Home » Competition »Net Neutrality »Public Policy & Gov't » Currently Reading:

This Week: FCC’s Ajit Pai Plans to Announce Sweeping Plan to Dismantle Net Neutrality

Phillip Dampier November 20, 2017 Competition, Net Neutrality, Public Policy & Gov't 5 Comments

Pai

FCC Chairman Ajit Pai is preparing to announce a complete dismantling of Net Neutrality protections enacted during the Obama Administration, despite millions of comments from Americans demanding the agency retain rules protecting an open internet.

According to a report in the Wall Street Journal (use link embedded in tweet below to avoid paywall), Pai seems poised to introduce a complete rollback of the rules requiring internet service providers to treat all web traffic equally, which appears to have been his original plan before opening the matter to public comment.

The changes, likely to be adopted by the 3-2 Republican majority at the FCC, will allow ISPs to sell paid or bundled packages of websites and content and offer it to consumers at higher speeds, lower prices, or without counting usage against data caps. “Paid prioritization” was specifically forbidden under rules introduced by Obama-era FCC chairman Thomas Wheeler, who expressed concern ISPs already wielded too much power over the internet experience.

WSJ:

If the rollback survives likely legal challenges, it has the potential to reorder the online business environment. It could give internet providers such as AT&T Inc., Comcast Corp., Charter Communications Inc. and Verizon Communications Inc. more flexibility to use bundles of services and creative pricing to make their favored content more attractive to consumers.

These companies generally profess support for basic principles of “Net Neutrality,” such as not blocking content or throttling its delivery. But with the Obama-era bright-line rules widely expected to be eliminated, many experts predict the industry will experiment with new services. The big internet providers either declined to comment or didn’t respond over the weekend.

The change would affect not only how the internet is regulated, but who regulates it. Under the new plan, legal experts say, oversight responsibility would shift to include the Federal Trade Commission as well as the FCC.

The FTC has long been the principal regulator of most internet businesses, a regime effectively ended with the 2015 rules. The shift is significant because unlike the FCC, the FTC generally doesn’t adopt overarching rules, instead developing case-by-case determinations about what business behavior is fair or unfair.

0 0 votes
Article Rating
5 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
kaniki
kaniki
6 years ago

“It could give internet providers such as … more flexibility to use bundles of services and creative pricing to make their favored content more attractive to consumers.” I am trying to figure out how this is going to change. Go to spectrum.. Their lowest internet price, for just internet is $65 month, plus fees.. But bundle with their other services, and they will drop the price in about half.. Spectrum pricing, $65 for 60mb down, 5mb up.. Yet, the fiber company that is about internet, not TV, can provide 150mb down, 150mb up, for $5 less.. Even verizon’s lower speed… Read more »

EJ
EJ
6 years ago
Reply to  kaniki

I think you are confused on what Net Neutrality really is. It is not about ads, it is about the ability for your provider to control the bandwidth based on the company it is providing the bandwidth for. So things like YouTube, Netflix, Facebook, Amazon, and the list goes and on and it will go on. All of these will be forced to pay a price to have there content streamed to you. The internet providers can play favorites and will play favorites based on who pays and based on if it is there content. While that sounds great on… Read more »

kaniki
kaniki
6 years ago
Reply to  EJ

Trust me, I know this.. Look at the current merger / takeover / buyout in alaska.. They are charging something like $180 to get unlimited internet at 1tb speeds, while places with fiber are getting it for $80.. They have a data cap on their lowest plan, for $65, that limits it to 50gb, and then they slow your speeds down. There have been complaints and lawsuits about companies slowing bandwidth down to places like netflix. My comment was not so much that I want to see neutrality dropped, but the fact that they are using the fact that these… Read more »

EJ
EJ
6 years ago

As I have stated before if these companies are smart they will collaborate together and make it clear that if net neutrality is reversed they will collaborate together and walk into every major city and provide internet service that is superior and cheaper then these internet providers. It will more beneficial to Google, Netflix, Hulu and the others to do it this way then be extorted by provider after to provider. Make sure these internet providers feel the pain by lobbying and spreading misinformation about net neutrality. Make those stock prices go down and provide a better product to the… Read more »

kaniki
kaniki
6 years ago
Reply to  EJ

I would say, as a whole, most places really only have one option. Especially in rural areas.. The only places that will usually have at least 2, will be big, major cities.. That is it. As for the trump comment. I will just say this.. No president should be judged, by one thing that they do, unless it is the biggest mess up in the history of the country. All presidents have their good, and bad things that they have done.. While I do not want to see Net Neutrality stopped, I also believe that it needs replaced with something… Read more »

Search This Site:

Contributions:

Recent Comments:

Your Account:

Stop the Cap!