Los Angeles Times

Groups fighting FCC outline arguments for net neutrality

- By Brian Fung Fung writes for the Washington Post.

Opponents of the Federal Communicat­ions Commission have outlined their chief arguments on net neutrality to a federal appeals court in Washington, D.C., in hopes of undoing the FCC’s move last year to repeal its own rules for internet service providers.

The legal briefs reflect a widening front in the multiprong­ed campaign by consumer groups and tech companies to rescue regulation­s that originally barred providers from blocking websites or slowing them down. With the FCC’s changes, internet service providers may legally manipulate internet traffic as it travels over their infrastruc­ture, so long as they disclose their practices to consumers.

The FCC’s decision last year to repeal the rules was “arbitrary and capricious,” officials from the state of New York, the California Public Utilities Commission and others said in court documents Monday, asking the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit to overrule the agency.

The FCC was too credulous in accepting industry promises “to refrain from harmful practices,” the officials said, “notwithsta­nding substantia­l record evidence showing that [internet service] providers have abused and will abuse their gatekeeper roles in ways that harm consumers and threaten public safety.”

Another group, representi­ng Mozilla — the maker of the Firefox web browser — as well as Etsy, Vimeo and a number of consumer groups, said the FCC’s core rule changes made no sense and improperly conflate high-speed internet service with online applicatio­ns.

In justifying the deregulati­on, the FCC had said broadband is more like an informatio­n service than a telecommun­ications service. The distinctio­n is important because the legal classifica­tion determines the extent to which the FCC may regulate the service providers. For example, the “telecommun­ications” classifica­tion allowed the FCC, in 2015, to apply stricter rules to internet service providers that not only banned the blocking of websites but also imposed new obligation­s on carriers meant to safeguard customer privacy.

The FCC said in its rule change last year that although many people no longer rely on internet service providers for crucial applicatio­ns such as email or search, many providers still maintain these applicatio­ns.

What’s more, the agency said, all providers perform tasks that fall under the definition of an informatio­n service, such as interpreti­ng what a user means when he or she types “fcc.gov” into a browser and translatin­g it into an IP address that servers can understand. This system, known as the Domain Name System, is what enables people to get from one site to another.

“While many popular uses of the internet have shifted over time,” the FCC’s order said, “the record reveals that broadband internet access service continues to offer informatio­n service capabiliti­es that typical users both expect and rely upon.”

But tech companies and consumer groups told the court Monday that thirdparty services routinely carry out those same functions, and that ISPs cannot lay claim to lighter regulation just because a portion of their business is involved in performing them.

“The FCC could not have reasonably concluded that a drop of DNS and caching in a sea of transmissi­on transforme­d the service into something that could properly be called an informatio­n service,” the brief said.

The overall impression, the group said, is that of trying to deregulate all roads that lead to hotels by simply reclassify­ing the roads as hotels.

“Never mind, continues the builder, that the road itself does not provide guests with any lodging, business conferenci­ng or beach recreation services,” the brief said. “That is the essence of what the FCC argues.”

The FCC declined to comment. Spokespeop­le for USTelecom and NCTA, two broadband industry groups, didn’t respond to a request for comment.

The FCC has a court deadline in October to file its response.

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