FCC’s net-neutrality rules won’t specifically address 5G network slicing
FCC officials confirmed that the agency’s new net-neutrality guidelines won’t specifically address new 5G technologies like network slicing. Instead, officials explained that network slicing will be handled under the same policy regime that the agency used in 2015, when it imposed net-neutrality guidelines during the Obama administration.
FCC officials confirmed that the agency’s new net-neutrality guidelines won’t specifically address new 5G technologies like network slicing. Instead, officials explained that network slicing will be handled under the same policy regime that the agency used in 2015, when it imposed net-neutrality guidelines during the Obama administration.
However, during a media briefing, FCC officials also said that 5G network-slicing technology will be subject to the agency’s new net-neutrality rules. The officials, who spoke on background and declined to be identified, explained that the agency’s 2015 rules regarding network-management technologies are flexible enough to address newer services like network slicing. As such, network slicing will be handled like any other network-management technology and won’t receive any special consideration.
The FCC plans to vote on April 25 on new net-neutrality rules. FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel said she will release a public draft of her net-neutrality proposal on Thursday. The new rules will likely pass along 3-2 party lines, with the agency’s three Democratic commissioners voting in favor of the rules.
“In 2017, we lived through one of the greatest hoaxes in regulatory history. We were told that ending ‘net neutrality’ (read: government control of the Internet) would end the Internet,” Brendan Carr, the FCC’s top Republican commissioner, posted on social media. “Now the government wants that control back & the FCC will vote on doing just that. I’m a no.”
The FCC initially voted to enact its net-neutrality guidelines during the Democratic Obama administration. But those rules were overturned during the Republican Trump administration under FCC Chair Ajit Pai. After President Biden, a Democrat, replaced Trump and gained Democratic control of the FCC, the agency proposed a new set of net-neutrality rules. Thus, it’s likely that, if Trump wins a second term, he would overturn them again.
The network slicing debate
The FCC’s current position on network slicing and net neutrality would seem to run against a proposal first floated by T-Mobile in December. In a filing then, the company urged the FCC to update its definition of “reasonable network management” to include services like network slicing.
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