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Colorado's 'Open Internet' Bill Would Punish Internet-Providing Violators By Taking Their Grant Money Away
Saturday April 6, 2019. 03:00 PM , from Slashdot
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Colorado Sun: Now that Democrats are in charge, Colorado's second attempt at its own version of a net neutrality law passed the General Assembly and now heads to Gov. Jared Polis for his certain signature. Keeping internet speeds consistent regardless of whether a customer is streaming video from Comcast or Netflix wasn't the only intent of the Senate Bill 78. The bill also makes internet service providers pay back state grants to build broadband infrastructure if those companies use paid prioritization to favor some internet traffic over others, or slow down speeds for some users.
The Colorado law is similar to the former federal one in that it would prohibit ISPs from prioritizing certain content. It would also force violating ISPs that benefited from state broadband grants to refund all money received in the previous 24 months. After the governor signs the bill into law, Colorado's attorney general would by Oct. 1 create guidelines on how consumers can file complaints about net neutrality violations. 'What I was really looking for in this year's bill was the appropriate nexus of action. A lot of the bills we saw getting in trouble in other states, or bills that were facing a lot of opposition, were more about sending a message of net neutrality instead of looking for a fulcrum point for state action,' said Sen. Kerry Donovan, a Democrat from Vail who sponsored last year's bill and wrote this year's bill. 'This bill says that if you're going to ask to be funded by the people in Colorado directly out of their paycheck then you need to adhere to these principles.' Read more of this story at Slashdot.
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