With the swearing in of Anna Gomez, the fifth Federal Communications Commission (FCC) commissioner, the deadlock has been broken and, for the first time since Biden took office, the agency can finally take action to restore Title II authority and net neutrality. Today, FCC Chair Jessica Rosenworcel ...
Statement: the FCC should ignore the inevitable flood of telecom industry astroturf and move full steam ahead with restoring net neutrality.::undefined
This really isn't the right question. The better question is why Congress hasn't codified net neutrality into law, which is what the FCC has been asking for at least a decade if not longer.
In some ways, it's better that the FCC can do this without Congress. But it leaves it open to the next republican president to just do away with it.
Given some states barring porn, it actually be interesting to see if other states like California start codifying NN into law, forcing companies to adopt a patchwork of laws. Typically the loss of money motivates them to lobby Congress to do the right thing.
Wonderful input, thank you. As far as I'm aware, because we haven't had NN, the downside we've seen is ISPs counting data usage for streaming, e.g., Netflix toward a user's monthly data usage, whereas they wouldn't count data usage count if the user was streaming from the ISP's own streaming service.
This leads me to believe Netflix, Disney, and the swath of companies who provide streaming services, but not their own ISP, may be, indeed, a proponent of NN.
I can see how, with the combination of ISPs losing money due to implementing that patchwork of "Internet laws", and other non-ISP-providing streaming service companies losing money to a lack of NN, we may see NN codified into law. But, to get there, things have to get worse first, no?