The net neutrality debate was sadly destined to be swallowed up by left-right posturing once the FCC
voted 3-2 to impose a compromise set of access rules on the ISP industry, and it appears the
ensuing political theater is nearing its zenith: the Republican-controlled House of Representatives voted yesterday to block funding for the FCC's proposed rules. We call it theater only because it's largely for show -- in order to take effect, the budget amendment would have to pass the Democratically-controlled Senate and be signed by the President, and neither of those things is likely to happen. What's more, the actual rules passed by the FCC have already been
challenged in the courtroom by Verizon and
MetroPCS, so it's not like the industry needs any additional help at the moment. Still, there's a part of us that's happy this issue is even being talked about at the highest levels, rather than being left to languish in administrative rulemaking hell like so many
other FCC initiatives -- and we have a feeling we'll be talking about this for a long time to come.
House of Representatives votes to block net neutrality originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 18 Feb 2011 12:12:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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