FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler has confirmed (CNet) that the agency is working on a new plan to restore net neutrality provisions overturned by a court case brought by Verizon. In addition, a number of US senators have written to Wheeler directly, asking the FCC to “move quickly” to restore neutrality rules.
As an example, Verizon could have allowed a website, say Facebook, to pay Verizon to have faster, more direct access than sites that didn’t pay. ISPs owned by cable providers want to throttle competitors like Netflix in order to promote their own video-on-demand services. The senators told Wheeler that “consumers, entrepreneurs and innovators deserve to know their right to view or use the content and services of their choice online will be protected.”
Democrats in Congress, opposed by Republicans, have also attempted to legislate the rules back into law. Wheeler mentioned in a speech on Monday that the “outline” of such a plan would arrive “in the coming days.”