Court Backs Rules Treating
Internet as Utility, Not Luxury
By CECILIA KANG JUNE
14, 2016 nytimes.com
The New Net Neutrality Rules
The Federal
Communications Commission is to take a more active role in regulating the
Internet as a public utility, which is expected to provoke court cases from
major broadband providers.
WASHINGTON —
High-speed internet service can be defined as a utility, a federal court has ruled in a sweeping decision clearing the way
for more rigorous policing of broadband providers and greater protections for
web users.
The decision
affirmed the government’s view that broadband is as essential as the phone and
power and should be available to all Americans, rather than a luxury that does
not need close government supervision.
The 2-to-1
decision from a three-judge panel at the United States Court of Appeals for the
District of Columbia Circuit on Tuesday came in a case about rules applying to
a doctrine known as net neutrality, which prohibit broadband companies from
blocking or slowing the delivery of internet content to consumers.
Those rules,
created by the Federal Communications Commission in early 2015, started a huge legal battle as cable, telecom and
wireless internet providers sued to overturn regulations that they said went
far beyond the F.C.C.’s authority and would hurt their businesses. On the other
side, millions of consumers and giant tech firms rallied in favor of the regulations.
President Obama also called for the strictest possible mandates on broadband
providers.
The court’s
decision upheld the F.C.C. on the declaration of broadband as a utility, which
was the most significant aspect of the rules. That has broad-reaching
implications for web and telecommunications companies that have battled for
nearly a decade over the need for regulation to ensure web users get full and
equal access to all content online.
“After a decade
of debate and legal battles, today’s ruling affirms the commission’s ability to
enforce the strongest possible internet protections — both on fixed and mobile
networks — that will ensure the internet remains open, now and in the future,” Tom
Wheeler, chairman of the F.C.C., said in a statement.
The two judges
who ruled in favor of the F.C.C. emphasized the importance of the internet as
an essential communications and information platform for consumers.
“Over the past
two decades, this content has transformed nearly every aspect of our lives,
from profound actions like choosing a leader, building a career, and falling in
love to more quotidian ones like hailing a cab and watching a movie,” wrote
David Tatel and Sri Srinivasan, the judges who wrote the opinion.
But the legal
battle over the regulations is most likely far from over. The cable and telecom
industries have signaled their intent to challenge any unfavorable decision,
possibly taking the case to the Supreme Court.
AT&T
immediately said it would continue to fight.
“We have always
expected this issue to be decided by the Supreme Court and we look forward to
participating in that appeal,” said David McAtee II, the senior executive vice
president and general counsel for AT&T.
For now, the
decision limits the ability of broadband providers like Comcast and Verizon to
shape the experience of internet users. Without net neutrality rules, the
broadband providers could be inclined to deliver certain content on the web at
slower speeds, for example, making the streams on Netflix or YouTube buffer or
shut down. Such business decisions by broadband providers would have created
fast and slow lanes on the internet, subjecting businesses and consumers to
extra charges and limited access to content online, the F.C.C. has argued.
“This is an
enormous win for consumers,” said Gene Kimmelman, president of the public
interest group Public Knowledge. “It ensures the right to an open internet with
no gatekeepers.”
Tom Wheeler, chairman of the F.C.C.,
said the court’s ruling would “ensure the internet remains open, now and in the
future.” Credit Matthew Eisman/Getty Images for Common Sense Media.
The 184-page
ruling also opens a path for new limits on broadband providers beyond net
neutrality. Already, the F.C.C. has proposed privacy rules for broadband providers,
curbing the ability of companies like Verizon and AT&T to collect and share
data about broadband subscribers.
Google and
Netflix support net neutrality rules and have warned government officials that
without regulatory limits, broadband providers will have an incentive to create
business models that could harm consumers. They argue that broadband providers
could degrade the quality of downloads and streams of online services to
extract tolls from web companies or to promote unfairly their own competing
services or the content of partners.
The court’s
ruling was a certainty for the F.C.C. Two of the three judges who heard the
case late last year agreed that wireless broadband services were also common
carrier utility services that were subject to anti-blocking and discrimination
rules, a decision protested by wireless carriers including AT&T and Verizon
Wireless.
In the opinion,
the two judges in favor of the rules said internet users don’t feel the
difference between fixed-wire broadband and mobile service. To an iPad user,
whose device switches automatically between Wi-Fi and wireless networks, the
government’s oversight of those technologies should not differ, they said.
Tech firms
cheered the decision, which they said would be particularly helpful to
start-ups that did not have the resources to fight gatekeepers of the web.
“Today marks a
huge victory for the millions of microbusinesses who depend on the open
internet to reach consumers and compete in the global marketplace,” said Althea
Erickson, the senior director of global policy at the online crafts marketplace
Etsy.
In a statement,
the cable industry’s biggest lobbying group highlighted the comments of the
dissenting judge, Stephen Williams, and said that its members were reviewing
the opinion. The group also said broadband legislation by Congress was a better
alternative to the F.C.C.’s classification of internet business as a utility.
“While this is
unlikely the last step in this decade-long debate over internet regulation, we
urge bipartisan leaders in Congress to renew their efforts to craft meaningful
legislation that can end ongoing uncertainty, promote network investment and
protect consumers,” the National Cable and Telecommunications Association said
in a statement.
In his lengthy
dissenting opinion, Mr. Williams called the rules an “unreasoned patchwork”
that will discourage competition in the broadband industry.
The biggest
threat to broadband providers is the potential of any regulations to hurt the
rates they charge for the service, analysts said. The F.C.C. has promised it
will not impose rate regulations on the firms like it does for phone companies.
“The pendulum
has today swung a bit further in the direction of long-term price regulation,”
said Craig Moffett, an analyst at the research firm MoffettNathanson.
The F.C.C. was
divided along party lines on the rules. It began its quest for net neutrality
rules in 2009, with two previous attempts at creating rules overturned by the
same court.
In a statement,
Ajit Pai, a Republican commissioner who was among a minority who opposed the
regulation of broadband as a utility, urged cable and telecom firms to keep
going with their legal challenge.
“I continue to
believe that these regulations are unlawful, and I hope that the parties
challenging them will continue the legal fight,” he said.
Correction: June 14, 2016
An earlier
version of this article misattributed a statement by a cable industry lobbying
group. The statement was made by the National Cable & Telecommunications
Association; it was not made by the group’s president, Michael Powell
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