Last updated: February 21, 2008 - 1:08am
[SOURCE: BusinessWeek, AUTHOR: Rep. Rick Boucher (D-VA)]
[Commentary] In the decade since Congress last rewrote the nation's telecommunications laws, our open and accessible Internet has become a wellspring for innovation, producing the likes of Google, Yahoo, eBay, Amazon, and thousands of smaller successful e-commerce enterprises. Collectively, the services they sell at home and abroad, and the jobs they have created, are driving forces of the 21st-century economy. Yet storm clouds are gathering, threatening to inhibit further progress. And as we prepare this year to refine our telecommunications rules once again, a measure to assure continued Internet openness and accessibility is now required. A firm principle of network neutrality is essential. With two simple new rules, and without hurting consumers or limiting innovation, telephone companies could launch an array of new services, including high-quality multichannel television. Under the first requirement, broadband providers would be prohibited from blocking, interfering with, or impairing the ability of Internet users to access lawful content, applications, and services on the Internet. Under the second principle, the broadband operators would be prohibited from favoring themselves or their affiliates in the allocation, use, or quality of Internet access services. Consistent with these rules, a broadband provider could prioritize a category of its own bits, such as video, if it also prioritized all video bits traveling over its pipes at no cost to other service providers. Internet providers could also take reasonable and nondiscriminatory steps to manage their networks for technical efficiency, to protect network security, and to prevent illegal activity. This simple, straightforward approach would preserve consumer choice and the openness and accessibility that have been the hallmark of the Internet. Under this approach, the incubation of new Internet-based products and services will continue to thrive. With the proposed merger of AT&T (T) and BellSouth (BLS), "last-mile" Internet links will be controlled by an even smaller number of companies whose reach will span the nation. A clear rule to assure Internet openness and accessibility is, therefore, even more urgently required. Simply put, to foster the conditions that have contributed so much to our economy and our way of life, we need to avoid a two-lane Internet, controlled by incumbents manning toll booths. That's the net on net neutrality.
http://yahoo.businessweek.com/technology/content/mar2006/tc20060307_164289.htm
Related
- Saving the Internet
- Battle for the Web
- Boucher: Three Telecom Issues To Rule Early Debate
- Push for Net neutrality mandate grows
- AT&T deal puts focus on Net fees
- Stevens Open-Minded on AT&T-BellSouth
- Time for Network Neutrality
- Consumers want unrestricted Internet access: survey
- Don't Undercut Internet Access
- Future of the Internet Highway Debated
- Broadband's Growing 'Need for Speed'
- At Stake: The Net As We Know It
- Verizon Splits With Bell Companies On Need For 'Net Neutrality' Solution
- Preserving a Free and Open Internet: A Platform for Innovation, Opportunity, and Prosperity
- Web Titans' D.C. Blues
Ratings
Login to rate this headline.

