2018 tech forecast: Expect more angst about privacy and net neutrality

Net neutrality advocates rally in front of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) ahead of Thursday’s expected FCC vote repealing so-called net neutrality rules in Washington, U.S., December 13, 2017. REUTERS/Yuri Gripas
Net neutrality advocates rally in front of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) ahead of Thursday’s expected FCC vote repealing so-called net neutrality rules in Washington, U.S., December 13, 2017. REUTERS/Yuri Gripas

The vast volume of unfinished tech-policy business that 2017 bequeathed in net neutrality, broadband competition privacy, security, and more won’t all get wrapped up in 2018, either.

But the combination of a U.S. election and a dramatic expansion of privacy rules overseas might open up room for a few wins for customers on those fronts.

Between candidates having to take a stand on net neutrality, privacy-abusive companies brought to heel with a foreign government’s fine, and more social-network CEOs pressed to act against trolling, you might see incremental but still-welcome progress. Or we could be left only with a deeper realization of the work remaining to be done.

The most likely outcome: Things won’t change significantly until there’s a different cast of characters in Washington and a more humble mindset in Silicon Valley.

The “now what?” phrase of net neutrality

The Federal Communications Commission’s vote to wipe out its existing net-neutrality rules leaves internet providers wide open to blocking or slowing sites—in theory. In practice, with the FCC’s move facing an array of lawsuits once it officially goes into effect, internet providers have little incentive to try anything funny until those court challenges wrap up.

So nightmare scenarios of Big Telecom censoring sites may look a little silly by spring. Those forecasts of doom also risk distracting people from the more subtle harm that happens when investors decide it’s too risky to back a startup developing an innovative but data-intensive app. Why place that bet when internet providers can now push those startups to pay more for priority delivery of their data?

Note that one of those Big Telecom firms, Verizon (VZ), owns Yahoo Finance.

Any lawsuits challenging FCC chair Ajit Pai’s move will almost certainly still be working their way through the courts as the 2018 elections near. Expect this to become something that candidates have to answer.

Building broadband

The net-neutrality debate might not be so vitriolic if more of us had more than two residential broadband providers. For that to change, we have to streamline rules and norms that slow down building out new broadband networks—the kind of burdensome regulations that founders of new high-speed services actually complain about.

The FCC’s Pai has said many of the right things on that issue, but he, like earlier FCC chairs, needs help from a Congress that has spent the last few years declining to advance any sweeping broadband-infrastructure legislation.

There’s always the chance that the infrastructure plan that Trump said would be among his top priorities will include a broadband component. The prospect of that even had some telecom-policy types cautiously optimistic in January. But almost a year into Trump’s administration, that infrastructure plan has yet to emerge. It’s starting to look as top-secret as Trump’s tax returns.