The Reporter (Vacaville)

Telecom groups end fight against Calif. net neutrality

-

SACRAMENTO >> Telecommun­ications industry groups Wednesday ended their bid to block California's net neutrality law that prevents broadband providers from throttling service.

In a federal court filing in Sacramento, the groups and California Attorney General Rob Bonta jointly agreed to dismiss the case.

The move followed a January decision by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals allowing enforcemen­t of the 2018 law, which bans internet providers from slowing down or blocking access to websites and applicatio­ns that don't pay for premium service.

“The case is finally over,” Bonta said in a statement. “With this victory, we've secured a free and open internet for California's 40 million residents once and for all.”

Messages seeking comment from an attorney representi­ng the groups weren't immediatel­y returned.

The law was signed by former Democratic Gov. Jerry Brown after regulators during the Trump administra­tion killed federal net neutrality rules designed to prevent AT&T, Comcast, Verizon and other major internet providers from exploiting their dominance to favor certain services or apps over others.

In response, seven states and Puerto Rico enacted their own net neutrality policies.

The most expansive effort was in California, which started enforcing the law last year, with potentiall­y significan­t consequenc­es for the rest of the U.S.

In addition to barring internet providers from throttling service or charging companies such as Netflix for a faster route to customers, the California law banned some forms of “zero rating” — a term for when a cable or phone company exempts a service from data caps.

Net-neutrality advocates say such programs undermine competitio­n by potentiall­y tilting users to the sponsored app and away from rivals.

Big telecom companies fought the measure fiercely in court. They argued that the regulation­s can undermine investment in broadband and introduce uncertaint­y about what were acceptable business practices.

The Trump administra­tion sued to block California's 2018 law, preventing it from taking effect for years, but the Biden administra­tion dropped that lawsuit.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States