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FCC To Regulate & Make Rules For Internet VoIP Telephone Calls
I can't wait to see how they are going to charge phone call taxes to people in other countries. This should be something to watch for sure.
FCC To Establish Fules For Internet Telephone Calls WASHINGTON · Regulators agreed Thursday to set rules for Internet telephone calls, and for a new way to reach the Web through an electrical outlet. The Federal Communications Commission said it would decide how to regulate calls made via high-speed Internet connections, which bypass at least part of the conventional phone network. While the Internet has been largely free from regulation, the FCC is getting involved now because some telecommunications services are migrating to the Web and companies want to know how the government will regulate what is known as Voice Over Internet Protocol, or VOIP. Among those who have asked the FCC to rule is AT&T. "You have different entities petitioning the FCC for an answer," said Grant Seiffert, vice president of the Telecommunications Industry Association, a trade group. "They say, `We want to provide this service. Are you going to regulate us?' They're being asked to make a judgment." Traditionally, a phone conversation is converted into electronic signals that traverse a network of switches, in a dedicated circuit that lasts the duration of a call. In VOIP, a conversation is converted to packets of data transmitted through the Internet. The packets get reassembled and converted to sound on the other end of the call. The FCC on Thursday told one company offering VOIP, pulver.com's Free World Dialup, that it was not a telephone service and therefore not subject to regulation. Consumers can join Free World Dialup for free and then make calls to other members without using regular telephones. Special numbers rather than 10-digit phone numbers route the calls. As it looks at regulating Internet calls, the FCC plans to look at whether such calls should be subject to the same fees as regular telephone service, such as for 911 emergency services or bringing telephone service to poor and rural areas, schools and libraries. Also to be decided is whether these new services need to pay fees to local telephone companies to complete calls to conventional phones. |
In short, it won't be good for consumers.
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Stay out of my internet! The more goverment bodies that are pushing for regulation in the internet is directly proportional to the shit were going to have to put up with. Just wait untill the FCC decides to impose indecency laws on the internet. It's not exactly an event around the corner but based on current trends it is possible it will happen.
Does anyone know any good websites that petition against goverment intervention on the internet? If so please post, I'd pledge my support! |
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