The New Democratic Party of Canada recently unveiled their new election platform for 2011. Following the Bell Internet cap scare from earlier in the year, the NDP has made the decision to emphasize Internet Access for the nation as one of its campaign goals. The constraints they hope to implement are bold, broad, and likely, somewhat unrealistic.
The party makes a very direct reference to Net Neutrality, stating that, "We will enshrine “net neutrality” in law, end price gouging and “net throttling,” with clear rules for Internet Service Providers (ISPs), enforced by the CRTC." This alone is something of an ambitious goal for Canada's democrats, but the group goes even further, stating their intention to "prohibit all forms of usage-based billing by Internet Service Providers." While usage based billing is not necessarily a violation of Network Neutrality, it does open the doors for ISPs to charge inflated prices for simple services and gouge their customers.
For example, text messaging is a popular form of usage based billing and, in some ways, price gouging. Some providers charge their customers a flat rate for every text message sent. Some of the lowest cost plans providers offer charge .15 cents to send a single text message (roughly 140bytes) across their network in an age when the Internet can transfer files more than 1 billion times that size in seconds.
Canadian Democrats are attempting to refuse ISPs the opportunity to unfairly exploit their customers while ensuring the Internet remains what it should be, a massive, open, and widely available network of information and communication.