Electronic Frontier Foundation weighs in on th Google-Verizon Net Neutrality Proposal

A Review of Ver­i­zon and Google’s Net Neu­tral­ity Pro­posal | Elec­tronic Fron­tier Foundation

It’s tough not to get myself worked up when I read things like the recent Google-Verizon pro­posal for a frame­work around net­work neu­tral­ity. Invari­ably, it feels like power is amass­ing to limit free­dom, and that tends to cause peo­ple to run around like their hair is on fire. Mine included.

The ini­tial emo­tional response appears to be that Google has been on a long path of selling-out to cor­po­rate part­ners, even though expe­ri­ence may be say­ing some­thing else. This is a reflec­tion of cog­ni­tive dis­so­nance as in gen­eral, Google has done good, smart things for this indus­try. If there’s any­one I’d like to see at the table dis­cussing net neu­tral­ity, it’s prob­a­bly them.

Time will tell. A wise man once said, “I’m not cheap, but I can be bought.”

The EFF has posted their response, and their hair is not yet on fire at this point. That’s a good thing, because it makes the issue far eas­ier to parse. If you haven’t read the full state­ment, you should. And then you should read Cindy Cohn’s well-though response.

On Mon­day, Google and Ver­i­zon pro­posed a new leg­isla­tive frame­work for net neu­tral­ity. Reac­tion to the pro­posal has been swift and, for the most part, highly crit­i­cal. While we agree with many aspects of that crit­i­cism, we are inter­ested in the framework’s attempt to grap­ple with the Tro­jan Horse prob­lem. The pro­posed solu­tion: a nar­row grant of power to the FCC to enforce neu­tral­ity within care­fully spec­i­fied para­me­ters. While this solu­tion is not with­out its own sub­stan­tial dan­gers, we think it deserves to be con­sid­ered fur­ther if Con­gress decides to legislate.