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The future of net neutrality What’s at stake for Canadians...

The Future of Net Neutrality: What's at stake for Canadians

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Page 1: The Future of Net Neutrality: What's at stake for Canadians

The future of net neutrality

What’s at stake for Canadians...

Page 2: The Future of Net Neutrality: What's at stake for Canadians

StopSpying.ca● ~200,000 Canadians spoke

out online against Bill C-30.

● Would have given warrantless access to your private data through a government-controlled online registry (i.e. open to threats by hackers)

Page 3: The Future of Net Neutrality: What's at stake for Canadians

StoptheMeter.ca● 500,000+ Canadians spoke

out against metered Internet access

● The Prime Minister ordered the CRTC back to the drawing board

● The CRTC reversed its decision, allowing independent ISPs to survive

Page 4: The Future of Net Neutrality: What's at stake for Canadians

- Telecommunications Act: forbids telecoms from “controlling the content or influencing the meaning or purpose” of communications on its network.

- In 2009, after revelations that ISPs were controlling content on their networks (i.e. blocking access to blogs by the union during a labour dispute, throttling the CBC’s “Next Great Prime Minister” show) the CRTC decided to look into the issue of “net neutrality”

Page 5: The Future of Net Neutrality: What's at stake for Canadians

Public opinion on net neutrality- During the 2009 hearing, over 11,000 people submitted

a letter to the CRTC via OM.ca - this was unprecedented at the time

- Over 1300 people wrote their own letters to the CRTC in support of net neutrality

- ⅔ of Canadians disagreed with allowing ISPs to charge extra fees / create a “fast lane” (Leger)

- 86% agreed with keeping the Internet open (Ipsos-Reid)

Page 6: The Future of Net Neutrality: What's at stake for Canadians

The CRTC ruled in favour of net neutrality - but with a complaints-based system.

Excellent, but incomplete...

Page 7: The Future of Net Neutrality: What's at stake for Canadians

What the end user experiences...

but they often don’t know why.

Page 8: The Future of Net Neutrality: What's at stake for Canadians

We need audits, & penalties for net neutrality violations (including special deals & data exemptions for ISPs own content) - basically, if net neutrality is a spectrum, we need more of it, not less.

Page 9: The Future of Net Neutrality: What's at stake for Canadians

If you’re slow on the Internet, you basically don’t exist.

Big gatekeepers have the ability to keep you from your audience if you can’t afford to pay.

Page 10: The Future of Net Neutrality: What's at stake for Canadians

Threats to net neutrality are threats to democracy- A non-neutral Internet harms public

interest advocates like OpenMedia.- When government willfully disregards

public opinion, that further erodes faith in our democracy.

- The next iteration of democracy -- a better democracy -- will depend on the development of innovative online tools, and the ability to get these tools to Internet users.

Page 11: The Future of Net Neutrality: What's at stake for Canadians

Agora - Used by the Spanish Green Party to crowdsource votes on a transparency bill

DemocracyOS - Used by the Argentinian Internet Party, & by Tunisian activists for input on the new Tunisian constitution

Page 12: The Future of Net Neutrality: What's at stake for Canadians
Page 13: The Future of Net Neutrality: What's at stake for Canadians

Democracy <3 The Open InternetThe evolution of these ideas and technologies (which are inextricably bound together) are threatened by a non-neutral Internet.

Internet users should be empowered to decide - and they overwhelmingly support net neutrality, and the great potential to democratize our politics and culture that it brings with it.