Ex-Obama FTC Boss Now Lobbying For Comcast, Trying To Prevent States From Protecting Consumers
from the revolving-door-regulation dept
While the Trump FCC has certainly taken protectionism, corruption and cronyism to an entirely new level, it's important not to forget that Trump and Ajit Pai are just products of the country's long established bipartisan dysfunction when it comes to revolving door regulators, and it's going to take more than just ejecting Trump and Pai to repair the underlying rot that has allowed them to blossom.
Case in point: former Obama FTC boss Jon Leibowitz, who has long professed himself to be a "privacy advocate," has spent much of the last few years lobbying for Comcast while at Davis Polk. That has included making a myriad of false claims about ongoing, EFF-backed efforts to protect broadband consumer privacy in California.
In an endless wave of op-eds (where his financial conflicts of interest are almost never disclosed to the reader), Leibowitz has been busy insisting that rampant ISP privacy abuses are a "nonexistent problem," and that strong state and FCC oversight of ISPs are unnecessary because the FTC will somehow rush in to save the day in the wake of efforts to neuter the FCC, kill net neutrality, and embolden massive anti-competitive telecom duopolies.
We've already outlined in detail why that's a horrible take here. More specifically, the FTC lacks rule-making authority, and can only act against ISPs if behavior is clearly proven to be "unfair and deceptive," something ISPs can usually wiggle out of on the net neutrality front (we weren't throttling a competitor, we were protecting the safety and integrity of the network!). The FTC's also understaffed, under-funded, and over-extended. And oh, did we mention that AT&T has been busy in court trying to obliterate whatever authority over ISPs the FTC does have?
Leibowitz (like most ISP lobbyists pretending to be objective analysts) "forgets" to mention that.
With more than half the states in the nation now considering some flavor of net neutrality and privacy rules in the wake of federal apathy, Leibowitz is also busy trying to help Comcast scuttle privacy and net neutrality in other states like Massachusetts. Massachusetts, with the backing of dozens of lawmakers, is contemplating new net neutrality rules that would effectively mirror the ones Comcast lobbied the FCC To dismantle last December.
Leibowitz's oppositional testimony this week in front of state leaders included claims that net neutrality somehow hampered broadband industry investment, an ISP-lobbying claim routinely debunked by just looking at ISP earnings reports, SEC filings, and countless CEO statements:
"According to his prepared testimony for a hearing before the Joint Committee on Telecommunications, Utilities, Leibowitz said he recognized "the sky did not fall" when the FCC, during the Obama Administration, reclassified ISPs as Title II common carriers. But he said that reclassification did have costs to consumers, including diminished deployment of broadband, according to the FCC, as well as removing broadband consumer protection from the FTC's jurisdiction."
Again that diminished deployment never happened. ISP CEOs admit as much. Meanwhile, the "sky did not fall" because the FCC's 2015 net neutrality rules haven't even technically been repealed yet (that's expected to occur sometime in April). Even then, ISPs aren't expected to truly even start testing their newfound anti-competitive freedoms until they're sure the FCC (with ISP help) wins their looming legal battle. Even then ISPs may not truly be comfortable behaving badly until they're sure tougher state and federal rules are pre-empted (that's why they're pushing for a fake, loophole-filled net neutrality law.)
Knowing that states might fill the consumer protection vacuum, both Verizon and Comcast lobbied the Trump FCC to include language in their net neutrality repeal trying to ban states from protecting consumers (from net neutrality or privacy violations). And while Leibowitz tried to warn Massachusetts leaders that they might run afoul of the Trump FCC if they try to protect consumers (oh no!), that ignores the fact that legal experts say the FCC abdicated its authority on this front when they decided to back away from classifying ISPs as common carriers.
Again, dozens of individual state privacy and net neutrality protections aren't ideal, but that's something Leibowitz's client Comcast should have thought about before lobbying to demolish popular and modest federal level privacy and net neutrality protections. The fact that ISP lobbyists still cling to false claims that net neutrality "demolished sector investment" speaks volumes as to the integrity of their arguments. Meanwhile, at some point media outlets in the States need to wake the hell up to the harm caused by publishing lobbyist op-eds without disclosing authors' financial ties to industries they represent.
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Filed Under: broadband, california, competition, ftc, jon leibowitz, lobbying, massachusetts, net neutrality, privacy
Companies: comcast
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Well, they can hardly come out and say the an open Internet is causing them to hemorrhage cable subscribers.
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Waaait a minute...
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Stop it.
Call it "Big Telecom's FCC" if you want to, but throwing Trump in there is an obvious attempt to boost your ratings in search engines.
I'd like to think that you're better than this, Techdirt. Let the mainstream media do their clickbait things, but don't lower yourselves like this by copying them. It leaves a bad taste in my mouth.
Please show a better example and a higher standard in the future. Thank you.
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burst pipe vs. slow drip
It's perhaps not unlike the way that gun control advocates yearn for the next big mass-shooting, because it provides the ideal environment and opportunity to finally get something done that's been languishing for a long time and would otherwise be very difficult to accomplish.
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On second thoughts, we shouldn't, Trump quietly maintained everything bad Obama left while trying to destroy anything good. Nevermind.
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Re: Stop it.
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Re: burst pipe vs. slow drip
It is a bloody business when both extremes benefit from mass-shootings! No reason to do anything but symbolic gestures and wash your hands, while you dry them in greenbacks, if you are a politician...
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Stop it.
Not quite sure exactly how Harold Feld, who's currently Senior Vice President at Public Knowledge fills his days.
Compared to Karl here at Techdirt, Harold's certainly not as prolific at his Tales of the Sausage Factory blog.
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Trump FCC
Trump did throw Wheeler out on his ear very early in his term, thereby upsetting the delicate balance that kept net neutrality in place on the federal level.
So, this is the Trump FCC, even if (like countless other US institutions) he just smashed a piece of it and let entropy take its course.
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Re: Stop it.
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Re: Trump FCC
If it hadn't been Wheeler, it would have been one of the other two Democrats on the FCC. The FCC always has a one-vote majority for the president's party.
But Trump is responsible for promoting Pai to chair and for appointing Carr (Pai's former aide). He was required to give these positions to Republicans, yes -- but he was not required to give them to those specific Republicans.
Trump and McConnell were well within their rights and power to put pro-net neutrality Republicans on the commission. They chose not to.
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Re:
Yeah, because it is not the case.
Competition is causing their angst, not the open-ness of the internet.
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Re: burst pipe vs. slow drip
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Might be true...
It also proves MONEY SPEAKS LOUDLY..
And a person Hired to a do a job, IS DOING HIS JOB..
Can you guess WHO is paying him, at the bottom??
YOU AND ME..so the copr can pay him Millions and billions to SHOw his support and BS the rest of us, and the prices for these services GOES UP AND UP AND UP...
Want to see a change? get everyone that has the service to GO TO VACATION MODE for 1 month, or until they lower prices...
Watch them Sh;t themselves..
Customer service couldnt handle all the calls..it would take them 2 weeks to do it..
It would confuse the Spit out of them..they would be going NUTS and the bills would get WEIRD..
10,000,000 all calling at 1 time going to vacation mode...and no end date..(dont give one, just say its 1 month PLUS) Then go find something ELSE to do for 1 month..and watch for the sales to come up IF YOU COME BACK..
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Re: Re: Stop it.
It's cheap, it's unnecessary and it's a distraction from who is responsible for these problems. Corrupt politicians on all sides and the telecoms who buy their way into power. Don't tell me things would have been different if we were doing things "her" way.
Ultimately, the best thing to call it is "America's FCC", but that cuts a bit too deep for most of you readers, doesn't it?
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This is why I'm hoping Techdirt can rise above this garbage-level journalism. The readers have spoken, however, and it seems the majority of them would prefer things stay just the way they are, being spoon fed propaganda that's fit for a dictatorship.
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"America's FCC"
That the FCC ignored the most recent comments period -- which still called for net neutrality and type-2 classification by an overwhelming majority despite efforts to sabotage it and discredit it -- has demonstrated that it no serves the will of the public of the United States.
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isn't bipartisanship wonderful
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Re: Trump FCC
https://www.wired.com/2016/12/tom-wheeler-resigns-fcc-long-net-neutrality/
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