Conferenza sul futuro del lavoro
Yanis Varoufakis, Robert Reich, Albert Wenger, Erik Brynjolfsson, Andrew Stern, Rob Johnson, Daniel Häni, Enno Schmidt, Bruno S. Frey and more! https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=atzW1cH6Mcg (Sent from my wireless device; please excuse brevity and typos (if any))
http://pubs.aeaweb.org/doi/pdfplus/10.1257/jep.30.2.127 <http://pubs.aeaweb.org/doi/pdfplus/10.1257/jep.30.2.127> (7) Net Neutrality: A Fast Lane to Understanding the Trade-Offs Shane Greenstein, Martin Peitz and Tommaso Valletti The last decade has seen a strident public debate about the principle of "net neutrality." The economic literature has focused on two definitions of net neutrality. The most basic definition of net neutrality is to prohibit payments from content providers to internet service providers; this situation we refer to as a one-sided pricing model, in contrast with a two-sided pricing model in which such payments are permitted. Net neutrality may also be defined as prohibiting prioritization of traffic, with or without compensation. The research program then is to explore how a net neutrality rule would alter the distribution of rents and the efficiency of outcomes. After describing the features of the modern internet and introducing the key players, (internet service providers, content providers, and customers), we summarize insights from some models of the treatment of internet traffic, framing issues in terms of the positive economic factors at work. Our survey provides little support for the bold and simplistic claims of the most vociferous supporters and detractors of net neutrality. The economic consequences of such policies depend crucially on the precise policy choice and how it is implemented. The consequences further depend on how long-run economic trade-offs play out; for some of them, there is relevant experience in other industries to draw upon, but for others there is no experience and no consensus forecast. Enrico Bertacchini - Assistant Professor University of Torino - Department of Economics and Statistics "Cognetti De Martiis" EBLA Center - International Center for Research on the Economics of Culture, Institutions and Creativity NEXA Center for Internet & Society, Politecnico of Torino Lungodora Siena 100, 10153 Torino, Italy TEL +390116704982 https://sites.google.com/site/ebertacchini/
Caro Enrico, Grazie per il riferimento. A questo proposito mi permetto di ricordare che il BEREC (Body of European Regulators of Electronic Communications) pubblicherà la bozza delle linee guida sull'implementazione del Regolamento "Connected Continent", specificamente le parti che si riferiscono alla "neutralità della rete", in occasione della riunione plenaria di giugno 2016. Le bozze di linee guida saranno soggette a consultazione pubblica, con l'obbiettivo di adottare le linee guida definitive entro la fine di agosto 2016. A presto, Andrea On Saturday, May 7, 2016, Enrico Bertacchini <ebertacchini@gmail.com> wrote:
http://pubs.aeaweb.org/doi/pdfplus/10.1257/jep.30.2.127
(7) Net Neutrality: A Fast Lane to Understanding the Trade-Offs Shane Greenstein, Martin Peitz and Tommaso Valletti The last decade has seen a strident public debate about the principle of "net neutrality." The economic literature has focused on two definitions of net neutrality. The most basic definition of net neutrality is to prohibit payments from content providers to internet service providers; this situation we refer to as a one-sided pricing model, in contrast with a two-sided pricing model in which such payments are permitted. Net neutrality may also be defined as prohibiting prioritization of traffic, with or without compensation. The research program then is to explore how a net neutrality rule would alter the distribution of rents and the efficiency of outcomes. After describing the features of the modern internet and introducing the key players, (internet service providers, content providers, and customers), we summarize insights from some models of the treatment of internet traffic, framing issues in terms of the positive economic factors at work. Our survey provides little support for the bold and simplistic claims of the most vociferous supporters and detractors of net neutrality. The economic consequences of such policies depend crucially on the precise policy choice and how it is implemented. The consequences further depend on how long-run economic trade-offs play out; for some of them, there is relevant experience in other industries to draw upon, but for others there is no experience and no consensus forecast.
Enrico Bertacchini - Assistant Professor University of Torino - Department of Economics and Statistics "Cognetti De Martiis" EBLA Center - International Center for Research on the Economics of Culture, Institutions and Creativity NEXA Center for Internet & Society, Politecnico of Torino
Lungodora Siena 100, 10153 Torino, Italy TEL +390116704982 https://sites.google.com/site/ebertacchini/
-- -- I speak only for myself. Sometimes I do not even agree with myself. Keep it in mind. Twitter: @andreaglorioso Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/andrea.glorioso LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/profile/view?id=1749288&trk=tab_pro
participants (3)
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Andrea Glorioso -
Enrico Bertacchini -
J.C. DE MARTIN