On 1/5/12 8:07 AM, "Jay Ashworth" <jra@baylink.com> wrote:
----- Original Message -----
From: "Zaid Ali" <zaid@zaidali.com>
On 1/5/12 7:22 AM, "Jay Ashworth" <jra@baylink.com> wrote:
Vint Cerf says no: http://j.mp/wwL9Ip
But I wonder to what degree that's dependent on how much our governments make Internet access the most practical/only practical way to interact with them.
Understand: I'm not saying that FiOS should be a human right. But as a society, America's recognized for decades that you gotta have a telephone, and subsidized local/lifeline service to that extent; that sort of subsidy applies to cellular phones now as well.
I agree with Vint here. Basic human rights are access to food, clothing and shelter. I think we are still struggling in the world with that. With your logic one would expect the radio and TV to be a basic human right but they are not, they are and will remain powerful medium which be enablers of something else and the Internet would fit there.
Well, I dunno... as I think was obvious from my other comments: TV and Radio are *broadcast* media; telephones and the internet are not; they're *two-way* communications media... and they're the communications media which have been chosen by the organs of government we've constituted to run things for us.
You hit the important word, though, in your reply: "*access to* food, clothing, and shelter"... not the things themselves.
The question here is "is *access to* the Internet a human right, something which the government ought to recognize and protect"? I sort of think it is, myself... and I think that Vint is missing the point: *all* of the things we generally view as human rights are enablers to other things, and we generally dub them *as those things*, by synecdoche... at least in my experience.
If I wrote a blog article that criticized the government and it was shutdown along with my Internet access I wouldn't say that my right to the Internet was violated. I would say that my right to free speech was violated. Regardless of one way or two way communication it is communication. Zaid