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07/19/2017

NCTA: No Need for FCC's Internet Rules

NCTA: The Internet & Television Association tells the FCC it doesn't see the need for any FCC net neutrality rules against blocking, throttling and paid prioritization given its members' longstanding voluntary adherence to those principles but does not oppose a congressional or Federal Trade Commission backstop.

"[T]here is no basis to conclude that prescriptive rules are necessary in today’s marketplace to preserve the open Internet—or would even be beneficial as a policy matter," it said.

That came in its comments filed Monday on the FCC's proposal to roll back Title II classification of ISPs and rethink those rules.

"As NCTA has made clear, the idea that consumers 'should have the freedom to go anywhere on the Internet or to run any application with confidence that the delivery of traffic will not be blocked or throttled' is one that sits at the foundation of Internet services, reflects how consumers enjoy the Internet today, and despite claims to the contrary, has never truly been in jeopardy."

The association pointed to the FCC's 2004 four "internet freedoms" voluntary principles offered by then FCC chairman and now NCTA president Michael Powell, saying they had since morphed into four tenets embraced by the industry: transparency, no blocking, no throttling and no anticompetitive paid prioritization.

NCTA said that while it does not see a problem that needs a government fix, "to the extent the Commission deems a regulatory backstop necessary, NCTA does not oppose measures enabling federal enforcement of open Internet principles."

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