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Here's what you can expect now that the FCC has killed net neutrality

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The Federal Communications Commission voted 3-2 Thursday to scrap all of its existing net-neutrality rules.

FCC chairman Ajit Pai has never wavered from his deep distaste for the rules adopted in 2015 that ban internet providers from blocking or slowing legal sites and forbid them from charging sites for priority delivery of their data.

His two Republican colleagues Mike O’Rielly and Brendan Carr agree with him, leaving Democratic commissioners Mignon Clyburn and Jessica Rosenworcel on the losing end.

So if you don’t like Pai’s plan, it’s too late to expect comments to the FCC to stop this. The chairman is so confident in his cause that he used his speech at the FCC Chairman’s dinner in Washington last Thursday to joke that, yes, he really was a Manchurian candidate for his former employer Verizon (VZ). (Verizon’s media division, Oath, includes Yahoo Finance.)

But what happens next may not go according to Pai’s script. Or yours.

The vote to kill net neutrality will first lead to protracted litigation. Should Pai’s plan survive that, internet providers will be free to block sites as long as they say they’ll do that. ISPs say they won’t (and there’s zero long-term business logic for them doing so), but this regulatory rollback will also enable them to engage in less-obvious mischief that the government may not be able to punish until years later.

FILE - In this Thursday, Dec. 7, 2017, file photo, demonstrators rally in support of net neutrality outside a Verizon store in New York.  (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer, File)
FILE – In this Thursday, Dec. 7, 2017, file photo, demonstrators rally in support of net neutrality outside a Verizon store in New York. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer, File)

It’s lawsuit time

Over the last decade of net-neutrality politics, only one group has consistently done well: telecom lawyers.

The FCC’s 2015 vote to put internet providers back under the same “telecommunications services” regulatory framework as phone companies appeared to have ended that legal trench warfare. The “Title II” rules that Pai calls “1930s-style” gave the FCC clear authority to create net-neutrality protections. Prior to that, attempts to craft weaker net-neutrality rules lost in court when judges found no solid legal foundation.

But Pai’s U-turn now invites challenges from advocates of the current rules. They can point to a law called the Administrative Procedure Act, which says an agency like the FCC can’t be arbitrary or capricious — meaning that the FCC of 2017 will have to explain why it disagrees so completely with the FCC of 2015.

FILE – In this Friday, Aug. 9, 2013, file photo, Federal Communications Commission Commissioner Ajit Pai speaks during an FCC meeting in Washington.(AP Photo/Susan Walsh, File)
FILE – In this Friday, Aug. 9, 2013, file photo, Federal Communications Commission Commissioner Ajit Pai speaks during an FCC meeting in Washington.(AP Photo/Susan Walsh, File)

“I think you’ll see public interest groups, trade associations and small and mid-sized tech companies filing the petitions for review,” predicted Gigi Sohn, who served as counselor for Pai’s predecessor Tom Wheeler.

Congress could also vote to stop this. But while polls show people hate this repeal — 83% opposed it in a new University of Maryland survey that took care to present Pai’s logic — Republican members have yet to show serious opposition.