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La coalizione americana Save The Internet!, che rappresenta gia' milioni di cittadini americani, si basa sulla convinzione che Internet e' un motore cruciale per la crescita economica e per la libera circolazione delle idee. L'obiettivo di quella coalizione e' di fare pressioni sul Congresso americano affinche' preservi la Network Neutrality, da considerare come il Primo Emendamento di Internet, e cioe' assicurando che Internet rimanga aperta alle nuove idee, all'innovazione e al progresso.

SaveTheInternet.it intende ovviamente unirsi all'iniziativa americana e adoperarsi anche in Italia, con l'obiettivo di promuovere una maggiore sensibilita' in rete sulla criticita' della Neutralita' della Rete, e anche una maggiore consapevolezza da parte della politica e delle istituzioni nazionali affinche' si attivino con ogni mezzo utile per preservare la natura libera e facilmente accessibile di Internet, come straordinario motore economico e strumento di democrazia.

SaveTheInternet.it e' aperta a chiunque abbia a cuore Internet e desideri che possa svilupparsi sulla base delle stesse premesse che oggi sono minacciate. In Italia come negli USA, le adesioni possono venire da persone, semplici utenti e professionisti, con qualunque esperienza e opinioni alle spalle. A tutti SaveTheInternet promette un'occasione di approfondimento e di aggregazione, e la soddisfazione di essere "parte attiva" di Internet.

SaveTheInternet.it nasce per iniziativa volontaristca, e prevede un percorso di crescita progressiva: il primo obiettivo e' stato raggiunto (settembre 2007) con la "comparsa" online attraverso questo tumblelog, ovvero un aggregazione di contributi su questo tema. Se vuoi commentare, spostati sulla fonte originale.



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Questo blog non è una testata giornalistica, in quanto viene aggiornato senza nessun tipo di periodicità predefinita. Pertanto, non può essere considerato un prodotto editoriale, ai sensi della legge 62 del 7 marzo 2001. Le immagini inserite in questo blog sono tratte in massima parte da Internet; alcuni post sono effetto di reblogging; qualora la loro pubblicazione violasse eventuali diritti d'autore, vogliate comunicarlo alla redazione.

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Free Speech Shouldn’t End at Verizon’s Door

Verizon got caught blocking pro-choice text messages on Wednesday. The phone company backpedaled on Thursday and lifted the ban. It was a simple glitch a Verizon spokesman declared, and they felt really, really bad about it.

Today, Verizon is in full damage control, hoping this cloud will blow over in time for its next assault on free speech.

But apologies aren’t cutting it anymore. Verizon’s censorship of the national pro-choice organization NARAL is just the latest example in a laundry list of phone company efforts to block, filter or interfere with the free flow of information on cell phones and the Internet.

Dingell

Rep. Dingell: Verizon must stop discriminating

In August, AT&T censored a live webcast of a Pearl Jam concert just as lead singer Eddie Vedder criticized President Bush. AT&T said this was a glitch and then scrambled to cover their tracks.

Earlier in the year, both Verizon and AT&T were caught handing over private customer phone records to the National Security Agency. The phone companies first denied it and then started a secret campaign with the White House to gain immunity from any lawsuits.

Getting Our Message Through

This pattern of abuse shows that powerful phone companies cannot be trusted to safeguard our basic freedoms. The democratic principles of free speech and open communication are too important to be entrusted to corporate gatekeepers. Whether it’s liberal or conservative, Democrat or Republican, pro-choice or pro-gun, the phone companies can’t pick and choose what messages get through.

Thankfully, a few leaders in Congress have had it with phony apologies from phone companies. Rep. John Dingell, chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, reacted to Verizon’s ban – and reversal – with strong words: “I am particularly concerned by [Verizon’s] ability and apparent willingness to interfere when customers choose to receive legitimate and legal communications from an organization…I ask Verizon to decisively state that it will no longer discriminate against any legal content its customers request from any organization.”

Dorgan

Sen. Dorgan: Protect network neutrality

Rep. Ed Markey of Massachusetts said that consumers not phone companies elect to receive wireless text messages, “so the blocking of such messages by a corporate gatekeeper was deeply concerning.” Markey urged Verizon and other phone companies “to ensure that their company policies do not interfere with the delivery of any lawful content, nor discriminate on the basis of who the sender of such messages may be.”

“Verizon may have reversed its initial decision in this case, and I’m glad they did. But the fact that they were willing and able to take their initial action is very troublesome,” Sen. Byron Dorgan of North Dakota told eWeek. “The network service providers often claim that the effort to ensure network neutrality is a solution in search of a problem, but this is fresh evidence that the problem is real and with us now,” Dorgan said. “We need to protect network neutrality by law.”

We Need Policies Not Apologies

Indeed, the blocking of text messages and interfering with Web traffic is perfectly legal under the current rules – a regulatory offspring of some of the most intense phone company lobbying in history.

Censorship by AT&T and Verizon shows us what we can expect in a future if these lobbyists are successful – and network gatekeepers lock up their full control of both Internet and wireless markets.

Much is at stake. This week, Verizon squelched free speech. Before they’re forced to apologize for another glitch, we need to put in place laws that protect our rights not only to speak out on the streets, but on the Internet, on cell phones — everywhere.

(via Net’s shared items in Google Reader)