The Federal Communications Commission moved Thursday to fulfill President Obama's pledge to adopt a rule to preserve an open internet.
In the face of controversy and a fierce lobbying effort from phone company and other internet service providers, FCC commissioners agreed to start the procedure to create a net neutrality rule.
In an statement earlier Thursday, FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski said the goal was to allow “each and every user of the Internet” access to “an unlimited online universe of ideas and commerce with the final say about their online experience.”The FCC’s action drew praise from net neutrality supporters and concerns from critics, many of whom have questioned why the government should regulate a web that has thrived through deregulation.
David L. Cohen, executive vice president of Comcast Corporation, said his company shares and embraces the FCC’s objective of an open internet, but “we may ultimately not agree on the level and extent of government involvement needed to accomplish this important objective.”
He said the next generation broadband will cost $350 billion to build.
“We continue to hope that any rules adopted by the commission will not harm the investment and innovation that has made the Internet what it is today and that will make it even greater tomorrow," he said in a statement.
Richard Whitt, a Washington legal counsel to Google, a company which has supported net neutrality, suggested there is a strong need for FCC action.
“The Internet was built and has thrived as an open platform, where individuals and entrepreneurs -- not network owners -- can connect and interact, choose marketplace winners and losers, and create new services and content on a level playing field. No one seems to disagree with that fundamental proposition. This new proceeding is aimed at opening a national dialogue on how best to protect that unique environment. For our part, we fully support the adoption of "rules of the road" to ensure that the broadband on-ramps to the Net remain open and robust,” he said.
