House Panel Shoots Down Net Neutrality

Started by TehBorken, Apr 29 06 06:38

Previous topic - Next topic

TehBorken

[h2]House Panel Shoots Down Net Neutrality[/h2] by JEFF CHESTER[/p] [posted online on April 27, 2006][/p] The GOP House leadership rejected calls Wednesday to preserve the Internet's  open and democratic nature in the United States. Phone and cable industry  lobbyists breathed a sigh of relief as the House Energy and Commerce Committee  defeated, 34 to 22, an amendment to a broadband communications bill (known as  the Barton-Rush Act) that would require "network neutrality." Under the  proposal, developed by Massacusetts Democrat Ed Markey and others, phone and  cable companies would have been prohibited from transforming the Internet into a  private, pay-as-you-post toll road. [/p] Over the past week, there has been a remarkable outpouring of public and  corporate support for network neutrality. [a href="http://savetheinternet.com/"]SavetheInternet.com[/a], organized by [a href="http://www.freepress.net/"]Free Press[/a] and representing dozens of  nonprofit groups and leading Internet experts, helped generate 250,000  signatures in less than a week for an online petition calling on Congress to  protect the Internet and pass the Markey bill. [/p] This new group, a collection of unusual bedfellows that runs the political  gamut from [a href="http://www.commoncause.org/site/pp.asp?c=dkLNK1MQIwG&b=186966"]Common  Cause[/a], the [a href="http://www.gunowners.org/"]Gun Owners of America[/a] and  the [a href="http://www.parentstv.org/"]Parents TV Council[/a] to [a href="http://www.craigslist.org/"]Craigslist[/a] founder Craig Newmark, also  spurred many bloggers to take a strong stand (ranging from the liberal Daily Kos  to the libertarian Instapundit). [/p] Meanwhile, Google, Microsoft, Yahoo!, Amazon, eBay and IAC, which make up the  Network Neutrality Coalition, unveiled their "[a href="http://www.dontmesswiththenet.com/home/"]Don't Mess With the Net[/a]"  campaign, running ads in Roll Call and The Hill targeting  lawmakers. MoveOn.org's new [a href="http://www.savetheinternet.com/blog/"]Save  the Internet[/a] campaign also generated many letters and e-mails to members of  Congress. [/p] It is puzzling, though, why Microsoft, Google, Yahoo! and allies have not  unleashed a serious--and very public--nationwide campaign in support of network  neutrality. So far, these giants have worked cautiously, largely inside the  Beltway, reflecting perhaps their corporate ambivalence about calling on  Congress to pass Internet-related safeguards. Unlike the phone and cable  efforts, there has been no saturation-TV or print-advertising campaign,  something these deep-pocketed digital giants could eaily afford. [/p] This growing pressure on the Democrats to stand up for an open Internet  helped convince House minority leader Nancy Pelosi to formally support the call  for network neutrality. Consequently, only five House Commerce Committee  Democrats voted with the GOP majority to kill the digital nondiscrimination  plan, including Edolphus Townes (New York), Albert Wynn (Maryland), Charles  Gonzalez (Texas), Bobby Rush (Illinois) and Gene Green (Texas). Only one  Republican committee member, Heather Wilson of New Mexico, voted in support of  the network neutrality amendment. [/p] Giants including AT&T (SBC), Verizon, Comcast and Time Warner have staked  their business plans for the Internet based on being able to control and  "monetize" the flow of digital communications coming into PCs, digital TVs and  mobile services. The Federal Communications Commission--at the behest of the  phone and cable lobby--recently overturned longstanding safeguards requiring the  Internet to operate in a nondiscriminatory manner. The two industries are  spending tens of millions of dollars to fight off any Congressional safeguard  for the Internet that would restore the nondiscrimination principle. [/p] Commerce Committee chair Joe Barton and House Speaker Dennis Hastert have  been the chief cheerleaders for the cable and phone lobby. On Wednesday, Barton  derided the call for network neutrality, claiming that it's "still not clearly  defined. It's kind of like pornography: You know it when you see it." Barton and  Hastert are expected, as early as next week, to successfully pass the bill in  the House without a network neutrality provision. A showdown is now looming in  the Senate Commerce Committee, which is about to take up its own broadband  Internet legislation. A bipartisan network neutrality amendment, similar to what  was just defeated in the House committee, will be offered by Senators Olympia  Snowe and Byron Dorgan. Public-interest advocates and corporate allies plan to  mobilize an even larger outcry of support for this proposal. [/p] With midterm elections looming, GOP leaders will come under increasing  pressure to make a choice. Will they continue to back their few phone and cable  industry supporters and keep the open Internet safeguards off the table? Or will  they recognize that a genuine digital-age protest movement is emerging that  could further harm their party's chances in November? The next few weeks will  reveal whether the "smart mobs" can win over a tiny handful of communications  monopolists. [/p]  
The real trouble with reality is that there's no background music.