Sunday, June 15, 2008

It Begins - The Shutdown of the Free Internet by 2012

Thanks to ‘bbc truth monopoly’ for this lead.

On the heals of the site shut down by Typepad of Aussie News & Views and now Sharia Finance, comes word that Bell Canada and TELUS (formerly owned by Verizon) employees officially confirm that by 2012 ISP's all over the globe will reduce Internet access to a TV-like subscription model, only offering access to a small standard amount of commercial sites and require extra fees for every other site you visit.

These 'other' sites would then lose all their exposure and eventually shut down, resulting in what could be seen as the end of the Internet.

From I Power.

Dylan Pattyn, who is currently writing an article for Time Magazine on the issue, has official confirmation from sources within Bell Canada and is interviewing a marketing representative from TELUS who confirms the story and states that TELUS has already started blocking all websites that aren't in the subscription package for mobile Internet access. They could not confirm whether it would happen in 2012 because both stated it may actually happen sooner (as early as 2010). Interviews with these sources, more confirmation from other sources and more in-depth information on the issue is set to be published in Time Magazine soon.

Could this be the Net in 2012?

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8 comments:

Damien said...

If this is true, it does not bode well for Infidel bloggers.

Damien said...

bbc truth monopoly’ may have pointed this out, but I suggested you look into this after he told us about it. I am glad you posted this. Thank you, WC. We need to see if there is anything we can do.

The Merry Widow said...

WC-Would you send me the html of this post? I'm very impressed and would like to crosspost this, with proper attribution, of course.
You can reach me at themerrywidow3@aol.com.

tmw

Anonymous said...

I remember history well, guys. In advanced commie societies, the typewriter was considered a weapon. Copy machines were feared. Underground printing presses. How long do you think this will last? Remember, necessity is the mother of all invention. They are poking holes into many leaks, but the dam may still break.

Anonymous said...

This would of course fit neatly in with the EUrabian directive that all bloggers must be licensed and taxed. Unregistered bloggers would then become totally innaccesible even by subscription.

Are the Canadians and Eurabians in cahoots?

Michael Travis said...

For those who view YouTube, Films or television online;


AT&T is thinking of charging more for those who download too much data. Spokesperson Michael Coe claims that about 5% of their DSL customers use 46% of their bandwidth, while overall usage doubles every year and a half. Time Warner is already charging its customers in Beaumont, Texas, who go over their bandwidth limit $1.00 per gigabyte. If you are one of those who downloads movies and TV shows, especially in hi-def, don’t move to the Lonestar state.

Also...with the advent of Syrius and "on demand" music services..private ownership of records, CD's, and any other form of music will soon be a thing of the past. The "Public airwaves" are in the process of being sold off to Multi-Nationals and Am-FM days are numbered.

In the future we won't have "citizenship"...just a EULA issued by the State.

Always On Watch said...

The mainstream media are a farce, including FNC.

If we "lose" the web, we lose a very important weapon is this war against Islamification.

And I'll bet that the rules won't apply to jihadis. Or maybe they'll just be well funded with our petro dollars, so the cost won't phase them at all.

Damien said...

Always On Watch,

The biggest problem is, how do we stop this?