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- Title
THE NEVER-WAS-NEUTRAL NET AND WHY INFORMED END USERS CAN END THE NET NEUTRALITY DEBATES.
- Authors
Has, Douglas A.
- Abstract
The article focuses on the net neutrality debate on end users through analyzing Internet history, testing monopolist theories against Internet markets, and exploring important economic arguments. It highlights both the definition of the term and the positions of the three commentators including professor Lawrence Lessig, professor Tim Wu, and doctor Barbara van Schewick. It describes the historical and technological non-neutrality on the Internet and the history of past neutrality. The evolution of advance non-neutral service differentiation tools used to operate networks and the modern Internet market's responses to access provider behavior are also discussed.
- Subjects
INTERNET laws; LESSIG, Lawrence, 1961-; WU, Tim, ca. 1973-; VAN Schewick, Barbara; INTERNET marketing; COMPUTER networks; INTERNET fraud; COMPUTER users; HISTORY of the Internet
- Publication
Berkeley Technology Law Journal, 2007, Vol 22, Issue 4, p1565
- ISSN
1086-3818
- Publication type
Article