As the chairman of the FCC makes plans to tear up the Internet policy known as net neutrality, Silicon Valley is beginning to voice its displeasure.
After a Tuesday meeting with Pai, the Internet Association—a lobby group representing the likes of Google, Facebook, Netflix, and Microsoft—shared a summary of its positions.
According to the document, the tech industry wants the FCC to forbid Internet service providers from using “choke point[s]” to extract fees from websites or to slow down certain sites. The industry also wants the agency to prohibit companies like Comcast or Verizon to forbid “prioritized access,” or what are commonly known as “fast lanes” for favored websites.
Currently, such practices are prohibited due to a landmark 2015 ruling by the FCC, known as the Open Internet Order, which made net neutrality (barring Internet companies from favoring some websites over others) the law of the land. Pai, however, shares the view of the telecom industry that the order is an unreasonable constraint on business and has vowed to scrap it.
In its meeting with Pai, though, the Internet Association rejected the notion that net neutrality is bad for business, and pointed out a court has found it to be lawful.