Net Neutrality Is Back! For Now.
from the regulatory-patty-cake dept
The FCC on Thursday once again voted along party lines to restore popular net neutrality rules stripped away during the Trump administration in a flurry of protest and sleazy industry behavior.
You might recall the 2017 repeal was so unpopular that telecom giants were caught using fake and dead people to create the illusion of public support. The Trump FCC was also caught making up a DDOS attack to explain away public outrage. And the repeal was a flurry of debunked lies, such as the claim that net neutrality would “stifle broadband investment” and represented “draconian government overreach.”
While years of disinformation from the GOP and telecom industry have muddied the water, the fairly modest rules are a stopgap effort to prevent telecom giants from abusing their regional market power and dominance of the broadband market to hamper competition and abuse consumers.
Under the rules your ISP can’t block you from accessing the service of your choice, or charge a startup extra money if they want to receive the same network priority as a giant company. These are basic protections ensuring the internet remains relatively open (assuming the FCC enforces the rules) and driven by decades of big ISPs (like AT&T and Comcast) trying to tilt the playing field in their favor.
“These net neutrality policies ensured you can go where you want and do what you want
online without your broadband provider making choices for you,” FCC boss Jessica Rosenworcel said in a statement. “They made clear your broadband provider should not have the right to block websites, slow services, or censor online content.”
While broadband providers have already started whining about the rules and threatened to sue, privately (just like last time) broadband industry executives doubt the rules will have any meaningful impact on their businesses. The rules aren’t onerous, won’t likely be enforced with any consistency, and big companies like AT&T and Comcast have never, ever really had to worry about serious FCC penalties for any of their various predatory, anti-competitive, or illegal behaviors.
What big ISPS are mostly worried about is that if you allow fairly tepid basic regulatory oversight, it could escalate more significantly into meaningful antitrust enforcement and rate regulation, neither of which they’ve ever actually had to worry about given widespread corruption and regulatory capture. That they might someday experience real accountability is something they enjoy whining about anyway.
Net neutrality experts like Stanford professor Barbara van Schewick had expressed concerns that the new rules were somewhat weaker than the original. She was particularly concerned that the rules opened the door to allowing ISPs to charge consumers extra if they wanted particular apps and services to operate in priority fast lanes, opening the door to anti-competitive behavior.
She and other telecom policy lawyers are still dissecting the final order, so it’s not yet clear if those concerns have been addressed (I’ll write a follow up post on loopholes once legal experts have had some time to digest the legal fine print).
In a statement, FCC official Brendan Carr (R, AT&T), made it abundantly clear that Republicans hope the Supreme Court’s looming plan to lobotomize what’s left of the federal regulatory state (see: Chevron) boxes the FCC in and prevents them from being able to protect consumers and open markets. Though legal precedent may protect the FCC more broadly than other agencies when that hammer finally falls.
I tend to think the Rosenworcel FCC knows they needed to pass these rules to be in the good graces of critics and consumers, but will be happy to have this political hot potato in the rear view mirror. I doubt the rules will ever be meaningfully enforced, though the broader Title II authority under the Telecom Act that the ruling restores will certainly help the agency’s consumer protection efforts on other fronts.
Public Knowledge Legal Director John Bergmayer tells Ars Technica ISPs will still try to push their luck in terms of tilting the playing field and nickel and diming consumers, and it’s important that the FCC remains diligent in enforcing the rules:
“Broadband providers will continue attempting to re-brand their old plans for internet fast and slow lanes, hoping to sneak them through. The FCC will need to diligently enforce its rules, including clarifying that discrimination in favor of certain apps or categories of traffic “impairs” and “degrades” traffic that is left in the slow lane, and that broadband providers cannot simply take apps that people use on the Internet every day and package them as a separate “non-broadband” service.”
It’s possible the Rosenworcel FCC, staffed with the kind of careerist revolving door folks who aren’t particularly interested in protracted political fights with deep-pocketed campaign contributors, doesn’t really enforce the rules. And the Trump FCC in a second Trump term would at best not enforce them and at worst turn around and eliminate them all over again.
This kind of policy patty cake could be addressed if Congress would just pass a net neutrality law, but just like consumer privacy and countless other modern American issues, they’re too corrupt to do that. So Democrats use the ever-shrinking confines of FCC power to implement half measures while Republicans — in perfect lockstep with telecoms — have shifted focus toward exploiting a corrupt Supreme Court to lobotomize federal regulatory power almost entirely.
The central problem with U.S. broadband continues to be concentrated, local monopoly power nobody in either party wants to address. Cable companies dominate broadband access in most U.S. cities, resulting in privacy violations, net neutrality violations, high prices, slow speeds, and spotty access in a service market where consumers are unable to organically punish providers by voting with their wallet.
Republicans actively support telecom monopolization and consolidation. Democrats claim to be interested in fixes, but even Democratic FCC members can’t openly admit monopoly power is a problem in public facing statements. In part because many of these companies, as their role in domestic surveillance has shown, are effectively a part of government and above most meaningful oversight.
We’ll see what happens next. Given precedent (the courts have repeatedly declared the FCC has the legal right to restore or eliminate net neutrality rules provided they have solid factual justification) I doubt industry lawsuits will have much of an impact. But this Supreme Court remains much of a wildcard, and I still don’t think the press or public are taking their looming war on the regulatory state seriously enough.
Filed Under: ajit pai, broadband, competition, fcc, high speed internet, net neutrality, telecom
BestNetTech is off for the holidays! We'll be back soon, and until then don't forget to




Comments on “Net Neutrality Is Back! For Now.”
ISPs had ample chance to show that Net Neutrality caused harm to them.
They never did, because they couldn’t, as no such harm existed.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Re:
Reading FCC stories on this website is like watching a clown in a circus do his bit but the only part of his show is him crushing his balls in a vice. Eventually you start wondering if the clown knows how to do anything else, or if he’ll ever get his balls out of the vice.
Re: Re:
Perhaps you were thinking of yourself when you wrote that.
Re: Re:
Why do you want American internet access to be similar to third world countries?
I think you just want to keep Americans poor so you can take advantage of their kids.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Re: Re: Re:
When the hell did I say that I wanted American internet access to be throttled? Are you high?
Re: Re:
I’m starting to wonder if you’re just a sockpuppet for BestNetTech. It seems that you can often be trusted to boost engagement by posting something contrarian in the comments for just about any article on the site.
Re: Re: Re:
For what reason would Mike need to boost engagement when BestNetTech has plenty of articles that never hit double digits on comments but don’t get memory-holed for “lack of engagement”?
Re: Re: Re:
He’s something involving socks, no doubt.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Re: Re: Re:
🚬
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Re: Re: Re:2
And for the record, my whole point was that the FCC was comically dysfunctional. I have no idea how Anonymous Cowards interpreted that as me being a pedophile but that’s the leaps of logic you get when dealing with people who think me and Matthew M. Bennett are the same person.
Re: Re: Re:3
Every choice has consequences. You chose to post under the name of a known troll, albeit with a different middle initial. You’ve also chosen to, at times, post with the same level of antagonism and contrarianism as the known troll. And though you’ve declared yourself to be a “satire” of that troll, satire requires a clarity of purpose and target to avoid being mistaken for sincerity.
You fucked around; now you’re finding out. Don’t hate the game because you played it poorly.
Re: Re:
Reading your comments on this website is like watching a dog lick its own butt. You’re doing something you enjoy and it’s not valuable or useful to anyone else, and it’s also awkward to watch, but hey, you do you!
Still waiting for the “anti-corporate” right to show up and make Republican politicians adopt another new narrative on issues like this.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
FCC legal authorities
… Does the FCC have any actual legal authority to regulate-the-Internet and its private business providers ?
that’s the huge, hidden issue underlying this long simmering NET NEUTRALITY controversy.
FCC never had and does not now have such Internet/ISP regulatory authority under the Federal Communications Act.
Congress itself must directly enact NET NEUTRALITY, or amend its existing Federal Communications Act.
Re:
The factual answer for all non right wing idiots is yes.
Re:
…hallucinated nobody mentally competent, ever.
Re: Re:
The Cass report
Re:
Are you claiming that communications were not regulated under title II of the Federal communications act? Are you trying to claim my isp does not transmit data from a server to my home? What, and i must emphizise this, the FUCK am I paying them for than?
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Re: Re:
yes
ISP’s have never been a “Common Carrier” under Title II
… in 2015 a concerted partisan effort began to change that status vja non-legislative FCC dictate
Re: Re: Re:
The FCC doesn’t only have regulatory over common carriers. It regulates “telecommunications services” under authority granted by Title II. The D.C. Circuit Court affirmed the authority to regulate net neutrality in 2015.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Re: Re: Re:2
Congress sharply limited FCC ‘TELECOMMINICATONS’ AUTHORITY in Title I versus broad regulatory authority in Title II;
ISP’s were always Title I
unelected FCC bureaucrats have no authority to override Congress and move ISP’s into Title II … vastly expanding arbitrary FCC power over the internet
Re: Re: Re:3
Back out here in the real world, internet had always been Titpe II untip corporate/Republican corruptuon misclassified it as Title I back in the early 2000s.
Then 2015 saw restoration of proper classification and light-touch regulation under Title II as per the FCC’s congressionally-granted authority.
Then corporate/Republican lies again in 2017.
Re: Re: Re:4
No, ISP’s were always Title I until the Obama drive to Title II in 2015
Title II is not ‘light touch’ regulation, but grants extremely broad discretionary authority to to all present & future FCC bureaucrats, including content regulation.
Re: Re: Re:5
Sorry, old timer, times change. Laws are reinterpreted to adjust to newer developments.
Or would you assert that the 1st Amendment only applies to the use of technologies that existed in 1791?
Re: Re: Re:5
Prove it, bot. Cite your sources,
Re: Re: Re:5
Ajit Pai had all the time in the world following the net neutrality repeal to make things better for consumers.
Instead all that happened was ISPs continuing to take more government funding, with no improvements made to infrastructure. User costs went up, the very thing that ISPs and their lobbyists threatened would be the norm if Title II continued to exist.
It’s almost like the whole Title II panic was intentional fearmongering on the part of ISPs and their stooges like Richard Bennett. California recognized this, and began to regulate themselves, which of course Ajit Pai absolutely hated.
You guys have been caught out on your bullshit multiple times before. It’s not going to work this time.
Re: Re: Re:5
Except foe the fact where, contrary to your delusions, the FCC reclassified the internet from Titpe II to Title I in 2005.
Now, how could that have happened in your young-earth world where it was Title I the whole time?
Re: Re: Re:3
Tell that to the courts:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Telecom_Association_v._FCC_(2016)
Re:
Not “the internet”, but ISPs. Nice try tho’.
…hallucinated nobody mentally competent, ever.
That sound you hear is Richard Bennett angrily gnashing his teeth and stamping his feet.
Interesting confulence of dumb people's ideas
Steve Bannon, watched something about him where he declared that reading/watching something when he was a 14yo boy caused him to want to burn it all down.
Destruction of the Administrative Estate, since 14
Dumb ass never grew up, similar to telecom CEOs