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Trumplican 6th Circuit Just Killed Net Neutrality (And Whatever Was Left Of Pathetic U.S. Broadband Consumer Protection)

from the not-with-a-bang,-but-with-a-whimper dept

The telecom industry (with the help of the recent Trump Supreme Court), has been drooling for months at the prospect that the Trump-stocked courts would soon finally deliver the killing blow to FCC net neutrality protections (read: popular FCC rules designed to prevent telecom monopolies from abusing their market power to screw over customers and competitors).

As predicted, this week the Trumplican heavy Sixth Circuit delivered, in a ruling that blocks the Biden FCC’s plan to restore net neutrality rules. The entire ruling reads like it could have been directly ripped from a telecom lobbyist’s playbook, with lots of false claims about how these very basic regulations somehow threatened the open web and constitute a “heavy-handed regulatory regime”:

“Today we consider the latest FCC order, issued in 2024, which resurrected the FCC’s heavy-handed regulatory regime.”

To be clear, the FCC’s net neutrality rules were actually very modest by international standards. They had ample loopholes for ISPs to stumble through. They were never actually enforced with any consistency by a broadly feckless and captured FCC. And they saw massive popularity across a bipartisan majority of Americans. Right out of the gate calling the rules “heavy-handed” is telling.

As a refresher, the “net neutrality debate” is about more than just “net neutrality.” It’s about whether we want our consumer protection officials to protect broadband consumers from a monopolized and broken industry filled with extremely unpopular, predatory corporations that routinely raise the bar on shitty service, price gouging, and bad behavior.

The more specific legal debate here was whether ISPs should be classified as “information services” under Title II of the Communications Act, which would reduce the FCC’s authority over telecoms. Or as “telecommunications services,” which would broaden the FCC’s role in protecting consumers from fraud, improving 911 reliability, fighting consolidation, and shoring up cybersecurity standards.

But contrary to their public and press pretense, the telecom industry policy position on this has never been consistent; giants like AT&T and Verizon have waffled on whether or not they support one classification or the other depending on whether they’re trying to dodge FTC fines for lying to customers or trying to gobble up billions in taxpayer subsidies. Let’s repeat that, because it’s important. The very same telcos were perfectly happy to have broadband classified as telecommunications services when it meant they got extra subsidies.

The Real Goal Is No U.S. Corporate Consumer Protection Oversight Whatsoever

It routinely gets lost in the weeds of press and policy coverage, but “net neutrality” is a bit of a distraction.

Telecoms (and the various think tanks, lawyers, lobbyists, and consultants paid to love them) have opposed not just net neutrality, but absolutely any federal broadband consumer protection. It doesn’t matter whether we’re talking about basic pricing transparency requirements or accurate broadband maps; the telecom industry desperately wants to rip you off without pesky federal intervention.

They’re poised to get what they want, and more. As expected, the Sixth Circuit dismantling of net neutrality (and FCC authority more generally) leans heavily on the recent Trump Supreme Court Loper Bright ruling, which has taken a hatchet to the last vestiges of regulatory independence:

“Today we consider the latest FCC order, issued in 2024, which resurrected the FCC’s heavy-handed regulatory regime. Under the present Safeguarding and Securing the Open Internet Order, Broadband Internet Service Providers are again deemed to offer a “telecommunications service” under Title II and therefore must abide by net-neutrality principles. But unlike past challenges that the D.C. Circuit considered under Chevron, we no longer afford deference to the FCC’s reading of the statute. Loper Bright. Instead, our task is to determine “the best reading of the statute” in the first instance.”

Corporations claim they wanted to kill Chevron Deference (which provided regulators with subject matter expertise some leeway to craft and interpret rules within the confines of Congressional law) because “regulators had run amok.” But the idea that the FCC (which struggles to stand up to AT&T and Comcast on a good day) has “run amok” has always been misinformation.

The reality is, with Congress in their back pocket and incapable of reform, corporations wanted to deliver a final killing blow to regulators that might get any bright ideas about trying to rein in their power or punish them for fraud. This has been dressed up in the press as some sort of noble, good faith institutional rebalancing (I recommend Law Professor Blake Reid’s dissection of this kerfuffle).

The court didn’t go quite as far as it could have in leveraging the recent Loper Bright ruling to dismantle the entirety of FCC authority over every last aspect of telecom, but the goal here certainly isn’t subtle: federal consumer protection of your broadband line is largely dead.

I’m not going to spend a lot of time dissecting the finer legalese here, because this is all bad faith bullshit. The ruling parrots the positions of AT&T and Comcast lawyers, keen to ignore logic, precedent, and history, and it’s not subtle about it. Arguing the finer, nuanced legal merits of this debate at this point is like trying to have a meaningful conversation with a damp walnut.

They want reporters and the public to treat this pseudo-legal, pseudo-logical circus with deference and seriousness. I won’t. It’s corruption with a lazy coat of paint.

Lose Lose

If the Sixth Circuit hadn’t ruled in favor of big telecom, incoming FCC boss Brendan Carr (R, AT&T) was poised to dismantle the rules anyway. You might remember Brendan from the first Trump FCC’s dismantling of net neutrality, which involved making up a DDOS attack to dismiss public outrage, and turning a blind eye to the industry’s use of dead and fake people to stuff the FCC comment section.

Brendan thinks consumer protection is diabolical government overreach, but bullying media and tech companies isn’t. There’s no real logic here. People and reporters shouldn’t get lost in the weeds: this is corporate power leveraging its influence over corrupt U.S. courts and captured regulators to undermine all corporate consumer protection authority, not just some piddly net neutrality rules.

That’s not to say net neutrality isn’t important. Big ISPs have long shown they’re willing to abuse market power. Ideally you’d have Congress pass a net neutrality law to end the regulatory ping pong at the FCC, but given Congress is too corrupt to function, that’s always been a non starter. There’s a lot of folks who like to make this point in the press (including AT&T) who know it’s a non-starter.

The Sixth Circuit ruling comes ironically (?) on the heels of the revelation that the telecom industry just suffered one of the worst hacking intrusions in American history, thanks (in part) to broad and mindless deregulation and our corrupt refusal to hold telecoms accountable for lax security standards. Or pass even the most basic of modern privacy or cybersecurity safeguards.

The underlying argument by telecoms, “free market” Libertarians, and many Republicans has long been that if you eliminate federal oversight of shitty U.S. telecoms, magic and innovation spills forth from the streets. That’s of course never been the case. Mindlessly eliminate federal corporate oversight of a regional monopoly like Comcast and AT&T and those entities just double down on their worst behaviors.

Usually because the same kind of folks pushing for mindless deregulation are also backing AT&T and Comcast’s efforts to ensure there’s no meaningful broadband competition.

As a result big telecom doesn’t innovate or compete. They’re regional monopolies who’ve effectively purchased their comfortable positions from corrupt state and federal bureaucrats, who work tirelessly to ensure that neither competition nor serious government oversight befouls their doorstep. One hopes the end of the net neutrality fight redirects attention toward the real problem: consolidated monopoly power.

The Sixth Circuit ruling is not all good news for big ISPs like Comcast and AT&T. The courts and legal precedent (whatever that’s worth anymore) have stated repeatedly that if the federal government is going to abdicate its federal consumer protection authorities, states are well within their legal right to pass their own net neutrality rules.

That said, while numerous states have net neutrality rules (like California, Washington, Maine, and Oregon), many more don’t. And among those that do, I highly suspect that enforcing net neutrality isn’t going to be a top priority given all the bottomless immigration, environmental, labor, and life and death legal fights that are headed in cash-strapped states’ direction during Trump 2.0.

It’s important to understand this is about much more than “net neutrality.” This is about corporate power leveraging corruption to take an axe to coherent federal consumer protection completely—under the pretense the folks doing it are operating in good faith with a serious eye on the confines of law.

And of course it’s about far more than telecom; post Loper Bright every industry across America is busy making similar arguments about every labor, consumer, public safety, and environmental ruling they don’t like, having massive impact on every industry and policy that touches every last part of your life. Corporations have achieved (another) generational victory in the dismantling of consumer protection.

The net neutrality fight may have been nuanced and wonky, but if if you think the broader existential, legal, and operational chaos coming as a result of this Trump 2.0 assault on federal governance is being overstated or will be in any way good for you (assuming you’re not an extremely racist and ignorant billionaire indifferent to mass suffering), you’re violently misreading the situation.

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Companies: at&t, comcast, verizon

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Comments on “Trumplican 6th Circuit Just Killed Net Neutrality (And Whatever Was Left Of Pathetic U.S. Broadband Consumer Protection)”

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This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re:

They hate everyone and everything⁠—including themselves, deep down⁠—that isn’t money or power. Hell, every time they show a modicum of cultural taste, it’s often because they misunderstand the media they claim to like. To wit: Paul Ryan liking Rage Against the Machine despite how, to quote Tom Morello, “he is the embodiment of the machine that our music has been raging against”.

This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
mick says:

Re: Re: Re:

I don’t give a shit about Kamala OR Biden, nancy – try again.

The only thing that matters is policy, and Republican policy begins and ends with corporate handouts. Dem policy also begins there, but actually helps some people along the way (ACA, infrastructure, etc).

That One Guy (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:3 Been there, done that, didn't work how the ISP tools thought it would

It’s already been tried by the federal government and courts have shot it for basically the same reason you suggest, with judges pointing out that if the federal government is going to abdicate all authority for regulation of ISPs then that means they’ve abdicated all authority, which includes the authority to tell states they can’t regulate either.

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ECA (profile) says:

Thought

That the Democrats controlled at least 1 part of congress.
If so??
How is ot that the republicans ran around Congress and to the Sup CT.??

I Understand how the gov. agencies have been cut So bad that Most cant do their job, and this is How they wanted it.
They want the LAw to belong to Each state.
If you dont understand that TRICK.. Look at where most Credit card corps are located. Wilmington del. Because of regulations States Created About 100 years ago. And only 2(?) states dont have certain restrictions.
And 1 of many reasons Credit cards can go HIGH INTEREST for any reason they want.

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Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:2

No offense, but that’s not true.
From common dreams:
In the weeks ahead, the FCC, as well as Free Press and the other parties who intervened in the case, will consider our legal options and decide whether to appeal the case to the Supreme Court. In Congress, we’ll start laying the groundwork for a future bill that restores Net Neutrality and FCC authority. Meanwhile, we’ll look to the states to hold the line, with laws like California’s strong Net Neutrality regulations thankfully still on the books.

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Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:2

I remember back in 2017 when there was a Chicken Little campaign that claimed the internet would stop working entirely!

No one ever said this. You’re lying. They pointed out how a lack of NN would enable shenanigans by the large broadband providers, something we HAVE in fact started seeing in subtle ways, such as preferencing deals from mobile providers where they downgrade video quality unless a streaming company cuts a deal. Without strong NN rules, we’re going to see more of that.

Well, apparently everything was fine from 2017 to 2024.

I mean, weird timeline. No, things were not fine, as I described above. But what kept things from being really bad where the state laws that were passed in 2017, which the telcos then spent years TRYING to get tossed out and failed.

So they were unable to do really bad stuff in those early years as they fought the court battles (and lost). Then once Biden took over, the telcos knew they couldn’t go scorched earth on preferencing deals because it would spur faster FCC action, which then put back the NN rules.

Note that when we’ve actually had NN rules (including the Wheeler order that Pai ripped up), none of the “parade of horribles” that NN haters happened.

You’re projecting again.

The NN rules have protected against some bad behavior, but we’re starting to see that bad behavior slip in, and now it can go into overdrive.

Can’t wait to see you ignore it when your ISP bill goes up and limits what you can access, Koby. I’m sure you’ll blame “the left” for it, rather than recognize what a dumbass you are.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

Please explain what is good about the idea that an ISP can charge you extra

Matthew didn’t claim it was good, just that (mandated) Net Neutrality was bad. Kind of like how claiming freedom of speech is good doesn’t mean supporting the views of every asshole.

Personally, I think it’s attacking the wrong part of the problem. I’m not sure whether that’s actively harmful or just ineffective, but in a properly functioning market it wouldn’t be needed: people would leave the shitty providers for the good ones. Setting up conditions to encourage the development of that market would be a better use of resources.

(Incidentally, if U.S. regulators and lawmakers were any good, the incumbent providers would end up regretting their opposition to this minor regulatory “over-reach”. Okay, the court doesn’t accept the regulator’s “reading” of the law? There’s a whole lot of authority, delegated in black-and-white and supported by court precedent, that they’ve just been reluctant to use—such as price regulation and mandated third-party access. Plus, lawmakers could pass actual laws, which is how things used to work.)

Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

(mandated) Net Neutrality was bad

I don’t see how it’s bad to mandate that ISPs treat all web traffic equally, such that traffic from Google is treated the same as traffic from DuckDuckGo without an ISP slowing down the traffic from DuckDuckGo unless a customer pays extra to access “fast lane” speeds for websites that the ISP doesn’t prefer, but maybe I’m just a fucking idiot. 🙃

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Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Thanks Obama

” a while now claiming it would happen under the Trump administration and now that it’s happened under Biden”

I know it is convoluted, but do try and keep up.

The US president does not have a control panel with switches and knobs for controlling everything everywhere for everyone.

The US Courts are (supposed to be) independent from the other two branches of government.

Humans are a bunch of corruptible miscreants.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

Everybody knows that the President has three levers on his desk: one for taxes, one for the price of eggs, one for the price of gas. And dang ol’ Sleepy Joe has been leaning on them when he takes his lil naps!

Thankfully Trump is going to pull those levers back on his first day in office and everything will be great again! We’re going to be winning! And the people you don’t like are going to be losing, and they’re going to cry, and you’ll be happy again!

… This was supposed to be a bit, but it’s uncomfortably close to how my parents actually think. JFC.

That One Guy (profile) says:

'What part of 'NO regulations are acceptable' is confusing to you?!'

I look forward to the exact same ‘small government’, ‘state’s rights’ republicans that are cheering this ruling on to once more start throwing massive tantrums when states step up to fill the regulatory gap, as they again argue that just because the federal government has no business or authority regulating companies it doesn’t mean that states can do so either.

Drew Wilson (user link) says:

I know I’ve been pretty pessimistic about a lot of things lately, but in this instance, there is something positive to think about. Multiple states (i.e. California) have passed their own version of network neutrality laws. While there have been challenges, a number of those challenges have been dropped.

Yes, a patchwork set of rules across the country is no replacement for a federal level set of laws, but at the very least, a patchwork set of protections is better than no protections at all, right?

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Citizen (profile) says:

Blood-suckers gonna suck blood

If a business is lobbying to get a regulation abolished, it is safe to assume that they intend to do something the regulation forbids. Anyone who claims ISPs won’t offer faster connections to sites that pay extra now that Net Neutrality’s dead is either naive or lying.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Citizen (profile) says:

Re:

Needless to say, if allowed to slow the connections of those who don’t cough up extra money, ISPs will do that, too. The top priority of a private business is not to innovate or to provide quality service; it is to make money. If doing the right thing costs more than doing the wrong thing, a company can be trusted to do the latter.

LittleCupcakes says:

It’s not “nuanced and wonky” at all.

The companies own their networks, and it is their right to promote, downgrade, privilege, and otherwise control the flow of information over their service.

Simple.

And regulation should not and never ought be “independent”. Regulators require a statute passed by the legislative, and can only execute those statutes as written and passed.

“Independent regulators” simply means that the executive does whatever the hell it wants whenever it wants, which is of course a constitutional nightmare. Anyone who believes otherwise is ignorant and/or purposely obtuse (which is to say, far-wing extremists of all types).

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

The companies own their networks, and it is their right to promote, downgrade, privilege, and otherwise control the flow of information over their service.

The internet is a network of networks. The companies necessary use publicly-owned infrastructure. They don’t own everything they use. They get tax breaks and subsidies and federal and state funding and bailouts to provide service they don’t provide.

Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re:

The companies own their networks, and it is their right to promote, downgrade, privilege, and otherwise control the flow of information over their service.

Yes or no: Do you believe ISPs should charge people an extra fee to let them access certain disfavored-by-the-ISP websites (e.g., streaming services) at the full speed those people believed they were paying for instead of intentionally slower speeds? (And before you say anything else: Yes, the demise of Network Neutrality means an ISP could do exactly that.)

That One Guy (profile) says:

Re:

If those companies hadn’t been granted massive amounts of subsidies and tax-breaks from the government to set up those networks in order to connect the public you might have had a point about how it’s their stuff, their rules, but as it stands all you really did was make a solid argument for why the government should just treat internet access as a public utility owned, managed and regulated by the government so that private companies can’t do what you say they can.

Anonymous Coward says:

Now that the internet has become the default method of paying ones bills, searching for work and other essential activity, the captains of industry think they have a captive audience from which extra revenue can be extracted.

Thing is .. captains of industry overlooked the fact that for a large majority of the population, disposable income has dropped to zero and gone negative in many cases.

Business says that no one wants to work anymore.
Fact is, no one wants to work for free.
Huge disconnect or just bullshit, you decide

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