Internet Freedom Day: This Year We Go to War for Net Neutrality

The loss of net neutrality this week was even bigger than expected.

This time of year is always the worst of times and best of times for internet freedom. Internet activistAaron Swartzcommitted suicide on January 4 of last year. Two years ago today, millions took part in the successful 2012 SOPA/PIPA Blackout protest, followed last year by an event many of us celebrated for the first time as Internet Freedom Day. (You can read all about Internet Freedom Day here, but basically, we should have at least one special day designated for celebratingone of the most revolutionary technologies the world has ever known.)

And this week, on January 14, the FCCs network neutrality rule wasgutted. So now, the internet freedom issue we need to focus on is network neutrality.

Because with the recent ruling, cable and phone companies like Verizon and AT&T now have the legal right to block any website, webpage, blog, video, web technology, app, cloud sync technology, or anything else running online through their pipes. Put another way, Comcast or Time Warner Cable can now block Netflix, BitTorrent, or even this article. They can choose to provide better service to some entities and not others, letting some websites load very, very slowly and others load instantly (for a fee!).

Even though we predicted this decision here in WIRED, it turns out that the real problem isnt the courts decision but the FCCs response to it.

Rather than taking the difficult (political) journey to protect internet freedom, the FCC is issuing deluded statements that no journey is necessary. Itd be like Frodo saying hes going to save Middle Earth except without carrying the ring to Mount Doom, the only place it can be destroyed.

In this case, FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler is Frodo and Mount Doom is a legal move called reclassification, which is the only way to win net neutrality in the courts.

Heres the insider background, one I personally lived. In 2007, when I was a lawyer for the public interest groupFree Press, I helped draft the complaint to the FCC against Comcast for secretly blocking BitTorrent and other technologies. My theory was simple: the FCC had issued a set of Open Internet principles in 2005 and by blocking legal technologies like BitTorrent, Comcast was violating those principles.

Now, the Open Internet principles were not legal rules adopted by the FCC; they were effectively a press statement posted on the FCC website. But we filed that complaint because the FCCs leadership had publiclyand repeatedly promised that if anyone violated the principles, the FCC would have the power and will to stop it. We took the FCC at its word and filed a complaint based on their stated Open Internet principles.

And the FCC ruled in our favor, against Comcast, in 2008. It found that Comcast violated the FCCs principles and that a certain part of the Communications Act, the first part known as Title I, gave the FCC the jurisdiction to act. Then the case went to court, and in January 2010 three years ago this week actually I argued the case, alongside the FCCs top lawyer, before the appellate court. But the three judges there made it clear they didnt buy a single one of our arguments. It was a bloodletting.

Read the rest here:

Internet Freedom Day: This Year We Go to War for Net Neutrality

Freedom Riders inspire ahead of Martin Luther King Jr. March

SAN ANTONIO Hungry to hear first-hand accounts of what it was like to be a civil rights activist fighting to end segregation in the Deep South in 1961, community members packed into the San Antonio Museum of Art on Saturday for a screening of the PBS documentary film Freedom Riders.

The event was capped off with a panel discussion featuring a handful of the groups' original members -- whose stark recollections of their abuse, courage and victories drew a standing ovation from the crowd of about 200 people.

We've been concerned that our young people aren't as involved with their rights, said Julia Aaron Humbles, a Freedom Rider who was one of the first to be arrested.

She told the group that history is doomed to repeat itself if people don't learn about their past and take action.

There's still a fight to be fought, but we're too old to fight it, she told the crowd, making them laugh.

Freedom Riders brought attention to the persistent racial inequality in the South by filling buses with white and African-American activists and riding them into towns where segregation continued. Audience members asked the group of four what it was like to tell their parents they had decided to participate in the Freedom Rides and whether abuse continued in prison. Patricia Dilworth, a San Antonio resident who was 18 when she decided to take part in the demonstrations, told the crowd that abuse at the hands of prison guards included cramped cells, being fed cornbread with a can of pepper tucked inside, nasty comments and only being allowed one shower a week.

When asked if they understood how their actions would shape history, Dilworth laughed.

I was 18, she said. I didn't know anything.

Several audience members took the opportunity to personally thank the group, which included MacArthur Cotton and Hezekiah Watkins, one of the youngest Freedom Riders.

Lesa Bailey said she was brought to tears by the documentary and deeply moved by the panel discussion.

See the original post here:

Freedom Riders inspire ahead of Martin Luther King Jr. March

Tagal system for 600 more river zones in Sabah

Tagal system for 600 more river zones in Sabah

He said the number was an addition to the existing 511, initiated by the Fisheries Department in partnership with riparian residents.

"Hopefully, the system could be adapted to all the rivers in Sabah so they could be rehabilitated and sustain our fishery resources," he told reporters here Saturday after launching the system at Petagas River.

Yahya, who is also State Agriculture and Food Industry Minister, also released more than 5,000 fish and prawn fries into the river.

The tagal system entails zoning certain sections of the river, which would then remain off-limits to fishing activities for a certain period to allow the resources to flourish before being harvested jointly by the villagers involved.

Encroachers would be penalised with a fine under the Sabah Inland Fisheries and Aquaculture Enactment 2003.

The Petagas River tagal system involves about 3km and will be looked after by some 4,000 villagers of Kg Contoh, Kg Muhibbah, Kg Sekambu, Kg Petagas, Kg Peringatan, Kg Tengah Padang and Kg Ganang.

Although it may seem to be an overly ambitious idea by the Minister who actually proposed for the said system to be created at the river back in June 2011, Yahya is confident it will work.

"Petagas River has become filthy because of rubbish dumping and so on, by the riverbank and in the river itself, by those living in the area and we have failed to tackle this problem," he said.

"Because of this, I proposed to the State Fisheries Department on June 16, 2011 to implement the tagal system in this river.

Excerpt from:

Tagal system for 600 more river zones in Sabah