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While Dems Renew Push For Net Neutrality, ISPs Impose Bandwidth Caps
by Wendy Davis, Friday, November 14, 2008, 5:15 PM

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Now that the election is over, it seems certain that Democrats will renew their push for net neutrality laws.

Sen. Byron Dorgan, who previously introduced legislation, intends to unveil a new proposal in January, one of his aides said this week at a University of Nebraska conference.

But previous efforts to enshrine net neutrality principles in law haven't gotten very far in the past. Telcos and cable companies opposed new laws, as did Federal Communications Commission chair Kevin Martin, who argued that the agency already had all the authority it needed to enforce the concept.

Indeed, earlier this year, Martin joined with the FCC's two Democrats to sanction Comcast for violating neutrality principles by slowing down peer-to-peer traffic.

Now, other ISPs have seized on the order against Comcast to argue against new laws on the theory that the FCC has already proven it can enforce neutrality principles.

But there are some problems with that reasoning. One is that Comcast has appealed the FCC's ruling on the ground that the FCC exceeded its authority. Should a court side with Comcast on that point, that decision could mean that new laws are the only way to protect neutrality.

Another problem is that the new commissioners on the FCC might not agree with this summer's 3-2 decision against Comcast.

But even if Congress acts to protect net neutrality, that doesn't mean that people will be able to consume all the content they wish online. That's because ISPs including AT&T, Comcast and Time Warner are now imposing bandwidth caps.

While the caps are neutral in that they don't discriminate between content, they could effectively deter people from using the Web as much as they otherwise would. For instance, Time Warner is testing monthly caps as low as 5 GBs, or enough to download two standard-def movies.

2 people recommend this article. 

3 comments on "While Dems Renew Push For Net Neutrality, ISPs Impose Bandwidth Caps"

  1. Jaye McCabe from jmod35
    commented on: November 15, 2008 at 12:09 AM
    Cablevision/Optimunonline seem to be putting a very, very low cap on individual subscribers for the last 6 or so months. Must be so they can distribute Madison Square Garden, etc., much more than they could a year or so ago.

  2. Paula Newman from GSK
    commented on: November 14, 2008 at 7:23 PM
    As far as the caps are concerned, Comcast's cap has already affected my use of the Internet. Since we have no idea of how much we are using in a month, we always wonder what's going to put us over the limit. I was going to get a Netflix set top box to download movies, but with cap, I think I'd be risking exceeding the limit. Comcast puts a limit on us but offers no way to gauge our usage, and then cuts off your service if you exceed it 2 months in a row. That's not an incentive to use the Internet.

  3. Brian Hayashi from ConnectMe 360
    commented on: November 14, 2008 at 6:39 PM
    I believe the courts will side with Comcast that the FCC exceeded its authority in attempting to enforce net neutrality principles, even if the new commissions on the block agree.

    Network neutrality advocates claim that we have higher prices because Americans can only choose from two broadband providers. It seems to me that with the advent of mobile phones, consumers can now get the benefits of "broadband" from any wireless provider, cable company or broadband ISP.

    I'd be more inclined to take the network neutrality side if there were evidence of specific discrimination against certain services, but it seems to me that operators are simply trying to account for larger and larger data flows across their network. After all, YouTube alone has grown to stream over five billion video views a month.

    See President-elect Obama's technology blueprint at http://www.web-strategist.com/blog/2008/11/05/obamas-technology-promises/

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