Comcast 'Honors' FCC Authority On Neutrality - Except When Suing Them To Prove They Have NoneExcept When Suing Them To Prove They Have None 05:55PM Monday Sep 21 2009 by Karl Bode tags: legal · competition · business · Op/Ed · cable · net-neutrality · Comcast Comcast today came out with a very interesting post over at the Comcast blog, in which the company pretends to support the FCC's new push to impose network neutrality rules -- sort of. That's strange, given that Comcast sued the FCC when the FCC gave Comcast a love tap for throttling upstream P2P traffic -- a technology debate that first began in our forums and exploded into a national network nerd firestorm. According to chief Comcast lobbying guru David L. Cohen, the company "supports and honors" the FCC's neutrality policies:
Granted, the bad press and threat of regulation ultimately resulted in Comcast employing a much more user friendly traffic management system that only temporarily throttles heavy users if they're on a congested node, and they're a major reason that node's congested. Still, Cohen's contention that Comcast didn't come to this resolution kicking, spitting and screaming after months of distortion gives his company considerably more credit than it deserves.
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