Net Neutrality

Musicians for Net Neutrality Coalition

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OpenMedia.ca in Favour of CRTC Hearing to Improve Rural Internet Access

Hearing to address Canada’s digital divide

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Date: February 5, 2010

VANCOUVER (BC) – The Canadian Radio-Television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) has called for a public hearing on October 25th, 2010, regarding the improvement of Internet access in rural areas. To this day, many of these areas are still using low-speed or dial-up Internet.

The joy of unintended consequences

Find the article on rabble.ca, VUE weekly, the Tyee, and Common Ground.

At Fresh Hot Type, the after-party for the Fresh Media Festival on October 24, local media arts group W2 provided a letterpress with which partygoers could experiment. The idea was that as the DJs spin in the background, participants could creatively express themselves by using the letterpress, ink and paper. Not satisfied with what seemed like the natural limits of the medium, participants soon began writing words and expressions on both their own and each other's bodies and acting out the words on the dance floor.

Big telecom companies like Telus like to scare policy makers by suggesting any open Internet requirements for Internet Service Providers will lead to "unintended consequences." I, however, have taken to arguing just the opposite: that letting ISPs become gatekeepers and regulators of Internet usage has both intended and unintended negative consequences for innovation, online choice and free expression. Clearly there are negative consequences to allowing an ISP to slow access to a radically democratic and innovative file-sharing service like bittorent, which is still very much in an embryonic stage of development. Most major ISPs are slowing access to bittorent and this limits our online choice of services and content, it limits individuals and companies that would innovate with this technology, and it stifles those who would have liked to express themselves through its applications.


Maritime Open Internet Town Hall Meetings

CBC podcast mp3s involving excerpts of the Maritime Open Internet Town Hall meetings are posted at the end of this blog post. The m4as that are posted are the cropped versions of the podcasts (which only have the net neutrality/town hall audio).

Check them out!

Why Should Queers Care About Net Neutrality?

"Canada's telecom regulator released its much-anticipated net neutrality decision in October, but some say the new framework doesn't go quite far enough.

The Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) finally acknowledged that the big telecom companies have been throttling the net by tossing specific internet traffic onto the slow lane. After years of a free-for-all policy vacuum in cyberspace, the CRTC is beginning to challenge the big telecom's self-appointed role as gatekeepers on what is supposed to be a free and open internet.

News Release: CRTC Fails to Protect Canadians

SaveOurNet.ca coalition urges action to save the open Internet in Canada

NEWS RELEASE
Date: Oct 22, 2009

OTTAWA — The SaveOurNet.ca coalition, a broad alliance of groups
fighting for a free and open Internet, is calling today's CRTC
decision on traffic management (Net Neutrality) a step in the right
direction, but it doesn't go far enough to protect online innovation
and consumer choice.

The CRTC's ruling comes despite broad consensus that meaningful and
enforceable rules are needed to protect the open Internet in Canada.

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