Broadband Industry Formally Tries, Once Again, To Kill Net Neutrality
from the when-at-first-you-don't-succeed,-cry-some-more dept
If at first you don't succeed, try to waste everybody's time in perpetuity. That's apparently the plan of the broadband industry, which has formally unveiled its latest attempt to kill U.S. net neutrality rules and the FCC's reclassification of ISPs as common carriers under Title II of the Telecom Act. As leaks had suggested, multiple broadband providers and trade organizations have requested an en banc review from the full 9-member DC Circuit Court of Appeals in the hopes of overturning last June's massive FCC legal win.Given the en banc request process limits the core argument to fifteen pages, the National Cable & Telecommunications Association (NCTA, pdf), the American Cable Association (ACA), the CTIA—The Wireless Association (pdf), and the United States Telecom Association (USTelecom, pdf) all filed slightly different, predominately flimsy legal arguments. Cable providers argued the FCC didn't properly justify the need for new rules; wireless providers tried to argue the FCC can't technically apply such rules to wireless; the telcos tried to argue Congress never intended to give the FCC Title II authority over broadband.
All of these claims have been thoroughly debunked in some fashion over the last ten years. For example, Alamo Broadband, filed its own request (pdf) trying to claim that net neutrality rules violate an ISPs' free speech rights, a claim that has all but been laughed out of court previously. In a new blog post, the cable industry tries to argue they had no choice but to keep wasting everybody's time:
"We don’t celebrate this petition, but we believe this action is necessary to correct unlawful action by the FCC. We aren’t challenging the specific net neutrality protections – as we’ve explained repeatedly, we have long supported the net neutrality principles embodied in the FCC’s 2010 order that could be enforceable under the Commission’s traditional light touch approach to internet regulation.Those would be the same 2010 rules that had so many loopholes as to be useless, and didn't cover wireless. The NCTA then trots out the old, stale canard that the rules are hurting network investment, something the facts (at least those outside the halls of conflicted, for-hire think tanks) have never supported:
"Because the FCC Order was such a monumental departure from the FCC’s successful tenure of overseeing broadband internet networks that have seen tremendous investment, expansion and innovation, we seek rehearing of these critical issues."In other words, we liked it a lot better when the FCC only pretended to do its job, leaving us alone to take predatory advantage of the near total market failure in countless broadband markets. The real concern for cable, phone and wireless companies now is the FCC's plan to use its restored Title II authority to pass some relatively basic privacy protections for broadband service. While the industry and some press outlets will tell you these rules are an incredible over-reach by the FCC, all they really require is that ISPs are transparent about what's collected, and provide consumers with working opt out tools.
As we noted last week, the chance of an expanded appeal being granted is slim, but the en banc approach is seen as slightly less futile than an appeal to the under-staffed Supreme Court. Still, the best option for ISPs looking to gut net neutrality? Elect a President that will stock the FCC with the kind of revolving door regulators who simply won't bother to enforce the rules. That's more likely under Trump, but with AT&T's top lobbyist supporting Clinton, real net neutrality protection shouldn't be seen as a given under her watch, either. Especially if dingo-esque Tom Wheeler gets replaced.
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Filed Under: appeal, broadband, dc circuit, en banc, net neutrality
Companies: aca, ctia, ncta, us telecom
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Screw you America
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Re: Screw you America
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$17 on the dollar...
Really nothing they can do has better returns than just defending their oligopoly.
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Re: Screw you America
It's because the lobbying is so much cheaper and so much more effective per dollar spent that it never ceases.
One of the good arguments that libertarians make is that we're so large as a nation, and that large governed groups mean that money spent lobbying and controlling government will sap away money that should have been directly invested in production.
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" we have long supported the net neutrality principles"
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NET-NEUTRALITY existed since 1996
The NET-NEUTRALITY regulations were put in place when the Internet was introduced to the public in 1996, and they have been applied until 2014.
In 2014 the NET-NEUTRALITY regulations were cancelled thank's to a law suit started by Verizon.
Without NET-NEUTRALITY the ISPs can start selling Internet access in packages; it recently happened in India: they lost NET-NEUTRALITY and now they have to buy internet acces by selecting "Social Media Sites +$10 a month" and then "News Sites +$5 a month" and then "Video Streamins Sites +$20 a month" and so on.
In case you don't understand it, this is what Cable Providers want to be able to do to disencourage people from subscribing to Video Services like NETFLIX and AMAZON VIDEO that allow People to cancel they Cable TV subscription.
When the NET-NEUTRALITY regulations got cancelled, Comcast started slowing down the Internet connection to Customers accessing NETFLIX, to the point Movies kept getting paused for buffering... Eventually Comcast made Netflix pay an undisclosed amount of money to re-allow Customers to see Netflix at full speed... And 2 months later the Monthly fee of Netflix went up by $2.
This means Customers have to pay TWICE for the same connection: first they buy a connection speed from Comcast, then they have to pay Netflix to have the right to use such speed they already paid for.
Thankfully NET-NEUTRALITY prohibits these types of practice... If you don't understand it, do some searches OnLine before posting comments against what is actually THE 1st AMENDMENT.
Regards
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It is just strategy
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Fifteen pages
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