- How to make new stuff from your piles of obsolete tech
- Why your computer sucks
- 10 recession-proof IT skills
- Juniper execs share network vision
- 9-year-old plots his fifth Microsoft certification
Federal Communications Commission chairman Julius Genachowski today proposed new rules that net neutrality advocates have longed to hear.
What the U.S. can learn from international net neutrality, broadband policies
During a speech at the Brookings Institute, Genachowski proposed adding two new rules to commission policy that would bar carriers from blocking or degrading lawful Web traffic and that would force carriers to be more open about their traffic management practices. Genachowski said that the two rules are necessary to preserve the openness of Internet architecture and to ensure that carriers are accountable to consumers.
In proposing the first rule, Genachowski said that carriers should not be allowed to favor certain types of content or applications over others and that they could not degrade traffic of Internet companies that offer services similar to those of the carriers. Genachowski said that carriers would retain the rights to manage their networks and that nothing in the rules would stop carriers from ensuring that “very heavy users do not crowd everyone else out” during peak traffic hours.
“Broadband providers cannot discriminate against particular Internet content or applications,” Genachowski said. “The Internet must continue to allow users to decide what content and applications succeed.”
Genachowski said that enforcing the non-discrimination rule would occur on a case-by-case basis, just as the commission has enforced its other traffic management provisions in the past. The commission’s most famous net neutrality-related ruling came last summer, when the FCC barred Comcast from using peer-to-peer traffic management practices that target individual protocols for slowing or blocking. In that particular case, Comcast sent TCP RST packets to users who were uploading large files, telling them that there was an error within the network and that a new connection would have to be established.
Genachowski cited the Comcast case as the impetus for the second proposed new rule that would force carriers to be more transparent in their traffic management practices.
“[Comcast’s] blocking was initially implemented with no notice to subscribers or the public,” he said. “It was discovered only after an engineer and hobbyist living in Oregon realized that his attempts to share public domain recordings of old barbershop quartet songs over a home Internet connection were being frustrated. It was not until he brought the problem to the attention of the media and Internet community, which then brought it to the attention of the FCC, that the improper network management practice became known and was stopped.”
Genachowski emphasized that while he wanted to see more transparency about traffic management from carriers, the new rules “will not require broadband providers to disclose personal information about subscribers or information that might compromise the security of the network, and there will be a mechanism to protect competitively sensitive data.”
Partner Content
Simplify Your Branch Infrastructure
Learn how to simplify your branch infrastructure while dramatically increasing app performance with Citrix Branch Repeater.
Download the Free Info Kit
Next-Gen Load Balancing
Free Guide: "Next Gen Load Balancing: 8 Things You Need to Handle Today's Network Traffic" shows you the functionality needed in your next load balancer.
Download the Free Guide
Accelerate Your Web Apps by up to 5x
Free Guide: "The Secret to Getting Maximum Speed from your Web Applications."' Learn how you can deliver Web apps up to 5x faster.
Download the Free Guide
Comments (9)
Hooray!By Anon-e-mous on September 21, 2009, 5:24 pmThis is very welcome news from the FCC. I pay a carrier for bandwidth, not censorship. To play the carrier's game, they want money on both sides - essentially reverting...
Reply | Read entire comment
Comcast's responseBy Alpha Doggs on September 21, 2009, 7:57 pmComcast EVP David Cohen reacts to the FCC proposed rules on the company's official blog. It reads in part: "We welcome the dialogue suggested by the Chairman in...
Reply | Read entire comment
AT&T's reactionBy Alpha Doggs on September 21, 2009, 7:58 pmhttp://www.att.com/gen/press-room?pid=4800&cdvn=news&newsarticleid=27154 “We commend Chairman Genachowski for his speech today, which begins a public process of...
Reply | Read entire comment
AT&T encourages competition?By Brad Reese on September 21, 2009, 9:56 pmAT&T encourages competition? Gee whiz, of the 22 Bell Operating Companies that competed after the breakup of the original Ma Bell in 1984, AT&T now owns the following...
Reply | Read entire comment
FCC on Net NutralityBy Anonymous on September 22, 2009, 9:43 amThe FCC does not do a very good job of enforcing the rules they already have. What makes him think he can get the resources to enforce any more rules in this political...
Reply | Read entire comment
Internet2/EDUCAUSE responseBy Alpha Doggs on September 22, 2009, 11:24 amGreg Jackson, Vice President for Policy and Analysis, EDUCAUSE, and Gary Bachula, Vice President for External Relations, Internet2, released the following statement...
Reply | Read entire comment
View all comments