How the end of net neutrality could change the internet - YouTube

Channel: Vox

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It's hard to overestimate just how much broadband changed the internet. Back when
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you had to connect to the internet using dial-up, information traveled slowly.
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Pages took forever to load and watching this video would have been impossible.
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Today's internet is a completely different creature, which is why it's so
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puzzling that the last time Congress passed a major legislation for
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regulating the internet, it was 1996. And so the task of regulating the Internet
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has fallen to five unelected bureaucrats: the Federal Communications Commission.
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As the tools we use to access the Internet have changed, they've had to decide what
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kinds of rules the companies that provide those tools should have to
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follow. And now under a new commissioner appointed by President Trump the FCC has
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altered those rules in a way that could fundamentally change how we use the Internet.
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Take a deep breath. This decision will
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not break the Internet. This decision puts the Federal Communications
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Commission on the wrong side of history. It creates a free-for-all, that we have
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not had on the Internet in the past and that's very very dangerous. It's gonna be f****d.
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What we're seeing here is the cable-ization of the Internet. This is a dark
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day for innovation, this is a dark day for small business, it is a dark day for
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consumers. First, let's define what most people mean when they talk about Net
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Neutrality. A good working consensus model that most would agree with is the
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idea that Internet Service Providers should treat all traffic more or less
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the same on their network. This means the companies whose wires and towers we use
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to access the Internet, can't block or slow down data from
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certain sites or apps. They can't make special deals to move certain data along
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faster than everybody else's. Internet content providers like Facebook, Google,
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and Netflix - they love Net Neutrality because it means that even if some of
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their products, like streaming this video for example, take up a lot more bandwidth
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than others like email, Internet Service Providers can't charge them extra for
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getting all that data to our phones and computers. Which is exactly why ISPs like
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Comcast Verizon and AT&T hate it. If they could charge Netflix and YouTube
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extra for those big packets of data, they could make a lot of money and now that
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the FCC has scrapped the net neutrality rules they almost certainly will. ISPs
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will also be able to charge customers more to access sites or apps that take
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up more bandwidth. And some argue this will mean more choices for consumers.
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My sense is this will be fantastic, right because my daughter chews through
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my Verizon data cap every month and all she ever does is Instagram. So if I could
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pay like 20 bucks and get her a phone that I can text with her and talk with
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her, but would allow her to use Instagram and get her off my standard data plan
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that would be great. But by privileging established tools like Instagram, these
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plans could make it a lot harder for new ones to break through. It's a time when
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more than ever we want to encourage and keep open a playing field for new
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services, new platforms, to be able to get in the game and provide a real
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alternative. I mean imagine a world in which we were
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all still stuck with MySpace. I don't think, you know, that's what we want, but
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Net Neutrality is part of why that's not what we have. Until 2005 Internet Service
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Providers were classified as common carriers which meant the FCC could
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regulate them like phone companies. In the Internet's early days these
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regulations kept phone companies from charging customers extra for using
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dial-up services like AOL and when phone companies started offering DSL broadband
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service over their lines, common carrier rules force them to let their
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competitors use those lines too. Which meant consumers had tons of choices when
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it came to picking an Internet Service Provider.
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A 2003 page from the Washington Post lists 18 different DSL options for the
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Washington, D.C. region. Today, residents have less than half as many
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choices. So what happened? In 2005 the FCC did the same thing it did in 2017. It
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said ISPs weren't common carriers and it stopped regulating them like phone
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companies and without that regulation ISPs became virtual monopolies. Today,
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two-thirds of Americans live in areas with just one choice for high-speed
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Internet. And if their ISPs start blocking,
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slowing down, or charging more as a result of this rule change, their options
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are to put up with it or go without the Internet. Despite the fact that
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majorities of both Republican and Democratic voters support Net Neutrality,
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it doesn't look like Congress or the FCC will be bringing it back anytime soon.