The Palm Beach Post

FCC chairman moves to end net neutrality

Move would free internet providers of utility-style rules.

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WASHINGTON — Federal Communicat­ions Commission Chairman Ajit Pai on Tuesday followed through on his pledge to repeal 2015 regulation­s designed to ensure that internet service providers treat all online content and apps equally, setting up a showdown with consumer groups and internet companies who fear the move will stifle competitio­n and innovation.

The current rules, known as net neutrality, impose utility-style regulation on ISPs such as Comcast, AT&T and Verizon to prevent them from favoring their own digital services over those of their rivals.

Pai said that he believes the net neutrality rules adopted during the Obama administra­tion discourage the ISPs from making investment­s in their network that would provide even better and faster online access.

“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 on the proposal. He promised to release his entire proposal Wednesday.

The attempt to repeal net neutrality has triggered protests from consumer groups and internet companies.

More than 22 million comments have been filed with the FCC about whether net neutrality should be rolled back.

The Internet Associatio­n, a group whose members include major internet companies such as Google and Amazon, vowed to continue to fight to keep the current net neutrality rules intact.

“Consumers have little choice in their ISP, and service providers should not be allowed to use this gatekeeper position at the point of connection to discrimina­te against websites and apps,” the group’s CEO, Michael Beckerman, said in a Tuesday statement.

Consumers Union predicted a repeal of net neutrality would allow ISPs to raise their prices and give preferenti­al treatment to certain sites and apps.

“Strong net neutrality rules are vital to consumers’ everyday lives and essential to preserving the internet as we know it today — an open marketplac­e where websites large and small compete on equal terms and where informatio­n and ideas move freely,” said Jonathan Schwantes, the advocacy group’s senior policy counsel.

Two of the FCC’s five voting commission­ers signaled they will oppose Pai’s plan.

Commission­er Jessica Rosenworce­l derided Pai’s plan as “ridiculous and offensive to the millions of Americans who use the internet every day.”

Commission­er Mignon L. Clyburn skewered Pai’s proposals as “a giveaway to the nation’s largest communicat­ions companies, at the expense of consumers and innovation.”

Rosenworce­l and Clyburn are the lone Democrats on the FCC.

Pai’s proposal on net neutrality comes after the Republican-dominated commission voted 3-2 last week to weaken rules meant to support independen­t local media, undoing a ban on companies owning newspapers and broadcast stations in a single market.

 ?? ERIC THAYER / NEW YORK TIMES ?? Federal Communicat­ions Commission Chairman Ajit Pai said Tuesday he wants to repeal internet neutrality rules that prohibit service providers from favoring certain content above others.
ERIC THAYER / NEW YORK TIMES Federal Communicat­ions Commission Chairman Ajit Pai said Tuesday he wants to repeal internet neutrality rules that prohibit service providers from favoring certain content above others.

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