Two pivotal developments this week could dramatically expand the power and footprint of major telecom companies, altering how Americans access everything from political news to Game of Thrones on the Internet.
Today marks the official end of the U.S. governmentโs net neutrality rules, which had required broadband providers such as AT&T, Charter and Verizon to treat all Web traffic equally. The repeal is part of a campaign by Ajit Pai, the Republican chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, to deregulate the telecom industry in a bid to boost its investments โ particularly in rural areas.
โI think ultimately itโs going to mean better, faster, cheaper Internet access and more competition,โ Pai said in an interview. Others disagree and will challenge Pai in court, while many states are fighting back with their own laws, further muddling the situation.
One day after the net neutrality changes, a federal judge is set to rule on Tuesday on whether AT&T can buy Time Warner. AT&T, already the countryโs second-largest wireless network, stands to gain a content trove from Time Warner that includes HBO and CNN โ leading the Justice Department, which filed the lawsuit, to argue that the company could harm its rivals.
The two events in Washington could lead to further consolidation of wireless, cable and content giants, public-interest advocates say. And they fear that behemoths like AT&T might someday prioritize their own TV shows and other content over rivalsโ. Internet service providers, or ISPs, deny that they would engage in such a practice โ yet consumer watchdogs worry that consumers would have little legal recourse if they did.
โI think this could be a one-two punch to consumers and online competition,โ said Gene Kimmelman, the president of Public Knowledge, a Washington, D.C.-based public interest group. โThe combination of no net neutrality and video consolidation creates new bottlenecks that empower the traditional media industry to raise prices and limit online competition.โ
But Pai, who has visited 26 states and two territories, said he heard a different message from consumers as the governmentโs net neutrality rules expire. His trips to places such Dahlonega, Ga., a city of roughly 6,500, illustrated that Americans feel they are โon the wrong side of the digital divideโ and lack broadband options, he said in an interview in his eighth-floor office at the commission. โThey are not concerned that Internet service providers are going to block access to lawful content.โ
The expiring net neutrality protections, adopted at the FCC under President Barack Obama in 2015, for years prevented the likes of AT&T and Comcast from slowing Web connections, blocking access to sites and services, or charging content companies for faster delivery of streaming movies or videos. Such arrangements, known as online โfast lanesโ in the eyes of critics, threatened hefty tolls that only the largest businesses could afford to pay, net neutrality advocates warned.
Beginning today, however, the U.S. government no longer explicitly prohibits those practices. Internet service providers are required only to publish information about how they manage their networks. Violations of their promises โ or behaviors that threaten competition or consumers โ now fall under the watch of the Federal Trade Commission, not the telecom-focused FCC.
When they adopted their repeal in December, Pai and his GOP allies argued that it would spare telecom giants from heavy-handed regulations that could crimp investments in broadband expansion. Democrats quickly charged that Pai had ignored roughly 22 million comments that flooded the agency as part of its official deliberations. Many of the commenters urged the FCC to preserve the governmentโs net neutrality protections, which had treated ISPs similar to utilities.
Pai said โmisinformationโ was behind some of the visceral online reaction he faced. โSome of the politicians whoโve been grandstanding on this issue have been misinforming the public,โ the chairman said, pointing to Senate Democrats who tweeted for months that an end to net neutrality would cripple Web speeds.
For now, companies like AT&T, Comcast and Verizon have said they would not block or throttle Web access or charge more for faster delivery of online content.
โWeโre all going to wake up on Monday, and weโre all going to be able to stream cool shows off Netflix or Hulu or YouTube,โ pledged Jonathan Spalter, the leader of USTelecom, a trade group for the telecom industry. Broadband providers, he said in an interview, had been โunfairly and inappropriately the target of this angst or fear.โ
Pai also stressed that the FTC โ the agency now in charge of policing whether telecoms abuse their power โ is โgoing to be a powerful tool for weeding out any anti-competitive conduct.โ
Some of the staunchest advocates of net neutrality protections insist the telecom industryโs commitments to not block or charge more for the delivery of some content are insufficient, while the FTC lacks the expertise and authority to hold them to account.
โI donโt believe them when they say theyโre not going to do anything and theyโre going to honor net neutrality,โ Rep. Frank Pallone, N.J., a Democrat on the House Energy and Commerce Committee, said in an interview. โThat may be true next week, but over time I suspect they will start violating.โ
Some neutrality advocates โ with the backing of about two dozen state attorneys general โ areshifting their attention to federal court, which is soon to hear challenges claiming that Pai acted arbitrarily in overturning the Obama-era rules. The case could โkeep ISPs honest, so to speak, so they wouldnโt make drastic changes on day oneโ after the repeal, said Michael Beckerman, the president of the Internet Association, which represents tech giants like Facebook and Google and is participating in a lawsuit.
A more urgent battle is brewing in several states, which are passing their versions of net neutrality rules in defiance of the federal repeal. Oregon, Vermont and Washington state have adopted open-Internet laws, while governors in an additional six states have sought to address the matter through executive orders.
In California, lawmakers hope a proposal making its way through the legislature could force the U.S. Congress to settle the issue with a long-elusive federal standard.
โIf that puts upward pressure on the federal government to enact robust net neutrality rules, then thatโs a good thing,โ said Scott Wiener, a Democratic state senator and the billโs chief author.
In response to the state action, USTelecom is โexploring legal action,โ said Spalter, citing the FCCโs order explicitly preempting states from acting on net neutrality.
At the FCC, Pai said the agency is โkeeping all options on the table.โ
โIโm confident that our decision is the one that best vindicates consumers concerns going forward, and protects them in the Internet economy that we have, and promotes a stronger economy for them going forward,โ he said.
A few blocks away from the FCC, another legal battle is crescendoing: the Justice Departmentโs war with AT&T over its $85 billion bid to buy Time Warner, announced in October 2016.
DOJ lawyers have argued that AT&Tโs deal would lead to higher prices for consumers, especially if the combined company withheld popular channels, like CNN or TNT, until other cable providers paid higher rates to carry them. In response, AT&T has labored to poke holes in the governmentโs economic analysis. Company attorneys also said during trial that AT&T has an incentive to ensure those channels are carried widely. No matter the outcome of the AT&T case, meanwhile, either side could appeal.
AT&T declined to comment on net neutrality or the lawsuit.
The verdict on the merger could have broad significance. Siding with AT&T might clear the way for more consolidation, while siding with the government could cause telecom giants to think twice about buying companies in new lines of business. Even now, federal policymakers have a full dossier of proposed megamergers to review, including the combination of wireless carriers Sprint and T-Mobile.
โIt is a period of profound change,โ said Democratic Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel, one of Paiโs chief critics, โand we are also watching a lot of the big get even bigger.โ
But Republicans at the FCC maintain that existing law is sufficient to guard against misbehavior, even as telecom companies gobble one another up.
โOne of the concerns I see animating the AT&T case … is this putting together of distribution and content,โ Republican FCC Commissioner Brendan Carr said in an interview. โBut what I can tell you is, if an ISP reaches an agreement to act in a non-neutral way by blocking, throttling or discriminating against traffic, or anti-competitively affiliating its content above another business, thatโs a per se violationโ of antitrust laws.
