The document discusses the origins and evolution of the net neutrality debate in the United States. It outlines key events and perspectives from both supporters and opponents of net neutrality. These include the initial coining of the term in 2002, various FCC rulings and policy statements, lobbying efforts, and legal challenges around issues like the Comcast throttling case and FCC regulations. The debate remains ongoing with shifting positions of government agencies and industry groups.
2. Origins of the Net Neutrality
Debate
Coalition of Broadband Users and Innovators
(CBUI) sent a letter to FCC Chairman Michael
Powell in November 2002
It included the phrase “net neutrality” coined
by Tim Wu in an article written in 2002 and
published in 2003
CBUI called for “nondiscrimination safeguards”
to guarantee net neutrality
3. What is Net Neutrality?
“Net neutrality simply means that all like Internet
content must be treated alike and move at the
same speed over the network. The owners of the
Internet’s wires cannot discriminate. This is the
simple but brilliant “end-to-end” design of the
Internet that has made it such a powerful force for
economic and social good.”
Lawrence Lessig and Robert W. McChesney, “No Tolls on the Internet,”
Washington Post, June 8, 2006.
Ask a Ninja’s “What is Net Neutrality?” video
4. Eli Noam’s Possible Meanings
No different quality grades for service
No price discrimination among Internet providers
No monopoly price charged to content and
application providers
No discrimination against content providers who
compete with carrier’s own content
No selectivity by the carriers over the content that
they transmit
No blocking of the access of users to some websites
5. Congress and the FCC Encourage
Telephone and Cable to Compete
Telecom Act of 1996
FCC decisions to permit telephone companies to
buy cable networks and cable operators to
compete in telephone markets
FCC wanted telcos and cable companies to
compete in high-speed Internet and cable TV
services via new fiber optic networks built
without government subsidies
6. Top ISPs in the USA (2011)
Comcast
Time Warner
AT&T
Cable operators
Cox
Optimum
Charter
Verizon
Telephone companies
Source: http://isp-review.toptenreviews.com/
7. Top Global Web Sites (2011)
Google
Facebook
YouTube
Yahoo!
Wikipedia
Baidu
Blogspot
Twitter
8. Michael Powell’s Internet
Freedoms, 2004
freedom to access content
freedom to use applications
freedom to attach personal devices
freedom to obtain service plan information
9. FCC Policy Statement 2005
consumers are entitled to access the lawful Internet
content of their choice
consumers are entitled to run applications and services
of their choice, subject to the needs of law enforcement
consumers are entitled to connect their choice of legal
devices that do not harm the network
consumers are entitled to competition among network
providers, application and service providers, and
content providers
11. Arguments of Proponents
End-to-end architecture of the Internet must
be preserved
This means preventing discrimination by
conduit companies against content and
services that they do not control
Conduit companies will reserve lots of
bandwidth for services like cable TV which will
degrade Internet performance for everyone
else
Vint Cerf
12. More Arguments of Proponents
There is insufficient competition between
cable operators and telcos to guarantee nondiscrimination
There is a potential for violations of freedom
of speech in the absence of net neutrality
guarantees
Gigi Sohn
Larry
Lessig
Tim
Berners-Lee
13. Organizations that Supported
Net Neutrality
ACLU
ALA
Christian Coalition
Gun Owners of America
Consumers Union
Google, Amazon, Yahoo!
American Electronics Association
15. Arguments of Opponents
Net neutrality guarantees constitute
unnecessary regulation
The threat of discrimination is overblown
Cable and telephone companies need new
revenues to build out the network
Need to have “intelligent networks” to obtain
“quality of service”
Competition is sufficient to prevent abuses
16. The Video Franchise Bill,
2006
Attempts by Democrats led by Ed Markey in
the House to add net neutrality amendments
failed in committee and on the floor
Net neutrality amendment proposed by
Senator Olympia Snowe (R-ME) failed to pass
in an 11-11 committee vote
Senator Ted Stevens (R-AK) voted against the
amendment
17. Ted Stevens’ Tubes Statement
“And again, the Internet is not something you just dump
something on. It's not a big truck. It's a series of tubes. And
if you don't understand those tubes can be filled and if they
are filled, when you put your message in, it gets in line and
it's going to be delayed by anyone that puts into that tube
enormous amounts of material, enormous amounts of
material. “
June 28, 2006
Series of Tubes Remix
19. Telecom Lobbying Money Spent in
the First Half of 2006
Category
Specific Firms and
Organization
Telephone
Interests
AT&T, Verizon, BellSouth,
and USTA
Amount in $
millions
30.3
Cable Interests Comcast, Time Warner, Cox,
and NCTA
Internet
Google, Yahoo!, eBay,
Interests
Microsoft, Amazon.com
12.2
Total
51.3
8.8
20. Wyden Saves the Day
Ron Wyden used his Senatorial privilege to place a
hold on the Video Franchise bill because of the
lack of net neutrality guarantees. Since Ted
Stevens did not have the 60 votes needed to
override Wyden’s hold, the bill was not put up for a
vote on the Senate floor.
21. Barack Obama Supports Net
Neutrality
Speech on net neutrality at Google in 2007
Net neutrality becomes part of the official
Democratic party platform in 2008
Obama appoints Julius Genachowski as head of
the FCC in 2009
American Recovery and Investment Act of 2009
provides $7.2 billion for broadband infrastructure
and mandates that the FCC prepare a National
Broadband Plan
22. Genachowski Adds Two Items to
FCC Policy Statement of 2005
“broadband providers cannot discriminate
against particular Internet content or
applications”
• “providers of broadband Internet access must
be transparent about their network
management processes.”
Video of Genachowski
23. The National Broadband Plan
FCC announced intention to guarantee net
neutrality in spite of Comcast ruling in 2009
Genachowski spoke of a “third way” between
“heavy-handed prescriptive regulation” and
the “light-touch approach” of the past
FCC would attempt to reclassify transmission
component of broadband as a
“telecommunication service”
24. Comcast Throttling of BitTorrent Traffic in 2007
Robb Topolski discovers delays in delivery of BitTorrent files for his barber shop quartet
Topolski publishes this on TorrentFreak blog
EFF and AP verify independently
Comcast eventually admits that it was “traffic
shaping” using an application called Sandvine
that prevents “seeding”
The FCC told Comcast to stop doing this
Comcast complied but appealed to courts
25. The Comcast Ruling of 2010
US Circuit Court of Appeals of DC ruled on April
6, 2010, that the FCC did not have the
authority to regulate ISPs under the Telecom
Act of 1996 (therefore Comcast was not bound
to obey FCC rules regarding traffic
management)
Ruling was based on FCC decision to reclassify
cable modems and DSL as information services
26. Verizon-Google Agreement
In August 2010, Verizon and Google
announced a joint policy proposal
The jist of it was:
Telecom companies agree to net neutrality on
their wired networks
Internet firms agree that net neutrality rules will
not apply to wireless networks
Both agree that reasonable traffic management is
permissible on both wired and wireless networks
27. Verizon Challenge to FCC
Open Internet Order (2013)
Verizon argues in a suit before the US Court of
Appeals that the FCC overstepped its authority in
reclassifying Internet service in its Open Internet
Order and violating Verizon’s 1st and 5th amendment
rights
In May 2013, the Supreme Court ruled that agencies
have authority to regulate when legislation is
ambiguous
Two of the Court of Appeals judges are opposed to
treating all content equally but no ruling yet
28. New FCC Chair
New Chair, Ted Wheeler as of October 2013
Telecom lobbyist background
Hired Gigi Sohn for policy advice
29. Conclusions
Net neutrality was framed by Republicans as a regulatory
issue. Democratic framing was confusing.
Republicans and their supporters carried the day until June
2006 when the political tide began turn against them.
The 2006 and 2008 election results meant that Democrats
and their allies would attempt to pass legislation
guaranteeing net neutrality.
However, the Comcast ruling and strong Republican
opposition to net neutrality made legislative action very
unlikely. It is still not clear whether the FCC strategy to
reclassify broadband transmission will work.