Net objectivity and the National Broadband Plan are together active and fine. Opposite to the media fury and expert punditry in the wake of a US constituency court verdict rebuffing efforts by the FCC to enforce its decision on Comcast, there were no broader allegations concerning the common authority of the FCC.
The court pronouncement a precise judgment concerning a definite event, based on the definite conditions and ways used by the FCC at the time it wanted to stop Comcast from randomly becoming selective against peer-to-peer network traffic.
The court declaration in that particular case does not mean that the FCC has no power to supervise units such as Comcast, just that the FCC had been unsuccessful in doing so appropriately, particularly concerning that case.
The court verdict previously this week does not alter the company’s broadband strategy goals, or the final authority of the FCC to take action, in order achieve its goals.
The court did not inquire the FCC's goals. It only cancelled single technological, legal mechanism for broadband strategy which had been selected by former Commissions.












