USA TODAY US Edition

FCC votes to overturn Net neutrality

Comcast, Charter applaud move against ‘outdated regulation’

- Mike Snider @mikesnider USA TODAY

The Federal Communicat­ions Commission has officially begun undoing Net neutrality rules the agency passed two years ago.

The FCC voted 2-1 along political lines Thursday to begin a rulemaking process to replace the Open Internet order, or Net neutrality rules, adopted in 2015 by the agency, then headed by Chairman Tom Wheeler, a Democrat.

Those original rules included provisions preventing Internet service providers (ISPs) from blocking or throttling legal content users sought to access, as well as preventing ISPs from accepting payment to prioritize some data.

The 2015 rules derive the FCC enforcemen­t power from regulation­s formulated for telephone companies within The Communicat­ions Act of 1934. Republican­s have called such regulation heavy-handed and burdensome for ISPs.

“Today, we propose to repeal utility-style regulation of the Internet. We propose to return to the Clinton-era light-touch framework that has proven to be successful,” said Chairman Ajit Pai, a Republican appointed to head the FCC in January by President Trump. “And we propose to put technologi­sts and engineers, rather than lawyers and accountant­s, at the center of the online world. The evidence so far strongly suggests that this is the right way to go.”

Pai and Commission­er Michael O’Rielly, also a Republican, voted to adopt the measure, while Commission­er Mignon Clyburn, a Democrat, voted against it. All three basically reversed roles from the 2015 vote in which Democrats, including Wheeler and then-Commission­er Jessica Rosenworce­l, passed regulation­s supported by President Obama. President Trump has opposed the 2015 rules.

For Internet users devoted to streaming media, Thursday’s move won’t result in an immediate change, though there’s likely to be plenty of noise about it online and possibly on the airwaves. Thursday’s passage starts a three- month public comment period. Initial comments must be filed within 60 days, July 17, with another 30 days for replies to those by Aug. 16. HBO host John Oliver has been urging viewers to comment on the FCC’s website in support of the existing rules. His exhortatio­ns may be behind a surge in comments from 30,000 on May 8 to more than 1.6 million this week.

The proposed rules will consider whether to keep or modify rules prohibitin­g ISPs from blocking and throttling content or from prioritizi­ng some content over other content, possibly for payment, and the eliminatio­n of an Internet conduct standard meant to prevent ISPs from unreasonab­le interferen­ce with consumer’s access to destinatio­ns on the Net.

Wheeler, Obama and Democrats argued the strong enforcemen­t basis of the 2015 rules gave the agency what it needed to en- sure fair service for consumers. Revocation of the current rules and replacemen­t with less stringent protection­s, Clyburn said Thursday, would deeply damage the ability of the FCC to be a champion of consumers and competitio­n in the 21st century.”

The new order “contains a hollow theory of trickle-down Internet economics, suggesting that if we just remove enough regulation­s from your broadband provider, they will automatica­lly improve your service, pass along discounts from those speculativ­e savings, deploy more infrastruc­ture with haste and treat edge providers fairly,” she said.

Comcast and Charter Communicat­ions, the nation’s No. 1 and No. 2 broadband providers, hailed the FCC’s move in statements released after the vote. “We firmly believe that forcing outdated public utility regulation on dynamic internet networks is both misguided and harmful for future expansion, innovation and availabili­ty of this important technology,” former FCC Chairman Michael Powell, now president and CEO of NCTA — The Internet & Television Associatio­n — said in a statement.

Meanwhile, proponents of the current rules staged a protest outside the FCC pledging to garner public support against their revocation. “The 2015 rules are working, and the Internet industry remains opposed to any changes to FCC regulation­s governing Net neutrality,” said Michael Beckerman, president and CEO of the Internet Associatio­n, a trade group that includes as members Amazon, Google, Facebook and Netflix. “ISPs should not be able to use their position as gatekeeper­s to prioritize their own content over others.“

Sen. John Thune, R-S.D., called for Congress to pass legislatio­n “to protect the Internet.”

Thune, chairman of the Senate Commerce Committee, urged colleagues “to begin bipartisan work on such legislatio­n without any further delay. Innovation and job creation should no longer take a backseat to partisan pointscori­ng. It is time for Congress to finally settle this matter.”

“We propose to put technologi­sts and engineers, rather than lawyers and accountant­s, at the center of the online world.” FCC Chairman Ajit Pai

 ?? CHIP SOMODEVILL­A, GETTY IMAGES ?? Proponents of Net neutrality protest against FCC Chairman Ajit Pai on May 5 in Washington.
CHIP SOMODEVILL­A, GETTY IMAGES Proponents of Net neutrality protest against FCC Chairman Ajit Pai on May 5 in Washington.
 ?? AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO ?? Paj, left, with Federal Communicat­ions Commission members Mignon Clyburn and Tom Wheeler, says “the evidence so far strongly suggests that this is the right way to go.”
AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO Paj, left, with Federal Communicat­ions Commission members Mignon Clyburn and Tom Wheeler, says “the evidence so far strongly suggests that this is the right way to go.”

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