Friday, June 24, 2011

Politics on the Web

Net Neutrality: Presenting a Politicized Web

So, I just recently found out that my cellphone provider, Verizon Wireless, is about to kill unlimited data plans. AT&T recently made a similar movement, and we have known for some time that Comcast, a cable internet provider, throttles data speeds, giving people slower downloads if they like to use high-bandwith services like Netflix, Skype, and Bittorent. Now, this concerns me because efforts to charge for tiered usage of data and the practice of capping or limiting the amount of data that a person is allowed to use on a connection that they paid for are, for me, signs that internet service providers are moving away from the ideas surrounding net neutrality.


What exactly is Net Neutrality and what does it mean for you?

Check out this video from the Save The Internet Coalition:
Check out Net Neutrality 101 for more up-to-date information on the topic.

This post is sparked, in part, by Verizon's change in policy and by a conversation we had in class the other day concerning the place of democracy on the internet and the democratization (or perceived democratization) of new media forms, including blogs like this one. I think that in any discussion of politics and the internet, that net neutrality as a concept should certainly be on the agenda.


Connections
In chapter three of The Myth of Digital Democracy, Matthew Hindman is concerned with (what he sees) as the two main methods people use to find expressly political websites: random browsing/linking, and online search engines like Google and Yahoo. Problematically skipping over the entirety of social networking, Hindman's statistical findings point to what he calls "Googlearchy"whereby "the number of links pointing to a site is the most important determinant of site visibility" and a "niche dominance should be a general rule of online life," where such "niche dominance [is] self-perpetuating," because of its relative political gravity (55).

Essentially, what he's trying to say is that a handful of powerful, political sites garner more attention from web searches, because blogs, like this one, make links like these which inevitably put those sites above others on a Google search. (If you want to know more about this practice, look into Search Engine Optimization). Now, this is a fairly accurate account of online searching and relative popularity, but a more insidious issue lurks underneath the surface as large corporations find ways to usurp Net Neutrality.

So What About Net Neutrality?
With the internet as it currently (mostly) is today, Hindman's discussion of web politics really is democratic, in the sense that anyone who pays for or who can attain access to an internet service can learn to post links about political topics which make them rise to popularity and notoriety. By the same token, citizen journalism is more possible than ever, and at least in America, we don't have a ton of hard limits about what you can and can't do with the internet (yet).

Imagine if your internet service provider noticed that you watched a lot of Netflix movies (let's say they're political documentaries) and that you liked to make searches like "tactics for urban political dissent." They own the pipes that bring you your data, so they can (though they shouldn't) peek in and see some basic details about what you're doing online. As previously mentioned, Comcast has been found out for this practice of "packet shaping" where they throttle down your speeds if they see that you're downloading a lot of of video, for instance. This applies to illegally - as well as legally- downloaded content.


After all, Comcast would probably rather you pay for their cable service than have you watch viral/grassroots-politically-oriented YouTube videos all day, it's in their best monetary interest, of course. They are in the entertainment business, you know.

Now, Verizon suddenly deciding to tier (provide different levels at different costs) of their wireless data service, instead of the current unlimited plan, doesn't entirely move away from the principal of net neutrality. But, I see such movements as the beginning of making differential levels of access to the internet. If you can pay more, you get more; conversely, those only able to afford the 75MB a month plan will barely be able to check their email without going over their limit. More distressing, perhaps, is that the Verizon tiering comes shortly after the iPhone and iPad 2, two of the most popular mobile internet devices, became available on the network.


Some pundits argue that you should pay more for internet service if you use more. I definitely recognize the merit of this argument, even if - as a relatively poor tech-savvy graduate student - this kind of tiering puts myself and other people who are unable to afford premium service at a disadvantage.

However, in the interest of the internet being a truly democratic medium, I prefer proffering the idea that internet service providers, like Comcast, should only provide "dumb pipes," or access to the internet that cannot be throttled or modified. Already, particularly in America, if you pay say $60/mo for a 5+ Megabit internet connection, you most likely will never truly see download speeds that fast, because ISP's cut corners and overload their servers in order to handle more customers. Personally, I have an internet connection similar to the one described above, and it's rare that I get 1 Megabit sustained download speed. In a dumb pipe situation, an ISP would not be allowed to falsely advertise higher-than-achievable speeds and would also not throttle down a customer's speed if they happen to be using all of the data they paid for.

To widen the metaphor of dumb pipes, many folks believe that access to data and the internet should work more like public utility, like access to water in a typical American home. This site provides a great summary of this argument, but essentially, the belief is that a basic rate should allow usable, sustained, and uninterrupted data flow. Just as the water company shouldn't care that I wash my body, my plates, my clothes, or my cat, Comcast shouldn't dictate that I can't see online video or use Skype without paying a special fee. Furthermore, they certainly shouldn't be peeking into my political life online, but, you know, big business is like sand - they have a way of getting in everywhere. . .

***If you want to learn more about Net Neutrality and find out what you can do to help,
check out: Net Neutrality 101, sign up for the newsletter at http://www.savetheinternet.com, and check out what you can do to help the efforts of the Electronic Frontier Foundation at http://www.eff.org. Together, we can work to keep the internet free, open, and for the people.


Other interesting sources:


Net Neutrality Music Video


Issues of censorship - student video.


Explaining the relationship between Net Neutrality and the internet.


Work Cited
Hindman, Matthew. Myth of Digital Democracy. Princeton: Princeton U P, 2009. Book.

7 comments:

  1. Sam! Thank you for this post... I've always known that I was concerned about this issue, but was not fully aware of how important and far-reaching it was. I feel very inspired to talk about this in my classroom.

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  2. Boo-yah! Sam, this post was mind-blowingly helpful for me in understanding some of the specifics surrounding net neutrality that I didn't pick up on in class/readings. Thanks for putting it into terms that a non-tech person (obviously myself, who can't even figure out how to access our class Tumblr account) can understand. This is so clearly a class issue and one to be interrogated as we bring up topics like national distribution of wealth, etc.

    Also, I will have "I'm the internet, you're the internet..." stuck in my head for awhile. Neato.
    -- Heather

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  3. Sam -

    I'll echo Heather: this is a great post that articulates the issue of net neutrality in terms that can easily be understood by a non-tech person.

    The one question I'm still wrestling with is this: is the internet a human right (clean water, air, etc) or is it a luxury (Lexus, Gucci, etc). I'm sure this is a huge debate among politicians and corporations, but I am curious to better understanding how people are justifying these lines.

    Fair and equal access to all educational, political and governmental sites seems like a reasonable request. But I can see how unlimited bandwidth to download every Will Ferrell movie would cause some people pause. And seeing that porn is the number 1 internet use...well, you get the point.

    Anyway, thanks for giving me a good foundation for better understanding this very important issue.

    - Josh

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  4. I think the bulk of internet use is about communication, and I come down on communication (public speech, mail, etc.) as a right more than a luxury. While it is true that mass entertainment takes some bandwidth, I think Sam's point about similarly apportioned space for activist videos, altnews, etc. is well made. That is, if treating Will Farrell as an unnecessary luxury (tempting though that might be) means similarly treating marginalized media voices as an unnecessary luxury, I say err on the side of access to Farrell being a right.

    So yes, some people will use the town square to juggle or do a striptease while others are openly worried about our war with Sparta. Some will post LOLcatz while others will post news about Ai Weiwei's incarceration. As Larry Flint famously argued, using what people choose to say with their freedom of speech as a justification to limit their freedom of speech is contradictory and counterproductive. (Albeit, add a slight nuance here of dealing with hate-speech and that crowded theater not on fire line, etc.)

    Those dumb tubes and whatever maintenance they require seems more like a public utility than a private enterprise to me. It's one thing for Hulu to charge me for plus content (call that an admission fee) and quite another for a private company to charge me again based on the content I prefer (whether assessed by bandwidth-use or ideological content). At the very least, I think a fairly liberal "minimal" amount of access (e.g. like the difference between USPS and Fed Express) maintained with public funds and a fair, subsidized fee structure (c.f. postage) makes sense to me. But I don't want Verizon or AT&T or any other profit driven company determining that fee, or doing a backdoor limit on bandwidth.

    Then again, I've never been one for the "government can't do anything right" argument. Let's not forget that the bulk of this technology is and has been developed with hefty contributions of public support (i.e. your tax dollars).

    Thanks, Sam, for an extremely cogent and witty explanation of net neutrality and why it matters.

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  5. As a student from China, I always try to compare the internet situations between our two countries. I sincerely appreciate your article and it is a great inspiration for me to think about the nature of internet and the ownership of internet.

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  6. Jonny (and others who have insight about this issue)

    I like the idea of positioning communication as a right that includes the internet as a form of communication. Positioning this as a human right, I'm wondering more about the efforts being made to make the internet a public service like water, sewer, and mail. Right now we have lots of private options, but I'd be interested to know more about the ways local governments offer public internet options.

    For example, when cities put Wireless in their parks or connections in their libraries, is that a public service controlled by the local government or is that the government hiring a private company? If it is a private company, then that starts to raise more concerns about this whole net neutrality and public officials doing work with private companies...

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  7. Vaguely on topic, here's a fun news update from Rolling Stone today.

    http://www.rollingstone.com/culture/blogs/gear-up/internet-providers-to-punish-customers-who-pirate-content-20110708

    This is an interesting tension for me: I'm anti-piracy all the way — not that I give a crap about recording companies — but pirating does have an impact on the artist's ability to survive in a corrupt system: the average recording artist makes little from sales royalties, but sales have a major impact on how/if/where they tour, which is where the artists make their money, if I've been informed accurately.

    But I do think it's proper to download stuff that's out of print or not commercially available. In the MP3 age, there's no reason a record or movie should be out of print/circulation unless it's the artist's call; in that case, it should be swapped online without repercussion. Make it available or cast it out.

    So, in sum: illegal downloading is bad; paying $200 for your favorite band's obscure out-of-print demo tape: pointless unless you're a collector. Download it instead. Then lose your internet service.

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