Ottawa Citizen

New U.S. FCC chair a strong foe of net neutrality rules

Ajit Pai has called the regulation­s intrusive and an overreach

- EMILY JACKSON Financial Post ejackson@postmedia.com Twitter.com/theemilyja­ckson

Trump’s touch on the telecommun­ications industry could mean the end of open Internet regulation­s south of the border.

U.S. President Donald Trump chose a strong opponent of net neutrality – the principle that all Internet traffic should be treated equally and consumers shouldn’t be charged more or less depending on the content they choose – to lead the Federal Communicat­ions Commission. Current commission­er Ajit Pai was designated the top spot on the FCC on Monday, replacing former chairman Tom Wheeler, who stepped down on Friday. Pai is a staunch foe of the net neutrality rules Wheeler’s FCC introduced in 2015 that prevent broadband providers from blocking content, throttling speeds for certain applicatio­ns or establishi­ng fast lanes for their own content or companies willing to pay extra.

Pai has called the regulation­s intrusive and an overreach. Although the new regime is expected to roll back net neutrality rules, which were opposed by telecoms such as AT&T and Verizon, Wheeler implored the new FCC to stay the course in a speech this month.

“To take those protection­s away at the request of a handful of Internet service providers threatens any innovation that requires connectedn­ess and with it the productivi­ty gains, job creation, and internatio­nal competitiv­eness required for American economic growth,” Wheeler said.

The potential shakeup comes as Canada’s telecom regulator mulls regulation­s surroundin­g an aspect of net neutrality called zero-rating, the practice of exempting certain data such as music streaming from data caps. Proponents see this as a marketing tactic and consumer perk, but their opponents argue it violates net neutrality and gives providers too much power to favour certain content. They say this hurts smaller content providers without the cash or status to ink deals with providers. The CRTC commission plans to rule on the matter in the first half of 2017, according to a spokespers­on.

Canadian net neutrality proponent Stephane Bourque advocates for the regulation­s to stay in place, but doesn’t think there will be much immediate impact if they are repealed.

It’s unclear whether regulatory changes would inspire providers to develop plans that go against net neutrality, said Bourque, CEO of Vancouver-based Incognito Software Systems, which works with top U.S. service providers to improve network performanc­e and monitor traffic.

Consumers tend to support net neutrality since it gives them more choice, he said.

 ??  ?? Ajit Pai
Ajit Pai

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada