FCC will propose net neutrality rules

In a move that will make a start to keeping one of Barack Obama’s campaign promises, the FCC will be proposing a set of rules aimed at preserving and enforcing internet neutrality.
A number of reports have surfaced today which indicate that the head of the Federal Communications Commission, Julius Genachowski, will give a speech Monday at the Brookings Institution in Washington which lays out the plans of the Obama administration to both fully define and enforce the concept of network neutrality, according to an AP story.
Network neutrality is a principle proposed for residential broadband networks and potentially for all networks. A neutral broadband network is one that is free of restrictions on content, sites, or platforms, on the kinds of equipment that may be attached, and on the modes of communication allowed, as well as one where communication is not unreasonably degraded by other communication streams.
It is anticipated that the new FCC proposals will seek to implement a pledge that Barack Obama made during the presidential campaign. He said then that he fully supported Internet neutrality, i.e. the equal treatment of Internet traffic. Such rules would keep Internet service providers such as Verizon Communications Inc., Comcast Corp. or AT&T Inc., from slowing or blocking certain services or content flowing through their vast networks. It is feared that without strict rules ensuring neutrality of the internet, communications companies could interfere with the transmission of content, such as television shows delivered over the Internet, that compete with other services the ISPs offer, like cable television, much to the detriment of the consumer.
The issue is, of course, about money. Many internet service providers are cable companies or other corporations that license and deliver content via methods other than the internet. It is therefore in their interest to hoard entertainment commodities, ensuring that their companies can realize the best profit from them. Opposing groups do not want to see the freedom of information on the internet fettered for reasons of profit. President-to-be Obama agreed with this latter group during his run for the U.S. Presidency and is now apparently ready to make good on his promise to keep the internet neutral.