Comments on: AT&T and Verizon say FCC Net neutrality principles work
Executives from AT&T and Verizon Communications say the FCC needs to show that its Net neutrality principles can be enforced to keep future Net neutrality legislation at bay.
Executives from AT&T and Verizon Communications say the FCC needs to show that its Net neutrality principles can be enforced to keep future Net neutrality legislation at bay.
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Really, the FCC needs to slap these companies down, and call them on the lie that 'big bandwidth users' are causing them to lose an inordinate amount of money. We aren't. Most ISP's get a rate of 10 dollars per 500GB's, so since I only use, max on a regular basis 200GB's.... they are still making a heck of a lot of money off me.
Remember, the whole problem began when they, the ILECs, got the FCC to waive their common carriage obligations. So instead of having open competition among ISPs, there is Exactly One ISP on DSL (the ILEC) and Exactly One on cable (the MSO). This is the duopoly they wanted, purely and specifically so that they, the ILECs, could gut neutrality and replace Internet access with "IP-enabled multimedia services" (IMS), a sort of Prodigy Classic on stereoids (now, with moving pictures!). And -- this was an AT&T statement -- take a share of the transaction value of ecommerce across their network. Wiretap everything (DPI) and charge for value. Just look at their wireless networks (email and web browsing ONLY) to see what they do when allowed. It is just taking them a while to scale up their IMS mess to cover wireline.
Comcast and other ISPs, especially the surviving independent ISPs (it ain't easy), have a serious problem with extremely heavy usage caused by high-quality video across the Internet. If there were a real (open) choice of ISPs, we'd recognize the market effect, price aligning with cost, and product differentiation to meet cost goals. But the well is poisoned. Rational activities are viewed with suspicion, and the real culprits are manipulating their sock puppet at the FCC.
And hey, what ever became of the "rule of law" in this country? The FCC is suppposed to make rules following the Administrative Procedures Act. It's not supposed to enforce non-rules based on Dictates of the Chairman. What is this, Mao's China? I know our democratic system is in tatters but this is ridiculous.
Congress has its own bandwidth challenges. Every Congress ends up leaving important policy issues unresolved because it runs out of time or resources, or has misplaced its priorities. In the telecom sector the most important Congressional priority should be to find a workable solution to providing universal broadband access. Close behind that is the need for health IT legislation that could reduce healthcare costs by billions of dollars. The strongest arguement against network neutrality legislation now is Congressional priorities - Congress should be focusing its time on those issues, as long as the FCC continues to enforce its network neutrality principles.
- by zeroplane June 18, 2008 9:59 AM PDT
- Comcast!
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(5 Comments)It's Craptastic!