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March 23, 2006

FCC chief and free-market fan Kevin Martin, mirroring telco fears of net-neutrality laws, says his agency already has the authority to act if incumbents try to block or degrade service. As with a number of recent editorials, Martin and this Networking Pipeline story seem to blur the line between the network neutrality debate, and the right of incumbents to charge more for faster service... .
"We've already demonstrated we'll take action if necessary," Martin said. However, Martin also added that he supports network operators' desires to offer different levels of broadband service at different speeds, and at different pricing -- a so-called "tiered" Internet service structure that opponents say could give a market advantage to deep-pocket companies who can afford to pay service providers for preferential treatment.

While Martin said that consumers who don't pay for higher levels of Internet service shouldn't expect to get higher levels of performance, he did say in a following press conference that "the commission needs to make sure" that there are fair-trade ways to ensure that consumers "get what they are purchasing." When asked how consumers could measure service performance levels, Martin said that public Web sites already exist that let users measure their connection speeds."
For the record, nobody anywhere has suggested ISPs shouldn't be allowed to charge customers more, for faster service. The debate is over incumbents pulling a new revenue stream out of thin air by charging content providers (often competitors) a new QoS tariff that will likely be passed on to consumers.