Verizon Now Pleads For Bogus Net Neutrality Rules Under 706 Promising It Won't Sue This Time, Ignoring That Others Will Sue

from the nice-try dept

If the FCC reclassifies Internet access as a Title II service, the hyper-regulatory group will be happy, but may sue anyway if the FCC forbears from too many arcane common carrier rules for their taste (and to keep their fund raising pipeline flowing). As well, the ISPs, and perhaps some in the tech industry, will have no choice but to fight the sudden reversal of two decades of settled law. By departing from the judicially sanctioned Section 706 approach, the FCC will have increased both the likelihood – and the likelihood of success – of any legal challenge.

Recently we’ve heard press reports that the FCC might embrace a “hybrid” model – one that splits Internet access apart (at least in metaphysical terms), and reclassifies the content-provider portion as a Title II service, but bases customer-facing rules on section 706. Both the utility regulation crowd and the ISPs have pushed back hard on this approach. Here the FCC has opened itself to credible challenges by all parties. Again, by departing from the safe harbor of Section 706, the FCC will face strong challenges on the partial move to Title II from those investing in networks. And because the FCC will have to describe why the partial move was necessary, it will open itself to challenge by the utility regulation camp about why a wholesale move to Title II wasn’t equally necessary. Like a full move to Title II, the hybrid approach also fairly guarantees litigation.

Finally, there is the original section 706-based proposal. In this instance all of the major ISPs and their trade associations have conceded that the FCC can lawfully prohibit harmful paid prioritization on this basis – effectively waiving their ability to challenge the FCC’s authority to do so and taking them out of the litigation path. For their part, the utility regulation camp cannot appeal an FCC decision to rely on 706 as a basis for prohibiting paid prioritization without arguing that those rules are invalid, which they would be loath to do. Their only possible appeal is to argue that the FCC should have regulated even more heavily, and reclassified under Title II to impose legacy common carrier regulations. The Title II advocates will have a very hard time finding a solid basis on which to challenge what they believe is the “under regulation” of this route: the statutory basis is already blessed, and the record will likely support the regulations proposed.

In addition to recognizing that asymmetrical application of open Internet rules to only broadband ISPs would be bad policy, it would also be an arbitrary and capricious application of the Commission’s authority since the record soundly shows that ISPs are not the only Internet actors capable of undermining the goals of the proposed open Internet rules. In its comments, ACA argued that not only would failure to apply open Internet rules on all Internet actors that have the ability to block or degrade fail to achieve the primary open Internet goals of the Commission, but asymmetric regulation that constrain the business behavior of a single class of platform providers (i.e., fixed broadband ISPs that are also MVPDs) would distort market incentives....



[....]



Should the Commission adopt new open Internet rules on ISPs as part of this proceeding, the Commission must broaden the scope of its rules to apply equally to all forms of Internet blocking and degradation that interfere with the virtuous circle of innovation, consumer demand, investment and broadband deployment that it is charged to protect, or else it severely risks reversal in the courts. The prolonged uncertainty such a situation would create would do no one – not edge providers, nor access providers nor consumers – any good.

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One of the points that we've made a few times concerning the whole net neutrality fight is that whatever rules are put in place, someone is going to sue. As we noted in that post, Verizon's original filing on the net neutrality plan the FCC announced back in May (based on Section 706)that Verizon would sue over those rules if they were put in place (in contrast to Comcast and AT&T who both said they'd be fine with rules under 706). Since then, it's become clear that lots of other ISPs have made it clear to Verizon that it should shut up and sit tight , because its own lawsuit that kicked out the 2010 rules now seem likely to lead to much stricter laws.So it's fairly amusing to see Verizon put out a blog post effectively now pleading for the May rules under 706 -- rules that it didn't initially support -- now that it's come out that the FCC is considering this new "hybrid plan." Suddenly, according to Verizon, rules under 706 are unassailable and won't lead to a lawsuit, while everything else will. First, Verizon attacks the full Title II plan, insisting that ISPs will "have no choice" but to sue, and even that consumer groups would sue if the FCC forbears too much:I've seen no indication that anyone on the consumer advocacy side of things would sue if the FCC forbears too much -- in fact, most of the proposals ask for forbearance from nearly all Title II requirements, leaving just a few in place. But, yes, everyone knows that Verizon and others would sue over Title II rules.And, of course, if the hybrid plan is put in place, folks from both sides may sue:But... Verizon insists, suddenly the original proposal under 706 that Verizon itself didn't initially want -- well, that won't lead to litigation in Verizon's fantasy world:Of course, this ignores the fact that the 2010 rules were under Section 706, and Verizon. Yes, these new rules try to take into account the specifics of the court's ruling, but still. Section 706 rules can and do lead to lawsuits. In fact... while Verizon would like to pretend everyone would be happy with rules under Section 706, that's clearly not true. The American Cable Association (ACA), in its filing to the FCC (pdf), made it fairly clear that its members would, in fact, sue over the use of Section 706(as is expected) the FCC makes it clear that the rules only apply to internetproviders and not online service providers (i.e., Netflix, YouTube, etc.):This is the poison pill effort that some broadband providers were trying early on with net neutrality rules, basically telling the FCC if it's going to put any kind of rules on internet access providers (who often do represent a monopoly/duopoly situation), they mustsaddle the same rules on internet companies, despite the situation being entirely different. The goal here was to try to scare internet companies into supporting the broadband players' position, but it also shows the thinking of these ISPs and the fact that the basic rules under 706 are almost certainly going to lead to litigation too, contrary to Verizon's new attitude that rules under 706 are universally loved and adored by all.So, again, key point: no matter what rules the FCC puts in place,. Given that, the argument that the FCC should choose plan A, B or C based on a lawsuitstrategy makes little to no sense. Therea lawsuit from. You can make reasonable arguments that one or another legal position may be more defensible, but in talking to a lot of different people on all sides of this debate, I'm fairly convinced thathas a legitimate idea of which plans are more defensible than others. They can all make credible arguments thatof the three plans will win in the courts or lose in the courts. I've seen convincing arguments that the 706 plan can survive the courts, the hybrid plan can survive the courts and the Title II plan can survive the courts. Similarly, I've seen credible arguments that all three would fail in court.Given all that, if the plan is going to get challenged no matter what, and there will be the dreaded "years of uncertainty" no matter what --to accomplish what the FCC is trying to do?

Filed Under: fcc, litigation, net neutrality, open internet, rules, section 706, title ii

Companies: american cable association, verizon