Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Impedirn Republicans to regulate the Net Neutrality in the U.S.

Was sung. The Republicans will oppose the regulatory principles of net neutrality proposed by the Federal Communications authority and supported by Democrats. A prominent member of the GOP congressional group that deals with regulations on Internet, Marsha Blackburn, has proposed a law to prevent regulatory initiatives on Internet services.

At a conference in the State of Nation, the Republican has said that "we must guard against Washington hiperregulador instinct" about what is new and is not well understood. Tennessee's representative insisted that the conservatives chose this term to "Republicans" - they must defend the free market as a cornerstone of his philosophy.

Blackburn propose a law under which the Federal Communications Commission should not encourage or enacting any regulation of Internet services. It has the support of 60 Republicans announcing the failure of Obama's initiative to defend the principle of the Network Neutrality Federal Communications Commission, a U.S.

government agency, voted in December for rules, proposed by the administration of Barack Obama, who defend the Network Neutrality is a concept that holds that ISPs can not discriminate the content or service traffic for some and hurting others on the Internet. The rules adopted in December fully apply to terrestrial cable connections, and partly to the 3G mobile networks.

Now, they must be voted on Capitol Hill. Republicans who oppose them, the majority in both houses of Congress this month. The distinction between terrestrial and wireless connections to the alternative approaches designed by Google and Verizon in an attempt to bring the two more opposing positions: those who reject the principle and those who defend it fully.

The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has five members. Three of them who are Democrats and were elected by Barack Obama, voted in favor of Network Neutrality The other two, nominated by George Bush, voted against it.

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