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The Courts

Biden DOJ Halts Trump Admin Lawsuit Against California Net Neutrality Rules (arstechnica.com) 131

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: The Biden administration has abandoned a Trump-era lawsuit that sought to block California's net neutrality law. In a court filing today, the US Department of Justice said it "hereby gives notice of its voluntary dismissal of this case." Shortly after, the court announced that the case is "dismissed in its entirety" and "all pending motions in this action are denied as moot."

The case began when Trump's DOJ sued California in September 2018 in US District Court for the Eastern District of California, trying to block a state net neutrality law similar to the US net neutrality law repealed by the Ajit Pai-led FCC. Though Pai's FCC lost an attempt to impose a blanket, nationwide preemption of any state net neutrality law, the US government's lawsuit against the California law was moving forward in the final months of the Trump administration.

The Biden DOJ's voluntary dismissal of the case puts an end to that. "I am pleased that the Department of Justice has withdrawn this lawsuit," FCC Acting Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel said today. "When the FCC, over my objection, rolled back its net neutrality policies, states like California sought to fill the void with their own laws. By taking this step, Washington is listening to the American people, who overwhelmingly support an open Internet, and is charting a course to once again make net neutrality the law of the land."
The report notes that California still has to defend its net neutrality rules against a separate lawsuit filed by the major broadband-industry lobby groups. "The industry groups representing all the biggest ISPs and many smaller ones filed an amended complaint against California in August 2020, claiming the net neutrality law is 'unconstitutional state regulation,'" reports Ars.
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Biden DOJ Halts Trump Admin Lawsuit Against California Net Neutrality Rules

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  • If they mandate neutrality on a federal level, what happens to the telcos currently not counting/bundling all the streaming data traffic into the plans for free? HBO Max for AT&T? T-mobile for Netflix?

    • Zero rating will have to go away.

      Internet access should be treated the same way that water, gas, and electricity is. A regulated fee structure where you pay a 'connection fee' that covers maintenance for everything up to and including your meter, then a 'unit charge' for what you use.

      I'd gladly take that over a large fee that covers some amount of data then a usurious fee for overages. Where I am I get 550GB/month with the first 10GB over for $5 then $10 for every 10GB after that. Or you add another $15 o

      • Speak for yourself, I have no data caps, and I don't want any. You shouldn't have any either. Maybe throttling beyond a certain point but no caps and no pay-as-you-go.

        • Agreed... I could go with the cable company or the phone company for broad band but the latter has caps, so I stuck with the former.
      • Internet access should be treated the same way that water, gas, and electricity is. A regulated fee structure where you pay a 'connection fee' that covers maintenance for everything up to and including your meter, then a 'unit charge' for what you use.

        I'd gladly take that over a large fee that covers some amount of data then a usurious fee for overages. Where I am I get 550GB/month with the first 10GB over for $5 then $10 for every 10GB after that. Or you add another $15 on the monthly fee for unlimited data.

        I'd rather have a cheap ($10 month) connection fee and pay $0.03 per GB. The big benefit for a fixed connection fee and all usage metered is the desire to get you to use more metered data by increasing your connection speed. The way it is done now, there every reason for the ISP to slow your connection instead of speeding it up.

        That'd be fine if Internet service was anything like water, gas, or electricity. It's not. It costs ISPs exactly the same to run an always-on broadband connection with zero data traversing it or saturated data traversing it. But more to the point, a malicious actor can't force you to consume the maximum amount of water or gas or electricity that your service can provide for every hour of the day all month long, whereas a malicious actor CAN DDoS your Internet connection into oblivion. And you would get

    • by feedayeen ( 1322473 ) on Tuesday February 09, 2021 @04:44AM (#61043144)

      That's a clear case where a company is using their positions to hamstring competition. Lets say your electric company owned a lightbulb company too. They made a special bulb that can be plugged into an unmetered circuit in your house. It would not be very surprising if suddenly everyone bought those bulbs and the competition floundered. Short term, that's good for consumers, long term after the other competition is gone, maybe not.

      Social media and streaming systems have the same problems. If I can stream YouTube all day long for no extra cost, but Vimeo ate into my bandwidth and I can only stream it for say 10 hours before being charged, the little guy has no chance.

  • by raymorris ( 2726007 ) on Tuesday February 09, 2021 @02:01AM (#61042908) Journal

    Quoting TFS:

    "the US net neutrality law repealed by the Ajit Pai-led FCC"

    They STILL it's the job of commission to pass and repeal bills.
    Do schools not show "how a bill becomes a law" anymore?

    • Do schools not show "how a bill becomes a law" anymore?

      They don't. All we get nowadays are late night comedy shows riffing on it.

      Nobody shows the Disney short featuring Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck, and Goofy about how to drive on interstate highways, either. Disney created it in the late '50s when the interstate system was new. That one should also be required viewing.

  • What, that can't be right. Biden's admin did something that wasn't just woke nonsense?

    • Not at all! Net neutrality disproportionately benefits the poor and marginalised: anyone who isn't wealthy enough to own their own ISP will be rewarded, at the expense of those who do!

      You should know by now - there's always a "woke" angle. (And rarely is it a bad one.)

"The vast majority of successful major crimes against property are perpetrated by individuals abusing positions of trust." -- Lawrence Dalzell

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