Panel #2 at this year’s “State of the Net” pre-conference featured a lively debate about net neutrality and investment. It included a debate between Hal Singer of Empiris LLC and Michael Livermore of the New York University Law School. It also featured the comments of Markham Erickson of the Open Internet Coalition and Christopher Yoo of the University of Pennsylvania Law School. The panel was ably moderated by Susan Crawford. Here are some highlights of what proved to be a fun and feisty debate, which began with the comments of Hal Singer:
Hal Singer, Empiris LLC
- FCC wants to constrain pricing flexibility for networks
- Not clear we need price regulation for service delivery in absence of clear market power
- FCC offers novel “collective action” theory to justify regulation, but doesn’t make sense and doesn’t apply here
- Investment at edge of network will not decline in absence of Net neutrality regulation
- Outlawing priority delivery would discourage investment in new networks AND applications
- “Net neutrality would harm the very folks it seeks to protect”; end users will see price hikes
- Investment at core is crucial
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