Author Topic: Court: FCC has no power to regulate Net neutrality  (Read 213 times)

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Offline ms

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Court: FCC has no power to regulate Net neutrality
« on: April 06, 2010, 07:42:06 AM »


April 6, 2010 8:15 AM PDT
Court: FCC has no power to regulate Net neutrality
by Declan McCullagh

The Federal Communications Commission does not have the legal authority to slap Net neutrality regulations on Internet providers, a federal appeals court ruled Tuesday.
A three-judge panel in Washington, D.C. unanimously tossed out the FCC's August 2008 cease and desist order against Comcast, which had taken measures to slow BitTorrent transfers and had voluntarily ended them earlier that year.
Because the FCC "has failed to tie its assertion" of regulatory authority to any actual law enacted by Congress, the agency does not have the authority to regulate an Internet provider's network management practices, wrote Judge David Tatel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit.
Tuesday's decision could doom one of the signature initiatives of FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski, a Democrat. Last October, Genachowski announced plans to begin drafting a formal set of Net neutrality rules--even though Congress has not given the agency permission to begin. (Verizon Communications CEO Ivan Seidenberg has said that new regulations would stifle innovative technologies like telemedicine.)
Even though liberal advocacy groups had urged the FCC to take action against Comcast, the agency's vote to proceed was a narrow 3-2, with the dissenting commissioners predicting at the time that it would not hold up in court. FCC Commissioner Robert McDowell, a Republican, said at the time that the FCC's ruling was unlawful and the lack of legal authority "is sure to doom this order on appeal."
The ruling also is likely to shift the debate to whether Congress will choose to explicitly grant the FCC the authority to regulate companies' network management practices. It will also likely revive lobbying coalitions that have been defunct for the last few years.
In 2006, Congress rejected five bills, backed by groups including Google, Amazon.com, Free Press, and Public Knowledge, that would have handed the FCC the power to police Net neutrality violations. Even though the Democrats have enjoyed a majority on Capitol Hill since 2007, the political leadership has shown little interest in resuscitating those proposals.
"We must decide whether the Federal Communications Commission has authority to regulate an Internet service provider's network management practices," Tatel wrote in his 36-page opinion. "The Commission may exercise this 'ancillary' authority only if it demonstrates that its action--here barring Comcast from interfering with its customers' use of peer-to-peer networking applications--is 'reasonably ancillary to the...effective performance of its statutorily mandated responsibilities.'"
In August 2005, the FCC adopted a set of principles saying "consumers are entitled to run applications and use services of their choice." But the principles also permit providers' "reasonable network management" and, confusingly, the FCC admitted on the day of their adoption that the guidelines "are not enforceable."
The FCC's 2008 vote to punish Comcast stems from a request from Free Press and its political allies, including some Yale, Harvard, and Stanford law school faculty.
This is not the first time that the FCC has been rebuked for enacting regulations without any actual legal authority to do so. In 2005, the Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit ruled the agency did not have the authority to draft its so-called broadcast flag rule. And a federal appeals court in Pennsylvania ruled in the Janet Jackson nipple exposure incident that the FCC's sanctions against CBS--which publishes CNET News--amounted to an "arbitrary and capricious change of policy.

Offline MGMorden

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Re: Court: FCC has no power to regulate Net neutrality
« Reply #1 on: April 06, 2010, 08:56:45 AM »
And so signals the beginning of the end of real usability on the internet.  It was good while it lasted.

For those who are wondering, net neutrality is refers to several different things.

For one, the slap on the wrist Comcast got was for intentionally sabotaging the communications of it's customers.  You pay the ISP for usage of the internet.  Typically once you're paid for your service that would mean you're free to do what you want, but for Bittorrent (a system by which users can share files with each other) Comcast was tampering with the communications.  Basically, while your computer was talking to someone else's, Comcast would throw in a false signal to keep randoming reseting your connection with the other computer you were talking to.  This constant disconnecting and reconnecting was intended to keep you from sharing things too fast.

The other side of the coin, which is far more of a problem, is content providers "double dipping".  You see, you paid your ISP for access to the internet, and websites like Google pay THEIR ISP's for access as well, but some companies are starting to get jealous, and essentially want to charge websites like Google AGAIN to get their data to you - even though both parties involved have already paid for access to the connection.  Websites that refuse to be fleeced again could be slowed, or placed on a cap so that the user could only access such services by a limited amount.  Many ISP's are looking at alternative services that they themselves can provide.  So if you pay for internet access from AT&T, and you want to use Skype, well then too bad. Skype didn't pay the AT&T mafia.  Even though it's on the internet, and you pay for access to the internet, you can't access that.  AT&T will be happy to sell you some voice-over-IP services of their own though.

Mark my words, if net neutrality cannot be enforced, you can kiss anything like Hulu, Skype, Vonage, Netflix (the streaming services, not the mail order part), etc goodbye.  Greedy providers will price access to such things out of your reach even though you technically already paid for it.