Friday, July 17, 2009 at 2:00 PM ET
This week the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission wrapped up its hearings on Internet traffic management. Earlier in the proceeding I testified on behalf of the Open Internet Coalition (of which Google is a member) to argue that "innovation without permission" requires a robust, open Internet -- a view echoed by consumer groups, Internet policy advocates, content producers and distributors.
Fittingly, tonnes of people who would normally never follow a regulatory hearing took to the web to listen to the CRTC's live audiocast, follow the live-blog from the National Post, and tweet up a storm with the tags #crtc and #netneutrality (including me, @jacobglick). Journalist Greg O'Brien (@gregobr) tweeted, "Total listeners to the #crtc proceeding Monday: 371. Highest ever group to take in a Commission webcast, they say."
This impromptu online community was an object lesson in precisely the point we made to the Commission about the power of an open Internet to share insights, test arguments, and facilitate meaningful civic engagement -- all in cool, unexpected ways.

1 comments:
Impromptu? The 'impromptu' community you reference is the result of two years of solid work to bring force the CRTC to open a proceeding on Net Neutrality, and to have a broad based citizen participation in the proceedings. Canadians for Democratic Media and the Save Our Net coalition is the well-organized coalition of organisations from across Canada that organized the petitions and coordinated the online viewing. Maybe you should join?
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