As the war rages on whether ISPs can slap tollgates on Internet traffic to generate additional revenue, Tim Berners-Lee (the guy who invented the World Wide Web) wades into the debate with a plea for the U.S. Congress to protect Net Neutrality. While it's nice to have Internet pioneers such as Berners-Lee and Vinton Cerf and leading players such as eBay and Google throw their support behind Net Neutrality, this has become a political battle with the well-financed ISPs (BellSouth, AT&T, etc.) and their lobbyists putting the hammer down in Washington. Sure, you can talk about why Net Neutrality is important to innovation and maintaining an open access environment but there's an awful lots of money at stake, which often takes precedence over ideals or ideologies. The economic reality is the carriers are losing lots and lots of high-margin local telephone customers as VoIP becomes more mainstream. As a result, they argue they have to make it up somewhere if they want to remain vibrant and profitable. With an army of lobbyists at their disposal, they've done a great job convincing many politicians about their "plight". While Berners-Lee is well-respected, it's going to be a huge challenge waging war against money-hungry carriers with lots of political clout.