Source:
AFPSAN FRANCISCO (AFP) – Google and US telecom titan Verizon on Monday proposed a legal framework to safeguard 'net neutrality' but said the rules should not apply to wireless broadband Internet connections. "We both recognize that wireless broadband is different from the traditional wireline world, in part because the mobile marketplace is more competitive and changing rapidly," the companies said in a joint statement.
"In recognition of the still-nascent nature of the wireless broadband marketplace, under this proposal we would not now apply most of the wireline principles to wireless." Google and Verizon laid out a detailed plan for US legislators to create laws aimed at preventing Internet service providers from violating "net neutrality" by giving some data priority over other digital information.
"The original architects of the Internet got the big things right," the companies said. "By making the network open, they enabled the greatest exchange of ideas in history. By making the Internet scalable, they enabled explosive innovation in the infrastructure."
Recommending that wireless Internet connections be exempt from net neutrality rules played into fears that Google is changing allegiance in the battle to stop ISPs from giving preferential treatment to those that pay.
Read more:
http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20100809/tc_afp/usitinternettelecomgovernmentgoogleverizon_20100809185221
Google, Verizon Outline Internet Policy Proposal
Just days after the FCC announced it was abandoning efforts at reaching a compromise on net neutrality, Google CEO Eric Schmidt and Verizon CEO Ivan Seidenberg laid out a "joint policy proposal" that would provide guidelines for how information and Internet traffic should be handled over wireless and wireline networks.
Google published the terms of the Google-Verizon agreement in a blog post titled "A Joint Policy for an Open Internet." Their plan, which does not treat wireless and wireline networks equally and has been accused of having a "giant, enormous, science-fiction-quality" loophole, includes seven key elements.
Additional commentary and analysis is forthcoming. According to the New York Times, Media Access Project's Andrew Jay Schwartzman says, "The plan raises as many questions as it answers. For example, it does not disclose the standard to be used in resolving consumer complaints. One question that the plan does definitively answer is that the non-discrimination proposal would never apply to wireless. That alone makes this arrangement a non-starter."
Law professor Susan Crawford argues that there are two major loopholes in their proposal. First, the failure to spell out net neutrality for wireless networks is "a huge hole, given the growing popularity of wireless services and the recent suggestion by the Commission that we may not have a competitive wireless marketplace." Second, Crawford writes that exempting "managed services" from regulation is a "giant, enormous, science-fiction-quality loophole" and "prioritization using another label."
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/08/09/google-verizon-deal-net-n_n_675847.html______________________________
One tech blogger just summed this up perfectly:
'Google and Verizon’s Joint Policy Proposal for an Open Internet: Just keep repeating the word “open” '
They just had a live joint press conference where they seem to be attempting to 'redefine' Net Neutrality. They
seem to be saying that net neutrality is ok for
most of the hardwired Internet, but that the wireless Internet is 'too new' for net neutrality. Of course the wireless Internet will be
most of the Internet in the not so distant future. Some tech blogs say this is a way to isolate some bandwidth of the Internet (for yet to be offered 'alternate streams') and get the feds to impose fines on your local ISPs if they don't obey Google/Verizon's wishes.
One thing is clear. They lied (or bent the truth) about not having a 'deal' last week. So it's a 'proposal?' Sounds like a Contract On America type 'proposal.'
I smell a rat.
Here's the Google Policy Blog:
http://googlepublicpolicy.blogspot.com/2010/08/joint-policy-proposal-for-open-internet.html