Author Topic: Has the tide turned against the FCC’s plan for regulating the Internet?  (Read 445 times)

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Online mystery-ak

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http://humanevents.com/2015/02/24/has-the-tide-turned-against-the-fccs-plan-for-regulating-the-internet/?utm_source=hefbp&utm_medium=fbpage&utm_campaign=heupdate

Yaël Ossowski | Tuesday Feb 24, 2015 6:00 AM

This article originally appeared on watchdog.org.

Whether the public knows it or not, the Internet is set to face its biggest transformation yet when the Federal Communications Commission meets in Washington, D.C. on Thursday.

It’s at this meeting of the commissioners, cloaked in bureaucratic mystique, that FCC chairman Tom Wheeler is expected to present the Title II classification of Internet service providers. That means companies offering Internet services would be regarded — and regulated — the same as those offering telephone services.

It will give the FCC an incredible amount of power in crafting rules to guarantee certain “marketplace behavior in a way that protects consumers,” wrote Wheeler in a Wired article detailing the plan this month.

The plan has been heralded as net neutrality to keep the Internet “open, fair and free” by proponents, and derided as the first harmful step in regulating the most creative and potent technology of our age by opponents.

Is it a measure of fairness, keeping big Internet companies from dictating what we see online? Is it about keeping the Internet free and open?

At least the public doesn’t seem to think so.

“The public neither understands nor supports the FCC voting on net neutrality rules without greater disclosure of the exact wording and the details of the proposal,” said Peter Hart, founder of Hart Research Associates.

Partnering with the Progressive Policy Institute, a self-titled “New Democratic” think thank, Hart conducted a detailed survey Friday that reveals the extent to which the majority of Americans are opposed to the idea of regulating the Internet.

“Net neutrality is near net zero understanding: just one in four Americans knows what the term refers to, and just one in 10 Americans has positive feelings about it,” said Hart in a press release accompanying the results.

According to the survey, 56 percent of Americans say the government shouldn’t take a stronger and more active role in overseeing and regulating the Internet. That’s compounded by the nearly three-fourths of respondents who say they’re not even familiar with the idea of net neutrality.

That’s surely a blow to the active online campaigns highlighting the issue, funded inlarge part by the Ford Foundation and many other progressive organizations who regularly champion net freedom.

“These findings suggest that the FCC’s bid to impose outdated telephone regulations on the Internet is driven more by professional activists than by the public, which seems instinctively to resist the idea,” said Will Marshall, president of PPI. “That’s why Congress should take a closer look at what the FCC is up to and make sure these issues get a thorough public airing.”

It was conducted Feb. 13-15 by telephone survey with 800 U.S. adults and has a margin of error of 3.46 percent.

This latest poll paints a different picture than a more cited survey from last November, conducted by the University of Delaware’s Center for Political Communication, often trumpeted by proponents.

It found that 81 percent of Americans oppose “allowing Internet service providers to charge some websites or streaming video services extra for faster speeds,” drawing attention to the uniform answers of both Republicans and Democrats.

It was conducted Oct. 21-26, 2014, from a pool of 900 U.S. residents and has a margin of error of 3.2 percent.

The intended result is obvious from the wording, even as proponents pointed to Republican support of the plan as a “bipartisan consensus.”

As usual, it comes down to semantics and framing. The public is generally against the idea of government regulation of the Internet and similarly against large ISPs charging prices for premium access, a gap of information exploited by both sides in the debate.

Whether the most recent survey reveals a definite public shift against net neutrality and Internet regulation is up for interpretation, but it didn’t stop detractors of the plan from using the results to make their case.

“President Obama’s 332-page plan to regulate the Internet has awakened a sleeping giant,” said FCC commissioner Ajit Pai in reaction to the survey. He’s made his namelikening the plan to Obama’s pet project to control Americans’ online behavior.

“Over the last two weeks, it has become clear that the American people want the federal government to keep its hands off of the Internet. Unfortunately, the FCC has steadfastly refused to inform the public because it knows that the more the American people find out about President Obama’s plan, the less they like it,” said Pai in a statement on the FCC’s website.

Regardless of the debate spearheaded by “professional activists,” Americans will bear the brunt of the decision to come Thursday, when the FCC considers the plan and likely adopts it among partisan lines.
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Re: Has the tide turned against the FCC’s plan for regulating the Internet?
« Reply #1 on: February 24, 2015, 07:13:17 pm »
http://thehill.com/business-a-lobbying/233626-fcc-dem-wants-last-minute-changes-to-net-neutrality-rules#.VOyz1KGpLOE.twitter

Democratic FCC commissioner balks at net neutrality rules
By Julian Hattem - 02/24/15 12:00 PM EST

A Democrat on the Federal Communications Commission wants to narrow the scope of new net neutrality rules that are set for a vote on Thursday, The Hill has learned.

Mignon Clyburn, one of three Democrats on the FCC, has asked Chairman Tom Wheeler to roll back some of the restrictions before the full commission votes on them, FCC officials said.

The request — which Wheeler has yet to respond to — puts the chairman in the awkward position of having to either roll back his proposals, or defend the tough rules and convince Clyburn to back down.
It’s an ironic spot for Wheeler, who for months was considered to be favoring weaker rules than those pushed for by his fellow Democrats, before he reversed himself about backing tougher restrictions on Internet service providers.

Wheeler will need the votes of both Clyburn and Democratic Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel to pass the rules since the two Republicans on the commission are expected to vote against anything he proposes. 

Clyburn’s changes would leave in place the central and most controversial component of Wheeler’s rules — the notion that broadband Internet service should be reclassified so that it can be treated as a “telecommunications” service under Title II of the Communications Act, similar to utilities like phone lines.

Proponents of net neutrality have said that move is the surest way to prevent Internet service providers from interfering with people’s access to the Web.

However, she wants to eliminate a new legal category of “broadband subscriber access services,” which was created as an additional point of legal authority for the FCC to monitor the ways that companies hand off traffic on the back end of the Internet.

Those deals, known as “interconnection” arrangements, became a point of contention last year, when Netflix accused Comcast and other companies of erecting “Internet tolls” before easily passing Web traffic from one network to another.

The initial plan sought by Wheeler would allow the FCC to investigate and take action against deals that are “not just and reasonable,” according to a fact sheet released by the FCC earlier this month.

Eliminating the new legal category could make it trickier for the FCC to police those arrangements, said the FCC officials, who were granted anonymity in order to speak freely about the ongoing negotiations.

Other FCC officials have previously said that the broader act of reclassifying broadband Internet service would, in and of itself, give the commission enough powers to oversee interconnection deals. That opinion has been backed up by lawyers at Google, among others, who made the argument to FCC officials last week.

Clyburn’s changes also would replace a new standard for Internet service providers’ conduct, which was meant to act as a catchall rule for any future behavior that might abuse consumers. That standard would be swapped out with potentially narrower language from 2010 rules that prevented “unreasonable discrimination.” A federal court tossed out those 2010 rules early last year, setting the stage for the FCC to write new rules.

The full text of the rules will not be revealed to the public until after the FCC’s vote on Thursday morning.

Clyburn declined to discuss specific changes she was supporting on Tuesday.

“This is a process that is an interaction with all five members of the commission and their offices,” she said after remarks at a policy forum hosted by Comptel, a trade group.

“I will just say that I am attempting to strike a balance and whatever you hear, whether it’s accurate or not, is a reflection of my enthusiastic willingness to do so.”

In a speech at the Federal Communications Bar Association last week, the commissioner said that she was “pleased” with the initial draft but also hinted that she might need some fixes to strike that balance between “strong” protections for consumers and “clarity” for investors.

“Some have expressed concerns about allowing private rights of action in court, failing to consider the impact on smaller [Internet service providers], that including interconnection goes too far or that the case-by-case approach does not go far enough and that the new conduct rule may not be as strong as the previous unreasonable discrimination rule,” she said.

The requested changes come as FCC lawyers are spending hours poring over the text of the rules.

In keeping with FCC procedural rules, the four other commissioners outside of Wheeler’s office got their first look at the rules just two and a half weeks ago. Now they are scrambling to make edits ahead of the vote on Thursday morning.

— Updated at 1:58 p.m.
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Offline flowers

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Re: Has the tide turned against the FCC’s plan for regulating the Internet?
« Reply #2 on: February 24, 2015, 08:19:13 pm »
They will get this. If not Thursday then some time soon.


Offline GourmetDan

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Re: Has the tide turned against the FCC’s plan for regulating the Internet?
« Reply #3 on: February 24, 2015, 08:26:56 pm »

A Democrat on the Federal Communications Commission wants to narrow the scope of new net neutrality rules that are set for a vote on Thursday, The Hill has learned.


'Narrow' the scope for now to get it in place, expand it later.

A strategy so stunning in it's brilliance...     /s


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Offline Fishrrman

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Re: Has the tide turned against the FCC’s plan for regulating the Internet?
« Reply #4 on: February 25, 2015, 04:34:59 am »
[[ Has the tide turned against the FCC’s plan for regulating the Internet? ]]

Articles like this are a joke. Read the headline, ignore the rest.

The administration is going to do what it wants.

Who's to stop them?