Net Neutrality took a hit in the Corporate GOP DC Circuit Court.
Yesterday, a federal appeals court ruled that the FCC had limited authority to regulate broadband services, meaning essentially that the FCC would not have the power to enforce Net Neutrality–giving all Internet users, and all Internet content providers, equal access to the network.
The decision is a setback for Net Neutrality advocates, for the FCC, and a minor win for Comcast, which has asserted its right to slow its own cable customers’ access to file-sharing, the issue for the case. But it’s not an out and out win for Comcast, as Jack Balkin explains, because there are a number of ways forward from here for the FCC.
The Supreme Court overturns the D.C. Circuit on the scope of the FCC’s ancillary jurisdiction, and the FCC goes on to fight the other issues in the case. One reason why the Supreme Court might reverse is because of its Brand X decision, in which it upheld the FCC’s decision in its 2002 Cable Modem Order to treat broadband providers not as common carriers subject to regulation under Title II of the Federal Communications Act, but rather as "information services" which would be subject to much less stringent regulations. Brand X was premised on the assumption that the FCC might still regulate broadband providers, even if they were classified as "information services" and not subject to the more stringent requirements of Title II. The D.C. Circuit has declared these parts of Brand X dicta or read them very narrowly. The Supreme Court might disagree. Congress might amend the Federal Communications Act to create a new source of jurisdiction to regulate broadband. To do this one would need at least 60 votes in the Senate. Good luck with that. Comcast and other broadband providers probably could exert influence in both parties to prevent broad new regulatory authority to the FCC. The FCC might revisit its initial decision in its 2002 Cable Modem Order to treat broadband providers as information services instead of telecommunications services (regulated by Title II of the Communications Act). The Supreme Court let the FCC classify broadband this way in the Brand X decision, but in hindsight it was a big mistake on the FCC’s part, because it put the FCC’s regulatory authority on a much shakier ground. If the FCC goes through the administrative process of reversing its earlier decision about cable broadband, and places cable and DSL under Title II authority, there is little doubt that it has jurisdictional power to impose network neutrality requirements. And it may create special rules or exemptions for broadband under Title II to the extent that the existing common carriage model of telephone service is inappropriate for broadband. Indeed, under its Title II jurisdiction, the FCC can require open access requirements, which would be even more valuable for purposes of promoting freedom of speech and innovation.It’s possible that the FCC will simply see if it can get a reversal in the Supreme Court. That will take many more years of litigation. But the FCC might decide that the better solution is to retrace its steps, correct the mistake it made in 2002, and reassert Title II authority over broadband. Doing this would give the FCC the tools it needs to deal with the regulatory problems of the future.
That option, the FCC reasserting its Title II authority over broadband, won’t happen without a fight, but it seems to be the best option for an FCC that under chairman Genachowski has been a strong Net Neutrality advocate… [emphasis added]
Inserted from <Daily Kos>
I don’t know what will transpire from here, so I cannot recommend a specific option yet, except that we keep a very close eye on this issue. If the giant telecoms have their way, their corporate propaganda will travel at the speed of light, while our freedom of speech travels at the speed of mud.
12 Responses to “Be Prepared to Defend Net Neutrality”
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TC, I have a petition up at my place from Color of Change to send to the FCC, also Leslie has one at Parsley’s Pics from Move On I think it is… I urge everyone to sign these petitions and get our names on record that we support Net Neutrality.
Just my opinion.
I’m not visiting today. Much too tired. But I went and signed your petition.
Already we see this happening. Even free email sights are overloaded with commercial content. Propaganda all is phony.
That it is, Benji.
Comcrap blows which is why I switched my service to AT&T (whom I like just slightly more), but I have to say, their service is much better and I have fewer outages (both on my cable for the TV and the internet) under AT&T, so that’s something. What I don’t understand is why Comcrap wants to do this? Do they want total control over the internet access and file sharing? What’s the BFD?
Glad you’re back TC – we’ve missed you. And you should consider an external hard drive to back up your files, in case your computer decides to crap out again.
Lisa, the BFD is they want to charge more to content providers to favor their traffic while slowing down the rest of us.
It’s urgent that we not sit on our hands on this one. We cannot depend on either the FCC nor the courts to protect our right of free speech. One need only look at what has happened to the rest of the media to realize that this is our last bastion of hope.
Sherry, you pegged that perfectly. The MSM covered up the truth about Bush and the GOP, until the news broke online and spread to a sufficient extent that they had to cover it or appear irrelevant. Without us to keep them honest, they will replace the few honest hosts that remain and go beck into 100% infoganda mode.
Somebody told me that the D.C. Appeals Court is notoriously rightwing, so even the Bush Supreme Court would probably overrule them. But I still like your third alternative better, having the FCC change their own rules to expand their authority.
They are, Tom. Notoriously indeed!
I would have to say that I have been very ignorant to what exactly “net neutrality” meant exactly, but as I have been reading up, my thoughts are beginning to take shape that it seems to be a good thing…
I’m still going to have to do more research on the matter though… just signed the petition on Annette’s site…
Kevin, in a nutshell, net neutrality would forbid service providers from slowing down traffic based on the content of that traffic. Without it, Rupert Murdoch could pay your ISP to give the fastest possible throughput to Faux Noise traffic, but to slow down your traffic from lefty bloggers.