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Communications United States Your Rights Online

FCC Tells Court It Has No 'Legal Authority' To Impose Net Neutrality Rules (arstechnica.com) 226

The Federal Communications Commission opened its defense of its net neutrality repeal yesterday, telling a court that it has no authority to keep the net neutrality rules in place. From a report: Chairman Ajit Pai's FCC argued that broadband is not a "telecommunications service" as defined in federal law, and therefore it must be classified as an information service instead. As an information service, broadband cannot be subject to common carrier regulations such as net neutrality rules, Pai's FCC said. The FCC is only allowed to impose common carrier regulations on telecommunications services. "Given these classification decisions, the Commission determined that the Communications Act does not endow it with legal authority to retain the former conduct rules," the FCC said in a summary of its defense filed yesterday in the US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. The FCC is defending the net neutrality repeal against a lawsuit filed by more than 20 state attorneys general, consumer advocacy groups, and tech companies. The FCC's opponents in the case will file reply briefs next month, and oral arguments are scheduled for February.
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FCC Tells Court It Has No 'Legal Authority' To Impose Net Neutrality Rules

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  • by srmalloy ( 263556 ) on Friday October 12, 2018 @12:47PM (#57468046) Homepage

    If the FCC has no authority to impose net neutrality regulations on telecommunication services, then it equally has no authority to prevent states from imposing their own net neutrality regulations, because their is no federal authority that they are usurping. This means that the fundamental premise behind the suit filed by the telecom companies to invalidate California's net neutrality legislation has no footing, since it requires the FCC to have the authority Mr. Pai just disclaimed it possessing.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by sconeu ( 64226 )

      Mod parent up. I came here to say the exact same thing.

      • Me too, except I know the difference between "there" and "their".

    • by zlives ( 2009072 )

      +1, came here to say same

    • by Green Mountain Bot ( 4981769 ) on Friday October 12, 2018 @01:05PM (#57468154)
      That's a big fat affirmative. The FCC is trying to not have their cake and keep anyone else from eating it, too.
    • I agree. They also open the door to voip providers..ie not require them to pay fcc fees and possibility 911 access and fees also. Fb
    • Exactly. Which is why Pai trying to claim he has the authority to prevent state level regulation will go down in the same flaming mass that the first neutrality regulations did.

      The FCC has no congressional authority to regulate data services, including preventing state level regulation, congress never gave it to them.

    • by guruevi ( 827432 )

      The FCC has no authority to impose regulations on information services, but neither does anyone else. It's not because the federal government "can't" do something, that the states can do it. Laws only give the government authority to do something. There is no laws on the books regards net neutrality (Obama's executive directive was not a law) so technically, neither FCC nor states can implement them. States also can't regulate other states, the Internet crosses states and even international, so the closest

      • The constitution gives congress the power to regulate interstate commerce if and when it so chooses but makes no prohibition against the states, and the 10th amendment says "The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people." If congress has not chosen to regulate this form of interstate commerce, isn't that right reserved to the states until congress acts to say otherwise?

        States have use taxes on

        • The constitution gives congress the power to regulate interstate commerce if and when it so chooses but makes no prohibition against the states, and the 10th amendment says "The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people."

          The 10th Amendment is what gives congress the authority to prevent states from regulating interstate commerce. Regulating IC is a power delegated to the United States by the Constitution", so IC meets the logical statement "delegated to the US OR not prohibited to the states", thus "not reserved to the States".

          • The 10th Amendment is what gives congress the authority to prevent states from regulating interstate commerce. Regulating IC is a power delegated to the United States by the Constitution", so IC meets the logical statement "delegated to the US OR not prohibited to the states", thus "not reserved to the States".

            Living up to your username as always, I see.

            You're asserting that "If not A, then B" is equivalent to "If A, then not B". It most definitely is not.

            But that's beside the point, as California isn't trying to regulate interstate commerce. They're only regulating commerce within their borders.

      • The Constitution doesn't empower the states only the federal government. Are you suggesting that when you order from the penny's catalog at the desk that suddenly state sales tax and consumer protection laws don't apply? California's law applies to the data served to customers in California who receive that from an ISP which much have a state level incorporation to business in the state California has every right to dictate consumer protections on what is being delivered.
      • Laws only give the government authority to do something. There is no laws on the books regards net neutrality ... so technically, neither FCC nor states can implement them.

        You might familiarize yourself with the 10th amendment:
        The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.

        States absolutely are not barred from regulating commerce within their borders. Thus, they are authorized to pass laws - like California's - to do just that.

        States also can't regulate other states, the Internet crosses states and even international, so the closest entity to an "authority" would be the UN.

        California isn't regulating other states, or the internet. They are regulating ISPs doing business within their borders.

      • by mbkennel ( 97636 )
        What is stopping the California Public Utilities Commission from deciding that ISP's with terminus in California are telecommunication utilities, or the state legislature?
    • By the same logic as is presented would it not by extension also lack the authority to regulate television? After all, while television contains "tele" within its name, it is clear that it is an informational service as opposed to being a telecommunications service.

      Then of course with the world abandoning classic telephony in favor of IP telephony we no longer have any real need for the FCC.

      If we also consider that LTE is run or operated primarily over the IP network infrastructure, often employing GRE tunn
      • Regulation of radio and, later, television that is broadcast over radio frequencies, is a separate part of the law from regulation of wired communications.
    • I don't think the FCC said they don't have authority over ISPs, rather they said they didn't think it was useful to exercise it in the way NN prescribed.

      The example of federal government limiting state rights for the assumed benefit of the country you can find with cars: CA due to the size of its market is not allowed to impose its own emissions standards on cars sold in CA, whereas RI for example can.

      • No, they specifically said they don't have authority [arstechnica.com]:

        Chairman Ajit Pai's FCC argued that broadband is not a "telecommunications service" as defined in federal law, and therefore it must be classified as an information service instead. As an information service, broadband cannot be subject to common carrier regulations such as net neutrality rules, Pai's FCC said. The FCC is only allowed to impose common carrier regulations on telecommunications services.

        "Given these classification decisions, the Commission determined that the Communications Act does not endow it with legal authority to retain the former conduct rules," the FCC said in a summary of its defense filed yesterday in the US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit.

    • The truly hilarious thing here is that the ISPs fought so hard to get rid of federal level regulations thinking this would make it easier for them, when in reality all it did was open the door for 50 completely different sets of regulations across the country, some maybe weak, but definitely some far more restrictive than what already existed. So instead of having to meet one standard, there will likely be multiple different standards. I'm willing to bet there are some people in the ISP industry wishing the
    • And if the FCC thinks that the internet is not telecommunications, then it's packed full of incompetent idiots. You can use the internet for everything that classic telecommunications does. And the internet makes full use of all the stuff the FCC does claim to regulate, like RF bands, copper wire, satellites, etc.

    • by msauve ( 701917 )
      Wait, you mean they can't have their cake and eat it, too?
  • by hawguy ( 1600213 ) on Friday October 12, 2018 @12:51PM (#57468060)

    Ok fine, so the FCC says it has no legal standing to enforce net neutrality, then it ought to step aside and let the states do it.

    https://www.theverge.com/2018/... [theverge.com]

    • Kind of the whole point of the 10th amendment. Since the federal agency that would have the logical authority to regulate this has stated they do not have the legal authority to do so, the 10th amendment kicks in and reserves this to the states meaning the FCC doesn't have the right to block net neutrality regulations of any kind any more by their own legal defense.
      • They did not say that the federal government does not have the authority to to do so. They stated that none of the laws passed by Congress give the FCC the authority to do so. Congress COULD pass such a law, but they have not done so. The FCC only has the authority which Congress has granted it.
  • Great! (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Jahoda ( 2715225 ) on Friday October 12, 2018 @12:53PM (#57468080)
    So, sounds like Calfornia can do whatever the fuck they want to regulate internet inside their state.
  • by Sarten-X ( 1102295 ) on Friday October 12, 2018 @12:58PM (#57468100) Homepage

    The big difference between a "carrier" and "information service" is that an information service produces the information is gives to customers, even if it's produced from information other sources provide.

    In other words, an "information service" is not only permitted to, but is expected to be adding to or changing the information passing through it. A related example would be a local network television station inserting its own ads in network programming. For an ISP, it means they would have full legal justification to run proxies that MITM encrypted streams and inject their own ads, or extract the data you send and resell it to advertisers. Essentially, any security effected by HTTPS is compromised, and because the CA trust model is inherently broken, that insecurity can even be made undetectable.

    • by edi_guy ( 2225738 ) on Friday October 12, 2018 @01:33PM (#57468314)
      FTFA

      "[B]roadband providers do not make a stand-alone offering of telecommunications," the FCC also said. "[B]roadband providers generally market and provide information processing capabilities and transmission together as a single service, and consumers perceive that service to include more than mere transmission."

      This to me is further reinforcement that Pai only really cares about the corporations involved. Everyone I know from tech saavy-to-noob, young-to-old, just wants straight up Internet access. None of the extra junk services that Comcast, TimeWarner, etc want to sell you. Pai is just such a straight up Corp shill I can't believe people from all political stripes aren't insisting that he be fired.

      • by eth1 ( 94901 )

        Well, I guess if the companies can't be properly classified, they need to be split up so that they can be.

        Goes back to what I've been saying for years: No single entity should be allowed to do more than one of:
        - Create content
        - Provide transport for content
        - Provide last-mile service
        Do that, and it fixes almost all of this, because the last two are pure carriers, and the one with the natural monopoly (last-mile) has no real incentive to not connect as many transport providers as possible.

  • by Zorro ( 15797 ) on Friday October 12, 2018 @01:02PM (#57468130)

    This is what happens when presidents just make crap up instead of doing it the legal way.

    • This is true.

      A phone and a pen are no match for making actual laws using the prescribed method. Remember, HOW you make the rule, is how you remove the rule, so if you cannot do it the hard way, it will be easy to undo later.

    • This is a great idea...if congress weren't thoroughly disinterested in doing their jobs.

      • This is one of the big points against regulatory agencies -- Congress can run and hide and let the rage play out elsewhere and every congress-critter can throw up their hands and exclaim, "I didn't do it!", proving the agency is legislation without representation.

    • They did. The FCC exists because Congress created it, and the FCC has the authority that Congress gave it.
  • "The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the states, are reserved to the states respectively, or to the people."

  • Ajit Pai Must Go! (Score:3, Informative)

    by BrendaEM ( 871664 ) on Friday October 12, 2018 @01:21PM (#57468234) Homepage
    File the attacks against Net Neutrality as "Clear Result of Corporate Payoff."
    Ajit Pai is slime.
  • One buys "Internet service" and "cable TV service", and perhaps other services. While TV service is perhaps an information service, Internet service is a telecommunications service - TCP/IP. So the "broadband companies" are providing both. Seems like their "Internet service" business is a telecommunications service.
  • by Joe Gillian ( 3683399 ) on Friday October 12, 2018 @02:28PM (#57468606)

    I don't have exact case names, but I specifically remember that the Obama-era FCC went to court because the telcos sued them claiming the FCC did not have the authority to regulate net neutrality under Title 1 (information services). The telcos won, and the courts told the FCC that if they wanted to mandate net neutrality, they'd have to do it under Title 2 (by regulating ISPs the same as telephone companies).

    That was EXACTLY what Tom Wheeler did - he moved ISPs under title 2 and began regulating them as Title 2 Common Carriers, which DID give the FCC the authority to mandate net neutrality because that's what the courts told him he had to do.

    I would hope the court would respect stare decisis and tell Ajit Pai that he cannot have it both ways, preferably forcing him to restore the regulation of ISPs under Title 2.

    • CONGRESS can do this, Not the FCC. Not the President, Not the Courts. CONGRESS. Talk to your Representative and Senators,

  • The US service providers who provide "broadband" access worked assiduously to reduce the amount of information services they were providing (personal web sites, e-mail, ftp servers, Usenet news services) leaving serving us with almost nothing but telecommunications services. We don't sign up with ISPs for their information services, we sign up with them for telecommunications. What we want now is for those telecommunications to be provided on an unrestricted basis as a common carrier service so that our o
  • Well, if indeed, the FCC does not have the "power" to regulate Broadband, then each of the 20 states suing them should be allowed to regulate this "information service" that the FCC says it cannot.

  • FCC has no authority on [insert your favorite communications mode here]. At times it sure seems like it when 2-way radio bitch about FCC not enforcing regulations (which is true as enforcement bureau has little resources). To me it seems FCC focuses on auctioning spectrum. At least Part 90 manufacturers and users tend keep themselves within operating limits, and the hams are generally reasonable (yes, there's a few troublemakers).

    But wait, this kind thing has happened before when radio was the new high te

  • the federal rules that ensured paper insulated wireline was the only monopoly network that was federally NN approved.
    Time for people to look for innovative ways to move on with their own networks without federal NN rules.
  • At this point I would settle merely for basic self-consistency.

    If ISPs are in fact "information services" and not telecommunications services then I would love to know what exactly fulfills "via telecommunications" role required by the definition of information services in order to be labeled an information service in the first place?

    "The term âoeinformation serviceâ means the offering of a capability for generating, acquiring, storing, transforming, processing, retrieving, utilizing, or making av

  • Chairman Ajit Pai's FCC argued that broadband is not a "telecommunications service" as defined in federal law, and therefore it must be classified as an information service instead.

    Oh, so I guess that VOIP doesn't exist any more then?

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