Skype’s Net Neutrality Infidelity Scandal
July 14, 2010
Skype, one of the high priests of the net neutrality movement, that preaches for Title II monopoly regulation of all the broadband providers it already rides upon for free, has been caught in the act of being blatantly unfaithful to its widely-professed net neutrality principles, by blocking interconnectivity to Fring!
Arstechnica and The Hill have both flagged Skype’s hypocrisy and infidelity to its supposed net neutrality and openness principles in blocking mobile video calling competitor Fring from access to Skype’s dominant network of a ~half-billion interconnected users.Now we know that Skype’s proclaimed principled stance for net neutrality and openness was really just a cynical PR and lobbying campaign of crony capitalism, and political cover for an industrial policy where the FCC picks Skype, Google Android, and Amazon Kindle as the “dumb pipe” market winners, and all broadband providers as the “dumb pipe” market losers.
Skype’s “do as I say not as I do” stance is particularly hypocritical because of Skype’s dominant size relative to Fring, in that Skype has about a half billion users and is “responsible for 12% of global international calling minutes” per Skype.
To the exent that the FCC attempts to change existing net neutrality rules, at a minimum, they should continue to be technologically-neutral, given the FCC’s well-known abysmal track record in trying to choose technologies and pick market winners and losers over the last several decades.
It will be interesting to see if the FCC remains silent as one of the biggest complainers of non-neutral blocking — blocks a competitor non-neutrally — or if the FCC will investigate the Skype-Fring blocking affair.
And where is SaveTheInternet and FreePress when a dominant-size half-billion-user network like Skype does to the little guy what they supposedly claim to oppose on principle…
Must Read Thierer Op-ed: America’s Chavez Fan Club
July 13, 2010
Anyone that cares about freedom generally, and freedom of the press in particular, must read PFF Adam Theirer’s outstanding Big Government expose/op-ed putting the spotlight on neo-marxist “FreePress:” “How America’s Hugo Chavez Fan Club Plans to ‘Reform’ the Media Marketplace.”
- Adam’s analysis and case are brilliant and dead-on; FreePress has one of the most destructive public policy agendas out there, period, full stop.
- It is frightening how much credence this Administration, FCC, FTC and Congress give to FreePress’ anti-freedom-of-the-press dsytopian policy agenda.
Google has “human raters” in its search “algorithm”
July 13, 2010
Today Google publicly admitted for the first time that its purported “neutral” and “unbiased” search algorithm is not completely-automated or computer-algorithmic like Google has long and consistently represented to the public.
- In a stunning first-time disclosure in a Richard Waters FT article by “the Google engineer responsible for its ranking algorithm,” Mr. Amit Singhal:
- “Google’s Mr Singhal calls this the problem of “brand recognition”: where companies whose standing is based on their success in one area use this to “venture out into another class of information which they may not be as rich at”. Google uses human raters to assess the quality of individual sites in order to counter this effect, he adds.” [Bold added for emphasis.]
- From Google’s website:
- “Ten things we know to be true:” “We never manipulate rankings to put our partners higher in our search results and no one can buy better PageRank. Our users trust our objectivity and no short-term gain could ever justify breaching that trust.”
- Code of Conduct: “…But “Don’t be evil” is much more than that. Yes, it’s about providing our users unbiased access to information…” [bold added]
Now that Google has let slip that it does have some type of official human editorial board adjusting/manipulating/editing search results, we better understand:
- What Mr. Amit Singhal meant when he described Google to the UK Telegraph as “the biggest kingmaker on this earth; and
- Why Google SVP Jonathan Rosenberg said on the official Google Blog: “We won’t (and shouldn’t) try to stop the faceless scribes of drivel, but we can move them to the back row of the arena.”
Now that Google has publicly disclosed that Google employees do manually adjust/manipulate search rankings as part of the opaque “Quality Score” process that many companies have filed antitrust suits about ( TradeComet, MyTriggers, Foundem, ejustice.FR, Ciao, Navx, etc.), antitrust authorities should want to know how these “human raters” maintain objectivity and what internal controls are in place for this human process to not be abused anti-competitively given Google’s search advertising monopoly per the DOJ.
Key questions for antitrust authorities:
- What are the formal guidelines and decision criteria that this equivalent of a Search Discrimination Board (SDB) follows to try and remain neutral and unbiased, and prevent anti-competitive behavior?
- Does the SDB have any specific written internal controls and procedures that document its many discrimination decisions? Is there a formal Google process to ensure the overall integrity of this human rater discrimination process?
- Is the SDB transparent and do websites affected have any notification of how the SDB made its decision so there is due process to correct any factual mistakes?
- Is there any way an affected party can reach a human at Google to discuss the SDB’s ranking of their content?
- Can anyone appeal decisions of the SDB? What is the process and when are decisions final?
- Does Google or any independent third party monitor or audit the SDB’s deliberations to cross-check Google’s public representations of unbiased search results?
- Can antitrust plaintiffs subpoena records of the SDB’s deliberations?
- Are human raters involved in the ranking of political or religious websites? Are there any recusal procedures to ensure SDB human raters don’t have the appearance of a bias or conflict of interest?
- Does the SDB attempt to capture the neutral and unbiased views, values, and concerns of the U.S? or the country the search is conducted in?
- Are the same SDB members deciding the rank of non-Google-owned content, the ones that decide the ranking of Google-owned content? How is that conflict of interest disclosed and managed? Are Google’s top executives ever involved in how Google-owned content is ranked and if not why not?
- What is the criteria that the SDB uses to decide which news organization’s reports rank higher among sites like NYT, FT, WSJ, FT, AP, Reuters, Fox, CNN, etc?
- If links are a factor in determining the rank of content, and Google’s advertising revenue is derived from sites’ search rankings, how does Google ensure the human raters of the SDB are not influenced to reward Google-owned content or Google partners’ content that Google revenue shares with?
In sum, this first-ever disclosure by Google that “human raters” manually discriminate in the “quality scores” that determine a website’s supposed neutral and unbiased search ranking, exposes a rats nest of conflicts of interest that Google has in its “black box” business model. This is important because Google now is:
- The world’s de facto editorial filter by which Internet content gets found;
- The only revenue collector for most of the world’s websites; and
- The dominant gatekeeper for any business seeking to reach Internet users and websites; …and finally because…
- Google is publicly representing itself as neutral and unbiased in order to maintain the trust of users, advertisers, publishers, and Governments around the world.
***
For more information see:
- Google kicks wrong beehive — IAC — which is now stinging over no search neutrality
- Monopolization Pattern behind Google-ITA — “It’s the data stupid!”
- French revolt against Google’s anti-competitive Guillotine
- Google: we’re “the biggest kingmaker on this earth” — Googleopoly Update
- www.Googleopoly.net
- www.GoogleMonitor.com
Read Eisenach’s great op-ed on net neutrality
July 13, 2010
Mr. Eisenach is right to spotlight and give credit to Clinton Administration FCC Chairman Bill Kennard’s wisdom to allow broadband competition a chance to flourish by not saddling broadband with monopoly telephone regulation.
This FCC would be wise to emulate the proven success of the Kennard FCC’s forward-looking broadband competition policy rather than pursue its current highly destructive and backward-looking “de-competition” policy.
For an FCC that so assiduously respected the integrity of process to produce a consensus National Broadband Plan just a few short months ago, how could this same FCC come to abuse the integrity of process in its pursuit of Title II net neutrality authority, just a few months later?
- What’s wrong with this picture?
How could the same FCC go from the predictable, open, consensus-driven process of developing the National Broadband Plan to the most unpredictable, closed, and non-consensus approach of the Title II net neutrality NOI?
How can an FCC, which supposedly heard loud and clear from Congress about the importance of the integrity of process in confirmation hearings held just last year, completely ignore letters to the FCC from a majority of Congress imploring the FCC to respect the Constitutional process that empowers the Congress, not the FCC, with the authority to set communications policy for the Nation?
Does not all integrity of process come entirely from respecting the Constitutional processes of separation of powers, due process, rule of law, equal protection, etc.?
How can the FCC maintain that they respect the integrity of process with the small “p” of the Adminstrative Procedures Act, when they disrespect the integrity of process with the large “P” of the U.S. Constitution and the Bill of Rights?
What’s wrong with this picture?
- This FCC’s apparent disregard for the integrity of Constitutionally mandated process.