CRTC ruling: it’s OK to throttle your customers!

Even though this is not where I was planning to go next in my ‘Big Picture’ look at what is happening around us, the timing of the CRTC’s ruling makes it convenient to call attention to what is happening with the internet.

Today’s article in the Financial Post, titled ‘CRTC denies request to ban Internet ‘Throttling”, we learned that Canada’s top censors communications regulating body, the CRTC, have ruled it’s OK bor Bell Canada to throttle internet trafic as they please – as long as they throttle everybody’s traffic equally….  Yeah, pull the other one!

“”Based on the evidence before us, we found that the measures employed by Bell Canada to manage its network were not discriminatory. Bell Canada applied the same traffic-shaping practices to wholesale customers as it did to its own retail customers,” said CRTC chairman Konrad von Finckenstein.”

CAIP outlined how Bell Canada’s throttling has slowed down usage of Voice-over-Internet-Protocol calls, encrypted traffic, peer-to-peer file sharing and virtual-private networks to 30 kilobytes per second (roughly half the speed of a dial-up modem) from 4:30 p.m. to 2 a.m. Normal speeds are about five megabytes per second, about 166 times faster.”

Uncle Stalin always used to say that controlling the means of communication is the best way to gain power.  It is ‘good’ to see that his message has hopped class barriers and that the mandarins at the CRTC have taken his lesson to heart.  Or something like that…

Whatever the reason, it is a message we must not ignore – especially when the CRTC is – reportedly – also considering serously altering the way internet is accessed in Canada.  I addressed this in an earlier post, but the upshot was that instead of just ‘surfing’ the net as a user would like, the ‘sites’ would be ‘bundled’ just like channels are bundled from a cable provider.  Then, the user could buy a ‘package’ that would include access to some 100 pre-approved ‘bundled’ sites.  Any website (or blog) outside of these ‘big ones’ would cost a buck or two (to be set) per click…IF they would be available at all… 

Yeah, a slow death of ‘throttling’ to anyone not in the ‘bundle’….  So, perhaps we ought not be surprised that this same set of people thinks it OK for Bell to slow internet trafic to the internet providers themselves to half the dial-up speed…during the hours that people are home and ‘surfing’. 

I guess the only question remaining here is:  what is their motivation in maintaining this consistent stand?

Perhaps the answer is simpler and more crass than most of us would imagine…

‘The Big Picture’ page is up

To make it easier to follow the ‘chain’ of posts about ‘The Big Picture’, I have created a key-page.  It is called ‘The Big Picture’ and is at the top-right of my page header.

As I make more posts, I will update it with links and breif descriptions of the posts.  At the end, I’ll try to sum things up, untangle all the threads of the ‘big knot’ and demonstrate how they weave together to show us at least a part of the fabric of the history that surrounds us.  Ambitious, I know – but I can dream!

‘The Media’s’ perception of themselves

This is likely going to be a contentious post:  most of the mainstream media (MSM) has a very high opinion about themselves, so if any members of the MSM actually come across this post, they will not be happy…  But, with their view of ‘bloggers’ in general and this being a rather small, not well known blog in particular, somehow I doubt this is likely.

In my never-humble-opinion, there are two completely different reasons why the MSM opinion of themselves is so high.

The first one is very easy to explain – it applies mostly to TV journalists.  In addition to the second one (to be described bellow), many TV journalists (and some print ones) are, recognized when they are out in the public.  This is due to the nature of their job – their images are piped into our homes… and we insist on treating them as celebrities…  So, it is not very surprising that some of them begin to suffer from ‘celebrititis’:  the mistaken belief that because one is a famous celebrity, one is smarter and better informed than mere mortals are…

The second one is much more difficult to express accurately…

Perhaps because many ‘Western’ journalists have – during the middle part of the 20th century – earned for themselves a reputation of integrity and impartiality, today’s journalists automatically expect the same sort of respect and that same presumption of impartiality.  

Yet, many journalists today are unable or unwilling to understand that this reputation was earned by specific journalists.  It is not simply a quality conferred onto someone by the virtue of selecting a respected profession and getting trained in it (if they even bother to).  Riding on the coat-tails of your predecessors only works for so long before those coat-tails are too threadbare to support your weight!

Even some left-wing journalists are admitting our media is left-wing biased.  Just look at some of our ‘Journalism professors’!  No wonder this crop of journalists, well, the way it is!!!  And people are beginning to notice. 

Yet, some journalists remain unable or unwilling to face reality.  There is a guy who has a 1-hour call-in talk show on my local radio station in the mornings.  This guy drives me nuts by attacking each and every caller who even peripherally mentions ‘media bias’.  According to him, there is no such thing – and it is an insult to suggest something like that exists.  He looses it and goes postal on anyone who even hints about media bias.  His ‘usual’ attack goes something like this:

‘Do you think that you are that much smarter than everyone else?  Do you think that everyone else is too stupid to figure out what you did?  You need to know ‘both sides’ of a strory to judge if there is ‘media bias’ in how it is reported. 

So, if you can see out both sides of the story from what you read and hear – and be convinced of the ‘other than your imagined bias’ side, then obviously, the media gave you enough balanced, unbiased information out of which you were able to form your view!  And if you can figure it out, why do you think everyone else is too dumb to do the same?  I find your insinuation very insulting!’

He varies that rant – but that is the gist of it….and he can really get worked up about it!

Of course, what this journalist (he was a newspaper editor and still writes columns) does not allow his browbeaten caller to get a word in edgewise, to explain that most people are not information junkies!  Yet, some of us are

Because, in my never-humble-opinion, it is only people who are obsessed (or just ‘highly motivated’) to obtain all kinds of information who are the ones who end up digging up both sides of any story!  And, at times, it really means ‘digging up’!!! 

Because the substance of the story is often very, very deeply burried.   (By whom and why varies – I am not going in for one of them ‘Global Conspiracy Theories’ – rather, I consider this more along he lines of ‘expediency-complacency theory’ or ‘career-objectives compliance theory’ – if you get my drift. 

So, people who want to find out what is going on do not simply read the newspapers, watch TV News or listen to the radio – there, they only find the ‘expedient’ or highly ‘normalized’ (for ‘normalized’, read ‘spun’) version of what is going on! 

Instead, these people turn to the internet.  There, they can find eyewitness accounts of some events.  There, they can find non-journalist written reports (as one tiny example, Amnesty International did carry factual information on their site, while mainstream media reported something wildly different – as happened in the case of the stoning of a 13-year-old-rape victim, Aisha Ibrahim Dhuhulow…..reported by the mainstream media as ’23-year-old woman stoned for adultery’!)

So, some people search far and deep for the actual information about what took place – and therefore they ‘get’ ‘both sides’ of a story….  You know, like the journalists of yesteryear used to do

That, however, does NOT mean that most people – who have other interests – have access to the same information!!!  NOT AT ALL!!!

Most people rely on the mainstream media (MSM) to bring the whole story to them.  Because they have no time or interest to sift through tons of information, they rely on the reporters and the journalists to do it for them and then present both sides!  Yet, both sides are hardly ever presented – most of our current crop of journalists were NOT taught in school to ‘report facts’.  Not at all.  They were taught to ‘report facts in a way people will ‘properly understand their implications’…  where ‘properly’ is dictated by the current intellectual elite’s pet point of view!

In other words, it is not that the caller is ‘smarter’ or ‘more clever’ than the rest of the population as this irritable journalist sarcastically implies.  It simply means he or she is more motivated to access non MSM sources and therefore has a broader baseline upon which to form a judgement!

But, let’s not be so dismissive of ‘everyone else’, either.  When ‘news’ is less and less informative and sounds more and more like preaching, even the uninformed get suspicious…

 

Update:  The radio host I mentioned in the post has some serious clarifications of his position, as he says I have misrepresented his views.  I have posted these in the comment section.  Please, take a few moments to read them.

Mainstream Media – Dan Rather speaks out

As our society evolves, so do the means we keep ourselves informed.

A thousand years ago, traveling merchants, storytellers and ‘going to the fair’ would be the main ways non-elites (as in, us regular citizens) got information about what was happening in the world.  A hundred years ago, we would likely read the newspapers – or have someone who read them tell us about all the interesting things that were going on.  Then, the radio, TV….well, you know the rest.

The large and established newspapers, news-magazines, TV-news and to a degree, radio, make up our ‘mainstream media’ (MSM).  The majority of the people in our society get all of their news through this means – hence the term, ‘mainstream’.

During the early part of the 20th, the MSM had earned for itself a reputation of impartiality and fierce independance.  Journalists were proud to ‘hunt down’ the truth, the whole truth – and report nothing but the truth.  And not just report it – report it in as factual a way as possible.

Recently, my father-in-law was looking up some news story from the 1st half of the 20th century – so he went down to the ‘National Archives’ and started looking through the dailies.  He was struck at how very differently the ‘news’ had been reported.  No fluffy wording.  No idiotic interviews with a neighbour who had not seen anything, but happened to be ‘around’ when the reporter needed an ‘eyewitness’.  No guesses about what ‘society’ had done to ’cause’ such a tragedy.  Just, well, facts.  A bit stark, to be sure, but informative…

So, what happened?

Dan Rather has some insights that I think are very interesting:

By the way, Mr. Rather thinks that ‘bloggers’ are the next wave in news-communication – and a healthy antidote to the current malaise of the MSM.  Though he does not have a blog himself, in another interview, he said that if he were offered an opportunity to join a group of several bloggers, he just might consider making it the place from which to fight this battle!

Media – where does one start?

Growing up behind the ‘Iron Curtain’, a person had to learn to ‘read between the lines’ of what the official news-media were reporting.  The alternative was being left with patently self-contradictory messages.  One little example:  the headline in a newspaper touted the Soviet Union as the most developed country in the world, while the newsstand itself was just by a big ‘inspirational’ sign that read ‘We will catch up to, then surpass the USA!’ 

In other words, keeping one’s brain from exploding from ‘doublespeak’ required that one began to construct filters through which to pass all ‘official news’.  And, it was all ‘official news’.  Of course, we had ‘freedom of the press’ – there were several independent sources besides the official government newspapers!  There was the Communist Party newspaper and there was the official ‘Union of Trade Unions’ newspaper, too!  Plus, we were told  we had freedom of the press!

When we came to Canada in the 1980s, we experienced something that we had then written off as just a bit of a quirk – but, looking back, I suspect it may have been a symptom of a malaise that is now causing the part of the illness of our ‘Western’ mainstream media sources.

I say ‘part’ because in my never-humble-opinion, there are several underlying causes….  It is not a simple situation.

So, what was this ‘quirk’?

When we came here, many Canadians were very welcoming of us.  Most were very nice – even if somewhat naive of the world situation, at least, it seemed so to us.  They would ask us a lot of questions about what our life had been like and offerered very empathetic replies.  We we would describe to them the type of censorship of the press that existed there – how difficult it was to actually find information on what was happening in world events.  They smiled indulgently and told us:  ‘It is the same here – just from the other direction!’

This seemed a singularly strange response to us.  We concluded it was just a poor attempt at trying to make us feel welcome.  But, because several different people offered me the same sentiments, it is something I have never forgotten – it did continue to bother me over the decades.

It bothered me because it showed an inability to differentiate between the freedom of the press and censorship.  It bothered me because it diminished the importance of protecting freedom of the press by a smile and a wave of the hand…. 

But it also told me that there was a danger that these people would perceive ‘right-wing bias’ where none existed.  That they would suspect it is there – simply because they are told that in Communist countries (which is their ‘opposite’) there is a ‘left wing bias’ – so here there ‘must’ be the opposite, ‘right wing’ bias…  This seemed to me to be both a twisted form of reasoning, lack of an ability to assess veracity, as well as an indication of undeserved self-deprecation.  Perhaps it was a kind of self-put-down:  considering one-self unworthy of actually asessing the situation using their own reasoning an therefore refusing to even try.  And I thought this was potentially dangerous….

It seems to me that this, or similar, faulty reasoning has permeated a lot of the learning institutions in ‘the West’ – that this ‘attitude’ is actively being taught in schools to our kids, teens and young adults.  And, it has been taught since at least the 1980s!

This started me thinking about how this attitude may have become come to be in the first place – why was this type of mis-reasoning never debunked by the intelligent people who were being taught it?  And then it occurred to me:  people will NOT question something IF they do not realize there is something to question!!!

Perhaps I am confusing things a little….  Let me explain this by going over a conversation I had with one of my high-school English teachers.  He was a 60’s hippy – all grown up and teaching American Literature now.  As we went over interpretations of differen novels, it became clear he was fiercly pro-peace (all war is evil, nothing is worth going to war over) and that he regarded the Soviet Union and the United States as pretty much ‘equivalent’ – economically as well as morally.  But, his in-born sense of fairness demanded that since he is part of ‘the West’, it is his duty to be critical of ‘the West’ – just as we, emigrants from ‘the East’ are critical of ‘the East’.

He and I had many interesting discussions – inside the class, as well as outside of it.  I’m afraid my inability to properly perceive ‘social boundaries’ meant that I asked some pretty direct questions of him – but he was genuinely a very nice guy and would discuss them with me in the spirit in which I asked them.

If this teacher is indicative of how the attitudes formed in other people of his generation, I don’t know.  However, it is interesting to entertain the possibility that he might… 

Part of the ‘culture’ of ‘the West’ in the decade plus following WWII was a significant amount of propaganda against Communism.  This went along with some pretty serious abuses of human rights – McCarthy and all that.  But that culture was also imbued with very positive things, like ‘patriotism’ and the knowledge that as horrible as war is, it is necessary to fight it sometimes…

It is one of those things we, people, tend to do:  we tend to bundle ideas together.  In this case, the ‘counter-revolution’ which happened – the ‘hippy movement’ – bundled the ideas of ‘freedom=good’  ‘McCarthyism is against freedom’ along with ‘patriotism’ and ‘necessary self-scacrifice in war’, ‘McCarthyism=right wing’, ‘facism=right wing’, ‘facism caused war’….  you see where I’m going with this. 

The Hippies (and, really, many pre-Hippies…Hippies were sort of the ‘trailing edge’ of this trend, but I don’t know the proper term to apply) rebelled against ‘the zeitgeist’ of their parent’s society – the good along with the bad!  And they were so busy rebelling against ‘the bad bits’ that they never noticed they did not reason things out…and that there even were any ‘good bits’ in their parent’s culture.

In other words, many of these people ‘bundled together’ all their partents’ era stood for.  They saw ‘rebelling against government control’ and ‘fighting for freedom’ to be the same thing as ‘rebelling against right wing ideas and people who espouse them’.  It never even occurred to them to question whether this reasoning is sound.  And since it did not occurr to them to question this, they never did.

These people then became the teachers of the next generation!

Thanks to the demographic ‘waves’, people who grew up on the leading edge (agewise) of this cultural wave have filled all the vacancies in Universtities and Colleges that were getting ready for the swelling numbers of the ‘boomers’ and they made sure to drum these ideas into the students’ heads. 

You want to question ‘government authority’?  Then question right-wing ideas!!!

Simply put, they failed to differentiate between the ’cause’ and the ‘symptom’:  since they saw ‘opression’ come from the ‘right wing’, they eqauted the two and did not reason any further.  This then became their entrenched dogma.

And they are still there, still teaching these same ideas… and they are senior enough to be in charge of approving the hiring of new professors.  Predictably, they select ones who think like they do.  After all, they must ‘guard’ the ‘institutions of learning’ against falling under the influence of ‘right wing McCarthyists’!!!

So, how did my conversations with my teacher go?  Rather well.  I walked away with a deeper understanding of ‘the West’ and its ‘internal struggle’.  But, I think I also had an impact on my teacher.  I recall that during one of our last conversations (the year was almost out) we were talking about the Soviet Union’s military backing of some of the most brutal revolutions in Africa. 

My teacher was dismissive of my criticism, saying it did not matter if the ‘new’ country accepted help from the USA or the USSR.  In his words:  ‘When you are hungry, it does not matter who offers you a steak.  You don’t ask about their politics, you eat the stake!’

To which I replied that the USA spends billions of dollars on foreign aid – a lot of it in Africa.  Sure, they do some bad things – nobody says they don’t.  But, they also bring in vaccinations, rice, beans – and books and teachers.  The Soviet Union also spends money on foreing aid in Africa.  But they never send food or books or medicine.  Instead of handing the Africans ‘a steak’, they hand them a gun and say:  ‘Your neighbour has a steak.  Go take it!’

All my teacher said was:  ‘I had not thought of that…’

The origin and nature of human rights

This is a most excellent video from StopAndLook which explores the origin and nature of our rights.

The author expresses the concepts eloquently and clearly:  human rights, at any given time, are what people agree they are.  Reaching a concensus is difficult. 

The origin of rights determines their nature.  This video explores the difference between the position that ‘rights’ originate with each individual versus the position that rights originate with the social group.

 

Though it is phrased differently, it is very simlar to the different attitudes captured in ‘Common Law’ versus ‘Civil Law’ legal codes:  very roughly, the ‘Common Law’ would be more closely aligned with the position that ‘rights’ originate with the individual whild ‘Civil Law’ is more congruent with the point of view that ‘rights’ originate from ‘the state’.

What is really important here is the difference in attitude between the citizen and the State.  A little bit of this difference in attitude is described in my post about the difference between a ‘tax cut’ and a ‘tax rebate’:  in a tax cut, the attitude is that the money is yours, and the government is able to accomplis the necessary ‘common goals’ using less of your money while in a tax rebate, the attitude is that the money is the government’s and that they have decided to give you a raise in your allowance.

This attitude, in my never-humble-opinion, is key in how the society evolves because it forms the expectations of the citizens towards the government, and vice versa. 

And this attitude is one of the ‘threads’ in this great big ‘knot’…

‘The Big Picture’ – terms and definitions

It is important – when embarking upon a long and convoluted description of something – to make sure that everyone following the discussion has a common understanding of what is being discussed.  This may sound fatuous, but – it is very common for people to use one word in several ways, to have a very different understanding of a principle or concept from what the speaker has.  Such a discussion will not be productive…

So, I would like to start by explaining what I mean by some of the words and concepts which I plan to bring into focus.

This post will continue to be updated as more posts are added.

 

Freedoms vs. Accomodations

Absolute freedom and the necessity to accomodate others if we wish to interact with them.  ‘Free Speech’ is the means by which we can arrive at a workable balance.

 

What does ‘Freedom of Speech’ mean?

This is just a clarification of what is meant by these words in the context of this discussion.

 

The origin and nature of human rights

This most excellent YouTube video (1st of 5-part series) by StopAndLook.  It contrasts the view that rights are inherent to the individual vs the view that rights are given to people by the state.  This results in very different attitudes (mindsets) between the state and citizen – and I contrast it to my post ‘Common law vs. civil law.  To further demonstrate the difference in attitudes, I also mention by ‘Tax cut’ vs. ‘tax rebate’  post.

Freedoms vs. Accomodations

This is part of the ‘Big Picture’ series.

‘Absolute Freedom’ can only be achieved by a person who is absolutely alone.  When a person has no others to interact with, they are free to do absolutely anything they wish – and they are absolutely responsible for the consequences of their actions.

What I mean by this is that if this person takes foolish or reckless actions – they are free to do so.  But, nobody will help them, as there is nobody else there.

Humans are social creatures – we build communities.  In order to get along, we agree to give up some of our freedoms willingly because we have made the judgment that it is in our best interest to do this.  So far so good.

Now, we have to find the balance between what we are willing to give up and what we are not willing to give up.  In other words, we have started a whole complex ‘freedom/accomodation’ balancing act.

After all, even if we give too many of our rights up willingly, make too many accomodations (or accomodate too far), we will feel oppressed.  (An example to illustrate this:  a young man willingly gives up his career to move into a different area because he wishes to be with the woman he loves.  Even though this decision was done willingly and happily, over time, he may regret the lost opportunities and begin to resent the woman he loves…  It may not even be a conscious thing – but it could fester, eventually put a strain on the relationship.)  

Obviously, this balance between one’s freedoms on the one hand and willingness to accomodate the community is not the same for every person…  Which is exactly why we have to be able to talk about it – openly and without fear. 

It is only through open and honest discourse that we can re-balance ‘freedoms’ versus ‘accomodations’.   And it is only by voicing our concerns that we can realize that the current ‘balance’ is oppressive.  Every society changes and continuously evolves – and as it does, this re-balancing will be necessary!

This cannot be accomplished without the freedom of each and every person to speak their mind, openly and without fear.  Therefore, I think the most fundamental freedom – the one which is key in maintaining and re-balancing all the other ones, is the Freedom of Speech.

What does ‘Freedom of Speech’ mean?

This is part of the ‘Big Picture’ series.

Each and every person must be free to speak their mind, seriously or in jest, regardless of who they are or what their ideas are.  I am fully willing to accept that spreading falsehoods or breaking confidentiality agreements can and should be prosecuted in civil court – that is the appropriate and necessary consequence  of this right to speak freely.  However, the key here it that is is actionable by the injured party, in civil court – not by anyone else, anywhere. 

There is a second part to this ‘freedom of speech issue’ – every person ought to have ‘freedom of speech’ on both the output and the input side, so to speak.  The ‘input side’, of course, is the ‘access to other people’s speech’.  Because, if a country were to allow each and every citizen to speak freely – but only in sound-proof cells where nobody can hear their voice – the citizens may be able to say what they wish, but it is not ‘freedom of speech’.

So, in my definition, ‘freedom of speech’ also includes the ‘freedom to be heard’ and perhaps most importantly the ‘freedom to hear others’ – regardless of what they may say.  As in, I get to choose whom I listen to – nobody else may make that choice for me!!!  To me, this is an essential component of ‘freedom of speech’.

Of course, because speech is the means of re-balancing freedoms vs. accomodations, those who wish to control the way a society evolves will allways seek to control speech!