Under Fire Over NET NEUTRALITY Plans, FCC SEEKS EARLY FEEDBACK [View all]
In a blog post on Thursday, Wheeler denied reports that his plans would abandon the FCCs commitment to an open Internet. But numerous advocacy groups
dont buy it. Campaigns are already calling for
consumers to protest the plans to the White House and lawmakers.
Email box where the public can send comments: openinternet@fcc.gov
The Public should SWAMP the FCC with protest emails for their upcoming Net Neutrality Plans......
The FCCs upcoming net neutrality plan has already touched off such a blaze of reaction that the agency has set up an email box where the public can send comments about it. The coming proposal has generated so much commentary, before even being released, that on Friday the U.S. Federal Communications Commission
started accepting comments at openinternet@fcc.gov. Normally, anyone who wanted to weigh in on an FCC proposal would have to wait for the agency to issue a notice of proposed rulemaking and start soliciting comments to its Electronic Comment Filing System. That will happen for the net neutrality issue on May 15, assuming the full Commission votes at its meeting that day to move the proposal forward.
But the email address means it will start accepting comments now. Its not the first time the agency has sought comments early, but it suggests
its keen to be seen as open to feedback on this issue. Chairman Tom
Wheeler circulated the proposal among his fellow commissioners on Thursday. The actual text of the plan is not yet public, but the agency has said
it would let Internet service providers give preferential treatment to some content providers on commercially reasonable terms. Watchdog groups say that could force consumers to pay more and squeeze out startups that cant afford anything but the slow lane.
The FCCs former rules on the issue were struck down by a federal appeals court in January. Now Wheeler is pushing to get the new regulations on the books by the end of this year. Wheeler has circulated the proposals among his fellow commissioners, who are set to address them at a regular agency
meeting on May 15.
http://www.pcworld.com/article/2148700/under-fire-over-net-neutrality-plans-fcc-seeks-early-feedback.html