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Friday, December 10, 2010

Clyburn optimistic FCC on net neutrality agreement (Information Week)

With net neutrality important vote on 21 December, FCC reality quickly, democratic Commissioner Mignon l. Clyburn said Thursday that the Republican and democratic Commissioners a deeply divided both evolve towards a consensus. She said that both parties are working "day and night in the hope of reaching in" consensus.

While she noted that all five Commissioners support the idea of an "open Internet", she said that there are still a few misgivings on the status of the part wireless net neutrality. Indicating promotes the FCC on the issue of the whole net neutrality decision, Clyburn said Congress solutions might be slow.

"It's on to the consumer", she said in a speech to a Conference of Telecom Washington… I am not opposed to interim Congress, but if it takes a number of years before the effective policy takes shape and gets implemented, that potential latency may actually do more harm by perpetuating uncertainty on the market. Investors, innovators and consumers deserve and require certainty. Many members of Congress have argued that net neutrality rules should be established by the Congress and the FCC.

Clyburn said that the FCC Commissioners have developed much consensus on the neutrality of the network, although it stated that the Commissioners need to develop more agreement on wireless issues. She added that direction until the meeting on 21 December will be mainly on wireless issues.

Clyburn seems to take a more conciliatory work with two Republican FCC Commissioners. Michael Copps, another democratic Commissioner, took a more difficult line arguing a reclassification of the rules governing the neutrality of the network could be countered by the Republican Commissioners. FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski is somewhere in the middle between his democratic colleagues and must work on a compromise between them.

Clyburn also welcomed a proposal earlier this year by Verizon and Google in which both companies have attempted to reach agreement on the neutrality of the network. "Even though these two companies agree on every single to open Internet principles," she said: "they have reached agreement on several important standards". ""

SEE ALSO:

Net Neutrality debate intensifies

Chairman of the FCC locations selected by net neutrality

COPPS FCC calls for reclassification to broadband

Practiced FCC part of "Net Neutrality" Waxman

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