From
The Daily Dot:
most U.S. Internet users will be subject to a new copyright
enforcement system that could slow the Internet to a crawl and force
violators to take educational courses. A source with direct knowledge of the Copyright Alert System
(CAS), who asked not to be named, has told the Daily Dot that the five
participating Internet service providers (ISPs) will start the
controversial program Monday. The ISPs—industry giants AT&T, Cablevision, Comcast, Time Warner,
and Verizon—will launch their versions of the CAS on different days
throughout the week. Comcast is expected to be the first, on Monday.
The control of the internet by big business in collusion with big government should worry everyone who believes in a a free and open net. From the
Financial Times:
[Comcast's] meteoric rise in the past decade parallels the relative decline of
internet service in the US. In the late 1990s the US had the fastest
speeds and widest penetration of almost anywhere – unsurprisingly given
that it invented the platform. Today the US comes 16th, according to the
OECD, with an average of 27 megabits per second, compared with up to
quadruple that in countries such as Japan and the Netherlands . . .
The FCC has been a good friend to Comcast and Time Warner Cable, the two largest cable providers
that dominate US broadband. In contrast to the spread of electricity
and telephones, where the US was far ahead of the rest of the world,
Washington has abjured the same regulatory promotion for the internet.
Through brilliantly effective lobbying, US cable companies have escaped
the universal access and affordability clauses that were imposed on
telecoms and electricity companies in earlier eras.
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