USA TODAY International Edition

Net neutrality rules are now in effect

Court of appeals denies a stay request

- Mike Snider

The Federal Communicat­ions Commission’s net neutrality rules went into effect Friday after a court decided not to block them.

The U. S. Court of Appeals in Washington, D. C. on Thursday denied a request by several broadband providers and opponents to the FCC’s Open Internet order or net neutrality rules.

The rules, passed by a partisan 3- 2 vote in February, require Internet service providers to give consumers access to all legal content and applicatio­ns on an equal basis, without favoring some sources or blocking others.

After the rules’ passage, several companies and groups including AT& T, USTelecom, CTIA The Wireless Associatio­n and National Cable & Telecommun­ications Associatio­n challenged the rules in court asking for a stay.

“This is a huge victory for Internet consumers and innovators,” FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler said in a statement released before the rules went into effect. “Starting Friday, there will be a referee on the field to keep the Internet fast, fair and open. Blocking, throttling, pay- for- priority fast lanes and other efforts to come between consumers and the Internet are now things of the past. The rules also give broadband providers the certainty and economic incentive to build fast and competitiv­e broadband networks.”

Opponents welcomed the court’s decision to expedite the case. “The U. S. is the world’s leader in the deployment and adoption of wireless broadband, due in large measure to decades of lighttouch regulation,” said CTIA President and CEO Meredith Attwell Baker in a statement. “The wireless industry seeks to restore that approach ... rather than suffer the harmful consequenc­es of the FCC’s overreach.”

Also on Thursday, a U. S. House subcommitt­ee passed a budget provision that would cut FCC funding by $ 25 million and prevent it from enforcing the net neutrality rules until court cases were decided. It’s not yet known if the provision will make it out of committee and be included in ongoing budget negotiatio­ns.

“This is a huge victory for Internet consumers and innovators.”

FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler

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CHIP SOMODEVILL­A, GETTY IMAGES

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