Monthly Archives: May 2008

Net Neutrality: Priorities, Please

All data are not treated equally on the Internet. There is only so much bandwidth to go around, so service providers give higher priority to certain types of data. Internet telephony and other time-sensitive applications like video games are sent through the Internet’s “express lanes,” while less urgent data sit in traffic. Comcastdoes this with BitTorrent file-sharing, for example. Prioritizing data is an efficient way to use the Internet’s limited resources.

But ISPs may one day offer express treatment for an additional charge. Such arrangements could benefit consumers and therefore should be legal, regardless of whether they materialize. Under such arrangements, YouTube, Amazon Unbox, or Apple’s iTunes Store could pay money for providers to give their sites the express-lane treatment. This would give service providers an incentive to build more and faster broadband infrastructure–where there is money to be made.

Congress thinks this is a problem. An antitrust problem, specifically. Reps. John Conyers (D-MI) and Zoe Lofgren (D-CA) have introduced a bill that would amend the Clayton Antitrust Act to “ensure competitive and non-discriminatory access to the Internet.” Providers would still be allowed to prioritize different kinds of data. But service providers would be barred from charging money to do it, in the name of what is called net neutrality.

The ban, of course, would reduce incentives for providers to expand and improve bandwidth. The result: a slower Internet for everyone. This consequence may be unintended, but it is not unforeseeable. Reps. Conyers and Lofgren should know better.

The faster that infrastructure is built, the faster that even the lowest-priority data will reach its destination. But new infrastructure won’t be built unless companies have an incentive to build it. Conyers-Lofgren hurts that incentive.

It gets worse. The Conyers-Lofgren bill is not the only game in town. It joins a similar, though less extreme effort by Reps. Ed Markey (D-MA) and Chip Pickering (R-MS). Net neutrality is a bipartisan issue, unfortunately. Rep. Jim Sensenbrenner (R-WI) is another Republican who has publicly favored net neutrality. Every year it seems more and more likely that Congress will pass some kind of net neutrality bill.

All of these politicians have good intentions. Equality is a desirable thing in many cases, after all. But policies should be judged by their consequences, not their intentions. The long-run effect of net neutrality bills–particularly Conyers-Lofgren–would be to slow the growth of broadband. As in so many other areas, Congress would best serve the country by leaving well enough alone.

A Specter is Haunting the NFL

Sen. Arlen Specter (R-PA) wants the federal government to open an investigation of the NFL’s Spygate scandal.

For those not in the know, the New England Patriots are accused of taping other teams’ signals from the bench. That is against league rules.

We are fighting two wars. Economic growth is slowing down. Entitlement programs like Social Security and Medicare are headed for financial meltdowns.

Sen. Specter’s solution? Involve the federal government in a sports league’s internal affairs.

Priorities please, Senator.

On the other hand, any time the Senate spends bungling this issue is time they can’t spend bungling more important matters. Maybe there’s a silver lining to this political grandstanding, after all.

Postage Rates to Rise on Monday

The Forever Stamp is a great idea. When postage rates rise to 42 cents on Monday, we won’t have to bother with those infernal penny stamps.

But I think there’s a downside here; people are becoming less sensitive to postage price increases. Not that I devote my life to tracking the price of postage, but this was the first I’d heard of the increase. Two days in advance. Usually there’s a little more notice for these things. People needed the time to buy those accursed one and two-cent stamps. Not anymore.

And increases will happen more frequently than before, too. According to CNN, the USPS increases may become an annual affair each May. People might not even notice.

I’ll still take the Forever Stamp, (potential) drawbacks and all. They’re just so convenient.

TruckNutz Update

Remember the kerfuffle in Florida over, of all things, fake testicles on the back of pickup trucks?

Via Fark, the situation has resolved itself. As expected, the TruckNutz ban did not pass. Kudos to Florida Senator Carey Baker for making the attempt, though. All the time that the legislature wasted debating his ban was time not spent hurting the state’s economy.

I love it when legislatures waste their time on silliness. More, please.