Last fall, I successfully defended my master’s thesis on net neutrality and now I’m happy to report you can read it online. It is about 160 pages long and focuses on how the debate over net neutrality has evolved in Canada and the United States. Net neutrality can be understood as a set of principles that require Internet service providers to provide access without interfering in content, applications used or user activity. It has been a political issue since 2005 and remains unresolved to this day. If you haven’t followed the issue at all so far, here’s your chance to get up to speed. It might be developed and expanded further into a traditional book at some later point.
