Web Inventor Tells Congress: Net Neutrality a Priority
March 1st, 2007 by tkarrSir Tim Berners-Lee, the inventor of the World Wide Web told U.S. House members Thursday that protecting Net Neutrality should be one of their top priorities.
Testifying today before the House Subcommittee on Telecommunications and the Internet, Sir Tim called upon Congress to ensure that the explosion of innovations happening on the Web not be slowed by limits imposed by Internet gatekeepers.
Net Neutrality ‘Obvious’ |
His prescription for the Web’s continued success includes the preservation of Net Neutrality and the thwarting of new royalty systems that would “constrain what people can read or publish online.”
Net Neutrality an ‘Obvious Requirement’
Rep. Greg Walden (R-Oregon) asked Berners-Lee to prioritize the one or two policy priorities that Congress should solve in the short term.
“I hope that the Net Neutrality thing is a short-term thing,” Sir Tim replied. “In most of the world people regard Net Neutrality as such an obvious requirement that I hope [the solution] will be short term.”
“The Web took off in all its glory because it was a royalty-free infrastructure,” Sir Tim said, reiterating his earlier warnings against threats by phone and cable companies to impose new tolls on Web traffic.
Freeing Up the Connection
“Non-discriminatory Internet provision is very important for a society based on the World Wide Web. I think that is very important,” Sir Tim said in response to Rep. Anna Eshoo (D-California), who asked for an explanation of how an absence of non-discrimination rules would impact the development of the Web.
“The communication medium is so important to society we have to give it a special treatment … I will always be in favor of erring on the side of keeping the medium to be the blank sheet — of allowing me, if I connect to the Internet, to connect to everyone else.”
In June 2006, Sir Lee said that he was concerned about threats by phone and cable companies to constrain access to Web sites that don’t pay their extortionate fees:
“When I invented the Web, I didn’t have to ask anyone’s permission,” he said. “Now, hundreds of millions of people are using it freely. I am worried that that is going end in the USA.”
During his testimony today Sir Lee, who is now based in the US as a senior researcher at MIT, expanded upon these concerns from the perspective of a Web-based business:
“If we had a situation in which the U.S. had serious flaws in its Net Neutrality … and [a country in] Europe did have Net Neutrality and I were trying to start a company, then I would be very tempted to move.”
The Human Web
Subcommittee chair Ed Markey (D-Mass.) asked Sir Lee to elaborate on his concerns about royalty-free proposals for the Web and how such royalties might have affected his work had they been a part of his original design for the Web.
Lee replied:
“Chairman Markey let me assure you that if I had charged from the word go, per click, the World Wide Web would not have taken off at all. We would not be here talking about it.
“Had there been a fee there would have been no investment. The investment people made in the Web was made by volunteers in their garages late at night. … I myself was allowed by my boss to do it in spare time. People did it in their ten percent time. And if there had been any pay-per-click, if there had been any form of fee, they would not have gone anywhere near it.”
>> Read Subcommittee Vice Chair Mike Doyle’s opening remarks





March 1st, 2007 at 6:27 pm
[…] post by tkarr and powered by Img […]
March 1st, 2007 at 6:28 pm
[…] post by tkarr and a wordpress plugin by […]
March 1st, 2007 at 10:50 pm
[…] post by Web Messenger » Web Inventor Tells Congress: Net Neutrality a Top Priority and plugin by Elliott […]
March 2nd, 2007 at 12:16 am
[…] post by Web Messenger » Web Inventor Tells Congress: Net Neutrality a Top Priority and powered by Img […]
March 3rd, 2007 at 12:08 am
[…] Web Inventor Tells Congress: Net Neutrality a Priority […]
June 19th, 2007 at 6:00 pm
I fear that keeping the net nuetral will be next to impossible as long as companies can control who they deal with and who they do not.
A couple of years ago the company I was with for my hosting was adversely affected by two Internet Backbone companies that decided to stop passing traffic between the two systems.
As long as there are people involve at all levels, the chances that egos and personalities getting in the way become quite troublesome to say the least.
These two companies made it impossible for me to connect to my own websites from my home. This affected millions of people. What if I was running a mission critial website or the use of Internet phone systems was interupted because of their own interpersonal issues.
I think in a net neutral world this would not likely happen, as all parties could allow the internet to work, and not worry about how they can get the little guy to pay for it.
September 24th, 2007 at 4:34 pm
My main question is why is Tim Berners-Lee not leading the Internet Oversight Committee in Congress? It would make sense to put the pioneers at the helm - not politicians.
I would love to see an updated article since this congressional hearing to see what has happened in congress since. It seems that cable companies are already gearing up to enact the tiered structure.
Thank you for taking the time to keep this at the forefront of news.