Timothy Karr: The Fate of the Internet Decided in Back Room
The Huffington Post
Timothy Karr
Campaign Director, Free Press and SavetheInternet.com
The Wall Street Journal just reported that the Federal Communications Commission is holding “closed-door meetings” with industry to broker a deal on Net Neutrality — the rule that lets users determine their own Internet experience.
Given that the corporations at the table all profit from gaining control over information, the outcome won’t be pretty.
The meetings include a small group of industry lobbyists representing the likes of AT&T, Verizon, the National Cable & Telecommunications Association, and Google. They reportedly met for two-and-a-half hours on Monday morning and will convene another meeting today. The goal according to insiders is to “reach consensus” on rules of the road for the Internet.
This is what a failed democracy looks like: After years of avid public support for Net Neutrality – involving millions of people from across the political spectrum – the federal regulator quietly huddles with industry lobbyists to eliminate basic protections and serve Wall Street’s bottom line.
We’ve seen government cater to big business in the same ways, prior to the BP oil disaster and the subprime mortgage meltdown.
Lieberman: China Can Shut Down the Internet
Follow @IntelHub








Comments
One Response to “Timothy Karr: The Fate of the Internet Decided in Back Room”Trackbacks
Check out what others are saying about this post...[...] Intel Hub – Timothy Karr: The Fate of the Internet Decided in Back Room (Hat Tip: Jean [...]