| Back Door May Open Net To Regs 
 February 19, 1999
 
 Inter@ctive Week via NewsEdge Corporation : The U.S. Federal Communications
 Commission has sworn with its right hand not to regulate the Internet. But is its
 left hand laying the groundwork to do that very thing?
 
 That question is met with everything from grave concern to mockery by FCC
 players.
 
 Chairman William Kennard and his colleagues have chimed in with the "don't
 regulate" consensus, which, for example, has protected Internet commerce from
 taxation and Internet service providers from paying the same access charges to
 local phone companies levied on long-distance carriers.
 
 "Regulation," of course, is in the beholder's eyes. Internet companies happily
 accept $10 billion to $12 billion in annual government subsidies, or "beneficial
 regulation," says Scott Cleland, of the Legg Mason Wood Walker securities firm.
 
 Meanwhile, though, the Net impinges ever more forcefully on matters in which the
 commission (www.fcc.gov) takes a strong interest.
 
 A phone-to-phone long-distance call via the Internet walks and quacks much like
 a conventional call; the question is how long the Internet telephony industry
 should keep warding off comparable rules and tolls. Last summer, the FCC told
 Congress it had to consider that question.
 
 In October 1998, the commission took up the nature of Digital Subscriber Line
 connections -- high-speed data access using ordinary copper phone lines -- and
 decided they were inherently interstate, giving the FCC regulatory jurisdiction.
 
 Now pending is a companion case concerning hundreds of millions of dollars per
 year in annual "reciprocal compensation" obligations from the Bells and GTE to
 competitive carriers for completing dial-up calls to Internet service providers. All
 indications are that the commission will decide these calls, too, are interstate,
 for regulatory purposes -- again giving the FCC jurisdiction.
 
 And Bell competitors and advocacy groups want the commission to force
 cable-modem service open to competing Internet providers. The FCC has decided
 not to do so for now, but the issue isn't dead.
 
 The commission is treading lightly, but these cases have antennae quivering. "It
 terrifies me," says Paul Misener, chief of staff for Commissioner Harold
 Furchtgott-Roth, one of two Republicans on the five-member FCC.
 
 Former Chairman Reed Hundt says the commission "can steer clear" of Net
 regulation, but he admits he's concerned it won't. "The Internet is an empty
 space," he says. "Sometimes people think it's a vacuum and they try to suck
 regulations into it."
 
 But an aide to one of the FCC's Democratic members, who spoke on condition of
 anonymity, scoffed at the worries. The GTE (www.gte.com) case "is not over the
 information service, the Internet. It is over the communication services that are
 used to access the Internet." And contending that the commission shouldn't
 regulate telephony that happens to use a technology called Internet Protocol, he
 scoffs, is like saying the health department shouldn't be allowed to inspect
 sanitation at an eatery called Jim's Internet Pizza Parlor.
 
 <<Inter@ctive Week -- 02-15-99>>
 
 [Copyright 1999, Ziff Wire]
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