Thursday, October 21, 2010

Fiorina Stands Up from Freedom; Slams ‘Net Neutrality’

by Capitol Confidential

California Republican Senate hopeful Carly Fiorina Tuesday reaffirmed her opposition to the Federal Communications Commission’s bid to exert regulatory influence over the broadband industry, attesting in a web video to the onerous and “antiquated” regulations imposed on the tech industry.

“Net neutrality, in principle, sounds fantastic,” Fiorina said in a ten-question online forum hosted by PDF. “But I grew up in the telcom industry, and I know how bureaucratic, and frankly antiquated, the regulations in the telcom industry have been.”


Fiorina, the former chief executive of tech giant Hewlett-Packard, warned the FCC against imposing a dated regulatory regime on industry that thrives on innovation.
“I don’t think we should take a regulator structure that was created in the early 20th century and apply it in the 21st century,” she said, adding, “I don’t support reclassifying broadband as telecom as a result.”


In the wake of House Democrats’ failure to adopt legislation on the matter, the FCC has renewed its interest in reclassifying broadband under a regulatory regime developed in the 1920’s for traditional telephone services, known as a Title II common carrier, ensuring the industry is within the agency’s regulatory reach.

Mrs. Fiorina’s opponent, Senator Barbara Boxer, also participated in the forum, and holds a decidedly different view: No regulation is bad regulation. “I strongly believe that we must preserve Net neutrality,” the 18-year incumbent says in her response.

Boxer had previously co-sponsored legislation to adopt Net neutrality rules. But like the majority of legislation the senator has championed, it was spiked by her colleagues.

Big Government