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View Full Version : Mark Cuban: Welcom to the "Department of the Internet"




jllundqu
02-26-2015, 12:24 PM
From Breitbart:


Dallas Mavericks owner and investor Mark Cuban predicted that proposed FCC Internet regulations will end up impacting TV and “your TV as you know it is over” on Thursday’s “Squawk Alley” on CNBC.

Cuban began by predicting “the courts will rule the Internet for the next however many years.” He then explained, “let’s just take it all the way through its logical conclusion. All bits are bits, all bits are equal. If all bits are equal, then let’s look at what a stream bit is an example. So when Henry and I do an interview, and it’s streamed lived on the Internet, there’s a camera, it goes through an encoder, it sends it out via server or some manner to the Internet, you click on Business Insider and you watch the stream, right? Now, let’s look at CNBC on Comcast. There’s cameras right in front of you, they go through a switcher, they go through an encoder, it’s put through a server, it goes to Comcast, and it’s streamed in a managed service environment to television. It’s the exact same thing. And if it’s the exact same thing technologically and all bits are equal, then why shouldn’t CNBC and all TV networks that are delivered on cable, and Telco, and fiber like Verizon, why shouldn’t they be part of the open Internet as well? And if they are and all bits are equal, now, let’s take it one step further. It’s the purview of the FCC now. The FCC, right? So, the FCC now has to apply their same standards to content, don’t they, that they do to television content because that’s where it is and there’s going to be certain citizens who think ‘well now, since all content is delivered over the Internet because all bits are bits, and it’s a fair, and open, and equal Internet — decency standards.’ And remember the FCC is the same agency that fought Nipplegate for eight years over a wardrobe malfunction.”

He added, “your TV as you know it is over.”

Cuban further said that due to court and regulatory battles that will ensue if the proposed regulations are adopted, innovation online will be halted, declaring “if you love the Internet the way you know it today, this is what you’re going to have for a long time. But, if you’re like me, and you think the best is yet to come, then you don’t the FCC involved because of all the uncertainty.”

Cuban also commented on the transparency regarding of the FCC’s regulation process, sarcastically remarking “lots of transparency, right? Yeah, Lots of transparency.” And “that’s the FCC, that’s the Department of Internet that we’re going to get, no transparency.”



http://www.breitbart.com/video/2015/02/26/cuban-fcc-net-regs-will-spill-over-tv-as-you-know-it-is-over/

God help us if the FCC gets its foot in the door....

SilentBull
02-26-2015, 12:37 PM
Could be an opportunity for Rand to get Cuban on his side.

heavenlyboy34
02-26-2015, 01:15 PM
Ministry Of Truth gonna take over teh interwebz! :eek: :mad:

Mr Tansill
02-26-2015, 05:37 PM
Ha! I bet it will impact your TV...only not in a bad way. Instead of powerful companies like Comcast-NBC, who has vested interest in you purchasing TV packages, owning access to content on the internet, it will remain the way it is today - meaning all bytes are equal to all other bytes. What could be more liberty seeking than that!?!?!

The only impact it will have on TV is that it will continue to decline in importance as a medium - which lessens the power of large companies and undermines the intersection of large corporate powers.

nayjevin
02-28-2015, 10:37 AM
Ha! I bet it will impact your TV...only not in a bad way. Instead of powerful companies like Comcast-NBC, who has vested interest in you purchasing TV packages, owning access to content on the internet, it will remain the way it is today - meaning all bytes are equal to all other bytes. What could be more liberty seeking than that!?!?!

The only impact it will have on TV is that it will continue to decline in importance as a medium - which lessens the power of large companies and undermines the intersection of large corporate powers.

The only part we know is that the FCC now has regulatory powers that it did not previously have. We do not know what is in the 300+ pages.

Lucille
02-28-2015, 10:47 AM
I'll just put these Cuban related posts from the other thread here.


Do you think that the FCC should invoke Title II status over some minor pricing and throttling issues? Does that make any sense at face value? Even Mark Cuban is perplexed when the alleged solutions aren't in scale to the actual problem. It's like dropping a JDAM ordinance on a termite hill. It's completely unnecessary.


Cuban is getting slammed on Twitter by the enlightened ones.

http://recode.net/2015/02/21/mark-cuban-inflames-the-internet-again-this-time-over-net-neutrality/

To paraphrase...

Cuban, you're rich and DUMB! You're absurdly rich...

https://recodetech.files.wordpress.com/2015/02/screen-shot-2015-02-21-at-11-02-43-am.png?w=972


I don't think this has been posted in this thread yet:

Mark Cuban: Welcom to the "Department of the Internet"
http://www.ronpaulforums.com/showthread.php?469707-Mark-Cuban-Welcom-to-the-quot-Department-of-the-Internet-quot


They mess with the Boomers' teevee at their peril!


Alex Jones just said that Mark Cuban was going to distribute an Alex Jones production a year ago and the White House supposedly threatened him.

Here it is:

http://youtu.be/o633B2YPse8?t=3m26s


Cuban should start a satellite company beaming the internets across the continent and run by an overseas company out of the fucking arm of the FCC.

^I like it.