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  1. #1
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    FCC makes Net neutrality rules official

    December 21, 2010 10:12 AM PST
    FCC makes Net neutrality rules official
    by Marguerite Reardon

    The Federal Communications Commission officially adopted controversial Net neutrality rules Tuesday, but the fight is far from over as the FCC's authority to create and enforce these rules may still be questionable.
    With the support of the Democratic FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski and two other Democratic Commissioners, Michael Copps and Mignon Clyburn, the commission passed the rules in a 3 to 2 vote. The two Republican commissioners, Robert McDowell and Meredith Attwell Baker, voted against the rules.
    While Democrats and Republicans on the commission do not agree on the need for these rules, all four seem to agree that the commission's legal authority for enforcing them is still questionable. Republicans McDowell and Baker said that the FCC's loss in a federal court case against Comcast for violating Net neutrality principles earlier this year sends a clear message that the courts do not believe that the FCC has the legal authority to apply such rules. And therefore the rules should not be enacted, because the FCC will find itself in court defending its authority. Meanwhile, the Democrats on the commission, who reluctantly voted in favor for the new rules, said the FCC should still consider reclassifying broadband traffic to ensure it has the authority to enforce new rules.
    Chairman Genachowski did not address the question of legal authority in his comments. This summer he had proposed a "third way" that would reclassify broadband traffic so that some aspects of broadband would comply with old rules used to regulate the telephone network. This proposal was largely panned by critics. And in recent months, the Chairman has backed away from talk of reclassifying broadband traffic.
    The new Net neutrality rules adopted Tuesday essentially creates two classes of service subject to different rules: One set of rules that applies to fixed broadband networks and one for wireless networks. The FCC says this is necessary because wireless networks are technologically different from fixed broadband networks.
    The first rule requires both wireless and wireline providers to be transparent in how they manage and operate their networks.
    The second Net neutrality rule prohibits the blocking of traffic on the Internet. The rule applies to both fixed wireline broadband network operators, as well as to wireless providers. But the stipulations for each type of network are slightly different.
    For fixed broadband networks, operators cannot block any lawful content, services, applications, or devices on their network. Wireless providers area also prohibited from blocking all Websites, but the rule is slightly more lenient when it comes to blocking applications and services. The rule only prohibits these companies from blocking access to applications that specifically compete with a carrier's telephony voice or video services. In each case, the blocking rule also allows fixed and wireless broadband providers to reasonably manage their networks.
    And finally, the last rule applies only to fixed broadband providers. It prohibits fixed wireline broadband providers from unreasonably discriminating against traffic on their network.
    While he voted in favor of the new rules, Commissioner Copps said he is not entirely happy with the final outcome. In particular, he is concerned that broadband providers will force Internet companies to "pay for prioritization." This would create a fast lane on the public Internet for services that pay to have their traffic prioritized above other traffic, while all other Internet traffic travels in the slow lane. But Copps acknowledged that the "no unreasonable discrimination rule" should protect consumers against such abuses.
    Copps also noted concern over the fact that wireless and fixed broadband services will be treated differently.
    "The Internet is the Internet no matter how you access it," he said.
    Still, he said that voting against the merger would delay any action at least another two years, which is not in the best interest of consumers.
    Republican Commissioner Robert McDowell, who voted against the rules, has been one of the most vocal opponents to Net neutrality regulation. In an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal on Monday, McDowell called the Net neutrality rules unnecessary.
    "On this winter solstice, we will witness jaw-dropping interventionist chutzpah as the FCC bypasses branches of our government in the dogged pursuit of needless and harmful regulation," McDowell wrote. "The darkest day of the year may end up marking the beginning of a long winter's night for Internet freedom."
    During the FCC meeting he explained his opinion, citing four reasons why he did not vote for the regulation:
    Nothing is broken with the current system.
    The FCC doesn't have the legal authority to enforces these rules.
    The rules will cause harm to the economy by stifling investment.
    Existing laws and government structures provide ample consumer protections in the event of systemic market failure.
    The commission has been working on developing these official rules of the road for the Internet for more than a year. In September 2009, Chairman Julius Genachowski suggested adding to the original Internet Openness principles adopted by the commission under former Chairman Michael Powell.
    The debate over whether to have such rules and what these rules should include has become a highly politicized issue attracting the attention of both Congressional Democrats and Republicans.
    In a statement released the night before the vote, Genachowski said that the rules that are now codified as official FCC regulation offers consumers, entrepreneurs and Internet companies, the protection they need, while also promoting investment in new technologies.
    "On one end of the spectrum, there are those who say government should do nothing at all," he said. "On the other end of the spectrum are those who would adopt a set of detailed and rigid regulations. reject both extremes in favor of a strong and sensible framework - one that protects Internet freedom and openness and promotes robust innovation and investment."
    Genachowski went on to say that the new rules will be good for business, because it will help stimulate investment and jobs.
    "We're adopting a framework that will increase certainty for businesses, investors, and entrepreneurs," he said. "We're taking an approach that will help foster a cycle of massive investment, innovation and consumer demand both at the edge and in the core of our broadband networks."
    Net neutrality supporters say the regulation doesn't go far enough. They believe that FCC sided too heavily with big phone companies and cable operators in drafting the new rules. And they believe that the new rules do not provide enough protection for consumers.
    Harold Feld, legal director for Public Knowledge, one of the groups leading the Net neutrality battle, said that FCC's rules are an "incremental step" when it could have been more.
    "It's a step forward, but hardly more than an incremental step beyond the Internet Policy Statement adopted by the previous Republican FCC," Feld said in a blog post. "After such an enormous build up and tumultuous process, it is unsurprising that supporters of an open Internet are bitterly disappointed -- particularly given the uncertainty over how the rules will be enforced."
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    Read more: http://news.cnet.com/8301-30686_3-20026 ... z18lwgALiz

  2. #2
    Coulrophobe's Avatar
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    How about filing some good ol' lawsuits? I'm not the most pro-litigious person but I think this case is worthy of filing one.

    I also think that Verizon or some other ISP is considering filing one as well.

  3. #3
    Senior Member curiouspat's Avatar
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    grrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr

    I just now finished calling the White House, and all my congresscritters re the traitors in the FCC, and the fact that they circumvented Congress and the COURTS. Ya know, there's just a little thing called the 1st Amendment?

    TIME'S UP!
    **********
    Why should <u>only</u> AMERICAN CITIZENS and LEGAL immigrants, have to obey the law?!

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