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Should the Internet be regulated?

Should the Internet be regulated?

By:  Tom Nolle  On: 27 Jan 2000 For: Network World Canada Creator

If you try to load an MP3 file from a source and the process doesn’t work, you probably sigh and try again. If you try to complete an Internet transaction on your favourite retail site and you’re left wondering whether you really bought something, you’re probably seriously annoyed and might send the company an e-mail. If you try to call 911 and it doesn’t work, you might be dead. Moral: Entertainment is optional, but that which supports life and shopping is mandatory.

If you try to load an MP3 file from a source and the process doesn't work, you probably sigh and try again. If you try to complete an Internet transaction on your favourite retail site and you're left wondering whether you really bought something, you're probably seriously annoyed and might send the company an e-mail. If you try to call 911 and it doesn't work, you might be dead. Moral: Entertainment is optional, but that which supports life and shopping is mandatory.

Ten years ago, the Internet was a network of academia that most people in the U.S. didn't know existed. Today, it's being promoted as a fundamental part of our economy and society. We've elevated other technologies to this level before, notably voice telephony and television. Those technologies have more or less willingly submitted to regulation. The majority of the Internet community, however, seems to be insisting the Internet is above regulation.

Most, though not all, Americans are comfortable with the idea that Internet content can't be censored. We've dealt with uncomfortable issues such as pornography by providing content filtering at the client edge, accepting that some uncensored material may fall into children's hands. Everybody may not like this trade-off, but it's consistent with trade-offs we've made in our other public media. There's no real problem with Internet content-nothing that justifies fixing.

There is a problem elsewhere, though, because some in the Internet community want to draw the shield against censorship across the boundary between the application and operation of the Internet. At a recent Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) gathering, reported on by Scott Bradner, a majority indicated its unwillingness to support federal regulations on wiretapping and call tracing. The Internet community's attitude raises questions about its willingness to operate in the public interest.

We've recently declared Microsoft Corp. to be an evil empire, a monopoly. In essence, we fear the power of a few corporate bigwigs to dictate to the rest of us. We wouldn't accept Microsoft's assertion that it's above the law. How about the IETF, then, or the Internet community? Perhaps their arguments against regulation are more moralistic. But doesn't their "we know what's best for the rest of you" attitude sound just like Microsoft's arguments? Is the manipulation of the many by the few evil because it's done by a corporation or because it's done at all? Antitrust laws are laws, just like wiretapping and call tracing laws, and are just like the telecom regulations on universal service subsidies that the Internet community also doesn't want to pay.


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Tom Nolle Tom Nolle is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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