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Michigan lawmakers target predatory loan companies; NY jury hears tape of Trump and Cohen Discussing Hush-Money Deal; flood-impacted VT households rebuild for climate resilience; film documents environmental battle with Colorado oil, gas industry.

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UW Expert: Keep The Internet A Level Playing Field

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Monday, September 16, 2013   

MADISON, Wis. - Should big corporations with a lot of money to spend get faster speeds on the Internet than the ordinary person? That's at the core of a case now moving through a federal appeals court, brought by Internet service provider Verizon. It wants to start charging more for those who want higher internet speed, something critics call an attack on the principle of "net neutrality."

Jennifer Yeh, policy counsel with the advocacy group Free Press, said the three-judge panel could do away with what is called the "Open Internet Order."

"It prevents content providers from paying for priority access to get to users. It prevents a tiered system of superhighways for the rich and slow speedways for the poor," Yeh explained.

UW-Madison telecommunications expert Barry Orton said the present law - where everybody pays the same rate - is based on the old-time railroad law of Common Carriage.

"You can't charge different amounts for the same thing to different people. So anybody using the common carrier, whether it be a railroad or a phone company or Internet provider - has to be treated the same, rather than differently, depending on whether they're a business rival or not," Orton said."

The idea of an Internet "fast lane" would create an uneven playing field in the eyes of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), which said it would give too much of an advantage to established companies with deep pockets and would be a big obstacle for smaller, start-up companies. Supporters of the principle of net neutrality warned that the added costs of higher Internet speeds would be passed on to consumers.

Orton and other telecommunications experts said they expect the court will have little choice but to find against the FCC in this case.

"The FCC made a fundamental error - and I don't think it was an error, I think they did it deliberately - to make sure that the Internet was not going to be regulatable in the future by themselves. The only way to really fix that is to unwind the original decision and declare it a telecommunications service, like phone service," Orton said.

Yeh said if Internet service providers are freed from the FCC's current oversight, corporations will have much greater control over what content we see and how much we pay for it, and the Internet will start to look more like a cable system.

More details are online at fsrn.org.


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