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FCC Tosses Petition Challenging Its New Internet Regulations 133

A petition submitted to the FCC by several of the players (including AT&T, CenturyLink, and USTelecom) who would be most affected by the agency's recently asserted Internet regulatory powers has been rejected by the agency's leadership. The Internet providers, along with the CTIA trade association, asserted that the FCC's Open Internet order is aganst the public interest. Per The Verge, the Commission last Friday "denied the petition, issuing an order that states its classification of broadband internet as a telecommunications service "falls well within the Commission's statutory authority, is consistent with Supreme Court precedent, and fully complies with the Administrative Procedure Act."
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FCC Tosses Petition Challenging Its New Internet Regulations

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  • Good (Score:5, Interesting)

    by msobkow ( 48369 ) on Monday May 11, 2015 @01:18AM (#49662125) Homepage Journal

    It's time to hold the players big and small accountable for their oppressive actions. They should be providing a data pipe, period. No "priority" internally hosted services, no "doesn't count towards your cap" services, no throttling of competing services.

    Perhaps more importantly, classifying broadband as telecommunications opens up the possibility of monopoly breakups in some of the markets where there is a serious lack of competition.

    • Re: (Score:1, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      No "priority" internally hosted services, no "doesn't count towards your cap" services

      Ehhh. While a noble goal, I'm guessing you don't work in networking at a design level. If you have to leave your own network, you have to pay for the traffic you pull; that's even true for the largest ISPs. So there really is a good argument to be made for giving priority to (and ignoring data caps for) services on the provider network. If you disallow that sort of thing, then you'll be stepping on all the easiest ways to, for example, peer out big files during peak times. You'd also put a dent in netw

      • by Anonymous Coward

        That is not the internet. If it's only accessible from your ISP it isn't the internet. They can run internal services and they may be faster than the internet connection, but it needs to not interfere in any way with your internet speeds that you pay for and they can not call that the internet. Because it's a private network and not what they sold you when you signed up for internet service.

      • by sjames ( 1099 )

        I don't see a problem with caching as long as that caching is available to all. Of course, that upstream doesn't cost the ISPs all that much. In the quantities they need, it's less than $1 per Mbps 95th percentile. So to support a customer paying over $50/month, that's under $2 for them to watch all the Netflix they want.

        Of course, in the case of Netflix, Comcast could have just accepted the mutually beneficial offer of a caching server and not even needed to pay that, but they chose to squeeze them for mo

        • by Bengie ( 1121981 )
          Upstream bandwidth is typically free because the 95th percentile is based on whichever direction is the highest. If your 10Gb/10Gb link averages 8Gb down and 2Gb up, then you pay for the 8Gb. That means you can upload another 6Gb/s and still not increase your bill. ISPs tend to be download heavy, so upstream is "free".
          • by Bengie ( 1121981 )
            I phrased the first and second sentences poorly. All flows should get the same "priority" as in they should not affect each other's latency and bandwidth should be evenly divided. If latency among flows is isolated and bandwidth is evenly spread, then all is well.
  • Is this FCC a USA government institution?

    I thought the US government was since Ronnie wholly owned by the corporations...
    Let us (normal internet users) hope the FCC can get away with this pro net-neutrality policy, level playing field and all that!
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Black Parrot ( 19622 )

      Is this FCC a USA government institution?

      I thought the US government was since Ronnie wholly owned by the corporations...

      Let us (normal internet users) hope the FCC can get away with this pro net-neutrality policy, level playing field and all that!

      There's something in the air. Lately even Joe Scarborough and some of the FOX News regulars have occasionally balked at the bullshit.

      Probably the solar system is passing through a cloud of hippie gas or something.

      • by zlives ( 2009072 )

        nah they are just beginning to realize that the population is about to resort to actually getting off the couch.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    I mean, we'd want the same treatment when we come up with petitions.

    After all, companies have the same rights as citizens... no more no less... right?

    • by Cafe Alpha ( 891670 ) on Monday May 11, 2015 @01:45AM (#49662215) Journal

      Doesn't it say in the Bible that corporations go to heaven? I'm sure it must.

      • Doesn't it say in the Bible that corporations go to heaven?

        Only the penny-stock corporations. But it's easier for a herd of camels to get through the eye of a needle than for a rich corporation to go to Heaven.

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward

        Considering the unlimited copyright extensions and money-based politics, corporations can never die. That is why they will never reach any afterlife.

      • by ndavis ( 1499237 )

        Doesn't it say in the Bible that corporations go to heaven? I'm sure it must.

        Well I'm sure it does but Corporations are people that never die and if they do they are usually bought out and ripped apart. Granted sometimes that really needs to happen!

        • Well I'm sure it does but Corporations are people that never die and if they do they are usually bought out and ripped apart

          So, they're soulless and evil abominations, then? Basically the undead?

          I think that explains a lot, actually.

      • This is how a corporation goes to heaven: First a hedge fund manager takes out a short term high interest loan from a bank through a shell corporation, then approaches the corporation's executive management and proposes [...insert references to stuff that sounds illegal but still boring as hell...] ... and since he's the first in line to get paid, he takes his management fees out and walks away with 10% of the initial loan value after the corporation has laid everyone off and entered the afterlife.
    • by hlavac ( 914630 ) on Monday May 11, 2015 @02:40AM (#49662347)
      Problem with corporations is they are immortal. They can do evil forever as long as its profitable. We need death penalty for corporations. And assasinations for corporations :)
  • A tax on a commodity focuses that tax on a subset of income--you spend what you make--thus magnifying the tax. If, for example, 2% of all pre-tax income in Australia was spent on Netflix, then a Netflix tax of 10% would translate to an income tax hike of 0.2% across the board; if it were focused on high-income earners, it would affect only the small part of society at a rate almost identical (e.g. the top 50% have 87.25% of the money, 0.2% becomes 0.229%; the top 25% have 67.38%, income tax hike of 0.2968

  • ...why did so many people have to rally, protest and sign petitions just to get Tom Wheeler to implement it instead of going with the telcos' desire for paid prioritization?

    The telcos speak poison with their forked tongues.

Think of it! With VLSI we can pack 100 ENIACs in 1 sq. cm.!

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