scotttswan
Registered
- Joined
- Apr 16, 2010
- Messages
- 3,715
- Likes
- 3,542
OK, Frenchie and Ejcot, have fun with fugazzeta: http://www.planetajo...il - 25-04-2014
Fugazzeta isn't a pizza, it lacks tomato sauce!
Its not terrible though.
OK, Frenchie and Ejcot, have fun with fugazzeta: http://www.planetajo...il - 25-04-2014
Something is not right here: Joe is taking awfully long to respond to this thread.Fugazzeta isn't a pizza, it lacks tomato sauce!
Its not terrible though.
Something is not right here: Joe is taking awfully long to respond to this thread.
I understand your fears. But there are too many in the states that see net control/censorship as a taboo. I doubt that these fears will realize. However there may be some speed limit charges for bandwidth hogs and content providers that want to profit from the built out infrastructure. Vigilance is always in the hands of the consumer.Seldom does fate, (or random chance), offer us such a clear contrast on two successive days.
In the USA, the Federal Communications Commission has just issued new rules that utterly destroy net neutrality, and deliver the Web into the hands of the rich and powerful, through the corporations they control.
While in Brazil, the Senate has passed an Internet Constitution, what amounts to an Internet Bill of Rights, clearly setting forth the rights, duties, and responsibilities of both users and providers. And the NETMundial summit, which wound up yesterday, may well have set forth the future of the Internet.
No, I'm not blind to Brazil's problems, but the trends are in opposite directions. The South is striving to improve, granted only on the principle of "two steps forward, one step back", but still trending onward and upward. While the North seems locked into a downward spiral of war, oppression, tyranny, and death.
Or sailing at Cordoba´s seaHe's hiking in the mountains outside Rosario and forgot to take any of his Apple devices with him.
He's hiking in the mountains outside Rosario and forgot to take any of his Apple devices with him.
Or sailing at Cordoba´s sea
Steve, except this is not just about the USA, as was your ongoing polemic against Obamacare, which had virtually no relevance to Argentina.
This is about South America, and vitally important to Argentina. This is about a net conference in Argentina's biggest neighbour.
I watched the video (which sounds exactly like something one of Ayn's fans would say and all would cheer) but there was no mention of Argentina.
Argentine was not mentioned in the article you linked to, either.
Argentina was, however, mentioned in this one:
http://panampost.com...nto-crosshairs/
I found it with a goolge seach of three words: "Agentina, Net, Neutrality."
And it brings up one very interesting point:
"The Argentina Internet Policy Commission (CAPI), according to resolution No. 13 in the Official Gazette, will operate under the Secretariat of Communications and be self-regulated."
The words "self regulated" sound like a contradiction in terms in Argentina. Vamos a ver.
PS: While my "ongoing polemic" about Obamacare has little to do with Argentine people, it might actually have some degree of relevance to expats in Argentina who may return to the USA in the next few years and not be able find the kind of affordable and reasonably priced health care that they have come to expect in Argentina.
The Argentina Internet Policy Commission (CAPI), according to resolution No. 13 in the Official Gazette, will operate under the Secretariat of Communications and be self-regulated. The CAPI will then provide a formal regulatory plan within the new cyber paradigm launched by Brazil through its approval of the Internet Civil Framework, nicknamed the “Constitution of the Internet.”