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#1271876 - 10/22/09 06:35 PM banks,automakers and now the net
kms Offline
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kms
Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 6,436
God Bless America
FCC Approves Proposed Net Neutrality Rules
The proposal, or so-called net neutrality regulations, will set off a series of regulatory procedures and a final rule is expected to be introduced early next year.

FOXNews.com

Thursday, October 22, 2009


FCC Approves Proposed Net Neutrality Rules
The proposal, or so-called net neutrality regulations, will set off a series of regulatory procedures and a final rule is expected to be introduced early next year.

FOXNews.com

Thursday, October 22, 2009


The Federal Communications Commission voted Thursday to approve proposed new rules aimed at blocking Internet service providers, like Comcast, and wireless phone companies such as Verizon and AT&T, from intentionally halting or slowing Web traffic.

The proposal, or so-called net neutrality regulations, will set off a series of regulatory procedures and a final rule is expected to be introduced early next year.

Supporters say the regulations prevents any company from steering viewers to its own outlets and manipulating choice by consumers to watch or read what they choose.

But critics charge that the plan is another power grab by the government.

"These new rules should rightly be viewed by consumers suspiciously as another government power grab over a private service provided by private companies in a competitive marketplace," Sen. John McCain wrote in an opinion article published by The Washington Times.

"Does this sound familiar? It should," McCain said, comparing the proposal to the federal bailout of Wall Street and the auto industry.

McCain argued that a government takeover of the Internet will "stifle innovation" and "hinder job creation," noting that the technology industry is the fastest-growing job market behind health care.

"Regulation kills innovation," he said. "Let's not kill the Internet. An open and unfettered Internet may be the real stimulus during these difficult economic times, and it comes without a $787 billion price tag that is passed along to taxpayers at a significant cost for future generations."

The proposal contains six principles, including four existing guidelines adopted in 2005 on Internet network operations. The additional rules are designed to prevent Internet traffic discrimination and increase transparency on how carriers manage their networks to ensure that they aren't targeting technologies that may compete with their own services.

Verizon and Google have endorsed the plan, saying they need open access to all Internet users, while AT&T has opposed it, saying the status quo should be maintained.

The FCC will take comments on how to apply the rules until Jan. 14 with replies due March 5, an FCC spokesman told Foxnews.com.


The Federal Communications Commission voted Thursday to approve proposed new rules aimed at blocking Internet service providers, like Comcast, and wireless phone companies such as Verizon and AT&T, from intentionally halting or slowing Web traffic.

The proposal, or so-called net neutrality regulations, will set off a series of regulatory procedures and a final rule is expected to be introduced early next year.

Supporters say the regulations prevents any company from steering viewers to its own outlets and manipulating choice by consumers to watch or read what they choose.

But critics charge that the plan is another power grab by the government.

"These new rules should rightly be viewed by consumers suspiciously as another government power grab over a private service provided by private companies in a competitive marketplace," Sen. John McCain wrote in an opinion article published by The Washington Times.

"Does this sound familiar? It should," McCain said, comparing the proposal to the federal bailout of Wall Street and the auto industry.

McCain argued that a government takeover of the Internet will "stifle innovation" and "hinder job creation," noting that the technology industry is the fastest-growing job market behind health care.

"Regulation kills innovation," he said. "Let's not kill the Internet. An open and unfettered Internet may be the real stimulus during these difficult economic times, and it comes without a $787 billion price tag that is passed along to taxpayers at a significant cost for future generations."

The proposal contains six principles, including four existing guidelines adopted in 2005 on Internet network operations. The additional rules are designed to prevent Internet traffic discrimination and increase transparency on how carriers manage their networks to ensure that they aren't targeting technologies that may compete with their own services.

Verizon and Google have endorsed the plan, saying they need open access to all Internet users, while AT&T has opposed it, saying the status quo should be maintained.

The FCC will take comments on how to apply the rules until Jan. 14 with replies due March 5, an FCC spokesman told Foxnews.com.

Last edited by kms; 10/22/09 06:35 PM.
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#1271894 - 10/22/09 06:42 PM Re: banks,automakers and now the net kms
buggs Offline
Power Poster
Joined: May 2005
Posts: 8,487
An answer to Senator McCain...

Neutrality Rules Won't Impact Investment
The oldest bluff in the telecom lobbying playbook...
09:56AM Thursday Oct 22 2009 by Karl Bode

One of the talking points repeated over and over and over by carriers who oppose network neutrality is that network neutrality rules will "stifle investment" in the sector. Verizon CEO Ivan Seidenberg said as much yesterday, and AT&T urged their employees (via private e-mail accounts) to bombard the FCC with the talking point earlier this week. Lobbyists and paid mouthpieces also repeat the threat at every opportunity. But is it true? Not even remotely, according to a new report by consumer advocacy firm Free Press:

Not only did AT&T's investment increase under network neutrality rules, but the company's gross investment also increased more than any other ISP's in America during this period. In the two years following the imposition of network neutrality rules, AT&T's gross capital expenditures increased by $1.8 billion, or 10.2 percent.

For one, it needs to be understood that with the volume of lobbying that will wind up shaping the FCC's new rules, it's highly unlikely that the guidelines will do anything other than prevent the most egregious of anti-competitive offenses (like an ISP blocking a service because it competes with one of its own). The idea that a heavily-lobbied Uncle Sam is going to pass real, tough pro-consumer laws at this juncture is somewhat of a joke in and of itself -- much less the idea that these basic rules would impact the largely unrelated need to invest in capacity.

Secondly, if you've studied the telecom industry lobbying play book at all, you know that threatening to halt investment is the oldest trick in the book. Carriers have always threatened to halt investment unless they get whatever it is they want (lower taxes, elimination of consumer protections, subsidies, less regulation for them, more regulation for a competitor, a new pony). It almost always works, thanks to spineless regulators who are driven either by fear their state is going to be left in the digital dust, or by campaign contributions.

For example in Massachusetts, Verizon first threatened to halt FiOS investment unless they got favorable TV regulation. After getting what they wanted -- Verizon again threatened to halt investment because they didn't want to pay property taxes. Even when Verizon wasn't having to pay property taxes they left huge rural swaths of Massachusetts unwired -- and it had to do with a low rural ROI and limited competition, given they already had favorable regulation. Withholding network investment to gain political favor is bullying, and the threats are empty.

But Free Press plays along, giving readers a business 101 primer on the kind of things that actually do impact network investment: competition (which carriers often don't face), supply costs (which continue to drop), and demand or expectation of demand (which obviously continue to rise). As the Free Press notes, when asked, no ISP has actually been able to supply a concrete example of how the new FCC neutrality rules would lower ROI, but that apparently doesn't stop these companies and their mouthpieces from re-using the argument repeatedly.

The idea that a few watered down FCC neutrality rules would halt absolutely necessary investment is bogus, yet that apparently doesn't stop it from being repeated not only by ISPs, but by a gullible press, well-lobbied politicians, and investors. It shows you the effectiveness of having your lobbyists repeat the same false arguments for half a decade, regardless of how many times those arguments are proven incorrect.


Yes, this is from a blog, AG. smile
Last edited by ynnuB sguB; 10/22/09 06:44 PM. Reason: Fix paragraph breaks.
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