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Net neutrality
ITU  /  About ITU  /  Press  /  News from ITU  /  Net neutrality

Net neutrality

The backbone of tomorrow’s Internet may have a remarkable Latvian touch. The Latvian presidency’s proposal on net neutrality challenges the fundamental principle of equal access to all content and applications on the Internet.

ResearchdemocracyRoman BeckBusiness IT Department

Written 12 May, 2015 05:42 by Jari Kickbusch

Will Latvian Proposal Lead to an Internet Monkey Class?

The day before the opening ceremony of the Latvian EU Presidency, the presidency made a move that caught the world’s attention with a proposal to the Council of the European Union. The proposal outlines how the EU legislation should permit telecom operators to make exclusive agreements with companies and individuals to provide faster Internet speeds.

At first glance the proposal might appear harmless; after all it is comme il faut in most parts of the western world that you get what you pay for. When you book a seat on business class, you expect the service to be better than in the other part of the plane often referred to as monkey class. Nevertheless, the proposal has been met by a remarkable political criticism. According to The Register, the Dutch MEP Marietje Shaake responded to the proposal by saying that it was "disappointing to the point of insulting". Along with more than 100 of her fellow MEP’s, she signed an open letter of 4 March 2015 to the Council of the European Union in which the Ministers of the Telecoms Council are strongly urged “to adopt an ambitious position on the Telecoms Single Market. Both with regard to ending roaming charges and with regard to net neutrality.

Internet speed as a product

At the IT University of Copenhagen, professor Roman Beck, an expert in the field of IT and business, is not surprised about the harsh resistance to the proposal. He explains that access to the Internet can be considered as a basic public service, similar to water or electricity supply. Following that argument, the general public will not accept different quality levels for different users groups. In other words, Internet services should not be perceived as a tradable product, rather they should be compared to the highway system where the same traffic laws and speed limits apply to all cars, whether an expensive luxury car or the smallest compact car.

“What is important for private Internet users is a critical matter for businesses. Imagine a ferry where transport fees are calculated by the value of the freight. Some goods would no longer be shipped, because their value would make it unaffordable. Now imagine a young Internet start-up with no access to fast priority delivery offering a service alongside established Internet giants that can afford such a service. The barrier to access for small companies not only prevents competition, but it also essentially prevents innovation in some areas,” professor Roman Beck says.

The needs of the industry

In contrast, the telecom companies claim that differentiated Internet speeds are necessary in order to protect innovation and competition. In a press release from 20 March, ITSPA, the Internet Telephony Services Providers’ Association, announced an award to the Latvian Presidency to show their support to the net neutrality proposal.

For several years, the telecoms have been lobbying intensively to convince European politicians that less regulation is needed, for example, to prioritize critical online-services in the health sector, prevent online queues and support the development of driverless cars. Steven Tas, chairman of the association Etno, that represents some of the largest European telecoms, recently said to the Register that “any future regulation must recognize how networks function: We need balanced rules on traffic management as well as measures that allow the development of specialized services and innovative offers.”

Chief executive of Deutsche Telecom, Timotheus Höttges, shares this point of view. In an interview with Bloomberg at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona in March he argued that telecoms need less regulation in order to compete with new competitors such as Google and Facebook.    “I’m asking for a leveled playing field. That we are operating the same business model [sic]. This is what we are fighting for. This is fair competition. I love competition,” he said.

Professor Roman Beck recognizes that the needs of the industry will be an important factor in shaping future development of the Internet. The politicians will have to find a balance between supporting competition and investment in the Internet backbones while ensuring that smaller players, for example startup companies or non-commercial media, have a fair chance to reach their audience:  “Essentially, the basic right to access the Internet needs to be formulated as a human right. Having access is not enough if bandwidth is not available. At the same time, investments into the Internet need to be lucrative for telecom companies.”

EU vs. US

Net neutrality is not only a hot topic in Europe. Nearly four million commenters took part in the Open Internet proceeding in the US organized by the Federal Communication Commission, FCC. On 26 February the FCC published a press release on the decision to enforce net neutrality against the will of the telecom companies:  “Today, the Commission — once and for all — enacts strong, sustainable rules, grounded in multiple sources of legal authority, to ensure that Americans reap the economic, social, and civic benefits of an Open Internet today and into the future,” the FCC wrote.

The telecoms immediately responded by declaring war on the FCC rules, reflected by a large number of lawsuits the FCC is facing since then.

At the IT University of Copenhagen, professor Roman Beck, who follows the ongoing debate in the US, notes, “ ...while it’s too early to say how the FCC decision will affect the investments into the Internet infrastructure, telecoms and internet service providers in Europe and elsewhere claim that they cannot finance the investments into the Internet backbones if they cannot access new revenue streams.  Assuming that this is true, a solution needs to be found that allows a functioning, open Internet for all while those with a “need for speed” can also have faster connections.”

Further information

Jari Kickbusch, phone 7218 5304, email jark@itu.dk

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