Reuters: Sen. Wyden offers Internet neutrality bill
WASHINGTON, March 2 (Reuters) - Sen. Ron Wyden on Thursday proposed legislation 
aimed at preventing high-speed Internet service providers from charging content 
companies extra so consumers have faster access to their Web sites or receive 
special treatment.

The Oregon Democrat said he was pushing the legislation to ensure smaller 
start-ups trying to do business on the Internet would not be outgunned by 
bigger companies.

"Neutrality in technology enables small businesses to thrive on the Internet, 
and allows folks to start small and dream big, and that's what I want to 
protect with this legislation," he said in a statement.

Providers of high-speed Internet service, known as broadband, have said 
consumers would be able to access any Internet site they choose.

Yet some broadband providers like Verizon Communications (VZ.N: Quote, Profile, 
Research) and AT&T Inc. (T.N: Quote, Profile, Research) have said they would 
like to charge more for services that use faster, private Internet networks, 
like for downloading movies.

Wyden's measure would specifically bar network operators from creating a 
priority channel where content providers could pay for faster access to 
customers.

"People get nervous when they hear a member of Congress talk about regulating 
the Internet and America's broadband networks," said Verizon spokesman David 
Fish. "This is an attempt to fix a hypothetical problem that doesn't exist."

However, companies like Web search engine Google Inc. (GOOG.O: Quote, Profile, 
Research) and Internet telephone provider Vonage Holdings Corp. counter that a 
private fast Internet could block users of their services and stifle innovation.

It was unclear whether Wyden's bill would advance. Sen. Ted Stevens, chairman 
of the Senate Commerce Committee which has jurisdiction over the issue, said he 
would prefer to have one comprehensive bill that overhauls U.S. communications 
laws.

Stevens, an Alaska Republican, has also said he would like to embrace some form 
of Internet neutrality but noted it was hard to define and get consensus among 
lawmakers. 

[http://today.reuters.com/investing/financeArticle.aspx?type=governmentFilingsNews&storyID=URI:urn:newsml:reuters.com:20060302:MTFH08897_2006-03-02_22-55-27_N02376259:1
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