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To: Jake0302 who wrote (25019)7/6/1999 7:50:00 PM
From: Jenne  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 41369
 
Broadband cable access issue reaching Congress
By John Borland
Staff Writer, CNET NEWS.COM
July 6, 1999, 4:35 p.m. PT
A Congressional measure aimed at prying open cable TV companies' networks to outside Internet service providers will likely be introduced next week, breaking new ground in a budding movement.

Sponsored by Representative Ed Markey (D-Massachusetts), instrumental in shaping the 1992 Cable Act and the 1996 Telecommunications Act, the measure would require cable companies to give ISPs like America Online direct access to their cable networks. Today, most cable Internet customers must use an ISP affiliated with the cable company, such as the AT&T-controlled Excite@Home, while dial-up Net users can choose any ISP.

The measure will be introduced next week, with a goal of signing up at least 100 co-sponsors, the congressman said.

"It would be a mistake, from a public policy perspective, to have an open network, the telephone network, and a closed network, the cable network," Markey said in an interview with CNET News.com today. "Both networks should be open."

Markey's efforts mark the latest in a string of high-profile measures focused on consumer high-speed Internet access this year. The bills have prompted an all-out lobbying campaign from companies like AT&T, AOL, and all of the big local telephone companies.

At the top of this legislative pig-pile has been the so-called cable open access issue, which first surfaced shortly after AT&T announced it would buy Tele-Communications Incorporated last year.

AT&T requires its broadband cable Internet subscribers to use the affiliated Excite@Home ISP service, just as most other cable companies require Internet customers to use their own affiliated ISPs.

Outside ISPs, such as America Online, MindSpring and GTE, have argued in court, in Congress, and in front of federal regulators that they should be given direct access to these cable networks in order to sell their own branded service, just as they can directly serve dial-up Internet customers over telephone lines.

Both sides have been trying to gain ground in Congress, at the Federal Communications Commission, and at the local government level. Television ads are even beginning to appear.

Despite the intensifying debate, federal policymakers have yet to make a single official ruling on the issue. But a federal court recently determined that the city of Portland, Oregon, could force AT&T to open its cable networks as a condition of approving its local cable franchise. That decision gave new life to similar open access drives in cities elsewhere in the country.

One bill, sponsored by Representatives Bob Goodlatte (R-Virginia) and Rick Boucher (D-Virginia), would force cable companies to open their networks, but would also reduce regulation on the big local telephone companies' broadband data businesses.

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July 6, 1999, 1:37 p.m. PT
America Online Inc. AOL
120.9375 +5.6875 +4.93%
AT&T Corp. T
56.6250 +0.0625 +0.11%

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A competing measure, introduced last week by House Telecommunications subcommittee chairman Billy Tauzin (R-Louisiana) and the well-known John Dingell (D-Michigan), would allow cable companies to keep their broadband networks closed to direct competition by outside ISPs, but would allow the telephone companies substantial new leeway in controlling their own high-speed data services.

Markey said each of the other two bills would allow local telephone companies to move toward a more closed model, which he opposes. His own measure would take a different tack, instructing federal regulators to view cable Internet access as a telecommunications service, which would force companies to give outside ISPs access.

AT&T declined to comment on Markey's planned resolution, but has consistently said that cable Internet access is a cable service, and not subject to open access requirements. The company has also argued that it is not technically practical to open up its cable networks to an unlimited number of outside ISPs. The company is currently appealing the Portland decision.

Despite the growing interest on the hill, few Washington insiders seem to think that any significant legislation on this or other telecommunications issues will be successful this year.

Even Markey is pessimistic about the chances of his measure--or its rivals--passing before legislators return home this fall. "At the end of the day I don't think it's likely that any legislation will pass heading in either direction over the next year and a half," he said.

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