INTRODUCTION
A SCENARIO
- Remy Ishak is a student at a local community college. Because he works full time, he takes many of her courses online, which provides the flexibility he needs in her schedule.
- For several semesters, this arrangement works well he accesses the course resources online, including bandwidth materials such as videos of recorded lectures and learning exercises that require the transfer of large files.
- In his fourth semester, though, he begins to notice a slowdown of her Internet access when he is working with content from the college. Videos don’t stream reliably, and some actions time out before can be completed.
- Company informed the institution that due to growing consumer demand for bandwidth-intensive content—such as online video games and streaming HD television and movies—it would begin charging more for transmitting this kind of material.
- When Remy complains to the cable company, they inform her that there are no regulations requiring broadband providers to transmit all content at the same speed and that the company is legally allowed to charge content providers a different rate for full speed service of their material
7 THINGS YOU SHOULD KNOW ABOUT NET NEUTRALITY
1.
What is it?
Net neutrality the principle
that Internet service providers and governments should treat all data, not
discriminating or charging differential by user. (will be answer in Q1)
2.
How does it work?
Comcast v. FCC case appears
to confirm this
3.
Whose doing it?
Supporters of enforceable
net neutrality rules include many higher education associations
(EDUCAUSE among them),
library and research organizations, public interest groups (such as Common Cause), and content companies
including Amazon.com,EBay, Google, Intel, Microsoft, Facebook, Skype, and
Yahoo.( Will beanswer in Q3)
4.
Why is it significant?
Because the Internet has
become such a critical communications infrastructure ( Will be answer in Q3)
5.
What are the downsides?
Who support and opposed
(will discuss in question 2)
6.
Where is it going?
Currently the federal
government and the private sector are investigating several avenues to resolve
this debate.
7.
What are the implications for higher education?
IMPACT OF NET NEUTRALITY
Question 1 : What is network neutrality?
- Net neutrality (also network neutrality or Internet neutrality) is the principle that Internet service providers and governments should treat all data on the Internet equally, not discriminating or charging differentially by user, content, site, platform, application, type of attached equipment, and modes of communication.
- The term was coined by Columbia media law professor Tim Wu in 2003 as an extension of the longstanding concept of a common carrier
- Proponents often see net neutrality as an important component of an open internet, where policies such as equal treatment of data and open web standards allow those on the internet to easily communicate and conduct business without interference from a third part.
Why has the internet operated under net neutrality up to this
point in
time?
The Internet has become such
a critical communications infrastructure, the ability for a network operator to
decide what information is allowed to pass freely and quickly, or slowly or not
at all, runs counter to the well-established tradition of acceptable common
carrier behavior.
Many see this as a direct
threat to our economy, our politics, our educational and healthcare systems ,
our security, and our basic values and freedoms. While all parties appear to
agree that openness is good, they disagree strongly about the degree to which we
need to guarantee it by law.
QUESTION 2 : Who is favor of net neutrality? Who is
opposed, Why?
Who
is favor of net neutrality?
For those who support
strong, enforceable net neutrality rules, the current legal environment is
untenable
Why?
Because every infraction has
to be recognized and challenged on an individual basis. Infractions can easily
go unnoticed until real harm has occurred, and even when they are revealed, it
is not clear whether any federal agency has the authority to act.
Court settlements are costly
and can take years to resolve; because of the speed with which the Internet
economy evolves, most supporters of net neutrality believe that the current
legal system is not equipped to deal with these issues.
Who is
opposed?
Those who oppose new net
neutrality regulations such as internet services provider
Why?
Because they would limit the
investment needed to deploy and improve broadband networks. Network development
iscapital-intensive and is almost exclusively accomplished through private
investment. Many broadband service providers feel that the current
system—despite the recent Comcast ruling—remains sufficient and that both the
FCC and the Federal Trade Commission have the authority to resolve these
issues. Opponents of new regulations believe that the issues that have come up
since 2005 have been dealt with properly and argue that there is no reason to
believe there will be any increase in these types of activity.
QUESTION 3 : What would be the impact on individual user,
businesses, and government of internet providers switched to a tiered service
model?
- Tiered service structures allow users to select from a small set of tiers at progressively increasing price points to receive the product or products best suited to their needs.
- Such systems are frequently seen in the telecommunications field, specifically when it comes to wireless service, digital and cable television options, and broadband internet access.
- When a wireless company, for example, charges customers different amounts based on the number of voice minutes, text messages, and other features they desire, the company is utilizing the principle of tiered service.
- This is also seen in charging different prices for services such as the speed of one's internet connection and the number of cable television channels one has access to.
Individual
user
Tiered service helps to keep
quality of service standards for high profile applications like streaming video
or VoIP. This comes at a cost of increasing costs for better service levels
Businesses
- Internet provider company – will decrees their cost
- The business – increase the effectiveness and efficiency
- “ pay more for the better services”
- Especially for the international company.
Government
- Government regulation
- Government can control the people that freely express their ideas in a forum as open and egalitarian as possible.
Question 4 : Are you in favor of legislation network
neutrality?
Yes, we are support of
legislation network neutrality.
Why?
As a student same with REMY ISHAK (the example
of scenario ) we are face the cost constrain in getting the information from
internet for our assignment. So, the internet neutrality will law will help us
to get the all information without pay any fee.
CONCLUSION
Those have several impact of
implement of law in net neutrality. It depends on parties that involve in this
issues.
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