"Normally people fess up and promise never to do it again," Phoenix Center head Lawrence Spiwak noted. Those of you who have had even casual acquaintance with the deference routinely shown to the FCC in Washington policy circles will agree.
"In this case, Comcast first said they didn't do it, then said they did, but that the FCC had no authority over it," Martin said. That's unusual behavior.
Network management is one thing; interfence with lawful applications another, Martin said.
"It did not seem to be reasonable that Comcast denied that was what they were doing," Martin said. "It is a problem when you have a company that won't admit it is doing something" independent evidence shows it is.
Not many who routinely deal with the FCC could say they have seen this sort of thing very often.
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