HR 5353
110th CONGRESS
2d Session
H. R. 5353
To establish broadband policy and direct the Federal Communications
Commission to conduct a proceeding and public broadband summits to assess
competition, consumer protection, and consumer choice issues relating to broadband
Internet access services, and for other purposes.
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
February 12, 2008
Mr. MARKEY (for himself and Mr. PICKERING) introduced the following bill;
which was referred to the Committee on Energy and Commerce
A BILL
To establish broadband policy and direct the Federal Communications
Commission to conduct a proceeding and public broadband summits to assess
competition, consumer protection, and consumer choice issues relating to broadband
Internet access services, and for other purposes.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United
States of America in Congress assembled,
SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.
This Act may be cited as the `Internet Freedom Preservation Act of 2008'.
SEC. 2. FINDINGS.
Congress finds the following:
(1) The Internet has had profound benefits for numerous aspects of daily
life for millions of people throughout the United States and is increasingly
vital to the economy of the United States.
(2) The importance of the broadband marketplace to citizens, communities,
and commerce warrants a thorough inquiry to obtain input and ideas for a
variety of broadband policies that will promote openness, competition, innovation,
and affordable, ubiquitous broadband service for all individuals in the
United States.
SEC. 3. BROADBAND POLICY.
Title I of the Communications Act of 1934 (47 U.S.C. 151 et seq.) is amended
by adding at the end the following new section:
`SEC. 12. BROADBAND POLICY.
`It is the policy of the United States--
`(1) to maintain the freedom to use for lawful purposes broadband telecommunications
networks, including the Internet, without unreasonable interference from
or discrimination by network operators, as has been the policy and history
of the Internet and the basis of user expectations since its inception;
`(2) to ensure that the Internet remains a vital force in the United States
economy, thereby enabling the Nation to preserve its global leadership in
online commerce and technological innovation;
`(3) to preserve and promote the open and interconnected nature of broadband
networks that enable consumers to reach, and service providers to offer,
lawful content, applications, and services of their choosing, using their
selection of devices, as long as such devices do not harm the network; and
`(4) to safeguard the open marketplace of ideas on the Internet by adopting
and enforcing baseline protections to guard against unreasonable discriminatory
favoritism for, or degradation of, content by network operators based upon
its source, ownership, or destination on the Internet.'.
SEC. 4. INTERNET FREEDOM ASSESSMENT.
(a) Internet Freedom Assessment Required-
(1) IN GENERAL- Within 90 days after the date of the enactment of this Act,
the Federal Communications Commission (in this Act referred to as the `Commission')
shall commence a proceeding on broadband services and consumer rights.
(2) SPECIFIC REQUIREMENTS- As part of the proceeding under this section,
the Commission shall assess--
(A) whether broadband network providers adhere to the Commission's Broadband
Policy Statement of August, 2005 (FCC 05-151), including whether, consistent
with the needs of law enforcement, such providers refrain from blocking,
thwarting, or unreasonably interfering with the ability of consumers to--
(i) access, use, send, receive, or offer lawful content, applications,
or services over broadband networks, including the Internet;
(ii) use lawful applications and services of their choice; and
(iii) attach or connect their choice of legal devices to use in conjunction
with their broadband telecommunications or information services, provided
such devices do not harm the network;
(B) whether broadband network providers add charges for quality of service,
or other similar additional fees or surcharges, to certain Internet applications
and service providers, and whether such pricing conflicts with the policies
of the United States stated in section 12 of the Communications Act of
1934 (as added by section 3 of this Act);
(C) whether broadband network providers offer to consumers parental control
protection tools, services to combat unsolicited commercial electronic
mail, and other similar consumer services, the manner in which such services
are offered, and the extent to which such services are consistent with
such policies of the United States;
(D) practices by which network providers manage or prioritize network
traffic, including prioritization for emergency communications, and whether
and in what instances such practices may be consistent with such policies
of the United States;
(E) with respect to content, applications, and services--
(i) the historic economic benefits of an open platform;
(ii) the relationship between competition in the broadband Internet
access market and an open platform; and
(iii) the policy choices and results of global competitors with respect
to access competition and an open platform;
(F) whether the need for enforceable rules governing openness, consumer
rights, and consumer protections or prohibiting unreasonable discrimination
is lessened if a broadband network provider provides significantly high
bandwidth speeds to consumers; and
(G) the potential of policies promoting openness in spectrum allocation,
universal service programs, and video franchising to expand innovation
through protection from unreasonable interference by network owners of
an open marketplace for speech and commerce in content, applications,
and services.
(b) Public Broadband Summits Required-
(1) IN GENERAL- As part of the proceeding required under subsection (a),
and within 1 year after the date of the enactment of this Act, the Commission
shall conduct a minimum of 8 public broadband summits, in geographically
diverse locations, around the United States. The Commission shall publicly
announce the time and location of each such summit at least 30 days in advance.
(2) PURPOSE OF PUBLIC BROADBAND SUMMITS- Such public broadband summits shall
seek to bring together, among others, consumers, consumer advocates, small
business owners, corporations, venture capitalists, State and local governments,
academia, labor organizations, religious organizations, representatives
of higher education, primary and secondary schools, public libraries, public
safety, and the technology sector to assess competition, consumer protection,
and consumer choice issues related to broadband Internet access services.
(c) Internet Input- As part of the proceeding required under subsection (a),
the Commission shall seek to utilize broadband technology to encourage input
from and communication with the people of the United States through the Internet
in a manner that will maximize the ability of such people to participate in
such proceeding.
(d) Report to Congress- Within 90 days after completing the summits under
subsection (b), the Commission shall submit a report to Congress--
(1) summarizing the results of the assessment under subsection (a), including
information gained from the public summits under subsection (b); and
(2) providing recommendations on how to promote competition, safeguard free
speech, and ensure robust consumer protections and consumer choice relating
to broadband Internet access services.
END