From CNET News.com: Netflix, the Web's hottest video rental service, is worried that bandwidth providers could abuse their position as the gatekeepers of Internet access to hamstring competing Web-video distributors. As the Federal Communications Commission continues to consider proposals for Net neutrality regulations, Netflix recently asked the agency (PDF) to adopt rules that protect Web video fans from anti-competitive practices. "Network operators control the delivery pipes and generate significant revenue from content that travels over those pipes," Netflix wrote to the FCC. These operators "provide both the means and motive for discriminating against new ventures that might threaten revenue sources of the network operators." Netflix's comments to the FCC, first reported by The Washington Post on Monday, is a signal that the company sees a showdown coming with Comcast, Time Warner, and other broadband providers over the distribution of online video. While seemingly everyone predicts the Web will one day be the preferred means of distribution for on-demand film and TV shows, Netflix has aggressively prepared for that day by building up its Web-streaming service and partnering with set-top box makers that enable users to watch Internet-video on TV sets. But in the future, cable and satellite companies may have the upper hand when it comes to acquiring Internet rights to films and TV shows. View: Article @ Source Site |