Bill would limit broadband fees based on use
- 18 June, 2009 06:48
- Comments
A new bill in the U.S. House of Representatives would require large broadband providers to get permission from the U.S. Federal Trade Commission before rolling out broadband subscription fees based on bandwidth use.
The Broadband Internet Fairness Act, introduced Wednesday by Representative Eric Massa, would prohibit volume usage plans if the FTC determines that the fees are "unreasonable or discriminatory," and it would require public hearings when broadband providers plan to introduce volume-based pricing.
"This bill, frankly, is the result of very, very strong grass-roots movements that demanded a fair billing practice with respect to their Internet service providers," Massa, a New York Democrat, said during a press conference. "Volume-based pricing, frankly, is detrimental to our economy and to our Internet future."
The bill was prompted by Time Warner Cable's announcement in April that the provider would charging customers in upstate New York based on bandwidth use, Massa said. For some Time Warner customers, the monthly price for cable-based broadband would rise from US$50 to $150 a month under the plan, Massa said.
Massa received complaints from a group of doctors, who said they'd have to pass the broadband rate increases on to their patients, he said.
AT&T has also experimented with volume pricing.
"That's just not acceptable by anyone," Massa said of volume-based pricing.
The bill, written with the help of consumer rights groups StoptheCap.com and Free Press, would prevent broadband providers from "overcharging" and "gouging" customers, Massa said. StoptheCap.com launched in upstate New York to oppose the volume caps.
Ben Scott, policy director of Free Press, praised the bill. "This a really inspiring example where grass-roots activism in response to an unfair business practice by a big corporation led to direct intervention by a congressional leader," he said. "These kind of Internet overcharges will cripple [Internet-based] development and really set back communities by years if not more."
Massa introduced his bill the same day that the Pew Internet and American Life Project released a survey showing that home broadband rates are increasing in the U.S. The average home broadband bill in April was $39, up from $34.50 in May 2008, the survey said. Broadband users who said they had only one provider had an average monthly bill of $44.70, while those with four or more providers had an average monthly bill of $32.10, according to the survey.
An AT&T spokesman called the bill a "one-size-fits-all broadband pricing model." Almost half of all Internet traffic is generated by 5 percent of broadband customers, said the spokesman, who asked not to be named.
"There is no question that the Internet continues to experience extraordinary growth as it increasingly becomes a vehicle not just for e-mail and Web sites but also for photos, video, movie distribution, VoIP and video games," he said. "Just one of these high-traffic users consumes as much bandwidth as 19 typical households, and in so doing contributes disproportionately to the risk of network congestion; something all consumers experience as slower than normal Web surfing or even broken up and scratchy streaming videos."
High-volume users should pay more, he added. "In their zeal to protect high-volume users Free Press is abandoning the vast majority of consumers who use the Internet in a more moderate fashion," the AT&T spokesman added. "In other words, Free Press prefers that grandma -- who simply wants to download their grandchildren's online photos a few times a month -- to pay for the heavy-using teenager who is downloading HD movies."
Join the CIO Australia group on LinkedIn. The group is open to CIOs, IT Directors, COOs, CTOs and senior IT managers.
- Bookmark this page
- Share this article
- Got more on this story? Email CIO
- Follow CIO on twitter
- Closing the print security gap - The market landscape for print security
- Focus & Invest in Business & Customers
- Enhancing Decision-Making, Cost-Efficiency, and Profitability With Predictive Analytics
- Optimised License Management for the Datacenter
- IDC Insight: V-Ray Gives Symantec NetBackup a Competitive Advantage Today and into the Future
-
Phones are distractions during catch-ups
-
Google's Sidewiki lets people post comments about Web pages
-
Leaving your job? Take your data with you
-
Australia's first 4G smartphone is the HTC Velocity 4G
-
Social networking, ignorance, and apathy
-
Prepare Your Enterprise for the Mobile Revolution: Boost the Bottom Line with Mobile UC
This white paper will highlight the changes in the mobile workplace; outline the benefits of unified communications (UC) and Fixed-Mobile Convergence (FMC) for mobile workers; identify the key market trends and business challenges IT managers must pay attention to now and into the future; and offer best practices for choosing a solution that will deliver clear ROI. -
Best practices for a Data Warehouse on Oracle Database 11g
Increasingly companies are recognizing the value of an enterprise data warehouse (EDW). A true EDW provides a single 360-degree view of the business and a powerful platform for a wide spectrum of business intelligence tasks ranging from predictive analysis to near real-time strategic and tactical decision support throughout the organization. Read on. -
Poster: Cisco Unified Fabric - Infrastructure for Traditional, Virtualised, and Cloud-based Environments
Cisco Unified Fabric Switching at a glance - view the product portfolio, features and key benefits. Download this free data centre poster.
-
Professional Crystal Reports for Visual Studio .Net, Second Edition
-
Computers for Seniors for Dummies, 2nd Edition
-
77-601
-
Professional UML with Visual Studio .Net
-
PHP & MySQL for Dummies, 3rd Edition
-
Act! 2005 for Dummies
-
Word 2010 All-In-One for Dummies®
-
Windows Vista Para Dummies (Spanish Edition)
-
Wordperfect 12 for Dummies








Comments
Post new comment