PR - businesses don't mean what they say much like the politicians. If you look at Empedocles's diagram and listen carefully to the story you will see Facebook, Google, Apple, Amazon - the tech giants - are the real concern to the telcos.
Sorry, you lost me again. You wrote of MNCs that have supposedly been shackled by the net neutrality rule and then gave examples of MNCs that are in fact supporting net neutrality. PR? I doubt that Google is investing in Google Fiber and spending money on lawsuits over it just for PR.
Google has to agree to FCC rules - such as not exceeding certain rates set by telco clubs. It stifles Google's ambitions.
Google certainly has to play by whatever FCC rules that are relevant. I was, however, responding to your claim, in the matter of "internet neutrality", that
It basically says if you're content driver Google you cannot also own the infrastructure
If that is the case, then Google is willfully breaking the rules and the regulator is fast asleep. Possible, but to my mind unlikely.
That bit was an extract on your general commentary on "net neutrality", which commentary was this:
Net neutrality - a PR word for the regulatory plethora - has shackled MNCs who would have invested way bigger by now. It basically says if you're content driver Google you cannot also own the infrastructure. If you're content owner Netflix you cannot also own the pipe or cable. Verizon cannot also own content without major approvals, etc. That's the gist I get which is good for a mature playing field but not one under construction. It's like saying Amazon cannot own a physical retail store or that Walmart cannot do e-commerce without fulfilling a long cheklist. Good but only once the sector is mature.
I have read the "net neutrality rule", and I am hard pressed to see how you come up with that. According to the FCC, the current rule is
Specifically, the Open Internet Order adopts bright-line rules that prohibit blocking, throttling, and paid prioritization; a rule preventing broadband providers from unreasonably interfering or disadvantaging consumers or edge providers from reaching one another on the Internet; and provides for enhanced transparency into network management practices, network performance, and commercial terms of broadband Internet access service.
Just on that basis, one can see why providers don't care for it. As Empedocles has pointed out, they cannot, for example, rip off people on the basis of "paid prioritization".
It is also not easy to see how a company like Google is constrained in the manner you have suggested. Perhaps you can point to the parts of the "rule" that you think are applicable. ?example, which part would you say supports the
red claim above
Here it is:
https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2015/04/13/2015-07841/protecting-and-promoting-the-open-internet