Category Archives: Net Neutrality
Amendments to Dutch Telecom law codify net neutrality and restrict the use of cookies
Kroes to Dutch MPs: wait with Net Neutrality legislation until after BEREC
The BEREC Working Group is studying the mobile broadband market. A report will be released at the end of this year. Until then, Commissioner Kroes believes, any attempt at Net Neutrality legislation will be premature.
Dutch language news article: http://www.nu.nl/internet/2538185/kroes-noemt-wetsvoorstel-netneutraliteit-prematuur.html
The Netherlands to be the first country in the world to introduce Net Neutrality legislation? Dutch provider Vodafone feels that the politicians who are proposing this legislation are acting irresponsibly
Blocking, throttling and pay per service not allowed. Breaching the Net Neutrality law will be sanctioned. Providers are allowed to introduce new subscription based business models, with differences in data transfer speeds and data volumes.
Dutch language article: http://www.nu.nl/internet/2528857/oppositie-wil-netneutraliteit-in-wet-vastleggen.html
Turns out that bragging about using deep packet inspection to classify and then charge extra for Skype and instant messaging isn’t a good business strategy for huge mobile phone operators
Dutch Minister of Economic Affairs Maxime Verhagen will not allow providers to charge more for specific online services. Blocking services is also out of the question
Dutch language news article: http://www.nu.nl/internet/2523176/verhagen-verbiedt-heffing-mobiele-diensten.html
Trying To Limit Net Access, Dutch Telcos Accidentally Force Government To Speak Out On Net Neutrality
Dutch provider Vodafone blocking VOIP. Ditching Fair Use Policy and throttling bandwidth of heavy users
Dutch language news article: http://www.nu.nl/internet/2498984/vodafone-blokkeert-diensten.html
Telenor fuels debate on net neutrality
The government of Chile has published their law on net neutrality in the Diario Oficial, the official gazette
Google spends $1 million on censorship and throttling detection
Google is paying Georgia Tech researchers to build consumer tools that can detect Internet throttling and government censorship, for both home and mobile devices. At the end of the project, the Georgia Tech team hopes to provide “a suite of Web-based, Internet-scale measurement tools that any user around the world could access for free.
With the help of these tools, users could determine whether their ISPs are providing the kind of service customers are paying for, and whether the data they send and receive over their network connections is being tampered with by governments and/or ISPs.”
Sir Tim Berners-Lee, the inventor of the World Wide Web, has agreed to assist the Broadband Stakeholder Group in adjusting its new ‘Voluntary Code of Practice’ on broadband ISP traffic management transparency
so that it takes better account of UK consumer rights and Net Neutrality (the principal of treating all internet traffic as equal)
Republicans on a House subcommittee on technology have pushed through a resolution expressing Congressional disapproval of the FCC’s net neutrality rules, passed in December. One Democrat on the committee doubted whether the Senate will ever consider the bill
Defining Internet “freedom”: Ars interviews Senator Al Franken
Republicans: No compromise possible on net neutrality
Dutch government: Internet access is NOT one of life’s essentials
“Availibility of the internet indeed is important but less so than electricity when looking at the needs for daily life. Households cannot function without electricity because it prevents them from providing life’s essentials such as food and heat.”
That’s why Internet Service Providers are allowed to disconnect subscribers as opposed to energy suppliers.
The government also feels there is no reason to implement Net Neutrality regulation. If access to certain online services is being blocked, subscribers can simply hop to another provider.
When asked about annoying pop-up ads or prerolls, the government advises to use a browser with an ad blocker.
Dutch language article: http://tweakers.net/nieuws/72849/regering-toegang-tot-internet-is-geen-primaire-levensbehoefte.html
This Thursday, February 17, is designated “Internet Strikes Back” day to “counter Congressional opposition to a fair and open Internet
Make no mistake: this will be a decisive vote. This is the only time that Congress will vote “yes or no” on Net Neutrality, so it’s crucial that they vote the right way. Help us send a clear message to Congress: a vote for the repeal act is a vote against internet users.
In the coming days, we’ll be working to coordinate a national day of action on the 17th, when we’ll flood Congress with calls from Net Neutrality supporters.Here are three ways you can help:
1.) Sign up for PK Mobile Action Alerts: The easiest way to participate in our national day of action will be through the PK Mobile Action Alerts system. If you have a mobile phone capable of receiving text messages, go here to sign up for PK Mobile Action Alerts in advance of the 17th.* Then, on the 17th, you’ll receive a text message reminding you to call your representative. By simply replying to this message with “act,” you’ll be automatically connected with your member of Congress.
2.) Help spread the word: Help spread the word about our national day of action: use the embed code below to display our “Internet Strikes Back” badge on your blog or website:
<a href=”http://bit.ly/internetstrikesback”><img style=”vertical-align: middle; border: 0;” src=”http://media.publicknowledge.org/newsletters/images/ISB_200.jpg” alt=”The Internet Strikes Back” width=”200″ height=”177″ /></a>

Also, help us spread the word using Twitter: use the hashtag#InternetStrikesBack or click here to tweet your support for net neutrality.
3.) Call in to Congress on the 17th: If you’ve signed up for PK Mobile Action Alerts, keep your eyes peeled for a text message on the 17th that will contain further instructions on how to take action. Otherwise, check back here on the 17th for a guide to looking up your Congressperson’s phone number using your zip code.
More: http://www.p2pnet.net/story/48919 and http://www.publicknowledge.org/internet-strikes-back-tell-congress-stand-net-neut
Ericsson and Akamai pair to side-step mobile net neutrality
EFF Warns That FCC Net Neutrality Rules Are A Bad, Bad Idea
Pierre Louette, Senior Executive Vice President, Group General Secretary of France Telecom: “There are two principles on which the Internet developed: zero-price rule, and non-discrimination rule. These are the two underlying principles being questioned today. Can we completely build the future of the Internet without revisiting those two principles?”
The Heritage Foundation, a top conservative think tank, says Congress should squelch the FCC’s net neutrality rules and curb the Commission’s authority over mergers and media acquisitions
(European) ISPs want more cash for (American) data-intensive services
To ensure that the internet will remain a stable and well-functioning infrastructure, ISPs have an urgent need for higher rewards to cover their investments. Otherwise, internet might become “become unusable at peak times”. That is the gist of the report “a Viable Future Model for the Internet”, a study by consultancy A.T. Kearney. The research was paid for by large European ISPs: France Telecom, Deutsche Telekom, Telecom Italia and Télefonica from Spain.
The main argument is hardly new: ISPs accuse data-intensive online services (like YouTube or Netflix) of reaping the rewards of fast and reliable networks, while all investments are made by ISPs. To prevent the entire internet from grinding to a halt, A.T. Kearney proposes four different remedies.
1. The price for internet connections rises with 6 euro per month on average.
2. Online service providers like Google and YouTube will have to pay for the traffic they generate. 0,05 euro per GB for fixed line traffic. For mobile traffic, this price lies 60(!) times higher, at 3,03.
3. The ISPs will offer paid prioritisation to the online services
4. Internet traffic will be managed more intensely in the “last mile”, meaning intensive internet use will be throttled when necessary.
More: http://futureofcopyright.com/index.php?page=news&id=1613
Direct link to study: http://www.atkearney.com/images/global/pdf/Viable_Future_Model_for_Internet.pdf
Not so fast! FCC says net neutrality lawsuits filed too soon
The Verizon and MetroPCS appeals are “fatally premature and must be dismissed”
MetroPCS piles on, sues FCC to stop net neutrality regulations
The free, unrestricted internet as we know it is under threat. Britain’s leading ISPs are attempting to construct a two-tier internet, where websites and services that are willing to pay are thrust into the ‘fast lane’, while those that don’t are left fighting for scraps of bandwidth or even blocked outright. They’re not so much ripping up the cherished notion of net neutrality as pouring petrol over the pieces and lighting the match
The only question is: can they get away with it?
http://www.pcpro.co.uk/features/364573/the-end-of-the-net-as-we-know-it
Catholic bishops, Protestant leaders: we need net neutrality!
Against The Powerful State: WikiLeaks Attacks And Cracking. “The citizen has to be able to check on the State again”
At the largest hacker conference in Europe geeks and nerds show their ethical side: it’s about decentralization, sharing information and free access. “The citizen has to be able to check on the State again”.
by Mirthe Berentsen – De Groene Amsterdammer, 5th January 2011
BERLIN – “It’s not like we want to take revenge at the ignorant civilization, because we have been bullied in the past, are more or less autistic, have long hair and wear glasses. It’s not science fiction dammit, I want you to listen for a moment and become aware of the dangers.” The Dutch Henk becomes agitated when I ask him whether the hackers at this conference are a new world power, because they can access information I have no clue about. “Of course it’s true that we, being hackers, can access certain information. But you do not have to be afraid. Every system administrator, no matter which company, has information others do not have. What is the use of making public that my boss is watching pornography for 10 hours per week on average? What is the use of that to me?”
There are a lot of hackers like Henk at the conference, ready to go to battle and convinced of the power of the internet as a foundation for a transparent future. For four days thousands of hackers, nerds, geeks and scientists gathered to attend lectures and workshops at Berlin’s most important hacker conference 27C3. Organized by Europe’s biggest hacker organization, the Chaos Computer Club which was established in 1981 in Germany. This years theme was “We Come in Peace”. Not an awkward choice in a time when hackers are being compared to criminals and when the lack of insight about hacking seems to increase.
There’s a diverse audience ranging from socially and politically aware hackers who want to change the world from behind their PC screens to boys who like to tinker with computer parts. While there’s a lecture ongoing upstairs about cognitive psychology for hackers and downstairs there’s someone talking about the vulnerability of the GSM signal, a Stradivarius is being played on the basis of music composed via HTML code. In the basement there are hundreds of boys busy picking locks and soldering all kinds of hardware which make lights flicker and spin.
A lot of attention goes to a demo on day three, organized by scientists, hackers and activists. A group which opposes the urge of governments to store more and more information about citizens. Since March of this year it is possible in Germany (just like in The Netherlands by the way) to retain all data relating to internet and (mobile) phone communication. The spokesperson (“Just call me Florian”) is of the opinion that it is of the utmost importance to make people aware of the dangers of this data retention by the government. Henk agrees with him: “One can compare it to the Panopticum of Foucault. Because the government can control you, you will conform to their rules and stop having a critical view regarding your own situation and whether you actually agree to everything. The information of citizens is lying in the streets so to say, while the citizen has little means of checking on the State. Think about debt registration in Tiel (The Netherlands) for example: when you’re a teenager and have not paid your phone bill, then that can cause problems if you want to arrange for a mortgage ten years later. This information has been obtained without you giving permission for that. That should not be possible in a free society, we have to act against that. The citizen has to be able to check on the State again.”
How exactly this could be realized is a difficult question according to Florian. “An organization such as WikiLeaks is a start but it needs to be done in an even better way. But what the Anonymous group went and did, by taking down all these credit card companies, that is really a no-no.” Anonymous, made up from many anonymous ‘so called’ hackers, was attacking MasterCard and VISA in December because they were blocking money transfers to WikiLeaks. “It’s a disgrace to the hacking trade. Real hackers have respect for technology, they want to crack codes not destroy it,” Florian says. Henk: “It does make a statement and will increase the publicity of your actions with a large audience. But let’s be honest here, taking down payment services has nothing to do with hacking.”
WITHIN THE HACKER COMMUNITY certain codes of ethics apply. The most important ones are: decentralization, sharing information, transparency, free access to the internet and through all this, making the world a better place. This ideal is especially being voiced by white hats. A concept that derives from the book ‘Six Thinking Hats’ which psychologist Edward de Bono had written in 1985. A management training aimed at ‘more effective thinking’ by putting on a certain hat and look at a problem from different perspectives. De Bono differentiated six types of hats; hackers only use two: the white hats and the black hats. (Not entirely correct, see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grey_hat , ed. ) The white hat hacker is being regarded as an ethical hacker, the hacker that will hack into systems to make the owners aware of the security risks. They will promote an open and transparent internet. White hat hackers will never destroy or misuse a computer system, as opposed to the black hat hackers. These are the stereotype baddies: the hacker who will use his skills for criminal purposes such as hacking banks, stealing information to resell it on the black market or attacking networks of organizations for financial gain.
Companies like to make use of the services of ethical hackers. The Deutsche Post for example has a new e-mail system and wants to secure it as best as it can, issuing a contest for hackers: The Security Cup. Hackers will be asked to attack and hack the site; the winner who is also able to find a solution to the security problem will be able to take home 5,000 euros. Hacker Matthias says, during the award ceremony, that the money is a joke. “It cannot be compared to the amounts of money available on the black market, but it is a safer practice. I work for big companies and important ministries. I cannot mention any names, really I can’t.”
As a hacker you lay the grounds for an attack, you seek out the flaws within a system and develop code to exploit those. Then you explain to your client where the hole in the security is located and someone from the company will then add that final piece of the puzzle. Matthias talks about his old life with big bonuses, the second home in Thailand, the expensive boat, the women and only having to work for a few hours per month. But he says he became depressed and filled with anxiety and therefore wanted to call it quits. It’s a life on the run. Like the life Julian Assange has now. I don’t want that.” Matthias says he knows Assange from the days before WikiLeaks. Assange was respected for his innovative and uncrackable crypto methods. “Aside from the fact that I feel he’s a megalomaniac arrogant bastard, his sudden popularity has surprised me. Nothing about his information is new, at least to a large part of the hackers over here, we knew this all along.”
There is some respect for Assange albeit limited. “I wish Assange and his people all the best, but I rather would not be living from a backpack and being on the run all the time,” the well known Dutch hacker Rop Gonggrijp states at the keynote of the conference. He is also worried about the increasing amount of information the government has collected about its citizens. Gonggrijp gained fame as one of the founders of XS4ALL, hacking electronic voting machines and the Public Transport Card, to demonstrate that these are not safe, and his involvement with WikiLeaks. During the keynote he discusses the situation in The Netherlands. Because of an increasing xenofobia The Netherlands is registering everything about its citizens. The Netherlands once was a country like Sweden or Denmark, a bit like Germany in the nineties, and after a period of political assassinations and crazy political developments we are now heading for the situation in the UK, says Gonggrijp.
With the sympathy for Assange at a minimum level, the support for the American soldier Bradley Manning seems to be at a height which has never been seen before. He was the one leaking the last secret documents to WikiLeaks. Throughout the building there are banners with the words “Free Bradley Manning”. To make Manning’s captivity a littlebit less lonely one can show support by writing him a postcard at the conference which will then be delivered to him personally. “Let’s not talk about Assange anymore but focus on the things that are really important. Such as supporting Bradley Manning, he is a very brave boy who deserves all our attention,” says Daniel Domscheit-Berg. Until recently he was the right hand of Assange and in September he left WikiLeaks. He speaks in a rather chaotic way and apologizes for that and says he is exhausted. In February his book will be published, Inside WikiLeaks. “Last year I was here at the same conference with a friend, with Julian, we felt strong together, were sharing the same ideals. But that is over. There was no unity anymore within the group, everything revolved around Julian and not the quality of the work.”
The media frenzy of the last few months and the upcoming launch of OpenLeaks, the whistleblower site which Domscheit-Berg is putting up, are causing sleepless nights. “I cannot say much about it, but it has the ability to change the future.” He is convinced that we have to be more aware of society in the future. Freedom of communication is not a given if the political pressure continues to increase. Will hackers, journalists and organizations such as the Chaos Computer Club be able to do their work without any barriers? Gonggrijp is of the opinion that this freedom could be under threat: “The consequence of WikiLeaks is that authorities are trying to limit freedom on the internet faster than ever before. The organizations which oppose this will therefore also have to work harder.” The emphasis should be on the importance of access to free information and communication. As Domscheit-Berg puts it: “We will now be able to see just how fragile the foundations of free communication for our future are. It’s up to hackers to show that there’s a different path.”
(My translation. Links added by vRRitti)
Dutch language article: http://www.groene.nl/2011/1/tegen-de-machtige-staat
Dutch civil rights movement says free internet access in The Netherlands under threat. Cites Disney and Warner Bros VOD contracts from anonymous source
Dutch civil rights movement Bits of Freedom (BoF) reports that movie studios Warner Bros and Disney insisted that internet service providers would disconnect internet users when they were found to engage in (copyright) infringing activities. BoF cites documents from 2006 used for commercial negotiations with internet service providers in The Netherlands regarding Video On Demand services. These documents were provided by an anonymous source, according to BoF.
A quote from Disney’s general provisions:
“During the period of one year following Licensee’s [de internetprovider, red.] receipt of the Trigger Notice [een waarschuwing dat de internetgebruiker inbreuk maakt op Disney's auteursrechten] the parties shall negotiate in good faith the further steps to be taken against Internet Subscribers who have been the subject of previous Notices, including suspending and/or terminating service to such Internet Subscribers.”
A quote from WB’s general provisions:
“If the Customer does not respond satisfactorily to the warning letter and, in addition, does not immediately take down the content that infringes Warner Intellectual Property, the Licensee shall suspend the Customer’s ISP account until such time as the Licensee has received confirmation from Customer that Customer is no longer infringing or facilitating the infringement of Warner Intellectual Property.”
BoF adds that they do not know whether these provisions were accepted by the providers but they do know that ZIGGO (formerly known as @Home) made a VOD deal with WB in 2006. ZIGGO appears to have promised to disconnect users who infringe on WB’s copyright.
BoF argues that as such an ‘internet ban’ already exists in The Netherlands and calls on the Dutch government to introduce legislation prohibiting providers from disconnecting internet users, adding ‘if The Netherlands really feels that internet access is an important issue, it should get in the way of the content industry’. According to BoF, disconnection is exclusion and people should share their thoughts about this topic with their favorite politicians.
(my summary and translation)
Full Dutch languange article https://www.bof.nl/2011/01/04/vrije-internettoegang-ook-in-nederland-onder-vuur/
Adoption of DPI is the only way forward in the face of burgeoning bandwidth congestion and advanced security threats. DPI will prove to be the silver bullet against these major challenges that ISPs, governments and enterprises face on a daily basis
Mobile providers (e.g. T-Mobile, Verizon, AT&T) already do deep packet inspection and already prohibit some acts based on factors other than the traffic involved
Some providers, for example, do “deep packet inspection” to try to determine if you’re “tethering” — that is, you’ve hacked your device (or bought an application) so your laptop can use your phone’s Internet connection. That’s part of “net neutrality,” yet nobody’s talking about it as something to be barred. Why not, if the point of neutrality is just that — neutrality?
More: http://seekingalpha.com/article/242981-net-neutrality-forced-errors-create-bad-bedfellows
ISPs Look To Make Money With Mined Data
Computer security expert Joshua Wright says over the past five years or so, a lot of ground has been lost when it comes to online privacy. Wright tells Linda Wertheimer that Internet service providers, ISPs, are realizing there may be some new business opportunities with collected user information.
More: http://www.npr.org/2010/12/27/132358556/Internet-Providers-Look-To-Make-Money-With-Mined-Data
Will Wikileaks fallout impact cloud computing and net neutrality?
Cloud providers and network operators should make sure usage agreements and SLAs are clearly defined and enforceable in consistent ways across geographic boundaries.
See also:
Voros: WikiLeaks pokes holes in cloud computing
http://www.mercurynews.com/breaking-news/ci_16959070
Republicans on new FCC net neutrality rules: kill!
Armageddon has arrived once again: the FCC has unleashed net neutrality rules, and the GOP has a problem with that.
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2010/12/gop-on-new-fcc-net-neutrality-rules-kill.ars
FCC: Yup, we’re going to stop “paid prioritization” on the ‘Net
But how far will the Commission go in making good on this threat?
See also:
Why everyone hates new net neutrality rules—even NN supporters
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2010/12/why-everyone-hates-new-net-neutrality-ruleseven-nn-supporters.ars