The FCC's 'power grab' on net neutrality still hasn't burned your broadband provider

Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Chairman Tom Wheeler in Washington May 12, 2015. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Chairman Tom Wheeler in Washington May 12, 2015. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst

Tech-policy geeks in Washington, DC are getting tired of waiting for a court ruling on the legality of the Federal Communications Commission’s net neutrality rules, which stop your internet providers from deliberately slowing down certain websites or services. Six months after the US Court of Appeals for the DC Circuit heard the case six, it still hasn’t issued a decision.

The results matter to more than people who obsessively refresh a page titled “USCA-DC Opinions” every Tuesday and Friday, starting at around 10 a.m. The risk that an internet service provider might block or slow an app, site or service (then charge it extra to get around those limits) is not hypothetical; ISPs have spent years talking about doing just that.

A ruling upholding the FCC’s adoption last spring of net-neutrality rules that prohibit this kind of discrimination against legal internet traffic would let us all get on with our online lives and ease the way for interesting new, bandwidth-dependent startups. A ruling the other way would up the uncertainty by vaporizing regulations that have remained in effect during this challenge.

But even as weeks of waiting for a resolution of United States Telecom Assoc. v. FCC et al. have turned into months, one thing is becoming clear: If net-neutrality rules were supposed to suffocate private investment in broadband, they’re doing a bad job of it.

Lowell McAdam, the Chairman and CEO of Verizon. You can arguably thank Verizon for the new net neutrality rules.
Lowell McAdam, the Chairman and CEO of Verizon. You can arguably thank Verizon for the new net neutrality rules.

A legal fight ending with the FCC’s “sweeping bureaucratic power grab”

The net neutrality story has changed greatly since Columbia University law professor Tim Wu used that phrase in the title of a 2003 paper about discriminatory practices by broadband providers. Just over two years ago, it seemed unimaginable that the FCC would pass strong rules based on longstanding “common carrier” provisions of telecom law that, for instance, require networks like the phone system to route people’s calls on an equal basis.

You can arguably credit Verizon (VZ) for the current rules. In 2011, that New York telecom giant sued the FCC to overturn an older, far weaker set of net-neutrality rules. That case hinged on the FCC’s classification of internet companies as “information services” — which was a label more suited to AOL at its floppy-disk-mailing peak than the internet we know today.

In January of 2014, the DC Circuit held the FCC didn’t have sufficient legal authority to prohibit “information services” (i.e., internet providers) from discriminating against certain kinds of traffic.

That ruling by judges David S. Tatel, Laurence H. Silberman and Judith W. Rogers, however, signaled as clearly as possible that the FCC could do just that if it reversed its decisions of an earlier decade to reclassify internet providers as information services and instead re-reclassified them as common carriers, using authority it’s long had under the Telecommunications Act.