FCC chairman Responds to Celebrities, ‘Verified Liberals,’ Net Neutrality Concerns – IOTW Report

FCC chairman Responds to Celebrities, ‘Verified Liberals,’ Net Neutrality Concerns

Breitbart: In his remarks on Net Neutrality reform today, FCC chairman Ajit Pai responded to a number of arguments made by defenders of the existing Net Neutrality framework, zeroing in on those made by celebrities with “large online followings.”

“Given that some of the more eye-catching critiques have come from Hollywood celebrities, whose large online followings give them out-sized influence in shaping the public debate, I thought I’d directly respond to some of their assertions” said Pai in his speech.

One of the key complaints made by Net Neutrality advocates, including former Star Trek actor and alleged sex pest George Takei, is that without the current regulatory framework, ISPs would split their services up into packages.

The concern has also gained traction on the internet due to the following viral graphic (which, weirdly, portrays the hypothetical post-Net Neutrality internet as cheaper than its supposedly more consumer-friendly predecessor).

Net Neutrality advocates have also been sharing a graphic that incorrectly portrays this kind of system operating in Portugal. In reality, the graphic depicts Portugal’s mobile internet plans.

Responding to this point, Pai pointed out that ISPs are already allowed to split their services up into packages, and have not done so.

For one thing, the Obama Administration itself made clear that curated Internet packages are lawful in the United States under the Commission’s 2015 rules. That’s right: the conduct described in a graphic that is currently being spread around the Internet is currently allowed under the previous Administration’s Title II rules. So, for example, if broadband providers want to offer a $10 a month package where you could only access a few websites like Twitter and Facebook, they can do that today. Indeed, the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals recently pointed out that net neutrality rules don’t prohibit these curated offerings.

So the complaint by Mr. Takei and others doesn’t hold water. They’re arguing that if the plan is adopted, Internet service providers would suddenly start doing something that net-neutrality rules already allow them to do. But the reason that Internet service providers aren’t offering such packages now, and likely won’t offer such packages in the future, is that American consumers by and large don’t want them.

Additionally, as several fact-checkers have pointed out, as part of the European Union, Portugal does have net neutrality regulations! Moreover, the graphic relates to supplemental data plans featuring specific apps that customers could get from one provider, beyond the various unrestricted base plans that provider offered. As one report put it, this example “is pointing to an example that has nothing to do with net neutrality.”

Pai also addressed one of the more fundamental misconceptions about Net Neutrality reform: that it would lead to an internet completely free of regulation and oversight.

Perhaps the most common criticism is that ending Title II utility-style regulation will mean the end of the Internet as we know it. Or, as Kumail Nanjiani, a star of HBO’s Silicon Valley put it, “We will never go back to a free Internet.”

But here’s the simple truth: We had a free and open Internet for two decades before 2015, and we’ll have a free and open Internet going forward.

Many critics don’t seem to understand that we are moving from heavy-handed regulation to light touch regulation, not a completely hands-off approach. We aren’t giving anybody a free pass. We are simply shifting from one-size-fits-all pre-emptive regulation to targeted enforcement based on actual market failure or anticompetitive conduct.  more

8 Comments on FCC chairman Responds to Celebrities, ‘Verified Liberals,’ Net Neutrality Concerns

  1. So basically the unhinged left and Hollyweird want me to pay more for shit I don’t use?

    If the graphic was correct, it appears I could save $27.98/month because I don’t game or use unsocial media.

    By the way, I received a notice from Netfux that the monthly rate is going up to $10.99/month. For years it was only $7.99/month then about 18 months ago it went up to $9.99/month. I was going to quit it back then but others in the house insisted we keep Netfux. I caved after considering it was only $24/year more, however this additional $12/year is grinding me pretty hard.

    Further, internet/cable/phone pricing seems to be adjusted based upon population. Having recently moved to a rural location with 550k less assholes surrounding me, my internet/cable bill went down $35/month for more service. With comcast I was paying about $110/month for internet and severely limited basic cable TV. Out in the sticks here my cable internet is just as fast and they provide expanded digital high definition cable along with a phone line, $75/month.

  2. As usual the inequities we saw before this spurious rule were primarily because of government intervention. So the lefties’ response is to create more government intervention. Of course, although the hoi polloi may think this is mostly about delivering fast internet to everyone (which it doesn’t) it is really about controlling our First Amendment rights.

  3. This issue has been pretty low on what-to-learn priority list. Just have to keep quiet when libs want to discuss. But one thing’s for sure: If screaming radical and emotional libs are for something, it’s wise to automatically take the opposite position. Looking for Priuses with bumper stickers re Net Neut.

  4. What I’ve seen argued about the need for NN, content providers can’t be charged more for using higher amounts of available bandwidth. With government regulation, this usually means the smaller companies will have to pay the higher amount that the big providers do. End result, big providers continue to be big providers, small providers go bankrupt before they’re profitable. Win-Win for the big providers, not so much for all the start-ups to come.

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