US 'net neutrality' in jeopardy with COPE act

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US 'net neutrality' in jeopardy with COPE act

Neal Thomas

This article went over the US media watchdog FAIR's mailing list this
morning:

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Action Alert
Saving Independent Media
Will Congress stifle community TV and internet freedom?

4/26/06

This week, Congress could deal a serious blow to some of the few remaining
checks on corporate domination of the media landscape.

The House Commerce Committee is debating proposed legislation called the
COPE Act (or the Communications Opportunity, Promotion and Enhancement Act).
Critics point to two significant problems with the bill:

--Community TV: Public access, government and educational (PEG) channels
offer a rare opportunity for the production of local, noncommercial,
community-oriented television. But the proposed bill, in a bid to allow
phone companies access to the cable TV market, could undermine the ability
of local communities to negotiate with cable companies to maintain these
channels, or to expand their public interest space in the digital age. For
years, public access television has been a vital educational and organizing
resource in an increasingly corporatized media marketplace. PEG channels are
one of the few ways a community can have some input into the type of media
it thinks would be of public benefit.

--"Net neutrality": The Internet is based on the principle that all
participating networks give equal access to all the information they
transmit. But the COPE Act would give big Internet service providers the
ability to prioritize high-speed Internet access according to their own
interests or the interests of deep-pocketed proprietors of Web real estate
that could pay for premium access. As the SaveTheInternet.com coalition puts
it:


These companies have a new vision for the Internet. Instead of an even
playing field, they want to reserve express lanes for their own content and
services or those from big corporations that can afford the steep tolls and
leave the rest of us on a winding dirt road.

Maintaining net neutrality is a fundamental necessity if the democratic
promise of the Internet is to be realized.

As FAIR has documented over its 20 year history, media policy is usually
crafted in Washington to the benefit of corporate media interests and their
lobbyists. But in the last few years, citizen voices have successfully
challenged that business as usual. It's time to do so once again.


ACTION:
Speak up for media freedom by opposing the COPE Act. Visit the sites below
to send your message to Congress:

http://www.saveaccess.org
(a coalition dedicated to preserving community TV)

http://action.freepress.net/campaign/savethenet
(the action page for the SavetheInternet.com coalition)


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Neal