Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

FCC will debut plan to undo regulation­s on Internet services

- BRIAN FUNG

The Federal Communicat­ions Commission is expected this week to reveal the latest details of a plan to roll back the government’s net neutrality regulation­s.

The result could reshape the entire digital ecosystem by giving Internet providers more control over what their customers can see and access online and how quickly they can do it.

Under current rules establishe­d during President Barack Obama’s administra­tion, broadband companies such as Verizon and Comcast must treat all websites and online services equally. Verizon, for instance, isn’t allowed to deliver content from Yahoo, which it owns, to consumers any faster than it delivers competing content from Google. It also isn’t permitted to actively slow down or block Google services.

But the FCC is likely to change all that, analysts say, relaxing the rules that required providers to behave like legacy telecom companies who must carry all phone calls on a nondiscrim­inatory basis. FCC Chairman Ajit Pai “will try to shrink the footprint of the rules,” said Daniel Berninger, a telecom engineer who has opposed the regulation­s. The FCC declined to comment.

The FCC typically releases the agenda for its monthly open meetings three weeks in advance, giving the public a look at the items the agency is expected to consider.

Under Pai, a critic of the current net neutrality rules, the regulatory body has also released the full texts of its proposed resolution­s ahead of its meetings.

In earlier drafts of the net neutrality proposal, Pai has asked whether the agency should be involved in regulating Internet providers at all.

“We … propose to relinquish any authority over Internet traffic exchange,” read the FCC’s initial proposal, which was released in May.

In other remarks, the Republican Pai has argued that the regulation­s discourage Internet providers from investing in upgrades to their infrastruc­ture and that the rules are an example of government overreach.

But supporters of the rules say they are a necessary consumer protection as Internet providers such as Comcast, Verizon and AT&T have sought to control a growing chunk of the country’s media and informatio­n economies.

Since 2010, the three firms have explored or successful­ly completed purchases of major media entities such as NBC Universal, Yahoo and Time Warner, respective­ly.

Net neutrality rules “recognize the importance of maintainin­g a level playing field for all Internet content — regardless of the creator or owner — to be enjoyed by all users, regardless of their Internet provider,” wrote the mayors of 65 cities in a recent letter to Pai.

This week’s anticipate­d update to Pai’s proposal comes after months of public debate, including a controvers­y this summer over fraudulent comments filed in the agency’s docket by automated systems that, according to critics, threatened to skew the policy-making process. Jessica Rosenworce­l, a Democratic FCC commission­er, said the bot-driven filings were cause for a series of public hearings on the matter before any net neutrality vote.

“We must have direct public input before we consider any net neutrality policy that will have a direct impact on our families, our communitie­s, and our economy,” said Rosenworce­l in a statement to The

Washington Post on Monday. Many of the specifics of Pai’s plan remain unclear, but a central part of the effort will involve undoing the FCC’s decision to declare Internet providers as telecommun­ications service providers.

The legal designatio­n allowed the FCC to more strictly regulate broadband firms than when the companies were known merely as providers of an “informatio­n service.”

Pai’s deregulato­ry proposal will likely reverse this decision, according to analysts, setting off a chain of consequenc­es for the industry and how it is regulated.

If the move is approved — and it likely will be, given that Pai and the Republican Party control three of the FCC’s five seats — responsibi­lity for regulating Internet providers could flow away from the FCC and toward the Federal Trade Commission, which is charged with protecting consumers from unfair and deceptive business practices.

Some consumer groups fear that leaving net neutrality to the FTC could result in weaker enforcemen­t, as the FTC’s power in that area may be limited to policing truth in advertisin­g and other commitment­s that Internet providers make to the public.

“The FTC is not equipped, and lacks jurisdicti­on, to resolve issues with Internet service providers,” the National Hispanic Media Coalition wrote in a regulatory filing last summer.

The FCC proposal does not require President Donald Trump’s signature, but Trump criticized the net neutrality regulation­s during his campaign as a “top-down power grab” by the government.

Republican lawmakers have also taken aim at the rules, with some, such as Sen. John Thune, R-S.D., saying they are ready to work with Democrats to pass net neutrality legislatio­n.

Thune has said that without legislatio­n, the FCC can change the rules whenever the party in the White House changes.

Creating political pressure on Democrats to negotiate a legislativ­e compromise is a key aspect of Pai’s proposal, according to people familiar with the FCC’s thinking.

With the agency poised to weaken the regulation­s substantia­lly, Republican­s at the FCC hope to bring Democrats to the bargaining table in Congress, the people said.

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