Biden’s New Net Neutrality Rules Don’t Prevent Anti-Competitive “Fast Lanes”

from the half-assery dept

One of the key reasons the net neutrality fight even became a thing was widespread concern that big ISPs would abuse their power to behave anti-competitively, picking winners and losers across the internet ecosystem, and nickel-and-diming consumers in a variety of obnoxiously creative ways.

Verizon, for example, charges you extra if you want 4K video to work properly. T-Mobile spent years letting some key partners and services (namely large companies) bypass usage caps and network throttling restrictions. It’s not complicated: these kinds of gatekeeper decisions give historically unpopular telecoms power they shouldn’t have under the principle of an open, competitive internet.

We’ve noted how the Biden FCC will vote on April 25 to restore popular net neutrality rules stripped away during the Trump administration. Though we’ve also indicated there are some concerns among experts that the rules may wind up being weaker than the original 2015 edition.

Stanford law professor and net neutrality expert Barbara van Schewick has written a blog post noting that while the Rosenworcel FCC has shored up some concerns on this front (the FCC’s rules won’t “pre-empt” tougher California rules, for example), there’s still room for concern. Most notably surrounding the new rules’ treatment of so-called “fast lanes”:

“There’s a huge problem: the proposed rules make it possible for mobile ISPs to start picking applications and putting them in a fast lane – where they’ll perform better generally and much better if the network gets congested.”

Wireless carriers have made it clear that they plan to use “network slicing” to create 5G fast lanes for certain apps such as video conferencing, games, and video. The FCC’s new net neutrality rules allows such behavior, providing the service or app isn’t charged for them. So they can’t, say, extort a company into paying more if it wants its service or app to see baseline performance, which is good.

But the rules still allow ISPs to charge consumers all manner of fees if they want the most popular apps and services to work their best. And van Schewick notes, the rules still allow big ISPs to determine which companies and services get priority. That inherently creates a system whereby less popular and successful apps and services (as well as academia-related services and nonprofits) are relegated to second-class network status, putting them at competitive and performance disadvantage:

“And as we’ve seen in the past, programs like this favor the most popular apps, even when the program is supposedly open to all apps in a category and no apps are paying the ISP. So the biggest apps will end up in all the fast lanes, while most others would be left out. The ones left out would likely include messaging apps like Signal, local news sites, decentralized Fediverse apps like Mastodon and PeerTube, niche video sites like Dropout, indie music sites like Bandcamp, and the millions of other sites and apps in the long tail.”

van Schewick provides some potential illustrative examples, several of which already exist in various forms:

So again, the problem is that big and influential services or games like Disney or ESPN will see network priority during periods of 5G wireless network congestion. While smaller competitors, nonprofits, and others get relegated into a sea of “best effort” network scenarios.

van Schewick notes the original Obama-era 2014 proposal restricted this stuff. As did, in her legal opinion, the 2015 final rules. Even the half-assed proposals floated by Republicans at various points prohibited ISPs from speeding up different apps and services arbitrarily. But she notes these new 2024 rules include an obvious silence on this front that seems clearly lobbied for by industry:

“The no-throttling rule that the FCC proposed in October explicitly prohibited ISPs from slowing down apps and classes of apps; it was silent on whether the rule also applies to speeding up. “

The original Rosenworcel FCC proposal unveiled last October didn’t include those restrictions, so public interest groupsstartups, and members of Congress all reached out asking why. April came, and the FCC’s draft net neutrality order still didn’t restrict the speeding up of specific apps and services, outside to say it would address so-called “fast lane” issues on a “case by case basis.”

Opponents of net neutrality like to pretend that the rules are a “solution in search of a problem,” but industry has made it extremely clear that this kind of fractured internet, which consumers face ever-escalating nickel-and-diming, and the most popular apps and services get network priority over everybody else, is precisely the sort of future they have in mind.

Like any publicly-traded company, telecoms are obligated to shareholders to boost quarterly revenues at any cost. In telecom this routinely comes in the form of direct price hikes, cuts to service quality and broadband deployment, or substandard customer service. But it also increasingly comes in the forms of obnoxious monetization efforts that create entirely new obstacles you’re then charged extra to overcome; efforts you can’t avoid because you either have no competing broadband alternatives to flee too (market failure) or all of the competitors on offer are engaging in the same bad behavior (regulatory capture).

FCC bureaucrats have generally prioritized “not stifling innovation” (as if telecom giants have meaningfully innovated any time in the last quarter century) over protecting markets and consumers, and there’s evidence that kind of thinking is once again at play. I’d suspect, quite intentionally, none of this will be addressed by the time the final net neutrality rules are voted on at the FCC’s April 25th meeting.

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Comments on “Biden’s New Net Neutrality Rules Don’t Prevent Anti-Competitive “Fast Lanes””

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This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.

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Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re:

he’s just as bad as the other side

Just yesterday, the “other side” celebrated the defeat of an attempt to repeal a nearly two-centuries-old anti-abortion law in Arizona that has no exceptions for rape or incest (which effectively allows a rapist to choose the mother of his child). Like, we have the video evidence, so nobody can deny it⁠—especially during election season.

One member of the “other side” has openly suggested, via his Twitter account, that pro-Palestinian protestors should be physically assaulted. He even tweeted a video of protestors being violently dragged away from where they were staging their protest as an example of what should be done. And even though he didn’t explicitly endorse the idea, he didn’t condemn the idea of using lethal violence (e.g., running over a protestor in a car) to stop disruptive protests.

The “other side” has a long and well-recorded history of being racist, sexist, homophobic, transphobic, and deferential to a single religious creed to the exclusion/mistreatment of all others.

I don’t like Joe Biden. He’s a middling centrist needledick and I wish the Dems would stop acting like him, in that they still act like “bipartisanship” and “compromise” that gives “the other side” more of what it wants will somehow mollify “the other side” enough to get them on board with more progressive ideas. He’s been a decent enough placeholder president to help the country get back on its feet after the pandemic, and that’s it. But I’m not going to sit here and argue that Democrats (including Biden) and “the other side” are the exact same when “the other side” is inching the country ever closer to authoritarian rule by a bunch of religious freaks who want to control everyone’s bodies and minds.

Yes, politicians in general suck. Yes, Democrats in particular suck in their own way. No, “both sides” are not equally as bad⁠—because I don’t remember Biden celebrating the downfall of Roe v. Wade, calling for book bans of any kind of book with pro-LGBTQ content, and trying to shove religion into public schools. When he does anything even remotely as authoritarian as “the other side” is doing (that doesn’t involve military action in a foreign nation-state), you let me know. Until then: Democrats don’t have anything like Project 2025 in their back pocket, so maybe stop saying “both sides are equally bad” when “the other side” has a plan to effectively turn the president into a king.

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Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

my high priority is internet privacy and when that’s being run over by the “lesser evil” why the hell should I shut up and say nothing of their complicity?

Nowhere did I suggest that anyone should be quiet about that issue. Rag on Biden and the Dems all the live-long day over it; they deserve that much. My screed is more about the idea that “both sides are the same” is some deflective bullshit meant to smokescreen the authoritarian intentions of Republicans by suggesting that Democrats want to be just as authoritarian.

ECA (profile) says:

Re: WHY

Do you think the Gov. Should be Stomping on the Capitalist Society, YOU created? And When do you think this ALL started?
The Corps have been doing So much of this crap over the years, that its all adding up to NOW.

The Price of Food, it is said, Corps can ship to other nations and get MORE MONEY then they do here(I would hate to be that other country) And WHy Prices are HIGH in this nation. But I would think its a Feedback loop CREATED by the corps, to feed on itself. Because over there, they say they CHARGE MORE, because its to HIGH over here.

Aint you seen the posts here, about the Corps paying the states to make regulations to restrict WHO can work in the states?
Considering the Cable/Phone system involved, its Funny that only 1-2 corps get ANY access in most states, Control prices, dont compete with each other, Have not replaced Any phone poles in 20-40 years unless they BROKE, replaced Any Wiring UNLESS it failed. And Sit on their But’s collecting the Charges.

They might as well be a Church.

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Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

I also check out when people say mean words.

Granted, research has shown that people who swear more also tend to be more honest. It also tends to be a pretty solid indicator of passion. And as a general rule, actual leftists tend to be better read in history and politics than liberals.

But yeah. Faux offense at dirty words is a really convenient, if bad-faith way to dismiss criticism.

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Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

I’m “grown up” enough to see none of the issues I had with the trump or obama terms be resolved whatsoever under biden. Hell he’s even more open about how much he doesn’t give a shit about our rights (unless it’s abortion since that’s all anyone seems to give a major damn about).

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

Disinformation isn’t a problem

“But, even more to the point, this whole idea is based on the false belief that people are simply sheep that are easily brainwashed by an algorithm and the content they see. And… that’s not true. Human beings are not puppets. Yes, content can have some level of influence on the margins, but there’s little to no evidence supporting the idea that the internet, as a whole, is a vast brainwashing machine.”
https://www.techdirt.com/2024/04/18/no-tiktok-is-not-programmable-fentanyl-stop-it/

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Disinformation isn’t a problem

Yes it is a problem.

Some people think the earth is flat, that is a problem for them and everyone else. Some people think that space lasers are being used to start forest fires, that is a problem for them and everyone else.

Some people claim lying is a-ok, that is a problem for everyone. There are all sorts of lies, some are a problem while others not so much.

For those who claim to be religious and thump their bibles, bearing false witness is supposed to put you on the path to your self created hell.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

On a modern smartphone, “calling” is an app. I don’t mean that as some minor technicality; I mean one is executing a program on one’s hand-held computer, which accesses the speaker and microphone and sends voice data via Internet Protocol.

It’s really not much different from Zoom and such. If the telcos don’t specifically exempt or prioritize “calls” on their IP network, they’ll be subject to all this bullshit. I believe there are regulatory mandates, at least, that require priority for emergency calls.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

Yes, few of them, because in case of emergency, people panic and naturally use the tools they know better, just giving the precise location using words is beyond what most people can do since GPS/maps apps.
I’m not saying that it wouldn’t fix anything if emergency services can have any higher priority than social services but searching for first aid recommendations in the web when waiting can also save lives.

T.L. (profile) says:

I read on PoliticusUSA that as part of the foreign aid package being voted on Saturday, the House is planning to put in the Protecting Americans from Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act (the TikTok divest or ban bill that already passed the chamber in March) into the package. So, just like with the bill’s original passage, they’re basically trying to make sure that it gets codified by Congress and not let the Senate mull over it.

Basically, they want to make this constitutionally problematic bill law by using the foreign aid process to advance it, waste tax dollars on another lawsuit over a likely unconstitutional TikTok/internet bill that may also allow the government to block other popular foreign-owned apps (Shein, AliExpress, Temu, etc.) and give the executive branch authority it shouldn’t have regarding what people can access online, incentivize autocratic governments and backsliding democracies to undermine internet freedom, and risk angering young voters and possibly help Trump win in November based on disillusionment over the government ignoring their legislative concerns (on top of Gaza, the economy and the environment/climate change).

Anonymous Coward says:

Like any publicly-traded company, telecoms are obligated to shareholders to boost quarterly revenues at any cost.

That is almost the exact opposite of what corporations have a duty to do. Companies’ duty is to act in the interests of the overall health, profitability, and longevity of the company. “Boosting quarterly revenues at any cost” would preclude almost all investment, crippling the possibility of long-term growth. McDonald’s would still be a single burger shack in San Bernadino with that attitude.

“Screw your customers to boost revenue for the next 3 months” is not a viable long-term strategy. Government-protected monopolies can do that. Normal corporations rely on repeat business and word of mouth.

Nimrod (profile) says:

Coin Flip

Every four years we get to choose between “heads” and “tails”, with the end result being mostly the same. I’ve had enough. I can’t bring myself to vote for either potential lame duck in November, so I’m going to write in the name “Taylor Swift” on my ballot instead. Just think- if we ALL did that, we wouldn’t be playing their “lesser of two evils” game any more. She is many things, but I don’t suspect Taylor Swift of being evil, and I think she’s unlikely to be the LESSER of anything. For the record, I’ve never heard her music. This opinion is based upon her actions and the reactions of the public. Maybe somethig such as this would be the way out of the “bipartisan” bullshit the two “only choice” parties have crafted to deny us a voice in our own government.

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