Posted on 10/26/2009 8:52:12 AM PDT by bs9021
Net Discrimination
Sarah Carlsruh, October 26, 2009
At the October 13 Conservative Bloggers Briefing at the Heritage Foundation, FCC Commissioner Robert McDowell addressed the issue of net neutrality, specifically the Federal Communication Commissions (FCC) upcoming initiative to regulate the internet.
On October 22nd, the FCC voted on a notice of proposed rulemaking regarding open internet practices. According to Commissioner McDowell, the premise behind the new rulesas outlined by FCC Chairman Julius Genachowskiis that the internet is broken and government must fix it. This draft, said McDowell, focuses on adding a non-discrimination requirement to the four net neutrality principles that came out in the summer of 2005, emphasizing the fact that, as of yet, the requirements have been uncodified principles, not regulations.
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) examined broadband markets in 2006 and determined no market failure, said McDowell. He then asked why rules should be changed when there is no market failure. What the FCC is looking for, he argued, is data since so far there has not been really a factual case made, adding that on the 22nd, the debate will begin in earnest.
Rather than government regulation, McDowell encouraged more private sector collaboration, saying that he subscribes to the philosophy that we should have innovation everywhere, not just where the government permits innovation.
Unfortunately, he warned, an increase in regulation might have the unintended consequence of reducing network investment as a result of the regulatory uncertainty that can come from new rules at the FCC.....
(Excerpt) Read more at academia.org ...
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