AT&T and Other ISPs May Be Getting Ready to Filter

Discussion in 'General Chat' started by iastaff, Jan 10, 2008.

  1. #1
    By Brad Stone
    The New York Times
    Tuesday, January 8, 2008

    For the past fifteen years, Internet service providers have
    acted -- to use an old cliche -- as wide-open information
    super-highways, letting data flow uninterrupted and
    unimpeded between users and the Internet.

    But ISPs may be about to embrace a new metaphor: traffic
    cop.

    At a small panel discussion about digital piracy here at
    NBC's booth on the Consumer Electronics Show floor,
    representatives from NBC, Microsoft, several digital
    filtering companies and telecom giant AT&T said the time
    was right to start filtering for copyrighted content at the
    network level.

    Such filtering for pirated material already occurs on sites
    like YouTube and Microsoft's Soapbox, and on some
    university networks.

    Network-level filtering means your Internet service
    provider -- Comcast, AT&T, EarthLink, or whoever you send
    that monthly check to -- could soon start sniffing your
    digital packets, looking for material that infringes on
    someone's copyright.

    "What we are already doing to address piracy hasn't been
    working. There's no secret there," said James Cicconi,
    senior vice president, external & legal affairs for AT&T.

    Mr. Cicconi said that AT&T has been talking to technology
    companies, and members of the MPAA and RIAA, for the last
    six months about implementing digital fingerprinting
    techniques on the network level.

    "We are very interested in a technology based solution and
    we think a network-based solution is the optimal way to
    approach this," he said. "We recognize we are not there yet
    but there are a lot of promising technologies. But we are
    having an open discussion with a number of content
    companies, including NBC Universal, to try to explore
    various technologies that are out there."

    Internet civil rights organizations oppose network-level
    filtering, arguing that it amounts to Big Brother
    monitoring of free speech, and that such filtering could
    block the use of material that may fall under fair-use
    legal provisions -- uses like parody, which enrich our
    culture.

    Rick Cotton, the general counsel of NBC Universal, who has
    led the company's fights against companies like YouTube for
    the last three years, clearly doesn't have much tolerance
    for that line of thinking.

    "The volume of peer-to-peer traffic online, dominated by
    copyrighted materials, is overwhelming. That clearly should
    not be an acceptable, continuing status," he said. "The
    question is how we collectively collaborate to address
    this."

    I asked the panelists how they would respond to objections
    from their customers over network level filtering -- for
    example, the kind of angry outcry Comcast saw last year,
    when it was accused of clamping down on BitTorrent traffic
    on its network.

    "Whatever we do has to pass muster with consumers and with
    policy standards. There is going to be a spotlight on it,"
    said Mr. Cicconi of AT&T.

    After the session, he told me that ISPs like AT&T would
    have to handle such network filtering delicately, and do
    more than just stop an upload dead in its tracks, or send a
    legalistic cease and desist form letter to a customer.
    "We've got to figure out a friendly way to do it, there's
    no doubt about it," he said.
     
    iastaff, Jan 10, 2008 IP