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Orwell1984

@fdn.com
reply to oliphant
Re: Telus within their rights

My point was that they thought it was important enough to make it an amendment. Not that the amendment applies. My original statement stands. Censorship is bad no matter who is doing it.


bamboox

join:2000-12-15
Renton, WA
said by Orwell1984:

Censorship is bad no matter who is doing it.
Is all censorship bad? Is censoring child porn bad? Is it bad if I prevent my child from view pornography?


oliphant
I Have 8 Boobies
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join:2004-11-26
Corona, CA

reply to Orwell1984
said by Orwell1984:

My point was that they thought it was important enough to make it an amendment. Not that the amendment applies. My original statement stands. Censorship is bad no matter who is doing it.
In your opinion maybe but the Founders also saw personal property rights important too.


Orwell1984

@fdn.com

reply to bamboox
If you limit what your child sees then that is good parenting.If you try to limit what my child sees then you are a censor.I won't argue the merits of censoring child porn it is too emotional of an issue, but it is already being used to further harass legal adult porn sites.


oliphant
I Have 8 Boobies
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join:2004-11-26
Corona, CA
Good. Private individuals or companies exercising their Constitutionally granted private property rights is a great thing.


bamboox

join:2000-12-15
Renton, WA

1 edit
reply to Orwell1984
said by Orwell1984:

If you limit what your child sees then that is good parenting.
So you're saying censorship can be good in this one case?


Orwell1984

@fdn.com
No, I am saying being a good parent is not censorship.


Orwell1984

@fdn.com

reply to oliphant
But the information being censored is not Telus's property.This is not like a newspaper deciding editorial policies.This is a company interfering with the ability of one group to express an opinion and another group to listen.The network may belong to Telus but the information carried on does not.


vpoko
Premium
join:2003-07-03
Jamaica Plain, MA

said by Orwell1984:

But the information being censored is not Telus's property.This is not like a newspaper deciding editorial policies.This is a company interfering with the ability of one group to express an opinion and another group to listen.The network may belong to Telus but the information carried on does not.
I agree, but the proper way to enforce this would be to convince the other backbone providers to revoke backbone access to ISP's who do not provide content-neutral access to the network. Hell, what if the union site is making money off of banner ads and Telus is costing the union (who is a customer of another ISP) ad-revenue. Of course in areas where there is no competition (a monopoly or duopoly) the government might have an interest in forcing ISP's to comply, but I think that the free market IS equipped to handle this kind of problem where a free-market exists.


oliphant
I Have 8 Boobies
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join:2004-11-26
Corona, CA

reply to Orwell1984
said by Orwell1984:

But the information being censored is not Telus's property.This is not like a newspaper deciding editorial policies.This is a company interfering with the ability of one group to express an opinion and another group to listen.The network may belong to Telus but the information carried on does not.
They own the service as such they determine which data crosses their privately owned service. In addition you don't subscribe to the data, only the service. Thus your only choice is to subscribe to the service or not.


oliphant
I Have 8 Boobies
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join:2004-11-26
Corona, CA

reply to Orwell1984
said by Orwell1984:

But the information being censored is not Telus's property.This is not like a newspaper deciding editorial policies.This is a company interfering with the ability of one group to express an opinion and another group to listen.The network may belong to Telus but the information carried on does not.
So what. Both groups are private. Telus as a private enterprise has no obligation to aid another private group in promoting whatever their message is.

If that group wants to get out their message, let them go stand on a street corner. Let them go buy advertising space on radio or TV. Or better yet let them start their own ISP.

Telus in no way shape or form has the obligation to provide the ability of any group to express their opinion or to allow any other group to listen.

The "listener" has only 1 choice. To subscribe or not to subscribe. EVERY other decision belongs to the company or individual that owns the service.


vpoko
Premium
join:2003-07-03
Jamaica Plain, MA
Obviously this would be governed by their contract, but do you think that other backbone providers might have a reason to be pissed? Generally the backbones are supposed to provide unfetered access to each other.

ross

join:2000-08-16
·Digizip

reply to oliphant
said by oliphant See Profile:

said by Orwell1984:

But the information being censored is not Telus's property.This is not like a newspaper deciding editorial policies.This is a company interfering with the ability of one group to express an opinion and another group to listen.The network may belong to Telus but the information carried on does not.
They own the service as such they determine which data crosses their privately owned service. In addition you don't subscribe to the data, only the service. Thus your only choice is to subscribe to the service or not.
Accepting your argument would mean the telephone company should have the right to censor what can be said over the phone. SBC, and the other Telcos, could cut off service to the CWA, or to other customers who were CWA members, or CWA staff, or any other entity, if they wanted to prevent them from promulgating or disseminating information amongst themselves, or to their membership during times of labor negotiations/strikes. In fact, accepting your argument means that SBC and the Telcos could do it for any reason, to anyone, any time they felt it in their interest.

Simply stunning!


bamboox

join:2000-12-15
Renton, WA

reply to Orwell1984
said by Orwell1984:

No, I am saying being a good parent is not censorship.
Doesn't that really depend on your definition of censorship? Telus could just as easily argue what they're doing is not censorship. It's protecting "protecting privacy rights". Or "protecting business interests".

yac898

join:2002-12-06
Stony Plain, AB

reply to oliphant
telus is limiting their users from accessing an outside isp / webhosting company. they can do this anytime they want, for any reason they want. they have just proved that. do YOU, would YOU want to/continue to do business with TELUS knowing you may only be getting the information they deem fit for your consumption?....


KrK
Heavy Artillery For The Little Guy
Premium
join:2000-01-17
Tulsa, OK
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reply to oliphant
said by oliphant See Profile:

In your opinion maybe but the Founders also saw personal property rights important too.
I'm sure they did.... but it's certain our corporations don't care about our personal property rights... only their own interests.

This *is* a slippery slope, and should be exposed to public scrutiny and condemned now. Last thing we need is "information providers" deciding to block access to information that they feel threatens them. Imagine if the Telephone company for example refused to connect calls to their competitors, or refused to provide them service in the first place. How about Cable companies that block all information about Satellite companies, or ISP's who block and firewall all competitors products and sites.

This is a bad precedent to allow to take hold.
--
"Regulatory capitalism is when companies invest in lawyers, lobbyists, and politicians, instead of plant, people, and customer service." - former FCC Chairman William Kennard (A real FCC Chairman, unlike the current Corporate Spokesperson in the job!)


oliphant
I Have 8 Boobies
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join:2004-11-26
Corona, CA

reply to ross
said by ross See Profile:

Accepting your argument would mean the telephone company should have the right to censor what can be said over the phone... -clipped-
No because they're governed by tariffs. By being granted the monopoly they AGREED to certain terms laid out by the State government. An ISP is in no way shape or form anything like a telephone company.

So by your argument, Dish Network is censoring The Anime Channel because they choose not to carry it.

Simply stunning!


oliphant
I Have 8 Boobies
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join:2004-11-26
Corona, CA


1 edit
reply to KrK
said by KrK See Profile:

said by oliphant See Profile:

In your opinion maybe but the Founders also saw personal property rights important too.
I'm sure they did.... but it's certain our corporations don't care about our personal property rights... only their own interests.

This *is* a slippery slope, and should be exposed to public scrutiny and condemned now. Last thing we need is "information providers" deciding to block access to information that they feel threatens them. Imagine if the Telephone company for example refused to connect calls to their competitors, or refused to provide them service in the first place. How about Cable companies that block all information about Satellite companies, or ISP's who block and firewall all competitors products and sites.

This is a bad precedent to allow to take hold.
No it's not. Those aren't OUR corporations. They're the stockholder's corporations. They are private industries, private property. And again, the telephone company is in no way shape or form similar to an ISP. The telephone company is a government granted monopoly and as such the telephone companies agree to terms laid out by the government in advance.

Is Dish Network a censor because they don't carry The Anime Network? Of course not. They are a private company and can pick and choose what programming they allow and what they do not allow just as an ISP can determine what traffic to allow and which not to allow so long as it doesn't violate existing law (eg anti-trust laws).

The 1st Amendment does not apply to private industry. Never has and never should. They can do whatever they want. You as a subscriber have a single choice: To subscribe or not to subscribe. EVERY other choice is theirs. You may not like it, but that is the consequence of property rights. The service is THEIR property, THEY determine how it is run and what they permit.


vpoko
Premium
join:2003-07-03
Jamaica Plain, MA

reply to oliphant
said by oliphant See Profile:

Simply stunning!
I have to take exeption with your continued use of the words "simply stunning" to describe the poster's thoughts. I wouldn't normally, but since you gave "scares me to death" such a workover I thought it only fitting to point out your stupid hyperboles as well.


oliphant
I Have 8 Boobies
Premium
join:2004-11-26
Corona, CA


4 edits
Perhaps you should read the entire thread before replying. I was being similarly sarcastic.

»Telus within their rights

Nothing about this is stunning. Nothing about this should scare anyone. The only amazing thing about this is that anyone would think the sky is falling and would make such a big deal about it. It's a concept that even the most simple minded can follow. They own the service, they say how it is run. If you own the service you can say how it is run. Don't like it...cancel.

Viva la Free Enterprise.
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