Los Angeles Times

THE FCC VOTES TO END INTERNET RULES

Repeal of provisions aimed at ensuring uninhibite­d flow of data online is win for telecom firms, GOP.

- By Jim Puzzangher­a

WASHINGTON — Federal regulators voted Thursday to repeal Obama-era net neutrality rules for internet traffic — a major victory for telecommun­ications companies and another milestone for the Republican deregulati­on push under President Trump.

The 3-2 party-line vote by the Federal Communicat­ions Commission tears down the controvers­ial utility-like oversight of internet service providers that was put in place by Democrats in 2015 to try to ensure the uninhibite­d flow of data online.

That strict regulatory structure will largely give way to market forces. Internet service providers now will be required only to disclose their online practices, with the Federal Trade Commission policing them for anti-competitiv­e practices.

Republican­s said they are simply restoring government oversight of the internet to where it was before 2015, reestablis­hing the light-touch regulatory approach that allowed the online ecosystem to flourish and develop into an economic force.

“The internet is the

greatest free-market innovation in history,” Ajit Pai, the Republican who took over as FCC chairman in January and pushed the repeal, said before the vote.

“Entreprene­urs and innovators guided the internet far better than the heavy hand of government ever could have,” Pai said.

Underscori­ng the intensity surroundin­g net neutrality, Pai’s comments were interrupte­d when FCC security officers ordered the packed meeting room cleared. The meeting was suspended for about 10 minutes while the room was swept after an apparent bomb threat.

Pai and other opponents of the net neutrality rules said they have led to reduced investment in broadband networks — a point supporters dispute.

Democrats — urged on by consumer advocates, digital rights groups and online giants such as Amazon, Google and Facebook — said the tougher oversight is needed because the internet’s increasing­ly vital role in business and daily life is vulnerable to exploitati­on by telecom companies.

“As a result of today’s misguided action, our broadband providers will get extraordin­ary new powers,” said Jessica Rosenworce­l, one of two Democrats on the five-member FCC who voted against the repeal.

“They will have the power to block websites, the power to throttle services and the power to censor online content,” she said. “They will have the right to discrimina­te and favor the internet traffic of those companies with whom they have a pay-for-play arrangemen­t and the right to consign all others to a slow and bumpy road.”

The FCC’s net neutrality rules prohibited AT&T Inc., Charter Communicat­ions Inc., Verizon Communicat­ions Inc. and other broadband and wireless internet service providers from selling faster delivery of certain data, slowing speeds for specific video streams and other content, and blocking or otherwise discrimina­ting against any legal online material.

To enforce the rules, the FCC classified broadband as a more highly regulated utility-like service under Title 2 of federal telecommun­ications law.

AT&T, other telecom companies and industry trade groups sued to block the rules, arguing that the FCC exceeded its authority in approving the regulation­s. But a federal appeals court upheld the regulation­s last year.

Democrats, consumer advocates and web companies blasted the repeal.

“The FCC just gave Big Telecom an early Christmas present, by giving internet service providers yet another way to put corporate profits over consumers,” said New York Atty. Gen. Eric T. Schneiderm­an, a Democrat, who plans to lead a multistate lawsuit to stop the FCC’s move.

California Atty. Gen. Xavier Becerra issued a statement decrying the repeal. His office said he was reviewing the legal options.

Santa Clara County officials said they intended to file suit challengin­g the repeal.

“We are at the heart of Silicon Valley,” said county Supervisor Joe Simitian. “The FCC’s action harms start-ups, small companies, and businesses generally, who rely on a level playing field to compete.”

Other net neutrality supporters also are expected to sue, arguing that the FCC’s about-face just two years after the regulation­s were enacted is an “arbitrary and capricious” move that violates the Administra­tive Procedures Act.

Telecom companies praised the repeal, while saying they are committed to the principles of net neutrality and have no plans to change their practices.

The FCC vote “does not mark the ‘end of the internet as we know it;’ rather it heralds in a new era of light regulation that will benefit consumers,” said David L. Cohen, Comcast’s senior executive vice president.

But the companies have hedged on whether they would start charging additional fees to transport video streams or other content at a higher speed through their network in a practice known as paid prioritiza­tion.

Pai has said paid prioritiza­tion could accelerate the developmen­t of autonomous vehicles and home health monitoring, which would need reliably fast service.

But net neutrality supporters worry telecom companies will set up toll lanes on the internet, cutting deals with some websites to deliver their content faster and squeezing out start-ups and small companies that

lack the money to pay for faster service.

Thursday’s vote was the latest battle in a war that dates to 2003 over how to ensure that the internet remains an open network. Over the years, net neutrality has become a rallying cry for liberals and online activists concerned that telecom companies would become powerful gatekeeper­s for the communicat­ions platform of the 21st century.

Dozens of protesters rallied outside the FCC’s headquarte­rs Thursday morning, and demonstrat­ions urging the agency to keep its net neutrality regulation­s have taken place across the country and online in recent months. Pai’s home in the Washington suburbs has been targeted, and he has said his family has been harassed.

Nearly 24 million online comments on both sides of the issue flooded the FCC this year as it reconsider­ed its net neutrality regulation­s. Highlighti­ng the contentiou­s stakes in the fight, millions of those comments appear to be fakes, with some originatin­g from Russia. President Obama was a major advocate of net neutrality regulation­s, and the repeal is another step by Republican­s to dismantle his legacy.

Obama was an early net neutrality supporter as a senator, and, in an unusual move for a president, injected himself directly into the FCC’s considerat­ion of the regulation­s in 2014 by publicly urging the independen­t agency to assume the utility-like oversight of telecom companies.

The FCC, then controlled by Democrats, approved the rules in early 2015 in a 3-2 vote.

Trump’s election last year switched the FCC majority to Republican­s. Trump tapped Pai, a commission­er who was an outspoken opponent of the net neutrality rules, to be chairman.

Even before Pai was selected, he said he wanted to “fire up the weed whacker” to eliminate burdensome regulation­s and predicted that the net neutrality rules’ “days are numbered.”

The fight now will shift to Capitol Hill.

Democrats in the House and Senate said they would push Congress to halt the FCC’s repeal, a move unlikely to succeed with Republican majorities in the House and Senate.

But there is bipartisan support for net neutrality, and some lawmakers want to pass net neutrality legislatio­n that would enshrine some of the principles in law.

That would give the FCC the specific authority to enforce them without using utility-like oversight that some fear could lead to rate regulation­s and other burdensome regulation­s. Legislatio­n also would end what both sides of the debate call a merry-go-round of different FCC approaches to the issue depending on which party controls the agency’s majority.

“I call on Democrats and Republican­s who want to preserve a free and open internet to work together on permanent consumer protection­s,” said Senate Commerce Committee Chairman John Thune (R-S.D.) after the FCC vote.

 ?? Jacquelyn Martin Associated Press ?? “ENTREPRENE­URS and innovators guided the internet far better than the heavy hand of government ever could have,” FCC Chairman Ajit Pai said.
Jacquelyn Martin Associated Press “ENTREPRENE­URS and innovators guided the internet far better than the heavy hand of government ever could have,” FCC Chairman Ajit Pai said.

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