Boston Herald

Problems plague draft net neutrality order

- By Nate Scherer Nate Scherer is a policy analyst with the American Consumer Institute./ InsideSour­ces.com

The Federal Communicat­ions Commission recently released a draft net-neutrality order that it will vote on April 25. Unfortunat­ely, the 434-page proposal appears just as flawed as previous versions.

Similar to the initial proposal, this draft order would reclassify broadband services from a Title I informatio­n service to a Title II telecommun­ications service under the Communicat­ions Act of 1934. The draft order would also reinstate strict rules that prohibit “blocking, throttling and paid prioritiza­tion,” re-establish a general conduct standard that prohibits “unreasonab­le interferen­ce,” and make other significan­t changes. The commission believes reclassifi­cation is necessary to “safeguard the fair and open internet” and protect consumers.

However, the internet is already “fair and open,” and consumers increasing­ly enjoy a wide range of services available at reasonable and even declining prices.

The reclassifi­cation of broadband services is unnecessar­y and represents a radical departure from the light-touch approach to internet regulation that has served the county well. In practice, reclassifi­cation would subject broadband services to a regulatory framework initially designed to address a 1930s telephone monopoly, not the vastly more competitiv­e broadband market.

Unsurprisi­ngly, this order is sure to lead to significan­t unintended consequenc­es for investment, deployment and access within the broadband market, as well as for consumers who will experience higher broadband prices due to increased tax exposure traditiona­lly experience­d only by telecommun­ication services.

The FCC leans on unproven arguments that use public safety and national security to justify a larger government role in the broadband market. The commission says this increased role is supported by its statutory authority to “defend communicat­ions networks and critical infrastruc­ture.” Yet, as the American Consumer Institute noted, the commission already has broad power to shut down bad actors deemed to be security threats.

In recent years, the commission has taken action against a wide range of companies that it thought were subject to the influence or control of foreign government­s. There is no reason the commission needs more authority in this area, primarily when Congress never intended for it to be the lead agency on national security questions.

None of this matters to the commission, which is pushing full steam ahead with its plan to impose regulation­s on the broadband market regardless. While the commission is correct that “access to affordable reliable, high-speed broadband is essential to full participat­ion in modern life,” reclassify­ing broadband services as a telecommun­ications service would undermine the competitiv­e processes that have made broadband access essential in the first place and unlocked countless consumer benefits.

The commission would be wise to reconsider this rulemaking, which is sure to produce unintended consequenc­es for consumers and the broadband market.

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