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Muerte del Internet libre - Canadá será caso de la prueba
Martes 22 de julio de 2008 Discuta este informe en los foros de RINF > En los 15 años pasados o así pues, como sociedad hemos tenido acceso a más información que siempre antes en historia moderna debido a el Internet. Hay aproximadamente 1 mil millones usuarios del Internet en el mundo y de estos usuarios puede comunicarse teóricamente en tiempo real con cualquier otro en el planeta. El Internet ha sido el logro tecnológico más grande del vigésimo siglo en gran medida, y ha sido reconocido como tal por la comunidad global. La transferencia libre de la información, no censurado, ilimitado y untainted, todavía se parece ser un sueño cuando usted piensa de ella. Cualquier campo que es educación mencionada, comercio, gobierno, las noticias, hospitalidad, política e incontable otras áreas han sido afectadas radicalmente por la introducción del Internet. Y sobre todo, es buenas noticias, excepto cuando se hacen los juicios pobres y se aprovecha la gente. El escrutinio y el descuido son necesarios, especialmente donde están implicados los niños. Sin embargo, cuando hay beneficios potenciales abiertos a una corporación, las necesidades de la sociedad no cuentan. Tome el caso reciente en Canadá con los behemoths, el balanceo de Telus y de Rogers hacia fuera una carga para la mensajería de texto sin ninguna advertencia al público. Era un movimiento arrogante y aventurado para los gigantes de las telecomunicaciones porque petardeó. Pueble la tecnología realmente usada del Internet para entregar un ruidoso y el mensaje claro a estas compañías y a ésa era desechar el recargo. La gente utilizó la energía del Internet contra los muchachos grandes y los pequeños individuos ganados. Sin embargo, la aplicación la mensajería de texto es justa un bache minúsculo en las pantallas de radar de Telus y de otra compañía, Bell Canada, los dos Internet Service Provider más grandes (ISP' S) de Canadá. Se está utilizando nuestro país mientras que un caso de la prueba para cambiar drástico la entrega del Internet mantiene por siempre. El cambio será tan radical que tiene el potencial de enviarnos de nuevo a los días del caballo y del cochecillo de compartir y del acceso de la información. En el reloj próximo de las semanas para un compartimiento del informe a tiempo que procurará alisar sobre los bordes ásperos de un diagrama diabólico por Bell Canada y Telus, comenzar a cargar por honorarios del sitio en la mayoría de los sitios de Internet. The plan is to convert the Internet into a cable-like system, where customers sign up for specific web sites, and then pay to visit sites beyond a cutoff point. From my browsing (on the currently free Internet) I have discovered that the ‘demise’ of the free Internet is slated for 2010 in Canada, and two years later around the world. Canada is seen a good choice to implement such shameful and sinister changes, since Canadians are viewed as being laissez fair, politically uninformed and an easy target. The corporate marauders will iron out the wrinkles in Canada and then spring the new, castrated version of the Internet on the rest of the world, probably with little fanfare, except for some dire warnings about the ‘evil’ of the Internet (free) and the CEO’s spouting about ’safety and security’. These buzzwords usually work pretty well. What will the Internet look like in Canada in 2010? I suspect that the ISP’s will provide a “package” program as companies like Cogeco currently do. Customers will pay for a series of websites as they do now for their television stations. Television stations will be available on-line as part of these packages, which will make the networks happy since they have lost much of the younger market which are surfing and chatting on their computers in the evening. However, as is the case with cable television now, if you choose something that is not part of the package, you know what happens. You pay extra. And this is where the Internet (free) as we know it will suffer almost immediate, economic strangulation. Thousands and thousands of Internet sites will not be part of the package so users will have to pay extra to visit those sites! In just an hour or two it is possible to easily visit 20-30 sites or more while looking for information. Just imagine how high these costs will be. At present, the world condemns China because that country restricts certain websites. “They are undemocratic; they are removing people’s freedom; they don’t respect individual rights; they are censoring information,” are some of the comments we hear. But what Bell Canada and Telus have planned for Canadians is much worse than that. They are planning the death of the Internet (free) as we know it, and I expect they’ll be hardly a whimper from Canadians. It’s all part of the corporate plan for a New World Order and virtually a masterstroke that will lead to the creation of billions and billions of dollars of corporate profit at the expense of the working and middle classes. There are so many other implications as a result of these changes, far too many to elaborate on here. Be aware that we will all lose our privacy because all websites will be tracked as part of the billing procedure, and we will be literally cut off from 90% of the information that we can access today. The little guys on the Net will fall likes flies; Bloggers and small website operators will die a quick death because people will not pay to go to their sites and read their pages. Ironically, the only medium that can save us is the one we are trying to save- the Internet (free). This article will be posted on my Blog, www.realitycheck.typepad.com and I encourage people and groups to learn more about this issue. Canadians can keep the Internet free just as they kept text messaging free. Don’t wait for the federal politicians. They will do nothing to help us. I would welcome a letter to the editor of the Standard Freeholder from a spokesperson from Bell Canada or Telus telling me that I am absolutely wrong in what I have written, and that no such changes to the Internet are being planned, and that access to Internet sites will remain FREE in the years to come. In the meantime, I encourage all of you to write to the media, ask questions, phone the radio station, phone a friend, or think of something else to prevent what appears to me to be inevitable. Maintaining Internet (free) access is the only way we have a chance at combatting the global corporate takeover, the North American Union, and a long list of other deadly deeds that the elite in society have planned for us. Yesterday was too late in trying to protect our rights and freedoms. We must now redouble our efforts in order to give our children and grandchildren a fighting chance in the future. Discuss this report in the RINF forums > Have Your Say: Death of Free Internet - Canada Will Be Test Case 2 Responses to “Death of Free Internet - Canada Will Be Test Case”
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I would just do without it and refer back to what I done before the Internet began, I would probibly fill the time with a new hobby, funded by scrapping the cable tv/ internet provider from my house for their cheek … Sorted.