Associated Press photo by Evan Vucci |
Obama's "statements at a town-hall meeting in Santa Monica, Calif., on innovation gave a strong signal to Mr. Obama’s Democratic appointees on the Federal Communications Commission that he wants them to heed the overwhelming public sentiment expressed in 3.7 million comments sent to the commission in recent months concerning a set of rules proposed by the commission meant to protect net neutrality," Wyatt writes. "A large majority of those comments, solicited by the commission, came out against Internet fast lanes—a practice known as paid prioritization."
In
May, the FCC "sought comment on a preliminary proposal for a new
set of rules intended to protect the 'Open Internet,'" Wyatt writes. "A previous set of
rules, crafted in 2010, was struck down in January by a federal appeals
court, which said the rules illegally subjected Internet service
providers to utility-like regulation."
"The
new rules were meant to discourage broadband providers from
discriminating against or blocking legal content requested by
subscribers," Wyatt writes. "But they were interpreted as not banning the creation of
fast lanes, in which a content provider like Netflix might pay an
Internet service provider like Comcast a fee to give its content top
priority for delivery to customers."
"Supporters of net neutrality say that if payment were required for
content providers to reach consumers in a timely fashion, only
wealthier, more established companies would be able to afford to do so,
while emerging companies—those that could be the next Google or
Facebook—might be relegated to the slow lane and a doubtful future," Wyatt writes. (Read more)
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