/ 04.07.2010 12:00AM
FCC Extends Net Neutrality Reply Comment Period
WASHINGTON: The
FCC today adopted an order extending the reply comment period for it’s Net
Neutrality proposal. Reply comments originally due March 5 are now due April
26. The extension comes a day after a federal court determined the FCC did not
have the authority to impose the spirit of Network Neutrality. The case involved
the FCC telling Comcast it couldn’t block or inhibit traffic on its broadband
service. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia ruled against
the FCC on the grounds it had no such authority.
Network Neutrality contends that broadband providers like Comcast should not be
able to limit or control the amount of bandwidth used by a site or a particular
user. The cable operator was caught doing so with BitTorrent users trading hefty
files, and the FCC ordered it to stop. Comcast took the commission to court and
won this latest round.
The FCC went after Comcast more on arcanum than hard and fast rules. The
commission’s Network Neutrality position consists of voluntary parameters
established in 2004, when broadband providers tried to block Internet voice
service competitors. The crux of the FCC’s position is that “network
operators cannot prevent users from accessing the lawful Internet content,
applications, and services of their choice, nor can they prohibit users from
attaching non-harmful devices to the network.”
The FCC
proposed
codifying voluntary Network Neutrality rules last October, as it prepared
the National Broadband Plan. Reply comments on that proposal--Dockets No.
09-191 and 07-52, are now due April 26. -- Deborah
D. McAdams
See..
April 6, 2010:
“Comcast Strikes a Blow
Against Net Neutrality”
A federal court today said the FCC did not have the authority to regulate
network management.