Web

Big Tech CEOs Are a No-Show On Net Neutrality Committee Hearing Deadline

A week ago today it was announced that Commerce Committee Chairman, Greg Walden, was inviting major tech and telecoms CEOs to testify on net-neutrality. But now it seems, no one wants to turn up.

Net neutrality is the idea that internet providers should not be allowed to block or slow certain products or websites based on a payscale. Tech companies have traditionally taken a pro-net-neutrality stance as it gives their sites the greatest reach coupled with an ideological open-internet mindset.

Telecoms companies, on the other hand, would prefer to be able to introduce payscales as a new level of competition to the market because it would earn them more money.

Net neutrality is in place in the US, however, Trump and other leading Republicans are looking to scrap it. The big tech CEOs have thus far been stalwarts of the pro-net neutrality campaign, so with a congressional hearing on the topic the proverbial stage was set for a battle of intellects.

Read More: 24 senators introducing bill to kill FCC Internet privacy rules received combined $2.29M from industry PACs

I was excited, I assumed the tech bosses would run rings round the committee. It was supposed to be the telecoms companies that were going to be an issue.

But both big tech and the telecoms companies have missed the RSVP deadline on the committee hearing which is due to take place on 7th September. According to Recode, the tech companies wanted to send underlings, scared that the grilling would be too much for their delicate CEOs.

The committee have said they’ll extend the RSVP deadline in order to get all parties to the table.

There is certainly something to the idea that testifying in congress – which the tech CEOs have never done – would be a no-win situation for them. They’d have been grilled about privacy battles and mergers and the like, which are conversations they’d really rather have out of earshot of the public.

Netflix have pretty much shrugged their shoulders on the issue. Their CEO, Reed Hastings, said, that net neutrality was “not narrowly important to us because we’re big enough to get the deals we want.” This is big statement from a company who has been embroiled in bandwidth issues with Verizon previously. They were supposed to be one of the main beneficiaries of net-neutrality due to the size of connection that streaming requires.

One can only hope this is a game of political chess which the tech CEOs are wise to. The invitation from the committee came after the July 12 net neutrality Day of Action, so it’s possible that this is a Republican counter-move to try and shut the tech CEOs up.

And shut-up they shall, for the moment at least. The public wants to keep net-neutrality. The only people who gain from scrapping net neutrality are the big telecoms companies, so if big tech leave the field they’ll be knowingly leaving the public to fight the battle themselves.

Ben Allen

Ben Allen is a traveller, a millennial and a Brit. He worked in the London startup world for a while but really prefers commenting on it than working in it. He has huge faith in the tech industry and enjoys talking and writing about the social issues inherent in its development.

View Comments

Recent Posts

Fintech lifeline for banks as rising consumer living costs hinder debt collection

Banks have moved from feast to famine amidst a spike in the number of financial…

7 hours ago

Mars Petcare and Michelson Found Animals want to make life easier for pet owners with Leap Venture Studio startup accelerator 

Being a pet owner can be hard. For one, according to researchers from the University…

8 hours ago

“A Lowercase ‘C’ Cost Me £550K”: CEO Shares Lessons Learned from Private Equity Earn-Out (Brains Byte Back podcast)

In this episode of Brains Byte Back, Erick Espinosa sits down with Sam Oliver, CEO…

1 day ago

A look into the edtech startup landscape in Southeast Asia

Education technology (edtech) is once again among the top sectors in Southeast Asia (SEA) for…

4 days ago

SQream Blue: the data preparation lakehouse setting new performance standards  

There is no single right big data solution. Organizations are most likely to succeed with…

4 days ago

Transformers: Navigating the New Era of Attention in Technology

In 2017, a group of researchers (from Google and the University of Toronto) introduced a…

1 week ago