After existing Open Internet, or net neutrality, regulations were struck down in court earlier this year, it appears the FCC is ready to come back with new ones. Re/code reports Chairman Tom Wheeler confirmed they will be on the table at an agency meeting May 15th. While that report indicates the rules will be the same, but justified under a different part of the law, the Wall Street Journal's sources say that new rules will be proposed tomorrow, with at least one notable change. According to the rumor, the new net neutrality rules will still bar ISPs from blocking or discriminating against certain sources over the last mile, but will allow them to sell special access to others. It sounds like the type of "managed connection" that Comcast, for example, is using to distribute video on-demand to its Xbox 360 app.
This would still leave network peering agreements like the one reached by Netflix and Comcast unaffected, but it appears ISPs could charge services for access to a clear pipeline to customer's homes. The proposed rules would leave such changes up to the FCC to determine if they were "commercially reasonable" for all sides on a case-by-case basis. Reed Hastings called out Comcast's plans two years ago, if this proposal ends up on the table we wouldn't be surprised to see a Facebook note from him again.
[Image credit: Associated Press]
Filed under: Home Entertainment, Internet, HD
0 comments:
Post a Comment