Neutral Current
2009
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Neutral Current

FCC Net neutrality rules reach mobile apps
Net neutrality advocates in Washington have long insisted that eventual government regulations would be simple and easy to understand. Public Knowledge has called the Net neutrality concept "ridiculously simple," and Free Press said the rules would be "clear" and easy to understand.
The Federal Communications Commission finally released its long-expected regulations this afternoon, which it had previously approved on a 3-2 party line vote earlier this week, and they're not exactly "ridiculously" simple. The rules and the related explanations total a whopping 194 pages (PDF).
One new item that was not previously disclosed: mobile wireless providers can't block "applications that compete with the provider's" own voice or video telephony services. By including that rule, the FCC effectively sided with Skype over wireless carriers.
A series of disputes erupted last year over whether Skype would be allowed on smartphones and over whether it was AT&T or Apple that was responsible for Google Voice not appearing in the iPhone's App Store. (In October 2009, AT&T agreed to support voice over Internet Protocol applications such as Skype on its 3G network, and Google Voice appeared as an iPhone application last month.)
The legality of "paid prioritization," which previously was ambiguous, also has been cleared up. The concept means a broadband provider favoring some traffic over other traffic. That would mean Amazon.com can't, theoretically, pay Comcast for its Web site to load faster than Barnes & Noble's.
The FCC acknowledged there's no evidence that "U.S. broadband providers currently engage in such arrangements." But because any pay-for-priority deals would "represent a significant departure from historical" practice and potentially raise barriers to entry on the Internet, they should be outlawed.
That section of today's order, which has been championed by Chairman Julius Genachowski, rejects arguments about paid prioritization that AT&T made earlier this year. AT&T noted it already had "hundreds" of customers who have paid extra for higher-priority services, and it argued that the Internet Engineering Task Force's specifications explicitly permit the practice.
Genachowski had said during Tuesday's vote that the rules would require all broadband providers including mobile services to disclose their network management practices, and that non-mobile providers would be prohibited from blocking and "unreasonably" discriminating against network traffic.
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is there any real difference between common and neutral since in ac power the current reverse its way ?
I tried to wire a pannel from a furnace with hot and neutral and I had to swIitch the wires because it didn't work, so I wonder if there is any difference in phase or whatsoever between the hot and the neutral line
It's mostly a difference in terminology. AC power comews into your house (in North America) as 2-phase 230-volt power. There are three wires for this: 2 "hot" wires and one "neutral". The two hot wires carry 115 volts each, but the voltages are 180 degrees out of phase. This allows you to connect these two hot wires to something like a hot water heater or electric stove that runs on 230 volts. For "normal" circuits, the two "hot" wires run to the two sides of your circuit breaker panel, and are used with the neutral wire to provide 115-volt circuits.
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