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Is a neutral net within the power of the FCC?
Questioning
whether new FCC network neutrality rulemaking process produces a legally
supportable set of rules
'Net Insider By
Scott Bradner , Network World , 10/28/2009
A few weeks ago I wrote about the
then pending FCC notice of proposed rulemaking concerning rules for the Internet.
The FCC has now posted the proposed
rulemaking and there is little to immediately worry or cheer about.
In the last column I mentioned that
some politicians were trying to block rules even before they had seen what the
FCC did. One of those politicians is Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) who announced
on Oct. 22 that he was introducing the "Internet Freedom Act of
2009," which he said would keep the Internet free from government control
and regulation.
This appears to be one of those
bills whose titles would be considered to be a bit misleading - in this case
the freedom appears to be for ISPs, not Internet users. (I say
"appears" because I've not been able to find a copy of McCain's bill
on his Web site
or on Thomas, the U.S. government site
that publishes bills that have been introduced into Congress. Nor can Google or
Bing find a copy. This is in contrast to a new process at the FCC where the
proposed rulemaking was published on the same day it was approved. In the past
such publication could be months after approval.)
So, just what did the FCC say in its
proposed rulemaking? Not all that much. They postulated a set of draft rules
based on six principles and asked a bunch
of questions.
Four of the 6 principles are based
on the ones that the FCC
published in 2005. These are the principles that the FCC used to tell
Comcast to stop
messing with BitTorrent. These are also the principles that Comcast is
suing over -- claiming that these FCC principles are not actually legally
adopted rules. The fifth principle would require nondiscriminatory treatment of
content and the sixth would require that ISPs tell their customers what they
are doing that might impact the other principles. The assumption seems to be
that the result of this six-month long (or longer) process would be legally
adopted rules. But, even if the rules are legally adopted, there is an open
question as to their legality.
Regular readers of this column will
know that I do believe in the power and importance of a neutral net -- neutral
in the sense that an ISP cannot decide Internet winners and losers. Thus, I'm
generally in favor of the principle behind the principles. But, I do note that,
historically, government regulation tends to assume too much about how things
work technically and, because of that, tends to become an impediment as
technology changes. You do not have to look any further than the difficulty of
applying the FCC's own old telephone regulations to IP-based voice.
But the biggest issue with the FCC's
proposed rulemaking is its legal base. Section IV (B) explains why the FCC
assumes it has the authority to regulate the Internet but the FCC does ask for
comments on its assumption.
I expect they will get quite a few. I
am not a lawyer, especially one schooled in matters of federal regulatory
jurisdiction, but the view I've seen is far from unanimous that the FCC has the
authority.
I do think we may need some way to
ensure a neutral net beyond assuming that ISPs will always act in the best
interest of the Internet users. I'm not sure how to get here since, if there is
anything less likely to produce good results than the lobbying-heavy FCC
process it is the lobbying-driven congressional process.
Disclaimer: Harvard educates both
the lobbyists and the lobbied but has provided no opinion on this topic, so the
above pondering is my own.
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