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Government The Courts The Internet United States

FCC Chairman: Net Rules Will Withstand Court Challenge 84

An anonymous reader writes with this story about FCC chairman Tom Wheeler's confidence that the net neutrality rules the agency passed last month will stand up to upcoming challenges in court."Now that the FCC is the subject of several lawsuits, and its leader, Chairman Tom Wheeler, was dragged in front of Congress repeatedly to answer the same battery of inanity, it's worth checking in to see how the agency is feeling. Is it confident that its recent vote to reclassify broadband under Title II of the Telecommunications Act will hold? Yes, unsurprisingly. Recently, Wheeler gave a speech at Ohio State University, laying out his larger philosophy regarding the open Internet. His second to last paragraph is worth reading: "One final prediction: the FCC's new rules will be upheld by the courts. The DC Circuit sent the previous Open Internet Order back to us and basically said, 'You're trying to impose common carrier-like regulation without stepping up and saying, "these are common carriers.'" We have addressed that issue, which is the underlying issue in all of the debates we've had so far. That gives me great confidence going forward that we will prevail.""
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FCC Chairman: Net Rules Will Withstand Court Challenge

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  • Optimist (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Is Optimistic. It is his position to state as such, Statists always do, then are often smacked down in court due to interest of business, aren't they learning anythjng from the TPP? The governmentnis in bed with business, its all a show of smoke and mirrors used to confuse and misdirect the citizens on whos turn is it to put us over a barrel, either the government or big business or is it time for being dp'd by both. To think otherwise is exactly what they want.

    • This has been going on 40 years, there's no reason to think common sense broke out now just because we wanted it to. Hopefully the same people who flooded the FCC site months ago are going to be ready to keep doing this until we can get some concession sufficient enough to weaken the monopolies.

    • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

      by thrich81 ( 1357561 )

      You lost me at "Statists"

      • by Anonymous Coward

        You lost me at "You lost me at 'Statists.'"

        • Can we get over the penis envy of who's packet has priority? If you are a politician it is obvious the mob packets will always beat yours if this comes to fruition. -dorks.

        • What's a "statist"? The definition I have (someone who believes the state is more important to the individual) does not seem to apply here, as the FCC is clearly siding with the individual here, and optimism has nothing pro or con with statism.

    • I work for a cable company at the corporate level, so I'll give a little insight to the situation. Tom Wheeler is a long standing friend of the cable industry. He was put into his position through cable lobbyists. Most of what he has done has been a well masked throw to the people and cable industry at the same time.

      That being said, Tom Wheeler's actions to reclassify cable as Title II was not seen coming. Most from the executive level feel it as a bit of betrayal and honestly this decision won't help th
    • Statists

      Stopped taking you seriously right there.

  • by jonwil ( 467024 ) on Monday March 30, 2015 @12:41AM (#49368405)

    It may survive a court challenge but it wont survive the new legislation Comcast, Verizon, AT&T etc are getting ready to submit to Congress via their bought congressmen and senators.

    • I'm personally not so sure about it surviving a court challenge anyway - the FCC decided suddenly to substantially change the regulatory system for an established, massive market, bring in a huge swathe of new rules and regulations for existing major players. I don't feel comfortable where a government agency can something of that scale to an established market without any new laws passed.

      • by nanoflower ( 1077145 ) on Monday March 30, 2015 @04:46AM (#49369011)

        I don't see it as a sudden change since they had been fighting this war for a number of years. Sure, the FCC had come down on the side of the cable companies most of the time but the fact that the issue of network neutrality came and kept coming up year after year shows that this isn't some sort of massive change out of nowhere. It was a clear reaction to the cable companies refusal to work with the FCC as they clearly kept saying 'I'm not going to do what you want and you can't make me.' This is just the FCC stepping and saying that they can make them do what they want.

        Given what the courts have said in the past I don't see a challenge to the FCC rules coming from the courts. Congress is another matter.

      • by thaylin ( 555395 )

        8 pages or rules that in essence just say, you cannot discriminate on packets, is considered a huge swathe?

      • the FCC decided suddenly to substantially change the regulatory system for an established, massive market, bring in a huge swathe of new rules and regulations for existing major players.

        Is this any different than when the telephone companies were first regulated? If not, I don't see how the courts can overturn this decision without completely getting rid of the common carrier regulations.

      • by sjames ( 1099 )

        Consider, in the last court case the judge pretty much spelled the current regulatory changes as a winning move.

    • Yeah at this point I'm pretty sure the lawsuits are just to buy time and drag their feet until they can get Congress involved or some FCC commissioners replaced.
    • Which won't survive a Presidential Veto. The president has expressed concerns that mirror ours and the FCC.
  • so now they'll mange, crangle and finagle every angle, they'll try, cry and lie, play, replay every day until they get their way.

    I wish they would just fuck off and accept that, just for once, that capital didn't get it fucking way like it does every single other time.

"The medium is the message." -- Marshall McLuhan

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