That's a wonderful bluring of what Randy's issue was to the point of indistinction. Yes, try to flip it. The issue is when a consumer buys access to the "Internet" what do they get? One way of tackling this is a truth in advertising defintion of what selling access to the "Internet" means. If you sell access to the "Internet" does that mean everybody except companies that offer services that compete with you? (for example: competing VOIP for phone companies, or competing IPTV for cable networks) Does access to the "Internet" include prefixes of: * prefixes of networks willing to pay you money * prefixes of networks willing to call it even * prefixes of networks that wanted you to pay money At some point, what you would be selling would not be access to what the average business customer or consumer would call the "Internet", in which case you shouldn't be allowed to market it that way. You should have to call it access to the "Partial Internet", or "Some of the Internet", or "The portion of the Internet willing to pay us money". i.e. "Contains only 50 percent Internet". (heh, just like a can of mixed nuts letting you know the amount of peanuts, or "fruit juice" that discloses whether it really has any fruit juice in it at all.) Most of us can probably agree that you should be free to sell whatever concontion of network connectivity you want. Certainly AOL, Compuserve, and Prodigy were all walled gardens before the Internet. Knock yourself out, just don't call it Internet access. Mike. On Wed, 2 Nov 2005, Sean Donelan wrote:
On Wed, 2 Nov 2005, Randy Bush wrote:
the two year window is far too low given the sbc ceo's recent public statements on the use of his wires by google and the like.
Should content suppliers be required to provide equal access to all networks? Or can content suppliers enter into exclusive contracts?
If Google sets up a WiFi network in San Francisco or buys AOL with Comcast, can Google create a custom content for users on its networks? Or must Google offer the same cotent on the same terms and conditions to everyone? Should AOL be able to offer selected content to only its customers, such as music downloads? Or must AOL supply that content to everyone equally? Comcast offers its users access to the Disney Connection web site, should Disney be required to offer it to all Internet users equally? The NFL offers its Sunday Ticket exclusively through DirecTV? Or must the NFL offer the same content to every network?
What rules should exist on how Google operates? Or is it just traditionally lobbying? Google says regulate the other guy, but not itself. The other guys say regulate Google, but not them.
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