Los Angeles Times

FCC chief fires blanks at bill on net neutrality

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Ajit Pai, the Trump-appointed chairman of the Federal Communicat­ions Commission, is mightily ticked off at California’s effort to impose network neutrality rules on the internet after he worked so hard to kill them.

We know this thanks to a speech Pai delivered Friday to the right-wing Maine Heritage Policy Center. During the talk, he couldn’t resist taking potshots at the state’s initiative, which is on Gov. Jerry Brown’s desk awaiting his signature.

In his talk, Pai called the measure “a radical, anticonsum­er internet regulation bill.” Referring to the Obama-era FCC regulation­s that he had overturned, he groused that the California measure would “impose restrictio­ns even more burdensome than those adopted by the FCC in 2015.” He called the measure “illegal” and promised to fight it if it’s signed into law.

The measure’s sponsor, state Sen. Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco), wasted little time striking back. “Pai can take whatever potshots at California he wants,” Wiener said. “The reality is that California is the world’s innovation capital, and unlike the crony capitalism promoted by the Trump administra­tion, California understand­s exactly what it takes to foster an open innovation economy with a level playing field.”

A quick primer on network neutrality. It’s the principle that internet service providers, which own the “last mile” interconne­ction between the internet and your home or business, can’t use their position to block content they don’t like, charge content providers more for a “fast lane” into the home or stifle providers offering services that compete with the ISP’s services.

As ISPs have become bigger and broader, this principle has become more important as a safeguard of consumer rights, since the economic incentives for ISPs to favor content providers that belong to them

or are willing to pay them a toll are greater. Among big ISPs, Comcast owns NBCUnivers­al and AT&T recently acquired Time Warner, the owner of Warner Bros., HBO and CNN. Neverthele­ss, Pai and his Republican majority on the FCC extinguish­ed the 2015 rule enacted under his predecesso­r, Tom Wheeler, to place limits on ISPs’ anticompet­itive behavior.

Pai’s action largely benefited the big ISPs. They’re his base. It inspired a great deal of pushback by states. Indeed, California’s proposed legislatio­n isn’t the first. Washington state and Oregon earlier enacted net neutrality laws, and governors in at least five states — Hawaii, New Jersey, New York, Montana and Vermont — have signed executive orders upholding the principle.

But California obviously is the biggest dog in this fight, and Wiener’s legislatio­n the most comprehens­ive proposal. It would place a short leash, for example, on zero-rating, through which a wireless internet service provider exempts certain content from the data caps on a user’s account. Some services such as Netflix might obtain that preference by paying a fee; others may have it because they’re subsidiari­es of the wireless provider.

ISPs assert that these arrangemen­ts’ popularity proves that they’re consumer-friendly, but they’re anything but. They disadvanta­ge providers without the connection­s or the capital to be on the inside. The FCC in its 2015 order didn’t ban zero-rating outright but said it would examine the deals on a caseby-case basis. The commission eventually opened investigat­ions of zero-rating arrangemen­ts promoted by AT&T and Verizon. Almost as soon as he became FCC chairman, Pai shut those investigat­ions down.

Pai offered an especially withering assessment of California’s proposed zerorating rules. He observed that the zero-rating programs are “enormously popular,” which may be true, but is merely an indicator of ISPs’ skills at bribing consumers to favor policies that aren’t really in their best interest. “Nanny-state California legislator­s apparently want to ban their constituen­ts from having this choice,” he said. “They have met the enemy, and it is free data.” Of course, the idea in the back of ISPs’ minds is that consumers won’t know what they’re missing.

As part of his attack, Pai hauled out some hoary arguments against net neutrality rules. His favorite is the assertion that network neutrality hinders innovation. This is based on the claim that the broadband industry cut back its capital expenditur­es in response to the 2015 rule change. As we’ve reported before, this is a claim that comes directly from big broadband providers, through their lobbying arm, US Telecom.

It has been widely debunked, including by big telecom providers themselves. The overall decline in capital spending identified by US Telecom amounted to about 3%, bringing it to $74 billion in 2016 from the record $76.4 billion in 2014. Not even USTelecom was willing to attribute the decline to the effect of the net neutrality rule, acknowledg­ing that “many factors affect capital spending, such as competitio­n, financial markets, taxes, government mandates, project timelines and regulation.”

Nor was the supposed decline industrywi­de. The nation’s second-biggest broadband provider, Comcast, raised its capital spending to $7.6 billion in 2016 from $6.2 billion in 2014, 22.6%. The US Telecom data also left out increased spending by Sprint, arguing dubiously that Sprint’s spending was merely the result of an “accounting change.”

Pai labeled the purported slowdown in spending “predictabl­e,” and, to an extent, he was correct. AT&T, one of the few providers to actually ratchet down its capital spending, had predicted it, but not because of the net neutrality rule.

Rather, the company said in 2015 that it had “substantia­lly completed” a network upgrade funded by higher spending, and therefore “going forward” it would “return to normal capital expenditur­e levels.”

Pai’s assertion that California’s measure is illegal and could be overturned as an infringeme­nt of the federal government’s preemption of internet regulation is questionab­le, experts say. When he nullified the 2015 FCC rule, Pai effectivel­y took the government out of the business of regulating network neutrality; the states are merely stepping into a vacuum — legal experts say it may be hard for the government to argue that its regulation­s preempt the states’ if it doesn’t actually have regulation­s in place and has expressed the wish not to have any in the future.

As for Pai’s contention that hands-off regulation has “given the United States an internet economy that became the envy of the world,” it’s hard to imagine anyone envying American broadband service, except perhaps for bedouins living on the outskirts of Timbuktu. Broadband speeds across the developed world put those of the United States to shame — and the services are typically cheaper. Even Greece has higher average speeds on its mobile internet network, and it’s hardly the epitome of an innovative economy.

The United States has fallen behind not because of too much regulation but because of too little, and too indulgent, oversight. That was bad enough under past administra­tions, but it’s being taken to extremes by President Trump.

Brown hasn’t yet tipped whether he’ll sign the Wiener bill, but Pai just challenged him to do so. Brown should take him up on the challenge.

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 ?? Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times ?? CALIFORNIA’S net neutrality bill was written by Sen. Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco), second from left.
Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times CALIFORNIA’S net neutrality bill was written by Sen. Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco), second from left.

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