FCC Revives Common Carriage for the Internet
After five years without net neutrality rules, the fix for a problem that doesn’t exist is back.

Until Monday, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) had been deadlocked for 2.5 years. It took President Joe Biden six months to nominate a third Democratic commissioner—and after moderate Democrats balked, it took another 17 for him to nominate someone else. The swearing-in of Anna Gomez gave Democrats a majority—two-thirds of the way into President Joe Biden's presidential term. With so much to cram into so little time, the next year will be the most frenzied in the FCC's nearly 100-year history.
The key issue is broadband regulation. It's been five years since the Republican FCC supposedly "killed net neutrality"—yet even after the pandemic's shift towards remote work, remote school, and remote everything broadband service is better than ever thanks to $2 trillion in private investment since 1996. That's by far the largest source of capital expenditures in the U.S., dwarfing public subsidies, even the generous grants included in pandemic stimulus bills.
On Thursday, the Commission released a draft proposal to bring back net neutrality rules by reinstating the 2015 Open Internet Order, a fix for a problem that doesn't exist. Expect the Commission to vote out the proposal for public comment at its next meeting on October 19.
As in 2015, the FCC promises not to impose rate regulation, build-out requirements, or other heavy-handed aspects of common carriage regulation—lest these sap private investment in broadband. But as in 2015, the FCC won't "forbear" from the core provisions of Title II of the Communications Act, which are essentially the same provisions imposed on railroads in the 1880s: regulators get broad discretion over what is "just and reasonable."
Despite promises of a "light touch," the FCC may also impose common carriage regulation upon broadband in another rulemaking. The Infrastructure Act of 2020 included $65 billion in spending on broadband (still less than the $86 billion private providers spent that year). Tucked into this massive spending bill was Section 60506, a provision requiring the FCC to write rules "to facilitate equal access to broadband internet access service…including preventing digital discrimination of access based on income level, race, ethnicity, color, religion, or national origin." Last year, the FCC proposed draft rules that would allow it to do exactly what it promised it wouldn't do in its 2015 Open Internet Order: impose build-out requirements, regulate rates, etc. The rules are due by the FCC's November 15 meeting.
Just as blocking and throttling lawful traffic wasn't a problem in 2015 (and still isn't today), there's no hard evidence of "digital discrimination." Yet breathless claims are made to justify prophylactic regulation in both contexts. Under the FCC's proposed rules, plaintiffs needn't prove any intentional discrimination. "Disparate impact" alone would suffice to make a claim, and broadband providers would bear the burden of proving a negative—of explaining why they didn't deploy service, or the same service, in some areas. That burden amounts to common carriage regulation, and it won't be easy to bear. Broadband service offerings vary geographically for a host of reasons, including natural impediments like bodies of water and topography; man-made impediments like highways and railroads; regulatory impediments like zoning issues, rights-of-way, and pole attachment problems; and economic realities like population density and the cost of wiring older buildings.
The FCC is likely to lose in both proceedings. In 2017, the D.C. Circuit upheld the FCC's reclassification of broadband service under Title II. Two Republican judges dissented, arguing that whether to treat broadband like railroads was a "major question" for Congress, not the FCC, to decide. One of those judges was Brett Kavanaugh. Six years later, the Supreme Court has embraced the "major questions" doctrine in a series of "cases in which the 'history and the breadth of the authority that [the agency] has asserted,' and the 'economic and political significance' of that assertion, provide a 'reason to hesitate before concluding that Congress' meant to confer such authority.'" Even President Barack Obamaʼs former solicitors general agree: Title II reclassification "will not survive a Supreme Court encounter with the major questions doctrine."
The FCC is on even weaker ground in the digital discrimination proceeding.
Congress "does not alter the fundamental details of a regulatory scheme in vague terms or ancillary provisions—it does not…hide elephants in mouseholes." If Congress had intended Section 60506 to transform broadband regulation, it would, at a minimum, have placed the provision inside the Communications Act—instead of leaving it a free-standing provision unconnected to the FCC's enforcement powers. Moreover, if Congress had intended the FCC to regulate broadband on the basis of disparate impact rather than intentional discrimination, it would have written a statute that looked more like civil rights laws the Supreme Court has recognized as creating disparate-impact liability; it would have clearly prohibited the denial of equal opportunities. Instead, Congress commanded the FCC only to "facilitate equal access"—which makes sense in a sprawling bill about infrastructure spending.
These are just two of likely dozens of items the FCC will rush to get done in the 16 monthly meetings that remain before the end of Biden's term. But they will dwarf the others in importance. Biden's dithering over his FCC nominee has created a real, but manageable, time crunch. If Republicans sweep the White House, House, and Senate in 2024, they'll likely do in January 2025 what they did in January 2021: use the Congressional Review Act to reverse rulemakings they don't like and bar the reissuance of any "substantially" similar rule without congressional approval. A prompt Congressional Review Act resolution could reach back, at most, to late August 2024. Thus, the FCC has slightly less than 11 months to finalize the Title II rulemaking and anything else controversial.
All of this puts FCC Chair Jessica Rosenworcel in a painful position. She's under enormous pressure to do things that probably won't stand up in court—and quickly. With progressives still convinced the open internet is somehow in peril—despite all evidence to the contrary—there's no chance Rosenworcel will back down from Title II reclassification.
At a minimum, she shouldn't rush the proceeding. In 2014, she had the courage to break with then-FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler on his rush to vote on draft neutrality rules. "Before proceeding," she said, joining Republican Ajit Pai, "I would have taken the time to understand the future" and "taken time for more input." Wheeler allowed the public just two months to file comments on what turned out to be, by far, the most commented-upon rulemaking in FCC history. Ultimately, he relented, allowing three months—plus another month for reply comments. Allowing the same window for comment now would protect Rosenworcel from charges of hypocrisy and set a precedent for good government.
It would also be the smart move. If the FCC has any chance of persuading increasingly skeptical courts that broadband reclassification isn't a "major question," it'll need all the help it can get.
Most helpful will be the back-and-forth on legal questions in reply comments. Allowing an extra month for those would help the FCC's allies help the agency. If, say, the FCC allowed three (or even two) months for comments plus two for reply comments, the final deadline would be around April 1 (or March 1), 2024. The agency would still have nearly five (or six) months to finish its final order—plenty of time to read and respond to comments—before late August.
On digital discrimination, all eyes will be on Gomez. She has more experience at the FCC and practicing communications law than any FCC commissioner in decades. She may well recognize how fundamentally Section 60506 differs from civil rights laws that the courts have interpreted to create liability for disparate impact rather than disparate treatment (discriminatory intent). As the first Latina commissioner in decades, she may also have the political capital to resist pressure from civil rights groups—especially if Commissioner Geoffrey Starks, an African-American, joins her. Approaching the end of a distinguished career, she may just care less about the politics of what the FCC does.
But if Gomez isn't quite ready to take a bold stance, there is a third option: the FCC could issue disparate-treatment rules at the November 15 meeting, as required by Section 60506, but punt on the question of disparate impact by splitting the proceeding with a further notice of proposed rulemaking on the legal questions of how to interpret the statute. As with Title II, the FCC would still have time to finalize whatever rules it writes by August.
Until now, Rosenworcel hasn't had a majority for any controversial item. In a very real sense, her chairmanship begins this week—and it will be defined principally by these two rulemakings and how she administers them.
If she's learned the right lessons from her 11 years on the FCC, she won't treat the public comment process as an inconvenience to be rushed through as quickly as possible. Moreover, she won't treat her fellow commissioners the way Tom Wheeler treated her and then-Commissioner Mignon Clyburn: as foot soldiers to be bullied when they dare to express an independent thought. And maybe, just maybe, Rosenworcel will think twice about when the FCC should defer to Congress.
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More likely, they'll fuck up the fucking up.
Never underestimate their ability to do exactly that.
Who could have seen this coming? I mean, it's not like the Democrats had a webpage for everyone to read their unicorn fart wish list of things they would do if given power.
If Congress shall make no law regarding the freedom of speech, nor of the press, from where did they get the power to create a Federal Communications Commission?
Well, originally, they couldn't. But originally the states could.
Then the doctrine of incorporation made a mess out of this by applying the 1A to both the federal government and the states.
But as it turns out, some government laws related to speech are needed. Since the 1A now applied to both states and the federal government, the only option was to weaken the 1A, and SCOTUS ruled that "reasonable time, manner, and place restrictions" are permissible.
So, there you have it: a series of bad decisions building on each other, each trying to fix the problems created by the previous decision.
Well technically, the FCC is supposed to regulate communications mediums, not speech.
American Comstockist nationalsocialism rammed home under color of Reconstruction inspired European totalitarians to replace rotting monarchies with christiano-fascism. Prohibitionism led to Radio Priest propaganda, convenient wars, comunism, hence emergencies, hence emergency powers, censorship, and the FCC. While Washington fiddles and stamps out criticism, communist altruism is amassing enough nuclear weapons to rid everyone forever of the FCC and Nixon-subsidized entrenched Kleptocracy. It's darkly karmic to behold.
The Postal Monopoly served as an agency of censorship to ban "disloyal" material by making it unmailable. Disloyal was a package-deal slur combining low-tariff, proslavery and Confederate, but the thing also banned "obscene"--to the delight of the New York Society for the Suppression of Vice--and all mention of the very existence of birth control. Comstockist reformers were disparaged by Tammany Hall Democrats as "reform" candidates. Before long, interracial French postcards gave pretext for censorship in faraway Shanghai to "protect white women" from epicanthian folded peepers.
Allocating wireless spectrum and interstate commerce comes to mind.
Where do they find these people that write this kind of garbage? This single sentence is one of the worst cases of straw man nonsense ever written as it mixes something that happened 3 years ago (the pandemic) with something that happened over the course of 27 years (investment):
"It's been five years since the Republican FCC supposedly 'killed net neutrality'—yet even after the pandemic's shift towards remote work, remote school, and remote everything broadband service is better than ever thanks to $2 trillion in private investment since 1996."
It made sense to me. The pandemic resulted in much more load being put on the broadband infrastructure, which it was able to bear while still providing better and better service thanks to 27 years of private investment.
Made sense to me, you could just be honest and say you're in favor of more regulations.
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Internet is going to end up regulated as a utility and shitty telecom companies in the US will only have themselves to blame.
Ah yes... the Whispering Wires case, where Republican Supreme Court prohibitionists drooled and ruled that the purpose of telephone monopolies was precisely to let the federal prohibition Gestapo listen in on conversations about Beelzebub's beer. So armed with "probable" cause, hatchet-wielding Kristallnacht and asset forfeiture goons made America a police state while Germany's version of the Klan sizzled with envy. So now that Orwell's pigs have no-knock searches and qualified immunity for summary SWAT executions, why even pretend to have uncensored, untapped media or communications?
So Reason is for government intervention in the Internet (Section 230) except when it isn't (common carrier). Got it!
Is the First Amendment... Or the entire Bill of Rights... Also "government intervention"? How about democracy itself? The provision that "the people" should get a VOICE in what Government Almighty does (or at least, who makes it up), is this, too, "government intervention"? Only un-elected right-wing DICKTATORSHIT is NOT "government intervention", do I have it right, right-wing wrong-nut?
Wrong. "the people" have a written LAW over their government almighty about what they can and cannot do to begin with.
Well yes, we do! Now we need to actually RUN Government Almighty that way! And Section 230 IS one of those rare gems, where Government Almighty limits its own powers!
You did acknowledge it. 'Bill of Rights'. I missed that in all that 'democracy' talk.
Telecommunications Act of 1996 containing Section 230 was written by Larry Pressler[R]. With a 16[D]:2[R] against vote so I'm not sure where you get off doing any right-wing bashing there? Is your tribalism showing?
Noy-Boy Toy-Boy was bashing S-230, ass many "Team R" folks around here do... So I was speaking up for S-230, and OTHER (Bill of Rights etc.) provisions where Government Almighty has willfully made itself LESS Almighty! It is a BLESSED thing when THAT happens, regardless of which "Teams" were for and against!
Never forget that God's gift to Germany, Adolf Hitler, limited his own powers in April 1945 in a partly spontaneous reversal of the Enabling Act.
Good one! Unlike Marxist Mammary-Necrophilia-Farter-Fuhrer and others on these pages, I am NOT a fan of suicide! I have, however, found it of some interest, to see just HOW many "top NAZIs" ended up doing this dirty deed! ... Now, I haven't suffered never-ending pain, while Government Almighty PUNISHES doctors who DARE to prescribe pain killers for me... I have not walked in these shoes... So I'm not talking about THAT. But NAZIs punching their own tickets? Some sort of ??? sad cosmic self-retribution, and I do not WANT to understand it any better! Wiki had some shit about it, lemme see here... NAZI leadershit suicides... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_suicides_in_Nazi_Germany
Adolf's 25 Points came out in 1920, before pointy Klan hoods marched up and down DC; before the Texas State Fairgrounds swarmed with 50000 klan hoods in 1923. But after beer banning Crashes turned These States into Hooverville hovels, mystical conservatives deflected their boiling wrath from beer and blacks to jews, blacks and furriners. The Hun suddenly became God's chosen and Herbert Hoover's "new race" blamed FDR for its own hand in increasing communism in 1920 and after 1920. History rhymes.
Shut up, SQRLSY, you're a drunk fascist pretending to be a libertarian.
Twat, the TRUE libertarians lust after sucking Orange-Man-Bad Orange Dick, in hopes of getting "sloppy 3,569ths" access to Spermy Daniels? ... Give it UP! Shit is NOT gonna work! For Our Donald is a JEALOUS Donald!!! He will SNOT share!
There shouldnt even BE an FCC
You couldn't find an enumerated power for regulating communication? Maybe it's in the 1st Amendment.
Yeah. I think it says something along the lines of, "Congress shall pass law restricting the right to freedom of speech, freedom of the press, and freedom of religion."
It might have had some slight differences, but I'm pretty sure that's roughly what it says.
FCC: One of FDR’s many “New Deal” [Na]tional So[zi]alist agencies.
Why it's almost like ever since SCOTUS told the Nazi's to stop censoring they've been throwing spaghetti at every wall in sight to see what will stick.
National Socialist Comstockism still censored all print, radio and teevee into the noughts. DVDs were country-coded so Americans could not witness the heroin and cocaine scenes in Vertov's Soviet "Man with a Movie Camera." The beer scenes were shocking enough to Republican censors in 1929! Digital media make it impossible for looters of both stripes to be certain all DMT recipes have been burned like so many Beatles albums. So it is no surprise to see Plessy v Ferguson efforts to use "separate but equal" monotheism to protect "us" from the shocking opinions of libertarian riffraff.
Net neutrality doctrine was never supposed to address providing “equal access” considering “disparate imact” of connectivity. It was to prevent providers from spying on user traffic. (Can a toll road decide what cars are street legal?)
Dumb question. Can a theme park create a dress code? Or decide what you're allowed to bring in? Or restrict what you can say?
The answer is, "Of course!" There isn't much competition in the realm of broadband (cellular and satellite are much more expensive and slower), but there's still enough that people can say what they want online.
Using Old Abe’s sage advice that the best way to get rid of a bad law is to enforce it strictly, we’ve all been very remiss with regards to the doctrine of “disparate impact”.
How lazy of us to apply it only to those few categories identified here by the FCC! The fields are ripe for harvesting claims of discrimination.
I, for one, feel very discriminated against because my home Internet provider only gives me 33.25 Mpbs down and 21.41 Mbps up when clearly my neighbor has more. I peek through his windows at night and see Netflix running in HD mode in every bedroom! That is so unjust.