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'Net at Risk' Tonight on PBS

My buddy Rick Karr did this great report for Moyers on America:

The Net at Risk

The future of the Internet is up for grabs. Last year, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) effectively eliminated net neutrality rules, which ensured that every content creator on the Internet-from big-time media concerns to backroom bloggers-had equal opportunity to make their voice heard. Now, large and powerful corporations are lobbying Washington to turn the World Wide Web into what critics call a "toll road," threatening the equitability that has come to define global democracy's newest forum. Yet the public knows little about what's happening behind closed doors on Capitol Hill.

Some activists describe the ongoing debate this way: A small number of mega-media giants owns much of the content and controls the delivery of content on radio and television and in the press; if we let them take control of the Internet as well, immune from government regulation, who will pay the price? Their opponents say that the best way to encourage Internet innovation and technological advances is to let the market-not the federal government-determine the shape of the system.

"The genius of the Internet was that it made the First Amendment a living document again for millions of Americans," says Robert McChesney, a media scholar and activist and co-author of OUR MEDIA, NOT THEIRS. "The decisions that we're going be making ... are probably going to set our entire communication system, and, really, our entire society, on a course that it won't be able to change for generations."

With the MOYERS ON AMERICA series, we inaugurate Citizens Class, an extensive, interactive curriculum designed to encourage and facilitate public discourse on the issues raised in the series. The workshop features multimedia discussions, reference materials on the key perspectives presented in the program, and questions for further reflection-all designed to stimulate deep and thoughtful community dialogue. Interested? Check it out. In search of specific information? Just browsing? Select topics below to explore a range of issues, from the new digital divide, voices from the debate over net neutrality, to ways to find out who owns your local media.

It's on PBS tonight. Don't miss it!

Comments

good thing i don't really *neeeeeeed* the internet...

lol..i think. saying one doesn't need the internet is like saying one doesn't need transportation. one can survive without it as long as someone has it. 'i want my mtv' or internet...lol

seriously -- what can we-all do about this nonsense? like, i don't neeeeed my land-line, either. or cable tv. i could stand to catch up on some reading, and my friends have forgotten what my handwriting looks like. but can individuals make a dent in this evil plan of big business? if the internet goes the way of radio, and we're facing the equivalent of a 'clearchannel' future for the internet, the internet will be, at best, unusable; at worst, useless.

Like... what I am really worried about is what's going to happen to porn? What is going to happen to all those 12 second video clip samples? Everybody knows that's where all the bandwidth is getting used up. People might actually have to start going to the video store again. Maybe glossy mags will come back.

i no longer have a land line. i really don't care if anyone recognizes my hand writing(i just want them to understand my words)i get money, pay bills,research laws an investers,renew my drivers licence and vehicle reg,pay my taxes,write my mother in fla and much more. all from my livingroom while i watch tv. i guess i am more concerned with saving resources than some. and porn has survived millenia...lol. all we can do in our imperfect lives is try to improve...

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