|
SAN DIEGO – August 30th, 2006 — Leading
Internet solutions provider Aplus.Net today announced
its support of “net neutrality” provisions
to current U.S. legislation regulating telecommunications.
If enacted, these net neutrality guidelines
would apply “common carrier rules” to
Internet service providers (ISPs), requiring that
all Internet traffic be managed on equal terms
and helping ensure that all web content remains
equally accessible to all users. If current legislation
reconfiguring the Internet is passed without net
neutrality provisions, ISPs will have the ability
to give priority or preference to certain websites.
In other words, if Company A pays more money than
Company B, then Company A’s information will
be delivered to your browser much faster than Company
B’s.
If larger, more established companies
are able to pay for better exposure, then the traditional
equal footing that has rewarded true entrepreneurship
by allowing new companies to thrive on the Internet
will be lost. Many of today’s most successful
Internet companies (Amazon.com, eBay) began as
small independent start-ups that thrived because
of the Internet’s inherent freedom. Without
that freedom, America’s
small businesses will suffer.
With more than 75 percent of its customer
base consisting of companies with fewer then five
employees, Aplus.Net certainly has a stake in the
future of America’s small businesses. Itself
the product of a successful small business start-up,
Aplus.Net is concerned that failure to adopt net
neutrality provisions would badly hurt the ability
of America’s entrepreneurs to grow through
the Internet, and therefore damage the U.S. economy
as a whole.
“Small business drives the U.S. economy by providing
jobs for over half of the private workforce,” states
the United States Small Business Administration
(SBA). “Data and research shows that small
businesses represent 99.7 percent of all firms,
they create more than half of the private non-farm
gross domestic product, and they create 60 to 80
percent of the net new jobs … In 2004, there
were an estimated 23,974,500 businesses in the U.S. Of the 5,683,700 firms with employees,
5,666,600 were small firms (fewer than 500 employees) … American
entrepreneurs are creative and productive, and
these numbers prove it.”1
“Aplus.Net has taken this position
to defend small business interests on the Internet,” says
Theo Ivanov, Marketing Director for Aplus.Net. “We
don’t believe ISPs should be able to play
favorites with the content they carry. Likewise,
consumers shouldn’t have certain content
forced on them, while other content is withheld.
It creates an unfair playing field, and that’s
bad economic policy. Some who oppose net neutrality
argue that it’s unwelcome government regulation.
We believe that this is one situation where regulation
is not only desirable—it’s necessary.”
|