Seven civil rights and civic groups joined Comcast in its fight for what it says is its right to manage network traffic and oppose new network neutrality regulations.
Comcast has been accused of violating federal regulations regarding "reasonable network management" by interfering with file-sharing traffic on its network.
The groups filed comments last week supporting network management, siding with private industry in opposing network neutrality laws and regulations.
"There is nothing more paramount for people of color in the broadband age than free speech and universal service, but we need some honesty in this debate," said Harry C. Alford, president and CEO of the National Black Chamber of Commerce. "Content discrimination is a real threat to an open Internet, but so are bandwidth hogs, particularly those who traffic in illegal, pirated material."
Comcast said it prevents file sharing via the BitTorrent protocol over its cable modems only as network management.
Network-neutrality proponents Free Press and members of the SaveTheInternet.com Coalition filed comments opposing network management that involves "discriminatory targeting."
"Our initial filing demonstrated that those who oppose our position don't have a leg to stand on," wrote Marvin Ammori, general counsel for Free Press and lead author of the filing. "Their responses either painfully misconstrue our arguments or rely on technical-sounding nonsense and father-knows-best claims, which are either irrelevant or invalid. Our reply comments make it clear that the [Federal Communications Commission] has the evidence and authority to stop Comcast and others from blocking Internet traffic."
Groups that joined the National Black Chamber of Commerce in signing the comments opposing network neutrality legislation and regulation include the Labor Council for Latin American Advancement, Latinos in Information Sciences and Technology Association, the League of Rural Voters, the National Black Justice Coalition, the National Council of Women's Organizations and the National Congress of Black Women.
"The filing argues that new Internet regulations, while well-intended, could create de facto protections for bandwidth hogs at the expense of consumers and civic organizations that depend on affordable broadband service and the widely available Internet fast lanes," the groups said. "At the same time, these leading civil rights organizations urge the FCC to monitor improper types of bandwidth management that could become a ruse for content discrimination."
E. Faye Williams, national chair of the National Congress of Black Women, said "properly conceived network management" can protect free speech by preventing peer-to-peer traffic from overwhelming the network and slowing connection speeds for other users.
"Likewise, it helps reduce costs for consumers, which is a crucial benefit for many of our households that struggle to afford broadband services," Williams said. "The question is not whether network management is appropriate. Any rational person would have to believe that it is. The question really is whether the network management technique that a particular provider uses is appropriate."