Monday, August 9, 2010

FCC announcing it will fight Google and Verizon... in so many words


Not thrilled with this morning’s Verizon-Google seven-tier joint policy proposal, FCC Commissioner Michael J. Copps put out the following one paragraph statement earlier today, basically asserting that the FCC is more interested in protecting consumer rights than Google and Verizon’s wishes.

“Some will claim this announcement moves the discussion forward. That’s one of its many problems. It is time to move a decision forward—a decision to reassert FCC authority over broadband telecommunications, to guarantee an open Internet now and forever, and to put the interests of consumers in front of the interests of giant corporations.”

While many of the ideas put forth in today’s Verizon-Google proposal wereNet Neutrality friendly, Copps is most likely referring to the proposal’s more controversial elementssuch as the wholesale exclusion of wireless Internet or “new services” from any sort of Net Neutrality edict. Specifically, the points put across in tiers five and and six which imply that wireless and mobile services that do not yet exist would be under different rules, to be determined.

Verizon’s Ivan Seidenberg and Google’s Eric Schmidt hope that their suggested legislative framework will make a “constructive contribution to the dialogue,” but Cook’s relatively shorter statement emphasized the importance of the FCC’s authority in making the decision, perhaps with at lot less power in the hands of corporations with so much at stake.

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