DFighter Posted July 25, 2017 Posted July 25, 2017 (edited) WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The chairman of the U.S. House Energy and Commerce Committee on Tuesday asked the chief executives of Alphabet Inc, Facebook Inc, Amazon.com Inc, AT&T Inc, Verizon Communications Inc and other companies to testify at a Sept. 7 hearing on the future of net neutrality rules. The U.S. Federal Communications Commission is considering tossing out 2015 Obama administration net neutrality rules that reclassified internet service like a public utility. The rules bar providers from blocking, slowing or offering paid prioritization of websites. Many internet providers want Congress to step in and write permanent rules. Other chief executives asked to testify include the heads of Comcast Corp, Netflix Inc and Charter Communications Inc. Some companies including Facebook said they were reviewing the letter but none immediately said if they will testify. "A strong consensus is forming across party lines and across industries that it’s time for Congress to call a halt on the back-and-forth and set clear net neutrality ground rules for the internet,” said Representative Greg Walden, a Republican, who chairs the committee. "The time has come to get everyone to the table and get this figured out." A group representing major technology firms last week urged the FCC to abandon plans to rescind the rules barring internet service providers from hindering consumer access to web content or offering paid "fast lanes." Major internet service have urged the FCC, however, to reverse the rules, even as they vowed not to hinder internet access. In May, the FCC voted 2-1 to advance Republican FCC Chairman Ajit Pai's plan to withdraw the former Obama administration's order reclassifying internet service providers as if they were utilities. The FCC is considering whether it has the authority to limit internet providers' ability to block, throttle or offer "paid prioritization," and, if so, whether it should keep any regulations in place. More than 12 million public comments have been filed on the proposal. The Internet Association, a group representing Facebook, Google, Microsoft Corp and Twitter Inc, said last week it was "open to alternative legal bases for the rules, either via legislative action codifying the existing net neutrality rules or via sound legal theories offered by the commission."Source: http://www.reuters.com/article/us-apple-qualcomm-idUSKBN1A92QB Source? (added by Redbaird) : https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-internet-idUSKBN1AA1VO Edited July 26, 2017 by RedBaird 1 Quote
Xernicus Posted July 26, 2017 Posted July 26, 2017 Wrong source. I find it interesting that it looks like only major telecom companies (most of which offer or own traditional cable TV services) are the only ISPs being invited. Small companies or consumers? Out of the question. Of course AT&T, Charter, Comcast and Verizon don't want net neutrality. They either own or have stakes in traditional cable TV, and they want to keep their cash cow going.The real reason for this stilted meeting of course is greed... senators help big companies, they get constituents and line their pockets with big dough. I've never understood cable TV. You pay big bucks- but you can't pick and choose the channels you want, there's just as many (or more) commercials on Cable TV than on OTA (antenna) broadcasting, there's tons of hidden fees and necessary taxes, etc. Here's my question... what's the likelihood that Comcast is going to use any rollback of net neutrality to upsell their "faster" internet speeds with the excuse that it will help with stuttering/buffering on sites like Netflix? (due to their own throttling and "sandscreen" filters in place) ...I'd bet 100%.Now if the government actually wants to be of use here... they'd get together and break all of these jokers up like they did to Bell Systems in the 80's. 1 Quote
Dingus Posted July 26, 2017 Posted July 26, 2017 Now if the government actually wants to be of use here... they'd get together and break all of these jokers up like they did to Bell Systems in the 80's. If you notice...they broke them up and they've been putting themselves back together again ever since! Quote
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