Net Neutrality and the FCC: Deja Vu All Over Again

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[Commentary] We have come to the end of the comments period set by the Trump Federal Communications Commission (FCC) during which the public could respond to the FCC’s efforts to deregulate high-speed Internet service and roll back network neutrality rules that designate the Internet a utility. There have been over 22 million comments to the FCC’s proposed rule making, or ‘rule unmaking’ — surely a testament to the Internet’s potential to encourage participation — and it appears the huge majority of those comments have spoken against the FCC’s proposal to deregulate.

The public now understands, just as the courts have always understood, the the Internet is an incredible information transmission utility that has fallen into the hands of monopolists and should be regulated in the public’s interest. But the Trump FCC has only free market solutions to problems we don’t have in 2017, so it is highly likely that this FCC will indeed do away with the Net Neutrality rules set forth by the FCC in 2015.

[Fred Johnson is a documentary maker and telecom policy analyst]


Net Neutrality and the FCC: Deja Vu All Over Again