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Eric Fruits on Title II Reclassification

ICLE Senior Scholar Eric Fruits was quoted by Law360 in a story about the Federal Communications Commission’s vote to reimpose Title II regulation on broadband . . .

ICLE Senior Scholar Eric Fruits was quoted by Law360 in a story about the Federal Communications Commission’s vote to reimpose Title II regulation on broadband internet-access service providers. You can read the full piece here.

“I’m skeptical that Congress would actually act to do any sort of CRA reversal,” said Eric Fruits, a senior scholar at the International Center for Law and Economics, and a critic of the order. “And so that means you’re going to have the lawsuits. And the other big story of the year would be if no one filed a lawsuit. I bet you there’s someone, somewhere, who already has a lawsuit written.”

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ICLE Statement on the FCC’s Net Neutrality Rule

PORTLAND, Ore. (April 23, 2024) – The International Center for Law & Economics (ICLE) offers the following statement on today’s vote by the Federal Communications . . .

PORTLAND, Ore. (April 23, 2024) – The International Center for Law & Economics (ICLE) offers the following statement on today’s vote by the Federal Communications Commission (FTC) to adopt a rule classifying internet service providers (ISPs) under Title II of the Communications Act.

The following quote can be attributed to ICLE Senior Scholar Eric Fruits:

Title II is much more than net neutrality. It is the same type of expansive and heavy-handed regulation that governs public utilities. The FCC’s rule is a sharp reversal from decades of light-touch regulation that has fostered America’s leadership in broadband innovation and investment. The industry would face the yoke of onerous federal regulation and meddling that would stifle and slow future investment and experimentation.

For more on the topic, see ICLE’s issue spotlight laying out the history of Title II and net neutrality, as well as our comments to the FCC on their notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM). To schedule an interview with Eric about the topic, contact ICLE Media and Communications Manager Elizabeth Lincicome at (919) 744-8087 or [email protected].

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ICLE on Section 214

ICLE was cited in a Law360 story on the Federal Communications Commission’s plan to reimpose Title II on broadband providers. You can read the full . . .

ICLE was cited in a Law360 story on the Federal Communications Commission’s plan to reimpose Title II on broadband providers. You can read the full piece here.

The International Center for Law & Economics waded into the contentious debate over what regulations would apply to the service if it is reclassified as a Title II service under the Communications Act with a Friday letter that pointed toward an article written by one of the think tank’s own, calling the foreign ownership rules a “trojan horse.” Title II of the act governs telecommunications services. Currently, broadband is regulated as an information service under Title I of the law and is subject to less regulation.

…But according to the think tank, applying Section 214 to broadband companies would “necessitate FCC approval for essential operational decisions, such as network upgrades or service discontinuations, thereby stifling innovation, investment, and the broader objectives of national broadband expansion.”

The think tank also highlights the argument that putting such regulation upon ISPs could “undermine public safety and network resiliency” by making it harder for companies to switch over to newer and safer technologies, since to do so might trigger burdensome regulatory oversight.

Instead, the think tank said it wanted to urge the FCC to “seek a regulatory approach that fosters innovation, investment, and the robust expansion of broadband access across the United States, without imposing unnecessary and counterproductive burdens.”

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Kristian Stout on the FCC’s Title II Vote

Communications Daily – ICLE Director of Innovation Policy Kristian Stout was quoted by Communications Daily in a story about the Federal Communications Commission’s vote to reinstate . . .

Communications Daily – ICLE Director of Innovation Policy Kristian Stout was quoted by Communications Daily in a story about the Federal Communications Commission’s vote to reinstate Title II regulations on broadband providers. You can read full piece here.

The reintroduction of Title II regulation “stands on even shakier ground now than it did in 2015,” said Kristian Stout, International Center for Law & Economics director-innovation policy: “The wisdom behind the commission’s 2018 Restoring Internet Freedom Order is more evident with each passing year, as the broadband market continues to demonstrate no need for utility-style regulations.” He said the rulemaking presents a major questions doctrine issue “that will leave the FCC in an uphill battle before the U.S. Supreme Court in the face of inevitable legal challenges.”

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Kristian Stout on the FCC’s Net Neutrality Vote

Law360 – ICLE Director of Innovation Policy Kristian Stout was quoted by Law360 in a story about the Federal Communications Commission’s vote to reinstate net neutrality . . .

Law360 – ICLE Director of Innovation Policy Kristian Stout was quoted by Law360 in a story about the Federal Communications Commission’s vote to reinstate net neutrality rules. You can read full piece here.

Some think tanks, including the International Center for Law & Economics, continued to oppose the FCC’s initiative on both policy and legal grounds.

“The justifications the FCC has put forward for imposing Title II obligations on broadband providers not only lack merit, but emphasize the likely legal challenges this order will face,” said Kristian Stout, ICLE director of innovation policy, in a statement.

Stout said the commission’s rulemaking presents a major-questions issue “that will leave the FCC in an uphill battle before the U.S. Supreme Court in the face of inevitable legal challenges.” The major-questions doctrine says large-scale regulatory initiatives that have broad impacts can’t be grounded in vague, minor and obscure provisions of law.

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ICLE Statement on FCC’s Net Neutrality Vote

PORTLAND, Ore. (Oct. 19, 2023) – The International Center for Law & Economics (ICLE) offers the following statement from ICLE Director of Innovation Policy Kristian Stout . . .

PORTLAND, Ore. (Oct. 19, 2023) – The International Center for Law & Economics (ICLE) offers the following statement from ICLE Director of Innovation Policy Kristian Stout in response to today’s vote by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to initiate a rulemaking proceeding reinstating Title II regulations on broadband providers:

This attempt by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to reintroduce Title II regulations (often referred to as “net neutrality”) stands on even shakier ground now than it did in 2015. The wisdom behind the commission’s 2018 Restoring Internet Freedom Order is more evident with each passing year, as the broadband market continues to demonstrate no need for utility-style regulations.

The justifications the FCC has put forward for imposing Title II obligations on broadband providers not only lack merit, but emphasize the likely legal challenges this order will face. The commission’s rulemaking present a “major questions doctrine” issue that will leave the FCC in an uphill battle before the U.S. Supreme Court in the face of inevitable legal challenges.

After considering the record in the pending proceeding, one hopes the commission will realize that Title II is simply a mistake for the broadband industry, and that it will abandon this ill-fated effort.

To schedule an interview with Kristian about the FCC’s planned regulations, contact ICLE Media and Communications Manager Elizabeth Lincicome at [email protected] or (919) 744-8087.

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Gus Hurwitz on Net Neutrality

DC Journal – ICLE Director of Law & Economics Programs Gus Hurwitz was cited in DC Journal in a story about the Federal Communications Commission’s play . . .

DC Journal – ICLE Director of Law & Economics Programs Gus Hurwitz was cited in DC Journal in a story about the Federal Communications Commission’s play to reimpose net neutrality. You can read full piece here.

Beyond the army of digital activists calling for net neutrality, Silicon Valley giants like Google, Netflix and Apple led the charge on net neutrality. University of Nebraska Law Scholar Gus Hurwitz wrote in The Washington Post in 2017, “The net neutrality rules are pure rent seeking by a content/edge industry as a way to hinder potential industrial competitors.”

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Eric Fruits on Net Neutrality

Law360 – ICLE Senior Scholar Eric Fruits was quoted by Law360 in a story about the Federal Communications Commission’s efforts to reinstate net neutrality. You can . . .

Law360 – ICLE Senior Scholar Eric Fruits was quoted by Law360 in a story about the Federal Communications Commission’s efforts to reinstate net neutrality. You can read full piece here.

Eric Fruits, a senior scholar at the International Center for Law and Economics, told Law360 on Wednesday the FCC has multiple avenues to use common-carrier regulation to affect broadband rates. “One of the big concerns that people have about the Title II reclassification is that it does open the door for rate regulation,” he said. “In some sense, one of the main purposes of Title II, at least with respect to telecoms, is rate regulation.”

Fruits, who recently co-authored a report with Geoffrey Manne on “de facto rate regulation” in the telecom sector, noted that with the 2015 net neutrality order, the FCC made clear it was not tackling that issue. Rosenworcel this week was “pretty adamant that they’re not doing it,” he said, but even so “there are some other issues that I think raise questions.”

For example, the chair mentioned banning paid prioritization several times, which the 2015 Open Internet Order did, “and it’s really hard to say [that] is not a form of rate regulation,” he said.

Another issue that will probably come up is zero-rating, which is an industry practice that involves not applying data caps to certain services. Fruits said that issue was never fully resolved from the 2015 order. “I think that is an issue that could come up again,” he said. “If you get rid of zero-rating, that again, is a form of rate regulation.”

Fruits said other concerns could arise from a Title II classification such as rates for attaching broadband equipment to utility poles.

 

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Kristian Stout on Revived Net Neutrality

Communications Daily – ICLE Director of Innovation Policy Kristian Stout was quoted by Communications Daily in a story about the Federal Communications Commission’s plan to reinstate . . .

Communications Daily – ICLE Director of Innovation Policy Kristian Stout was quoted by Communications Daily in a story about the Federal Communications Commission’s plan to reinstate net-neutrality rules. You can read full piece here.

“Despite dire predictions, the internet has thrived in the absence of utility-style net-neutrality regulations,” said Kristian Stout, International Center for Law & Economics director-innovation policy. Stout also questioned whether the FCC has the authority to impose Title II regulation on broadband: “As the U.S. Supreme Court has made clear through its ‘major questions’ doctrine, federal agencies cannot make major regulatory moves without explicit authorization from Congress.”

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