The US Federal Communications Commission’s new net neutrality framework clarified some points from its 2009 plan, but the latest proposal still faces scant support in Congress and from Internet service providers.
The FCC chairman Julius Genachowski offered a sneak peek at the draft net neutrality proposal on 1 December. More details will be available when the FCC discusses the proposal at its next open meeting on 21 December.
A few things remain the same from the initial 2009 net neutrality proposal: the FCC is still committed to protecting an “open Internet” and Internet service providers would still be banned from discriminating against applications or websites. The wireless industry is still subject to net neutrality rules.
However, the Washington DC appeals court ruled in the spring that the FCC did not currently have legal authority to regulate ISP network management. The case centred around whether the FCC could force US ISP Comcast to not block peer-to-peer file-sharing site BitTorrent on its network.
Under current FCC rules, ISPs are classified as Title I “information services” and not subject to FCC regulations over issues such as rate setting and universal service obligations. The FCC has authority over Title II telecommunications services, which includes public utilities such as telephone companies.
With the appellate decision, the FCC must either wait for Congress to enact net neutrality legislation or go ahead and reclassify the ISPs. Genachowski initially supported classification, and the reclassification is entirely within the FCC’s authority, but there was a lot of industry opposition and hints of legal challenges, similar to the Comcast case.
As for Congressional legislation, the net neutrality bill failed to come to vote before the mid-term elections in November, and it is unlikely to pass in a Republican-controlled House of Representatives. As CNN/Money noted, all 95 House and Senate candidates who’d supported the proposal lost on Election Day.
“I want to emphasise that moving this item to a vote at the Commission is not designed or intended to preclude action by Congress,” said Genachowski.
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