FCC plans total repeal of net neutrality rules

Authored by politico.com and submitted by hamlinmcgill
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FCC plans total repeal of net neutrality rules

Federal Communications Commission Chairman Ajit Pai will reveal plans to his fellow commissioners on Tuesday to fully dismantle the agency's Obama-era net neutrality regulations, people familiar with the plans said, in a major victory for the telecom industry in the long-running policy debate.

The commission will vote on the proposal in December, some seven months after it laid the groundwork for scuttling the rules that require internet service providers like Comcast or AT&T to treat web traffic equally.

President Donald Trump-appointed Pai’s plan would jettison rules that prohibit internet service providers from blocking or slowing web traffic or creating so-called paid internet fast lanes, the people familiar with the changes said.

Pai also will follow through on his plans to scrap the legal foundation that the FCC’s old Democratic majority adopted in 2015 to tighten federal oversight of internet service providers, a move he contends has deterred the industry from investing in broadband networks. Internet providers have feared that legal foundation, if left in place, could set the stage for possible government price regulation of internet service.

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The chairman’s approach, to be voted on at the FCC’s Dec. 14 meeting, would also get rid of the so-called general conduct standard, which gives the FCC authority to police behavior by internet service providers it deems unreasonable.

The plan includes transparency rules that would require internet service providers to inform their customers about their practices on issues such as blocking and throttling. Major internet providers, including Comcast, have publicly said they will not block or throttle web traffic.

The FCC will look to another agency, the Federal Trade Commission, to police whether internet service providers are acting in an anti-competitive manner.

An FCC spokesman declined comment on the plan.

Net Neutrality: Who Built the Internet? POLITICO technology reporter Margaret Harding McGill explains the net neutrality debate beginning with a very simple question: Who built the internet?

Supporters of the existing rules, including tech giants like Netflix and left-leaning digital activists, say they are necessary to ensuring the internet remains a level playing field. But critics, including Pai, have said they are too burdensome and deter investment in broadband networks.

The agency is expected to approve the rollback at its next meeting given the Republican majority, but the issue is likely to end up in court yet again. A federal appeals court upheld the current net neutrality rules in June 2016, siding with the FCC against a challenge from AT&T, USTelecom and other industry trade groups. This time, it’s likely to be net neutrality advocates taking the agency to court.

The move could also re-ignite interest in legislation to codify net neutrality rules, which Republican lawmakers and ISPs have pushed for this year. Some FCC watchers believe Pai’s dismantling of the rules could bring Democrats to the table to negotiate a legislative solution to the debate.

Pai’s rollback of the net neutrality rules will top his list of deregulatory accomplishments since Trump appointed him chairman in January. The longtime GOP commissioner has lived up to his promise the agency would take a “weed whacker” to federal regulations, slashing rules on media ownership, business broadband and the transition from copper to fiber services.

thelitelonee on November 21st, 2017 at 01:44 UTC »

Has any politician come out and explain why they think this is acceptable? Or are they hiding

Gutenbergbible on November 21st, 2017 at 00:43 UTC »

This is disgusting. It's anti-consumer, it's anti-free speech; the only people it's pro are telecoms that have spent tens of millions of dollars lobbying to make the internet worse so they can squeeze more profit out of it.

We've stopped (well, postponed) it before. If you make enough noise to congress, they will prevent this from happening. It doesn't take a lot of time. Listen to /u/NetNeutralityBot! Personally, I say don't bother writing the FCC since they'll just lie and say your comment came from a bot. Support the EFF and WRITE CONGRESS.

Edit: I’m one of the founders of BillFixers and we were talking about it in the office and we want to do something about this. We’ve donated to the EFF before but I think we can all do more. We’ve got some money and a staff of 20. PM me if you’ve got ideas for us to help.

hamlinmcgill on November 21st, 2017 at 00:27 UTC »

To clarify the news here: it was possible that Pai could have kept some remnants of net neutrality in place. He had originally sought comment on whether to keep or modify the rule against completely blocking websites, for example. But it looks like the whole thing is going in the trashcan...