What is the Open Internet Rule?
September 15, 2017
[Commentary]
- Federal Communications Commission Chairman Ajit Pai plans to reverse the agency’s open internet rules passed in 2015.
- The Open Internet Rule makes sure that the internet, the most important network of the 21st century, is open and available to everybody, and not controlled by a handful of companies.
- More than half of American consumers don’t have a choice when signing up for internet service, allowing monopolists to make the rules.
- The Open Internet Rule, as it currently stands, ensures that there is oversight in the internet marketplace.
- There are four companies, cable and telephone, that provide three-quarters of the access to the internet for American consumers, and they would prefer to be unregulated.
- The Open Internet Rule is the law of the land that protects consumers. If Congress or the Trump administration’s FCC eliminate the rule, consumers will lose their current protections. Without the Open Internet Rule, cable and phone companies will pick what you see, what you pay, and what you have to pay extra for. Congress plays an important role in the oversight of the FCC and in how the internet is regulated.
- The Open Internet Rule has been successful in protecting consumers, in stimulating innovation, and in providing good returns for those who provide internet service. If it isn’t broken, it doesn’t need to be fixed.
[Wheeler is a visiting fellow in Governance Studies. Wheeler is a businessman, author, and was Chairman of the Federal Communication Commission from 2013 to 2017.]
What is the Open Internet Rule?