Medicine Hat News

FCC chairman sets out to scrap open internet access rules

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The chairman of the Federal Communicat­ions Commission set out Tuesday to scrap rules around open internet access, a move that would allow giant cable and telecom companies to throttle broadband speeds and favour their own services if they wish.

Ajit Pai followed through on a pledge to try to repeal “net neutrality” regulation­s enacted under the Obama administra­tion. The current rules treat internet service providers such as Comcast, AT&T and Verizon as if they were utility companies that provide essential services, like electricit­y. The rules mandate that they give equal access to all online content and apps.

Pai said those rules discourage investment­s that could provide even better and faster online access. Instead, he said new rules would force ISPs to be transparen­t about their services and management policies, and then would let the market decide.

“Under my proposal, the federal government will stop micromanag­ing the internet,” Pai said in a statement.

Pai distribute­d his alternativ­e plan to other FCC commission­ers Tuesday in preparatio­n for a Dec. 14 vote. Pai promised to release his entire proposal Wednesday. Although the FCC’s two Democrats said they will oppose the proposal, the repeal is likely to prevail as Republican­s dominate 3-2. The vote for net neutrality in 2015 was also along party lines, but Democrats dominated then.

Equal treatment for all web traffic has been a fundamenta­l principle of the internet since its creation but companies have increasing­ly put their thumb on the scales of access. AT&T, for example, doesn’t count use of its streaming service DirecTV Now against wireless data caps, potentiall­y making it seem cheaper to its cellphone customers than rival TV services. Rivals would have to pay AT&T for that privilege.

Regulators, consumer advocates and some tech companies are concerned that repealing net neutrality will give ISPs even more power to block or slow down rival offerings.

A repeal also opens the ability for ISPs to charge a company like Netflix for a faster path to its customers. Allowing this paidpriori­ty market to exist could skew prices and create winners and losers among fledgling companies that require a high-speed connection to end users.

Pai, who was appointed by President Donald Trump, said in an interview on Fox News Radio that Trump did not have any input on his proposal. Asked whether deregulati­on would result in higher prices and put speedy internet access out of the reach of blue-collar Americans, Pai said “it’s going to mean exactly the opposite.”

“These heavy-handed regulation­s have made it harder for the private sector to build out the networks especially in rural America,” Pai said.

In a Wall Street Journal editorial published Tuesday, Pai cited a report by a non-profitthin­ktank , the Informatio­n Technology & Innovation Foundation, that said investment by the dozen largest ISPs fell about 2 per cent from 2015 to 2016, to $61 billion. The group didn’t link the drop solely to the stiffer rules introduced in 2015.

The attempt to repeal net neutrality has triggered protests from consumer groups and internet companies. A data firm called Emprata that was backed by a telecom industry group found in August that after filtering out form letters, the overwhelmi­ng majority of comments to the FCC — about 1.8 million — favoured net neutrality, compared with just 24,000 who supported its repeal.

Carmen Scurato, director of policy and legal affairs for the National Hispanic Media Coalition, said ISPs’ ability to impose monthly caps on data use already act to raise prices and limit access. Repealing net neutrality, she said, “is just erecting more barriers.”

Among those that will be hit hardest are startups that depend on high-speed internet connection­s for growth, said Colin Angle, co-founder and CEO of iRobot, maker of the Roomba robot vacuum cleaners. He said his own company wouldn’t be dramatical­ly affected in the near term, but the nascent robotics industry overall might.

“The need for these robots to consume bandwidth is certainly on the rise,” Angle said.

Google said in a statement that net neutrality rules “are working well for consumers and we’re disappoint­ed in the proposal announced today.”

Other tech companies were more muted, with some referring instead to their trade group, the Internet Associatio­n. Netflix, which had been vocal in support of the rules in 2015, tweeted that it “supports strong #NetNeutral­ity” and opposes the rules rollback.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? Federal Communicat­ions Commission Chairman Ajit Pai is following through on his pledge to repeal 2015 regulation­s designed to ensure that Internet service providers treat all online content and apps equally.
AP FILE PHOTO Federal Communicat­ions Commission Chairman Ajit Pai is following through on his pledge to repeal 2015 regulation­s designed to ensure that Internet service providers treat all online content and apps equally.

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