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Writers Articles And Opinions |
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17 July 2010 By Stephen Lendman
This article updates an
earlier one titled "The Struggle for Net Neutrality,"
accessed through the following link:
http://sjlendman.blogspot.com/2009/11/struggle-for-net-neutrality.html
First some background. As a
candidate, Obama pledged support for "network
neutrality to preserve the benefits of open
competition on the Internet." As president, he reneged
across the board, including for Internet freedom and
openness, Boston.com writer Joelle Tessler headlining,
"FCC votes to reconsider broadband regulations,"
saying:
Federal regulators are "wading
into a bitter policy dispute that could be tied up in
Congress and the courts for years." At stake: a free,
open, and affordable Internet, threatened by powerful
phone and cable giants wanting to privatize and
control it, have unregulated pricing power, and decide
what's published at what speed or blocked.
On June 16, alternate regulatory
paths were considered, including the one likely to
prevail, favored by FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski
"to define broadband access as a telecommunications
service subject to 'common carrier' obligations to
treat all traffic equally."
At issue is a US Court of Appeals
for the District of Columbia April 2010 ruling that
the agency exceeded its authority over phone and cable
giants, casting doubt on the future of Net
Neutrality.
On June 17, Washington Post
writer Jia Lynn Yang headlined, "FCC votes to seek
comment on its new legal strategy" to impose rules on
Internet providers, saying:
"Currently, broadband is defined
as an information service," outside FCC oversight. "Genachowski's
plan is to shift (it) into the same classification as
telephone service," authorizing more agency control
than now, partially regulating providers, a "third
way" applying some rules, not all, excluding the
likelihood of universal, affordable access, the Net
Neutrality gold standard, anything less called
unacceptable.
Opponents disagree, wanting
Congress and the courts to decide, both stacked with
pro-business types, sure to reward phone and cable
giants the way they satisfied bankers with financial
reform, Genachowski saying:
"I fully support this
Congressional effort. A limited update of the (1996
Telecommunications Act) could lock in an effective
broadband framework to promote investment and
innovation, foster competition, and empower
consumers," leaning heavily for the former over the
latter, abandoning the struggle for universal,
affordable access, if Congress goes along, which is
likely, given the power of big money to prevail.
Yet, according to Josh Silver,
Free Press.net President and CEO, the FCC has the
power by majority vote "to easily fix the problem by
'reclassifying' broadband under the law," as it now
stands. "But unless the FCC puts broadband under
what's called 'Title II' of the Telecommunications
Act," phone and cable giants will challenge all
unfriendly decisions in court, assuring consumers will
lose and they'll win. The companies know this, so
they're "going all out to keep the FCC from fixing the
problem," so far successfully.
If Genachowski betrays the
public, "it could mean the end of the Internet as we
know it," threatening the future of web sites like
this one, something readers can't afford to let
happen.
This writer's above-linked
article had a section on HR 3458: The Internet Freedom
Preservation Act of 2009. Introduced on July 31, 2009,
it would protect Net Neutrality, keeping it free and
open, unless destructively amended or aborted, its
fate apparently the latter. It was referred to
Committee, not approved, or enacted.
On October 22, 2009, S. 1836:
Internet Freedom Act of 2009 was introduced, an
anti-Net Neutrality bill. It was referred to
committee, not approved, or passed.
The Anti-Counterfeiting Trade
Agreement (ACTA) Threatening Net Neutrality, Consumer
Privacy, and Civil Liberties: An Update
On the pretext of protecting
intellectual property from infringement and
counterfeiters, it's about fast-tracking Internet
distribution and information technology rules to
subvert Net Neutrality, privacy, and personal freedoms
- global rules for unrestricted free trade,
undermining universal, affordable free access, civil
liberties, legitimate commerce, and the right of
sovereign nations to go their own way.
Until April, negotiations were
kept secret, only a May 2008 WikiLeaks report getting
out saying:
"If adopted, (ACTA) would impose
a strong, top-down enforcement regime, with new
cooperation requirements upon (ISPs), including
perfunctionary disclosure of customer information. The
proposal also bans 'anti-circumvention measures which
may affect online anonymity systems and would likely
outlaw multi-region CD/DVD players. The proposal also
specifies a plan to encourage developing nations to
accept the legal regime," imposing consequences for
opting out.
On April 22, 2010, Electronic
Frontier Foundation writer Gwen Hinze headlined,
"Preliminary Analysis of the Officially Released ACTA
Text," the first made public, saying:
"The text (leaves no doubt) that
ACTA is not just about counterfeiting." It's far more,
covering copyrights, patents, and all other
intellectual property forms, including the Internet,
and the ability of users to "communicate, collaborate
and create....new potential obligations for Internet
intermediaries (as well), requiring them to police"
cyberspace and its users, raising serious questions
about open affordable access, free expression,
personal privacy, and "fair use rights."
The official text omits separate
negotiating positions, because differences among them
are yet to be resolved, including for patents and
whether "obligations should be mandatory or
discretionary...."
In addition, some provisions run
counter to US law, including an EU proposal to impose
criminal sanctions for "inciting, aiding and abetting"
intellectual property and copyright infringement - not
recognized under US law, so changing it would be
needed to comply.
If so, it "raises the concern
that ACTA could expand the scope of secondary
copyright liability for Internet intermediaries,
consumer device manufacturers and software developers,
beyond" their current boundaries.
Further, ACTA's "Special Measures
Related to Technological Enforcement of Intellectual
Property in the Digital Environment" section contains
a Japanese proposal for ISPs to provide intellectual
property holders expeditious access to subscriber
information after giving "effective notification:"
also not recognized under US due process and judicial
oversight rules. Currently, American copyright holders
must sue and get an enforcing court injunction.
In addition, "ACTA's civil
enforcement chapter includes two" UK-type "loser-pays
attorney fee awards" proposals, not commonly practiced
in US civil litigation.
Resolving these differences is at
issue. Another involves the following:
"ACTA requires countries to adopt
laws prohibiting circumvention of copyright owners'
technological protection measures modeled on the US
Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA)." Yet ACTA
allows, seven exceptions, providing "a small measure
of flexibility," letting countries create exceptions
to what's banned.
Its provisions also differ from
recent US Circuit court rulings, requiring a nexus
between copyright infringement and TMPs' legal
protection. As a result, they "would require
signatories to adopt (broader) anti-circumvention
prohibitions" than under US law. Similarly, they'd
mandate countries "adopt third party liability, but
several proposals only permit, (not require) countries
to create limitations on the liability of Internet
intermediaries," weaker measures than under US safe
harbor provisions.
Further, ACTA would prevent
Congress from enacting laws diverging from its
provisions, including consumer-friendly ones. Instead,
it "will create new international norms, beyond those
agreed (to) in the 1994 Agreement on Trade Related
Aspects of Intellectual Property (TRIPS) and the 1996
WIPO Copyright Treaty and Performances and Phonograms
Treaties Implementation Act," affecting the following
areas:
-- holding Internet
intermediaries liable for their subscribers' behavior,
requiring they police, restrict, and impact their
privacy, free expression, and "ability to create and
collaborate;"
-- having ISPs impose "graduated
response" or "three strikes" policies, requiring they
disconnect subscribers Internet access for alleged
copyright infringements; and
-- enacting a global DMCA TPM
legal framework (America's legal standard) in place of
"the more open-ended language finally adopted in the
1996 WIPO Copyright Treaty and Performances and
Phonograms Treaty. If ACTA makes it universally
binding, US policy makers will achieve what they
couldn't include in the 1996 agreement, accomplishing
it only through bilateral agreements; and
-- criminalizing consumers'
non-commercial behavior with regard to copyright and
trademark infringements - what TRIPS mandated only for
the worst cases, involving commercial-scale
infringement and counterfeiting.
On June 23, American University
Washington College of Law's Program on Information
Justice and Intellectual Property released an "Urgent
ACTA Communique," stating that "over 90 academics,
practitioners and public interest organizations from
six continents" conclude that "the publicly released
draft of ACTA threatens numerous public interests,
including every concern specifically disclaimed by
negotiators."
They called ACTA "the predictably
deficient product of a deeply flawed process. What
started as a relatively simple proposal to coordinate
customs enforcement has transformed into a sweeping
and complex new international intellectual property
and internet regulation with grave consequences for
the global economy and governments' ability to promote
and protect the public interest."
"ACTA is hostile to the public
interest in at least seven critical areas of global
public policy: fundamental rights and freedoms
(including free expression, health, education, due
process, and judicial fairness); internet governance;
access to medicines; scope and nature of intellectual
property law; international trade; international law
and institutions; and (the) democratic process."
If enacted, ACTA will subvert
democratic freedoms, threatening privacy, free
expression, civil liberties, a free, open and
affordable Internet, and other consumer protections -
lost under binding global rules.
Yet there's hope. On July 9, the
Electronic Freedom Foundation (EFF) reported that
"over 300 Members of (the) European Parliament (MEPs)
have now signed the Written Declaration on ACTA,"
extending the deadline to September 9 for another
needed 69. "This is an unprecedented achievement and a
great reminder that we can make a difference. But the
fight is not over yet!"
The remaining signatures are
needed for the next Strasbourg September 6 - 9 plenary
session for the measure to become the official
European Parliament position - EFF urging:
"Help stop (ACTA) from
steamrolling our rights and freedoms....Written
Declaration 12 asks EU negotiators to ensure that ACTA
respects European citizens' fundamental rights to
freedom of expression and privacy, and opposes
provisions that would encourage Internet
intermediaries to engage in surveillance or filtering
of all Internet users' communications for potential
copyright-infringing material."
Internet-Threatening Congressional Legislation
On April 1, 2009, S. 773:
Cybersecurity Act of 2009 was introduced, referred to
committee, approved on March 24, 2010, but not thus
far enacted in secretly revised form four months
later, leaving it largely unchanged from what's known.
At the time, the Electronic
Frontier Foundation's Jennifer Granick raised serious
concerns about "giving the federal government
unprecedented power over the Internet without
necessarily improving security in the ways that matter
most, (saying this bill) should be opposed or
radically amended."
The above linked article explains
it, including provisions that weaken privacy
standards, and presidential authority to shut down the
Internet in "an emergency and disconnect critical
infrastructure systems on national security grounds,"
that may, in fact, be bogus.
Also on April 1, 2009, companion
legislation was introduced - S. 778: A bill to
establish, within the Executive Office of the
President, the Office of National Cybersecurity
Advisor (a czar). It was referred to committee where
it remains.
On June 10, 2010, Senators Joe
Lieberman (I. CT), Susan Collins (R. ME), and Tom
Carper (D. DE) introduced S. 3480: Protecting
Cyberspace as a National Asset Act of 2010 - "A bill
to amend the Homeland Security Act of 2002 and other
laws to enhance the security of the cyber and
communications infrastructure of the United States."
The bill was referred to committee, approved
unanimously, but so far not enacted.
It would establish a White House
Office for Cyberspace Policy and a National Center for
Cybersecurity and Communications, working
collaboratively with business to establish
cybersecurity requirements online, through
telecommunications networks, and other electronic
infrastructure.
Called a "kill switch" bill, it
will let the president (on grounds of national
security) shut down the Internet, disconnect its
networks, and force web sites, blogs, providers,
search engines and software companies to "immediately
comply with any (Department of Homeland Security)
emergency measure or action," or face fines or
closure.
It will also establish a National
Center for Cybersecurity and Communications (NCCC) to
monitor the "security status" of US private web sites,
blogs, ISPs, other net-related businesses, and
critical global online operations, and require
companies using the Internet and other "information
infrastructure" to be "subject to (NCCC) command,"
saying:
"The owner or operator of covered
critical infrastructure shall comply with any
emergency measure or action developed by (NCCC's)
Director (a czar)," ones remaining in place for 30
days, but can be extended monthly up to 120 days,
after which continuance would depend on congressional
approval.
In an introductory press release,
Lieberman said:
"Our economic security, national
security and public safety are now all at risk from
new kinds of enemies - cyber-warriors, cyber-spies,
cyber-terrorists and cyber-criminals. The need for
this legislation is obvious and urgent."
What's needed is truth and full
disclosure, not bogus terrorist threats hiding a
sinister purpose - subverting democratic freedoms in
times of economic and social upheaval, hard line
repression planned in response.
On June 23, in a letter to
Lieberman, Collins and Carper, the following
organizations raised serious civil liberties
concerns:
-- the ACLU
-- American Library Association
-- American Association of Law
Libraries
-- Association of Research
Libraries
-- Bill of Rights Defense
Committee
-- Center for Democracy &
Technology, and
-- Citizens Committee for the
Rights to Keep and Bear Arms.
These groups cited concerns for
"free speech, privacy, and other civil liberties
interests," wanting changes made to avoid
infringement, saying:
"The Internet is vital to free
speech and free inquiry, and Americans rely on it
every day to access and to convey information. Any
cybersecurity action the government requires that
would infringe on these rights....must meet a
traditional First Amendment strict scrutiny test," as
follows:
(1) measures "must further a
compelling government interest;"
(2) they "must be narrowly
tailored to advance that interest," and
(3) they "must be the least
restrictive means of achieving that interest."
Further, "the bill should be
amended to require an independent assessment of the
effect on free speech, privacy and other civil
liberties of the measures undertaken to respond to
each emergency the President declares." Otherwise,
constitutional rights will be jeopardized or subverted
by presidential decree, even if unjustified.
Philip Reitinger, Department of
Homeland Security (DHS) Deputy Undersecretary, said he
agreed that the administration "may need to take
extraordinary measures," preferably within DHS, the
1934 Communications Act already giving the executive
broad emergency power.
Under it, he (or she) may, under
"threat of war," seize control of any "facilities or
stations for wire communications," a provision
applicable to broadband providers and web sites.
Though Obama hasn't yet commented
officially, a May 2009 White House press release
said:
"In this information age, one of
your greatest assets - in our case, our ability to
communicate to a wide range of supporters through the
Internet - could also be one of your greatest
vulnerabilities.....America's economic prosperity in
the 21st century will depend on cybersecurity....our
defense and military networks are under constant
attack. Al Qaeda and other terrorist groups have
spoken of their desire to unleash a cyber attack on
our country....acts of terror could come not only from
a few extremists in suicide vests but from a few key
strokes on the computer - a weapon of mass
destruction."
At the same time, he pledged
support for "net neutrality so we can keep the
Internet as it should be - open and free," one of many
promises made, then broken - on his watch, democratic
freedoms and social safety net protections further
shredded en route to ending them, America already a de
facto police state, no longer a fit place to live in,
a reality too evident to hide, under a reactionary
president pretending to be populist. It's high time
public outrage responded.
Stephen Lendman lives in
Chicago and can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and
listen to cutting-edge discussions with distinguished
guests on the Progressive Radio News Hour on the
Progressive Radio Network Thursdays at 10AM US Central
time and Saturdays and Sundays at noon. All programs
are archived for easy listening.
http://www.progressiveradionetwork.com/the-progressive-news-hour/.
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