July 24, 2006
Members of the U.S. Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee on June 28, rejected a network neutrality amendment to a wide-ranging broadband bill but it turns out that’s not the last they’re hearing of the issue, says CIO blog.
Since that vote, a group of organizations supporting a net neutrality law have cranked up a pressure campaign on the 11 Republican senators who voted against the net neutrality amendment, which sponsors wanted to add to the broadband bill.
Organizations including the liberal MoveOn.org and the conservative Christian Coalition of America and others involved in the SavetheInternet.com coalition have urged members to contact senators and express their displeasure over the net neutrality vote.
“Thousands” of people have contacted their senators, said Adam Green, a spokesman for MoveOn.org.
Nora Miller, a freelance writer and editor from Arizona, is one of them. Miller has contacted two Republican lawmakers, including Sen. John McCain of Arizona.
“My biggest concern is that this law … minus any protection of net neutrality, amounts to a giant giveaway to telecom companies that do not have my best interests at heart,” she said in an e-mail. “My federal dollars created the Internet specifically to provide free and equal access to all users.”
Opponents of a net neutrality law, including large broadband providers such as AT&T and Comcast, say a law isn’t needed because they do not plan to block or degrade Web content.
Chairman Ted Stevens could be right, the internet is a series of tubes. John Hodgman explains.
During the week which ended on July 16, YouTube, the popular online video-sharing site's unique audience soar by a whopping 75 percent to 12.8 million users, up from 7.3 million during the previous week, according to new data released by Nielsen//NetRatings.
That traffic jump follows a six-month period of exponential growth for the site, as its audience size skyrocketed by nearly 300 percent since the beginning of the year.
Broadband Reports points out that Former Congressman turned Verizon PR man Tom Tauke speaks to Business Week about Verizon's position on net-neutrality, municipal broadband, and other topics.
Tauke states: "We don't necessarily think it's a wise investment, but we aren't out fighting these things."
Note that Tauke was central in lobbying Pennsylvania and other state lawmakers into passing laws that make such projects either illegal, or considerably more difficult.

