T-Mobile Blocks Twitter: Enclosing The Commons/Message

The news that T-Mobile is blocking Twitter, so that T-Mobile subscribers cannot update their status remotely, is poor news on several levels.

First of all, the instant issue is the disruption of service, and the annoyance factor involved for those users.

The greater issue is the ability play involved, where a cellular provider — who has been granted a license to use our radio spectrum by our government — believes that they can turn off a popular service without any debate or notice.

This is an example of enclosing the commons — those in potential abusing their position and limiting our access to shared resources that they have been designated to manage by the government. In Edwardian England, the gentry often turned the shared commons of villages all through the country into farmland, displacing the rural citizens from an area from which they had gained food, wood, thatch, and other necessities. These well-off landowners

became rich through war-time food production, while the yeomanry were displaced for a few shillings, and had to accept jobs on the farms, paid what the landowners determined adequate.

This is an example of an abuse of capability that — in principle — we should look to the government to counter: specifically the FCC. However, with Bush II in the White House, we can expect no help from that quarter.

Nope. Just like the Facebook Beacon mess, that will have to be a public hue-and-cry: we, the Edglings, must speak truth to potential.

T-Mobile: Whatever rights you think you have, you are abusing them. You are clueless. You will have to back down from that silly policy before it becomes a public relations catastrophe. But you will never ever, no matter what actions you take now, get a nickel of my money, ever again.

Original post by stowe.boyd@gmail.com (Stowe Boyd)

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  • 2 Comments so far

    1. The T-Mob December 15th, 2007 8:45 pm

      Twitter was down for 12+ hours, not us. Read Twitters website for more info. There is zero twitter blocking.

    2. Techitor December 15th, 2007 10:54 pm

      Thanks for the info

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