must insure that phone and cable companies operate their Internet 
	services in the public interest - as stewards for a vital medium for free 
	expression. 
	
	
	If Americans are to succeed in designing an equitable digital destiny for 
	themselves, they must mount an intensive opposition similar to the 
	successful challenges to the FCC's media ownership rules in 2003. 
	
	 
	
	Without such a public outcry to rein in the 
	GOP's corporate-driven agenda, it is likely that even many of the Democrats 
	who rallied against further consolidation will be "tamed" by the well-funded 
	lobbying campaigns of the powerful phone and cable industry.