I checked in this morning to see how the FCC's latest Net neutrality proposal last week was faring with the unhinged fringe.
Fox News, with its customary fair and balanced perspective, offers "FCC Goes For Nuclear Option - Seeks To Control Interent," and "Genachowski's 'Third Way' Is a Washington Internet Takeover."
Over at Whited Sepulchre we have: "The announcement last week by Federal Communications Commission Chairman Julius Genachowski that the agency planned to assert authority over the Internet raises all kinds of red flags...Every street in America should look like one of Chairman Mao's Cultural Revolution Rallies."
And at Freedom's Phoenix, "FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski's Mussolini-like Internet Power." It's right there next to "Obama's secret plan for the 4th reich? Part 1," and "The Military is Spraying Our Skies."
It's all so expected that it's not even amusing any more.
Despite the fact that everyone, from the Washington Post to career conspiranoid Alex Jones - Police State 4: The Rise Of FEMA - Don't Miss Out! Get Your Subscription Today! - is saying that Chairman Mao Tse Genachowski is enacting a diabolical master plan for crushing the free spirit of the Internet - not to mention Avatar downloads from BitTorrent - under the FCC's Wehrmacht, the FCC is not, repeat IS NOT, proposing to regulate ISPs like telephone companies.
How do I know this? Because unlike most of these reporters, apparently, I actually read the FCC's 14-page statement.
It all goes back to 1910 when the Federal Trade Commission first established its jurisdiction over telecommunications, along with the notion of "natural monopoly," the helpful suggestion of the Bell Telephone Company.
(Nothing like a "free market" married to a "natural monopoly." Our current worst-of-all-approaches telecommunications un-regulation is its bastard offspring.)
Twenty years later the 1934 Communications Act established the FCC, which remains the underlying architecture of US telecom regulation. The 1934 law chartered the FCC to regulate telecommunications, but not necessarily promote its development.
The Telecommunications Act of 1996 - of which we in the Internet industry are so fond - brought significant change to the communications the industry landscape. In addition to letting us plug in our 2400 Bd modems, the 1996 law formally defined two types of public communications services: "regulated telecommunications services" - conventional telephone service - and "information services" that were not subject to the requirements governing telecommunications services. Continue Reading...