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gravitate | 2 years ago

I hit CTRL+F to find the word 'neutral' in this article, but no such word appeared. But it did appear in another EFF article titled 'We Need to Talk About Infrastructure'[0], which is the crux of the issue here. My only question is; what is regarded 'internet infrastructure' these days? Is Cloudflare really just an ISP? Is VPN infra considered an ISP? Are mixer nets like Tor/Hyphanet an ISP?

'Essential internet infrastructure should be content-neutral':

[0] https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2022/12/we-need-talk-about-inf...

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torstenvl|2 years ago

Essential internet infrastructure should not be content-neutral.

Content neutrality is a higher bar than you think it is. Content-neutral means the rules cannot take content into account at all.

If the content is millions of ssh login requests on thousands of servers with ec2-user and the top 10000 most used passwords, the infrastructure should be able to block that.

Content-neutrality would probably make it illegal to prevent DDoS attacks. At some levels of infrastructure, sure, but broadly speaking, content-neutrality seems like a bad requirement.

Viewpoint-neutral, however, is a better goal.

https://www.law.cornell.edu/constitution-conan/amendment-1/o...

planede|2 years ago

DDoS generally has little to do about the content of the traffic. It's more about volume and traffic pattern.

Anyway, I think the details are in intent and the nature of the communication. Service providers shouldn't actively block communications where the only intent of the communication is consensual exchange of information between two or more parties (such as visiting a website) regardless of the content of the exchanged information.

SPAM would qualify as non-consensual from one party, so it would be exempt.

The intent of DDoS isn't to exchange information, so it would also be exempt.

I'm sure that it would need pages legalese to make this work, like ironing out the circumstances when ISPs can assume intent or consent. SPAM block lists should be reasonable.

ehhthing|2 years ago

I don't think this is true. Phone companies (which are legislated to be utilities) can block malicious/spam calls without legal issues.

pbhjpbhj|2 years ago

This seems a very poor argument.

Your examples are people forcing packets to a network node, content neutrality is about receiving what you wish from a server whose operator has chosen to serve that content.

Stopping people who are actively committing crimes is not preventing free movement on a right of way. Or rather, it is in layman's terms, but free movement does not include the commission of crimes. In the same way stopping brute force attempts is not the same as inhibiting net neutrality.

carbotaniuman|2 years ago

Viewpoint neutrality is debatable though, in this situation, HE could argue that they aren't banning based on viewpoint but rather the nature of the content, and point to other websites sharing similar viewpoints that they carry. It just seems like a half-step that pleases no one and does nothing. Let private companies be private companies, we don't need the unelected bureaucrats to tell us how to run DDOS protection or route traffic.

unethical_ban|2 years ago

I suspect carveouts for overtly, technically malicious behavior can be applied while still saying "content neutral".

ThrowawayTestr|2 years ago

Performing a DDoS attack is already illegal. Content neutral for legal content shouldn't be a high bar.

chonkerz|2 years ago

No company, ever, is going to accept being forced to sell their services to a customer who will use it for obnoxiously illegal purposes. No government is ever going to mandate the use of resources for illegal purposes.

yanderekko|2 years ago

Net neutrality stopped being a concern when activists decided that it was to their overall advantage to ally with powerful, censorious corporations in order to combat right-wing speech .