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Buying the Internet, $1 million at a time
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Oh, AT&T and your wacky antics -- what with re-routing your circuits to pass through a government-run spy box, and now this? Donating $1 million to a community center that's sponsored by a congressman on the House Energy and Commerce Committee... who knew you could be so flagrant, so blatant?
Yesterday, the House committee voted against Network Neutrality (PEEK has more on the vote); via TechSearch's Networking and Telecom blog, we learn that AT&T donated a whopping million dollars to this community center that was created by Rep. Bobby Rush (D-Ill.), whom the Chicago Sun-Times calls "a key player" on telecommunications legislation. Know why he's a key player? Rush is the only Democrat to sponsor the 'Communications Opportunity Promotion and Enhancement Act of 2006.' He has been working with committee chair Rep. Joe Barton (R-Texas) to promote the 'Barton-Rush' bill." Great.
The grant from AT&T's charitable arm was doled out way back in 2004, but you can't tell me that a million dollars going straight to a charitable cause that you started isn't going to influence your thoughts on communications and technology.
A CNet News.com article gives two excellent reasons why Network Neutrality (see what that actually means here; or watch this video) is critical to maintaining the Internet as-is, and not selling it off to the major providers. First:
"Did the Bells create the Internet? Did the cable companies create the Internet?" asked Rep. Ed Markey, a Massachusetts Democrat and sponsor of the amendment. "The answer is no. The Internet was built on a different model, a public interest model, funded by American taxpayers."
[I]t will only be economically feasible to invest in higher-speed links if some bandwidth can be reserved for paid content. In an interview with CNET News.com, for instance, Verizon Chief Technology Officer Mark Wegleitner said movie-quality video could be delivered to DSL subscribers if the copyright owner would pay.
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