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House Republicans Pass Bill To Repeal Net Neutrality Rules

04/ 8/11 06:30 PM ET   AP

Antinet Neutrality Bill Passes House Of Reps

WASHINGTON -- House Republicans adamant that the government keep its hands off the Internet passed a bill Friday to repeal federal rules barring Internet service providers from blocking or interfering with traffic on their networks.

Republicans, in voting to repeal rules on "network neutrality" set down by the Federal Communications Commission, said the FCC lacked the authority to promulgate the rules. They disputed the need to intervene in an already open Internet and warned that the rules would stifle investment in broadband systems.

"The FCC power grab would allow it to regulate any interstate communication service on barely more than a whim and without any additional input from Congress," said Rep. Greg Walden, R-Ore., sponsor of the legislation. The Internet, he added, "is open and innovative thanks to the government's hands-off approach."

But in what has become a largely partisan battle, the Democrat-controlled Senate is not expected to go along with the House. Sen. John D. Rockefeller, D-W.Va., chairman of the Senate Commerce Committee, said he was "disappointed that House leadership wants to undo the integrity of the FCC's process and unravel their good work."

Even if it cleared Congress, the White House has threatened to veto a bill it said puts in doubt whether "the democratic spirit of the Internet will remain intact."

Rep. Henry Waxman of California, top Democrat on the Energy and Commerce Committee, said nullifying the FCC rules would "give big phone and cable companies control over what websites Americans can visit, what applications they can run and what devices they can use."

The vote to pass the bill, mainly along party lines, was 240-179.

The FCC rules were adopted on a 3-2 vote last December after years of debate over the federal role in ensuring a free and open Internet. The FCC's three Democrats voted in support and its two Republicans opposed.

While generally seen as a compromise between technology companies fearing provider limitations on their access to the Internet and the big phone and cable companies insisting they need flexibility to manage Internet traffic, the rules drew a quick legal challenge from Verizon Communications Inc., which said the FCC had overstepped its authority.

A year ago a federal appeals court also ruled that the FCC exceeded its authority in sanctioning Comcast Corp. for discriminating against online file-sharing traffic Comcast said was clogging its network.

The rules prohibit phone and cable companies from favoring or discriminating against Internet content and services, including online calling services such as Skype and Web video services such as Netflix that could compete with their core operations. They require broadband providers to let subscribers access all legal online content.

They do give providers flexibility to manage data on their systems to deal with network congestion and unwanted traffic as long as they publicly disclose those practices. They do not specifically ban "paid prioritization," where a provider might charge more for faster transmission of data, but they outlaw "unreasonable network discrimination."

Wireless carriers are also barred from blocking access to any websites or competing services, but they are given more leeway to manage data traffic because wireless systems have less network bandwidth.

Even supporters acknowledged that the rules are mainly about preserving the status quo of a system that is generally working well.

But absent the rules, said Rep. Jared Polis, D-Colo., "there would be a major shift in power on the Internet to the broadband providers from the content providers."

He said there was legitimate fear among nonprofit and religious groups that they would be consigned to a lower tier because they could not pay a higher price for premium service. "So your Web page from Nike might load faster than your Web page from the Catholic Church because, if there was tiered access, who would be more likely to pay for the speed of the access?"

He also cited the actions of autocratic states such as China in blocking Internet content in saying the government must make clear that providers cannot discriminate against customers because of political or philosophical differences.

___

The bill is H.J.Res. 37

Online:

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WASHINGTON -- House Republicans adamant that the government keep its hands off the Internet passed a bill Friday to repeal federal rules barring Internet service providers from blocking or interfering...
WASHINGTON -- House Republicans adamant that the government keep its hands off the Internet passed a bill Friday to repeal federal rules barring Internet service providers from blocking or interfering...
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murphthesurf3 08:48 PM on 04/09/2011
House Republicans adamant that the government keep its hands off the Internet passed a bill Friday to repeal federal rules barring Internet service providers from blocking or interfering with traffic on their networks.

Why did they do this? So that the BIG MONEY folks can buy up service providers and set up their own rules, control access, and finance the system as they wish  Read More...
02:23 AM on 04/17/2011
Personally this has been coming for a long time. Dear Miss Thing AH has been declaring war on the alternative bloggers for awhile now.
An internet of mindless celebrity news, tepid censored news stories....
Where have I seen that before?
09:02 PM on 04/16/2011
Just another attack on a democratic institution by the plutocrats in the GOP.
06:19 AM on 04/12/2011
It makes me wonder what percentile the words "hit in the head with a shovel prior to going to the polling booth" apply to when it comes to GOP voters. No criticism. I just want a study done.
11:59 AM on 04/11/2011
Wow, they could halt the free exchange of information and ideas that is so dangerous to their party, and make themselves even richer at the same time. They must be pushing hard for this one.
01:06 AM on 04/11/2011
Republicans...Com cast ... No surprises
01:02 AM on 04/11/2011
hhhhmmm, i've tried to think of how bizarre this has become; of all the issues in the world (nuke plants burning/earthquakes, revolutions, etc) this one just is NOT that complicated---i really believe that if u asked a ton of libertarians or conservatives about the repealing of Net neutrality BUT u didn't tell them whether dems or shrubs voted for or against it, well, i honestly think 99 out of 100 would be yelling "don't let big corporations ruin the free wild west competitive internet" or some similar complaint.

i mean seriously, giving gatekeepers the ability to add tollbooths to every road on the biggest "highway" ever invented, sounds like a way to ruin the free marketplace, eh?!

OH: if you asked EVERY dictator & tyrant in the world "hey pal, do you want the internet free & open" what would they say?

Seriously--health care, budgets, wars are endlessly debatable but turning the internet into
a ripoff toll road is just a total sellout to greedy gatekeepers who wanna control one of the most open marketplaces in world history;

HOW can conservatives or tea partyers support this unless they just "like" republicans almost as if economics & communications are a childish game of hula-hoop----and it's the hoops that will now co$t more
& more to jump thru.
****INVESTOR TIP: put ur money in digital tollbooths, they're jumpin' off the shelf.
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cliffhammond
Onward through the fog!
07:59 PM on 04/10/2011
It's becoming more and more obvious why you-know-who.com bought Hereford Ton from Miss Thang. Under Miss Thang, my cookie sniffer program was picking up 2-3 tracking cookies on a visit here. After the sale, my cookie sniffer program is picking up 20-22 tracking cookies. Any day now, I should start receiving Armor Processed Meat on sale two for a dollar.
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07:35 PM on 04/10/2011
If you believe that government regulation and control of the internet is a solution, then you also believe that government is the solution and not the problem. Guess what, there’s an FCC Czar, and he has more power than any eeeeevil corporation and he has the power to take away your internet freedoms at the drop of a hat.
Net neutrality will not create a free and equal internet, it’s another government scam that puts more power and control into the wrong hands.
08:32 PM on 04/10/2011
If that were true, Congress wouldn't be able to allow ISPs to decide which internet based business fails or succeeds.

Logic, it's what's for dinner.
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MrVee
12:00 AM on 04/11/2011
Another word for regulation is rules. And we know republicans hate rules.
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jfraser95
02:58 AM on 04/16/2011
Unless it's rules banning abortion.
05:45 PM on 04/10/2011
WAR IS PEACE, FREEDOM IS SLAVERY, and IGNORANCE IS STRENGTH
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jmad
04:45 PM on 04/10/2011
Seems to me the repug house will put the whole joint on eBay with no minimum bid.
02:12 PM on 04/10/2011
I'm so sick of politicians being bought off by corporations. I wish for two years (of course I would like more) that all politicians would uphold their campaign promises and work for the little guy.
02:10 AM on 04/17/2011
IF WISHES WERE FISHES.....oh never mind.
Olethea
Life may be sweeter for this- I don't know.
11:25 AM on 04/10/2011
You might not love our government, but one of the things it's supposed to do is to uphold freedom of the press and protect us from censorship. Without a government beholden to these values, we get something like China- who can turn the internet on and off on a whim.

Do you really want private companies deciding whe you can and cannot access over the internet? It's just asking for trouble.
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BDeddens
11:18 AM on 04/10/2011
Maybe I'm not understanding this correctly but wouldn't this essentially be like your phone service provider barring you from calling certain businesses or charging you a fee to call certain numbers?
11:23 AM on 04/10/2011
THIS is what's so d4mn Orwellian *yet* gee, few in the overpaid media have mentioned it:: sounds like an easy way to shut-down free speech,,
or squelch any site that presents facts the ISP & it's owners disagree with, eh?
12:34 PM on 04/11/2011
I'm picturing the net as a system of roads. The GOP, i.e., corporations would be flying down newly paved superhighways while everyone else would be stuck in congested traffic or forced to use dirt backroads. If you did want to get on the superhighway, you would have to pay a big toll and have the "right" type of vehicle.
02:14 AM on 04/17/2011
You gotta problem with fascism buddy? Don't you want your ten thousand channels of nothing TeeVee?
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SeenItBefore
Ya want to super size that?
11:18 AM on 04/10/2011
If passed, it is the beginning of the end. As with television, when the cable was introduced, it was heralded from the heights as 'commercial free'. Why? Because all the revenue came from subscribers.

I fell for it in the 70's, got cable and the "Z" and within 3 months, got tired of watching the same movies a bazillion times a month and.... lo and behold.... COMMERCIALS!

But, in the next 40 years network has turned into a vapid wasteland of murder and reality shows making it hard to justify a digital screen or wasting the electricity to power a set.

When the internet gets too expensive and over regulated, I can only hope my nearest city still has a bookstore.
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11:15 AM on 04/10/2011
Freedom is s word that warms the hearts of all Republicans.
On the other side of the isle, free is word that warms the hearts of free loaders.
Olethea
Life may be sweeter for this- I don't know.
11:17 AM on 04/10/2011
I would like to see you do the mental gymnastics required to prove that stifling internet content somehow amounts to freedom.

Any time now...
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11:24 AM on 04/10/2011
It would require unlimited mental gymnastics to unravel that twisted statement you just made.
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BDeddens
11:23 AM on 04/10/2011
I pay for my internet access and expect to be able to access whatever websites I want when I want. Just like when I pick up the phone that I pay for I expect to be able to call whomever I want whenever I want.
Olethea
Life may be sweeter for this- I don't know.
11:26 AM on 04/10/2011
Fanned!