AP
FCC to probe Comcast data discrimination
By PETER SVENSSON, AP Technology Writer Tue Jan 8
LAS VEGAS - The Federal Communications Commission will investigate complaints
that Comcast Corp. actively interferes with Internet traffic as its subscribers
try to share files online, FCC Chairman Kevin Martin said Tuesday.
A coalition of consumer groups and legal scholars asked the agency in November
to stop Comcast from discriminating against certain types of data. Two groups
also asked the FCC to fine the nation's No. 2 Internet provider $195,000 for every
affected subscriber.
"Sure, we're going to investigate and make sure that no consumer is going
to be blocked," Martin told an audience at the International Consumer Electronics
Show.
In an investigation last year, The Associated Press found that Comcast in some
cases hindered file sharing by subscribers who used BitTorrent, a popular file-sharing
program. The findings, first reported Oct. 19, confirmed claims by users who also
noticed interference with other file-sharing applications.
"We look forward to responding to any FCC inquiries regarding our broadband
network management," said David L. Cohen, executive vice president at Philadelphia-based
Comcast.
Comcast denies that it blocks file sharing, but acknowledged after the AP story
that it was "delaying" some of the traffic between computers that share
files. The company said the intervention was necessary to improve the surfing
experience for the majority of its subscribers.
Peer-to-peer file sharing is a common way to illegally exchange copyright files,
but companies are also rushing to utilize it for legal distribution of video and
game content. If ISPs hinder or control that traffic, it makes them important
gatekeepers of Internet content.
The FCC's response will be an important test of its willingness to enforce "Net
Neutrality," the principle that Internet traffic be treated equally by carriers.
The agency has a broadly stated policy supporting the concept, but its position
hasn't been tested in a real-world case.
The FCC's policy statement makes an exception for "reasonable traffic management."
Comcast has said its practices fall under that exception.
"The question is going to arise: Are they reasonable network practices?"
Martin said Tuesday. "When they have reasonable network practices, they should
disclose those and make those public."
Comcast subscribers who asked the company about the interference before the AP
story ran were met with flat denials.
"Comcast plans to work with the Commission in its desire to bring more transparency
for consumers regarding broadband network management," Cohen said. "We
do disclose in our terms of use our right to manage our network for the benefit
of all customers."
Martin's announcement pleased Marvin Ammori, general counsel of Free Press, one
of the consumer groups that had sought FCC intervention.
"We hope the chairman's statements, made two months after we filed our complaint,
will lead to immediate and accelerated action," Ammori said in a prepared
release.
Martin also said the commission was looking at complaints that wireless carriers
denied text-messaging "short codes" to some applicants. The five-digit
numbers are a popular way to sign up for updates on everything from sports to
politics to entertainment news.
Verizon Wireless in late September denied a request by Naral Pro-Choice America,
an abortion rights group, to use its mobile network for a sign-up text messaging
program.
The company reversed course just a day later, calling it a mistake and an "isolated
incident."
Verizon Wireless has also denied a short code to a Swedish company, Rebtel Networks
AB, that operates a service similar to a virtual calling card, allowing users
to avoid paying the carrier's international rates on their cell-phone calls. Verizon
Wireless has stuck to that denial, saying it does want to provide an advertising
venue to a competitor.
"I tell the staff that they should act on all of those complaints and investigate
all of them," Martin said.