Netflix is the latest company to join a petition asking the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to deny the pending $45 billion Comcast / Time Warner merger. In a 256-page report, Netflix details how the merger will give the new entity too much control over the internet, and that this new power will enable it to stifle online video distributors that it sees as competition. Comcast continues to argue that because it does not overlap geographically with Time Warner, there are no major anti-trust concerns. Netflix was quick to point out that in 2000, the FCC required AT&T and MediaOne…
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Comcast recently filed its public interest statement with the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) explaining how the American public will benefit from its $45 billion planned merger with Time Warner Cable. Comcast claims the merger is necessary because it can’t compete with the likes of Google, Apple, Verizon and Netflix–companies with a national footprint. On the flipside, over 50 public interest groups, including MoveOn.org and Daily Kos, have signed a petition stating that a merger would give Comcast unprecedented power to raise broadband rates for a significant portion of the country and gatekeeper power over too much commercial and private activity.…