Internet businesses ask US to keep net neutrality rules

The move was seen as a victory for big internet service providers which favored a repeal


Reuters November 28, 2017
Ajit Pai, Chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, testifies before a US Senate Appropriations Financial Services and General Government Subcommittee on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC, US on June 20, 2017. PHOTO: REUTERS

AirBnb, Reddit, Shutterstock, Tumblr, Etsy , Twitter and a long list of small internet companies urged the Federal Communications Commission on Monday to scrap a plan to roll back net neutrality rules.

In a letter dated on Monday, the companies urged FCC Chairman Ajit Pai to reverse course and vote against changing the rules.

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Pai, a Republican appointed by President Donald Trump in January, unveiled plans last week to scrap landmark 2015 rules intended to ensure a free and open internet, moving to give broadband service providers sweeping power over what content consumers can access. The FCC is set to vote on December 14.

The move was seen as a victory for big internet service providers such as AT&T, Comcast and Verizon Communications, which favored a repeal.

The companies, which sent the letter on Cyber Monday to coincide with the biggest online shopping day of the year, argued that slowing access to content, called “throttling,” or blocking it altogether, would hurt the US economy.

“This would put small and medium-sized businesses at a disadvantage and prevent innovative new ones from even getting off the ground,” the companies said in the letter.

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Pai defended the change as a way to remove heavy-handed internet regulations.

“The internet and companies like Twitter, which signed the letter, thrived under the pre-2015 light-touch regulatory framework that governed Internet access. Chairman Pai wants to return to that framework so that we can increase investment in broadband networks and connect more Americans to the services that these companies offer online,” FCC spokesman Mark Wigfield said in a statement.

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