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Posted: Sunday, Sep 07, 2008 09:44 am
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![]() FSH Admin ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Admin Posts: 8177 Member No.: 6150 Joined: January 03, 2004 |
Ever since the FCC handed down its 3-2 decision against cable operator Comcast's network management techniques, Comcast has been expected to sue the FCC. Today, the cable giant made good on those predictions, filing an appeal of the FCC ruling in the DC Court of Appeals, which has jurisdiction over FCC decisions.
The appeal itself is brief: a two-page document, a cover letter, and a $450 check. But the fight that it spawns will no doubt drag on for quite some time, centering on one major question: can the FCC rule against Comcast based on a policy statement that the FCC said was not enforceable at the time? In a statement today, however, Comcast did admit that the FCC does have the authority to regulate ISPs "in appropriate circumstances and in accordance with appropriate procedures." As the legal process plays itself out, Comcast has pledged to abide by the order and continue its work to move towards a protocol-agnostic throttling system that could slow "heavy users" down to DSL levels for 20 minutes at a time (another piece of the bandwidth management puzzle, hard bandwidth caps, were also announced last month). View: Original Article |
| Industrial_One |
Posted: Saturday, Sep 13, 2008 09:09 pm
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Regular ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Member Posts: 165 Member No.: 44997 Joined: February 12, 2007 |
Since when does the FCC regulate the internet?
I have 90 gigs of bandwidth per month, if I breach it, the service is discontinued for the month. I don't see how enforcing the monthly bandwidth limit is such a fucking science to Comcast. |
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