FCC 'Net Neutrality' Rules Would Keep the Web Free for Speech and Trade
[Commentary] To understand the debate over network neutrality on the Internet, it is useful to start with the adage "To not act is to act." If the federal government does nothing—that is, if it does not adopt network neutrality rules—it will be allowing telephone and cable companies to block, degrade, or slow down any content on the Internet for any reason. Without such rules, the Internet will not live up to its full potential for fueling economic growth and serving as a vehicle for artistic, political, and social expression. Big broadband providers would like to change the Internet as we now know it. They want to be able to slow down or even block content for whatever reason they choose. They want to be able to keep such practices secret, too. Do we really want AT&T or Comcast selling Domino's Pizza the right to have its website always load faster than those of local independent pizzerias? What about blocking either pro-choice or pro-life websites or, for that matter, both of them? Right now, service providers are free to do so. In short, network neutrality is about your freedom to use the full potential of the Internet for commercial, political, artistic, and social expression. We need it, and that is why the FCC needs to act on its proposal. Not to do so would be an unfortunate action. [Andrew Jay Schwartzman is president and CEO of the Media Access Project.]
FCC 'Net Neutrality' Rules Would Keep the Web Free for Speech and Trade