FCC considers fees for phone-to-phone IP services
By John Rendleman, PC Week Online 04.13.98 4:45 pm ET
The Federal Communications Commission told Congress late last Friday that it may consider, on a case-by-case basis, whether some "phone-to-phone" IP telephone and fax services should be required to pay access fees for connecting to the conventional telephone network to help pay for universal service programs.
While noting that its intent is not to regulate the entire Internet or to thwart the growth and innovation of IP-based services, the commission, in a report delivered to Congress, said it will gather information on the issue of subjecting certain IP telephony services to the regulatory fees.
"While a more definitive determination demands that we have a better factual record, I note that even in this regard we are not proposing the possibility of 'regulating the Internet' or imposing universal service contribution obligations on Internet service providers," said FCC Chairman William Kennard in a statement. "We are simply identifying a very narrow category of service -- IP telephony -- that shares many of the characteristics of a telecommunications service."
In tentatively classifying IP telephony services that use conventional telephone devices and fax machines to place voice and fax calls over the Internet using standard telephone numbering schemes, the FCC opened the door to future commission proceedings in which the agency could apply new fees to such services.
The report's conclusions draw a road map for future decisions resulting from complaints by conventional telephone service providers, which maintain that their networks are being used unfairly by IP telephony providers, even though the report revealed some ambiguity at the commission about the issue.
Even if IP telephony is classified as a telecommunications service for regulatory purposes, FCC Commissioner Michael Powell said the service "should not, in my current view, be required to contribute to universal service."
According to Powell, "if innovative new IP services were all thrown into the bucket of telecommunications carriers, we would drop a mountain of regulations, and their attendant costs, on these services and perhaps stifle innovation and competition in direct contravention of the [Telecommunications Act of 1996]."
Taking the strongest stance against subjecting IP telephony providers to such fees, Commissioner Harold Furchtgott-Roth said he opposes the thrust of the report and characterized the agency's potential new policy directives as "mere Band-Aids for a dying patient."
Furchtgott-Roth went on to say that "I am concerned that such rules could be technically infeasible, could discourage further facilities build-out and could seriously undermine our international telecommunications policies." |