The Federal Communications Commission voted Thursday to repeal Obama-era net neutrality rules, which required internet service providers to offer equal access to all web content without charging consumers for higher-quality delivery or giving preferential treatment to certain websites.
The vote is a big win for Ajit Pai, the agency's chairman, who has long opposed the regulations, saying they impeded innovation. He once said they were based on "hypothetical harms and hysterical prophecies of doom."
These are the rules that were repealed
The original rules went into effect in 2015 and laid out a regulatory plan that addressed a rapidly changing internet. Under those regulations, broadband service was considered a utility under Title II of the Communications Act, giving the FCC broad power over internet providers. The rules prohibited the following practices:
Blocking: Internet service providers could not discriminate against any lawful content by blocking websites or apps.
Throttling: Service providers could not slow the transmission of data based on the nature of the content, as long as it is legal.
Paid prioritization: Service providers could not create an internet fast lane for companies and consumers who pay premiums, and a slow lane for those who don't.
[GCI, Alaska Communications vow not to penalize Alaskans when net neutrality rescinded]
How it could affect you
Many consumer advocates have argued that if the rules get scrapped, broadband providers will begin selling the internet in bundles, not unlike how cable television is sold today. Want to access Facebook and Twitter? Under a bundling system, getting on those sites could require paying for a premium social media package.
In some countries, internet bundling is already happening. In October, Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., posted a screenshot on Twitter from a Portuguese mobile carrier that showed subscription plans with names like Social, Messaging and Video. He wrote that providers were "starting to split the net."
Another major concern is that consumers could suffer from pay-to-play deals. Without rules prohibiting paid prioritization, a fast lane could be occupied by big internet and media companies, as well as affluent households, while everyone else would be left on the slow lane.
Some small-business owners have also been concerned these issues will affect them, worrying that industry giants could pay to get an edge, and leave them on an unfair playing field.
"The internet, the speed of it, our entire business revolves around that," David Callicott, who sells paraffin-free candles on his website, GoodLight, said last month.
E-commerce startups, for their part, have feared they could end up on the losing end of paid prioritization, where their websites and services load slower than those run by internet behemoths. Remote workers of all kinds, including freelancers and franchisees working in the gig economy,could similarly face higher costs to do their jobs from home.
The argument against regulation
"It's basic economics," Pai said in a speech at the Newseum in April. "The more heavily you regulate something, the less of it you're likely to get."
The FCC chairman has long argued against the rules, pointing out that before they were put into effect in 2015, service providers had not engaged in any of the practices the rules prohibit.
"Did these fast lanes and slow lanes exist? No," he said in the speech. "It's almost as if the special interests pushing Title II weren't trying to solve a real problem but instead looking for an excuse to achieve their long-standing goal of forcing the internet under the federal government's control."
Several internet providers have made public pledges in recent months that they will not block or throttle sites once the rules were repealed. The companies argue that Title II gives the FCC too much control over their business, and that the regulations make it hard to expand their networks.
The internet was already changed
Perhaps the repeal won't change the direction of the internet. In November, Farhad Manjoo argued that the internet has already been dying a slow death, and that the repeal of net neutrality rules only hastens its demise.
He wrote that the biggest U.S. internet companies — Amazon, Apple, Facebook, Google and Microsoft — "control much of the online infrastructure, from app stores to operating systems to cloud storage to nearly all of the online ad business."
Meanwhile, most American homes and smartphones connect to the internet through a "handful of broadband companies — AT&T, Charter, Comcast and Verizon, many of which are also aiming to become content companies, because why not."