Verizon’s lawsuit against earlier net neutrality rules is about to backfire in a spectacular fashion. The Wall Street Journal reports
that the Federal Communications Commission will propose new net
neutrality rules that will reclassify ISPs under Title II of the
Telecommunications Act and thus open them up to being regulated more
like utilities.
“According
to multiple people familiar with the agency’s plan, Mr. Wheeler intends
to change the way both mobile and fixed broadband firms are regulated,”
the Journal writes. “Rather than being lightly regulated information
services, they would become like telecommunications companies, which
would subject them to greater regulation on everything from pricing to
how they deploy their networks.”
This
would give the FCC the power to stop ISPs from blocking traffic from
services that rival their own and from setting up paid prioritization
schemes where they would charge money to Internet companies to ensure
that their traffic got delivered faster than other companies who don’t
pay up.
This sort of regulation is vigorously opposed by most ISPs, of course — AT&T has already penned a long missive arguing why Title II reclassification would be a supposedly ruinous move by the FCC.
That
said, you can’t help but wonder if any of this would have happened had
Verizon decided against suing the FCC over its original net neutrality
regulations that were widely seen as a compromise that ISPs could live
with. Verizon took a risk that the FCC would simply sit on its hands
after getting beaten once in court but now that gamble seems to have
failed in a huge way.
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