Codebreaker

AT&T offers FaceTime defense

John Moe Aug 23, 2012

AT&T’s Senior VP for Regulatory Affairs Bob Quinn took to the company’s blog yesterday to offer a defense of the company’s decision to block the use of Apple’s FaceTime app unless users are on a shared data plan. That has led to several charges of violating the FCC’s net neutrality rules.

From the Washington Post:

“The FCC’s net neutrality rules do not regulate the availability to customers of applications that are preloaded on phones,” Bob Quinn wrote. “Rather, they address whether customers are able to download apps that compete with our voice or video telephone services.”

A lot of people suspect that the real reason AT&T is being difficult about this is that FaceTime competes with regular phone calls, which is how AT&T makes some money.

Wired says, regarding Quinn’s defense, baloney:

But the rules adopted by the Federal Communications Commission to prevent carriers from blocking access to applications and websites over mobile connections are crystal clear: Mobile broadband providers cannot “block applications that compete with the provider’s voice or video telephony services.”
Nowhere in the rules will you find a mention of the term “preloaded.” And nor will you find it in the rest of the FCC’s nearly 200-page official order that accompanied and explained the agency’s rationale for adopting these rules. This is simply a distinction that AT&T is inventing, hoping that the FCC lets it poke another loophole in the already weak wireless Net Neutrality protections.

Now we have to see how much the FCC and AT&T’s customers care about pursuing this.

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