Politics

Politics

by Mike Masnick


Filed Under:
ed markey, fcc, internet, net neutrality, regulations



Markey's Non-Regulation Net Neutrality Regulation

from the this-does-what-exactly? dept

As I've made clear in the past, while I believe that a neutral internet is important to encourage growth and innovation, I worry that any legislation passed to require net neutrality will backfire. It will be gamed by lobbyists and there will be loopholes and unintended consequences that will cause a lot more problems than expected. Also, getting Congress into the business of regulating the internet is quite dangerous. So, with that in mind, I should probably be more supportive of Rep. Markey's newly introduced net neutrality legislation because it's barely regulatory at all. There's no mandate and no punishment. It simply states that neutrality is an important principle, and empowers the FCC to look into allegations of anyone violating this principle. However, if that's the case, why bother at all? After all, the FCC already looks into these allegations. Effectively, the only thing this really does is force the FCC to move back to former chair Michael Powell's principles concerning the internet, rather than Kevin Martin's more telco-friendly policies. While I agree that Powell's principles were more reasonable, it's difficult to see why Congress needs to get involved at all at this point -- especially to put up legislation that doesn't do anything other than say what it hopes internet providers will do.

3 Comments | Leave a Comment..

 
 

Reader Comments

(Flattened / Threaded)

    Feb 13th, 2008 @ 3:33pm
  • Huh.

    by Exiled From The Mainstream

    Its mainly a reinforcement tactic I think. Markey wants it in so theres something in place thats in favor of net neutrality and harder to dislodge, otherwise its a gap a bill AGAINST net neutrality can fill.

    It seems silly and it probably is unless you're looking at it from Markey's viewpoint and logic. Its also one of those "Hey look we're doing something!" political tactics. Besides hoping on the internet providers is like hoping the wolves wont eat the sheep if you leave them alone together.

    I'm probably full of it though so whatever, just my two cents.

    (reply to this comment) (link to this comment)

  • Feb 14th, 2008 @ 6:37am
  • I do not think

    by known coward

    That any legislation congress has passed endorsed net neutrality as a policy So i think that is Markety's point.

    (reply to this comment) (link to this comment)

  • Feb 14th, 2008 @ 12:00pm
  • by Anonymous Coward

    this is the same congress that banned online gambling right? how is that keeping the internet neutral?

    (reply to this comment) (link to this comment)

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