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Network Neutrality: From Policy to Law to Regulation [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 320 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 234x156x19 mm, kaal: 608 g, 2 graphs
  • Ilmumisaeg: 28-Feb-2017
  • Kirjastus: Manchester University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1526107279
  • ISBN-13: 9781526107275
  • Formaat: Hardback, 320 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 234x156x19 mm, kaal: 608 g, 2 graphs
  • Ilmumisaeg: 28-Feb-2017
  • Kirjastus: Manchester University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1526107279
  • ISBN-13: 9781526107275
This book explains the concept of net neutrality, its history since 1999, engineering, policy challenge, legislation and regulation, dividing it into its negative/'lite' and positive/'heavy' elements. He compares national and regional legislation and regulation of net neutrality from an interdisciplinary and international perspective. He also examines the future of net neutrality battles in Europe, the United States and in developing countries such as India and Brazil. He explores the case studies of Specialized Services and Content Delivery Networks for video over the Internet, and zero rating or sponsored data plans. Finally, he offers co-regulatory solutions based on FRAND and non-exclusivity. This book is a must-read for researchers and advocates in net neutrality debate, and those interested in the context of communications regulation, law and economic regulation, human rights discourse and policy, and the impact of science and engineering on policy and governance.

Arvustused

This volume represents a truly comprehensive analysis of network neutrality up until June 2016. The meticulous research and referencing means that the text is a complete description at that date and provides the perfect foundation for additional work.The writing style of the author is readily accessible and exceptionally readable. This is important for a text to have an audience beyond academia. In particular, the description in Chapter 4 of the way in which the European Union, in its various forms, created a messy compromise law was fascinating. This chapter provides a fabulous case study in European Union regulatory decision making. Telecoms Policy Review

Network neutrality, also known as net neutrality, is a hot-button topic that is never far from the headlines. Janet Kearney, Law Library Journal, 2018 -- .

List of figures
ix
List of tables
x
List of European Court and competition cases
xi
List of European Commission Communications
xii
List of European Commission Decisions
xiv
List of European Directives, Recommendations and Regulations
xv
List of European Institution documents and public releases
xviii
List of European regulatory reports
xxi
List of United Kingdom Regulator reports
xxiv
List of United Kingdom court cases
xxvi
List of United Kingdom statutes
xxvii
List of United States cases
xxviii
List of United States legislation
xxix
List of Federal Communications Commission (FCC) documents
xxx
List of other national laws, regulatory decisions and guidelines
xxxii
List of abbreviations
xxxv
Acknowledgements xli
Introduction: neutrality, discrimination and common carriage 1(26)
State of the law on net neutrality 2017
5(4)
Net neutrality definition and policy
9(2)
Net neutrality lite and heavy
11(1)
US and EU regulation of net neutrality 2017
12(5)
History of common carriage: forerunner to net neutrality
17(5)
Deep packet inspection and traffic management
22(2)
Back to the future: plus ca change
24(3)
1 A Brief History of Net Neutrality Law
27(21)
The development of net neutrality regulation
29(3)
Reasonable network management and regulatory consultation
32(1)
Zero rating controversy
33(2)
European Union law 2009--12
35(4)
National law and regulation since 2012
39(8)
Norway
40(2)
Netherlands and Slovenia 2012
42(2)
Slovenia regulation 2015
44(1)
French principles 2010/14
45(2)
Conclusion
47(1)
2 The limits of competition law and communications regulation
48(29)
Competition policy: origins and purposes
50(4)
Maniadaki on competition and net neutrality
52(2)
Telecom regulation: the UK case study
54(14)
Fixed network regulation
54(5)
Mobile network regulation
59(1)
Network interconnection
60(1)
Mobile termination regulatory battles
61(3)
Regulating the mobiles: delay, degrade, confuse
64(4)
Platform regulation: US cuckoos in the European nest?
68(3)
Behavioural regulation: nudging net neutrality
71(3)
Limits of competition law in net neutrality analysis
74(3)
3 Noam's Arc and the zettaflood: towards Specialised Services?
77(18)
Three data floods? Video, productivity and innovative services, SpS
77(2)
Exploding facts and Internet traffic growth
79(7)
UHD video over the Internet
83(3)
Home-worker Internet and productivity
86(2)
Specialised Services: the exception to net neutrality
88(5)
SpS and the European ASQ research controversy
91(2)
Universal service to avoid Internet `dirt roads'
93(2)
4 European Open Internet regulation
95(38)
Trilogue agreement on net neutrality regulation 2015
97(5)
Regulation 2015/2120
102(15)
Regulation 2015/2120 recitals
104(8)
Regulation 2015/2110 Articles 3--6
112(4)
Interpretation: good news, bad news and do not mention the N-word
116(1)
BEREC and the Guidelines
117(5)
Introduction to BEREC
118(2)
BEREC's Guidelines: process and interpretation
120(2)
Consultation on traffic management practices
122(9)
Specialised Services
123(2)
Transparency in Internet access quality
125(3)
`Commercial practices': zero rating
128(2)
Future Work Programme for BEREC
130(1)
European law conclusion
131(2)
5 Three wise monkeys of net neutrality: privacy, liability and interception
133(26)
The GDPR and the Snowden inquiries 2016
135(4)
What is changing in LAP analysis of traffic?
139(6)
Law and technologies to intercept communications
143(2)
Regulating DPI and interception of traffic
145(2)
Alleged criminal breaches of UK e-privacy by LAPs
147(6)
The EC takes the UK to court for net neutrality privacy breach prosecution
149(4)
Corporate interception on behalf of government
153(5)
Conclusion: regulatory problems in implementing net neutrality
158(1)
6 Open Internet self-regulation in the UK
159(26)
Introduction to UK net neutrality policy
161(2)
Administrative development of Ofcom
163(6)
Government net neutrality policy 2010
169(3)
Ofcom's approach to net neutrality 2011
172(3)
Policy developments after 2012
175(6)
BSG Code update 2015
179(2)
Net neutrality law 2016
181(2)
Evaluation of UK regulation and future development
183(2)
7 Implementing mobile net neutrality
185(17)
Zero rating
185(13)
Case studies
188(1)
Chile
188(2)
Brazil
190(2)
India
192(3)
Canada
195(3)
Regulating zero rating
198(2)
Conclusion and further research needs
200(2)
8 Net neutrality postponed
202(21)
Zero-rate friends and family; specialised-service your enemies
202(2)
A Toolkit for Neutrality Regulation
204(7)
Measurement
208(1)
Technical advice
209(2)
The United Nations to the rescue? Free expression and privacy
211(4)
Interdisciplinary analysis of regulation
215(1)
Internet industrial policy for gigabit infrastructure?
216(3)
Net neutrality and the future of law
219(4)
References 223(32)
Index 255
Christopher T. Marsden is Professor of Internet Law at the University of Sussex -- .