Three public interest groups say they're filing a formal complaint
against AT&T with the FCC for its policy on FaceTime over 3G.
A trio public interest groups intend to file a formal complaint
against telecom giant AT&T over a decision to require a specific
wireless data plan to use Apple's FaceTime video chat over its 3G
network.
In a notice
today, Free Press, Public Knowledge, and the New America Foundation's
Open Technology Institute said they intended to file a complaint
against the carrier with the Federal Communications Commission
asserting that AT&T has violated Net Neutrality with a policy that
requires users to be on a specific data plan in order to use Apple's
FaceTime video chat service on 3G.
"AT&T's decision to block FaceTime unless a customer pays for
voice and text minutes she doesn't need is a clear violation of the
FCC's Open Internet rules," Free Press Policy Director Matt Wood said
in a press release. "It's particularly outrageous that AT&T is
requiring this for
iPad users, given that this device isn't even capable of making voice calls."
Last month AT&T said it would allow only customers with its new
Family Share plans to access feature over its cellular network. By
contrast, U.S. rivals like Verizon and Sprint simply allowed it
outright, counting any data usage against the monthly allotment in a
subscriber's plan.
At the time, AT&T countered some of the immediate criticism by
saying that the FCC's Net neutrality rules do not regulate applications
that come pre-loaded on devices (such as FaceTime, which has shipped on
iPhones since the
iPhone
4 in 2010). Instead, AT&T's senior vice president of regulatory
affairs Bob Quinn argued that the rules covered whether phone owners
could download applications that competed with what AT&T offered
out of the box.
In the group's note today, the organizations countered by saying
that AT&T could not block apps that competed with its voice calling
services, per the Open Internet rules the FCC passed in 2010.
News of the complaint comes just a day before Apple is set to release iOS 6, which enables FaceTime over 3G on the
iPhone 4S and its third-generation iPad.
(via GigaOm)