2010-04-09 11:19:02
Wed Apr 7, 5:17 pm ET
First, a primer for the uninitiated on "net neutrality."
Net (as in network) neutrality is the idea that all traffic on the Internet
should be treated equally and more to the point should come at the same
price. Right now, for instance, you don't have to pay more to watch a YouTube
video than you do to check your email, even though the YouTube video eats up
more bandwidth and, in theory, costs your ISP more for you to watch.
Websites and most consumers love the idea of net neutrality.
ISPs, on the other hand, are not fans. In fact, the net neutrality movement
arose as a response to major ISPs' plans to attempt to charge websites and
service providers more for "better" service on their networks. Fail to pay up
and that YouTube video might take twice as long to download ... or it may not
download at all.
ISPs call this the cost of doing business and a necessary reality in an era
where bandwidth isn't growing but the amount of data being pushed through the
available pipes is.
Net neutrality proponents call this extortion.
No matter who is right, things were looking up for net neutrality fans after
the FCC and the Obama administration came out with specific and strongly worded
recommendations and plans that they would push for net neutrality as the Obama
broadband program (100Mbps to everyone!) moved forward.
But the showdown had already begun prior to the Obama era, way back in 2007,
when Comcast, the country's largest cable company, began throttling BitTorrent
downloads, effectively putting a speed limit on how fast they could go. The FCC
put the kibosh on the practice, and ISPs, led by the mammoth Comcast, sued.
Then the FCC announced even more sweeping rules that it planned to enact in the
future.
This week, a major legal ruling was handed down in the Comcast case, and the
tide has now turned in favor of the ISPs. The District of Columbia Court of
Appeals said that the FCC had overstepped its authority in mandating net
neutrality and that ISPs should be free to manage traffic however they see fit,
noting that under current law, the FCC does not have "untrammeled freedom" to
regulate broadband services. (In other words, Congress would have to
specifically grant such powers.) The ruling was unanimous among the three
judges on the panel.
Now net neutrality fans find themselves facing a serious uphill climb. Not only
does the ruling open up the way for now for ISPs to ask websites and
service providers for money; it might also allow them to restrict certain
services from running on their networks entirely. Comcast, for example, may not
want you to watch Hulu on its service, since then you'd have less of a reason
to pay $60 a month for cable TV. It may also be able to ban VOIP services like
Skype, so you'll pony up another $20 for wired telephone service. The dominoes
are already lining up.
What happens now? The FCC has more tricks up its sleeve. As the MSNBC story
above notes, broadband service could be reclassified to fall under the other
heavily regulated telecommunications services that the FCC oversees, but that
would likely result in additional legal wrangling and longer delays for the
broadband plan to go into effect, a so-called nuclear option that would turn
the world of broadband into a bit of a bureaucratic nightmare.
If it doesn't take this route, the FCC will instead have to ask Congress for
the power to implement net neutrality rules as it sees fit, but that's a
political game in a time when Washington seems awfully low on political
capital. Don't rule out an appeal to the Supreme Court, either.
Stay tuned for as long as your Internet service holds out, anyway.
Christopher Null is a technology writer for Yahoo! News.