http://www.infobeat.com/stories/cgi/story.cgi?id=2558771355-470


08:33 PM ET 03/11/99

FCC: No Internet Regulation Plans

 FCC: No Internet Regulation Plans
 By JEANNINE AVERSA=
 Associated Press Writer=
           WASHINGTON (AP) _ The chairman of the Federal Communications
 Commission, bombarded anew with e-mails from computer users fearing
 government regulation of the Internet, tried again Thursday to
 dispel the notion.
           ``I want to say this as clearly as I can ... as long as I'm
 chairman of the Federal Communications Commission this agency will
 not regulate the Internet,'' Bill Kennard told a meeting of
 telecommunications and Internet analysts.
           Kennard was addressing rumors that have circulated on the
 Internet for a long time as well as concerns by some consumer
 groups.
           The FCC last month concluded that a computer user's dial-up
 calls to the Internet are interstate communications subject to
 federal jurisdiction. Internet dial-ups have been treated as local
 calls.
           The FCC has said this decision merely resolves a dispute
among
 phone companies over how to compensate each other for Internet
 connections and how to clarify the role of state and federal
 regulators. The agency said the decision will not affect how
 consumers tap into the Internet or how much they pay.
           But consumer groups and others believe the action
inadvertently
 could lead to higher charges in the future for Internet access by
 computer users.
           ``It's not going to happen,'' Kennard said. He repeated that
the
 FCC has no intention of making computer users pay long-distance
 fees for dial-up access to the Internet, as people now pay when
 they make long-distance telephone calls.
           Still, ``these rumors get on the Internet that the big bad
FCC
 is going to impose all this regulation on the Internet,'' Kennard
 said.
           ``Now I know this painfully because every so often when one
of
 these rumors flares up I get, literally, about 600 e-mail messages
 a day by people who are telling me to keep my hands off the
 Internet,'' Kennard added.
           Separately, Kennard said the FCC is monitoring to ensure
cable
 companies providing high-speed Internet services are not freezing
 out competitors or restricting consumers' options for Internet
 service.
           The FCC, in recent decisions, has declined to force cable
 companies to share their high-speed lines with competitors. But the
 FCC has said it would keep watch.
           Kennard said the FCC is organizing meetings with the various
 stakeholders in this debate ``so that we can get a better handle on
 the problem and monitor the marketplace.''
           Consumer groups, public interest advocates, America Online
and
 others continue to press the FCC to require that cable companies
 give other companies access to those lines so they can offer
 competing services. The cable industry and AT&T, which just
 acquired cable giant Tele-Communications Inc., oppose the idea.
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