Net Neutrality
Network neutrality (or open inter-working)
means that you are in control of where you go and what you do online.
Companies that provide Internet services should treat all lawful
Internet content in a neutral manner. It is the founding principle of
the Internet and what allows the Internet to be the largest and most
diverse platform for expression in recent history.
Why Network Neutrality?
In
recent months, network neutrality has become a broad and ill-defined
term that encompasses a range of policy objectives including free
expression, user choice, and discrimination as well as business issues
including network traffic management, pricing, and overall business
models.
Amongst all this, transparency is key.
Building a Common Understanding
The
debate on network neutrality has flared up in recent months. Net
neutrality was one of the most controversial issues at the NETmundial
Conference, held in Sao Paulo in April 2014. A session at the 2014
Internet Governance Forum aimed to build a common understanding of Net
Neutrality to help develop local solutions with global impact.
We Focus On:
The Internet Society works on a range of issues that fall under the umbrella of net neutrality, including:
- Allowing the freedom of expression.
- Supporting user choice.
- Preventing discrimination.
We also work with local and global businesses to develop solutions around things like:
- Network traffic management.
- Pricing.
- Business models.
Defend Internet Freedom in India!
The
internet's success in fostering innovation, access to knowledge and
freedom of speech is in large part due to the principle of net
neutrality — the idea that internet service providers give their
customers equal access to all lawful websites and services on the
internet, without giving priority to any website over another.
Due
to intense lobbying by telecom operators like Airtel and Vodafone, the
Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) is planning to allow them
to block apps and websites to extort more money from consumers and
businesses — an extreme violation of net neutrality.
Let’s remind
TRAI that their job is to protect the rights of consumers, not the
profit margins of telcos. Let’s demand access to the free, open
internet.
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