Article from The Hill
By Tony Romm and Kim Hart – 04/06/10 10:55 AM ET
A federal appeals court on Tuesday dealt a significant legal blow to the Obama administration and net neutrality advocates, ruling that the Federal Communications Commission has no authority to regulate how Web providers manage their network traffic.
The decision overturns the FCC’s order in 2008 that Comcast cease blocking subscribers’ peer-to-peer file sharing applications, including BitTorrent, which the company said had over-burdened its strapped broadband network and slowed users’ connections.
Previously, the FCC argued that a smattering of federal laws, policy statements and court cases endowed the agency with the implicit authority to regulate Internet service providers’ (ISP) Web practices. It invoked that authority in late 2008, when it ordered Comcast to stop blocking or “throttling” traffic to BitTorrent.
But the Federal Court of Appeals in Washington D.C. on Tuesday disagreed with the agency’s assessment and subsequently ruled on a 3-0 vote to toss the FCC’s landmark order.
According to the court, “The Commission may exercise this ‘ancillary’ authority only if it demonstrates that its action—here barring Comcast from interfering with its customers’ use of peer-to-peer networking applications—is ‘reasonably ancillary to the . . . effective performance of its statutorily mandated responsibilities.’”
However, the judges noted, “The Commission has failed to make that showing. It relies principally on several Congressional statements of policy, but under Supreme Court and D.C. Circuit case law statements of policy, by themselves, do not create ’statutorily mandated responsibilities.’”
Neither Comcast nor the FCC have released a statement responding to the decision.
Still, the court’s move ultimately doubles as a major roadblock for the FCC, which drafted its comprehensive National Broadband Plan this year under the assumption that it possesses regulatory power over the Internet and the companies that provide users’ access to it. Many of its provisions also include clarion calls for net neutrality, which the agency may no longer have the authority to institute and enforce on its own.
Net neutrality is a top priority for President Barack Obama, who won the allegiance of the tech community during his campaign by promising to support an “open-Internet” regime.
The decision is a set-back for lawmakers that are trying to legislate net neutrality, also with the assumption that the FCC has the authority to codify such rules. Senators including Byron Dorgan (D-ND) and Olympia Snowe (R-Maine) have been big backers of net neutrality. In the House, Rick Boucher (D-Va.), Henry Waxman (D-Calif.) and Ed Markey (D-Mass.) have repeatedly pushed for formal net neutrality rules.
It’s also a major defeat for Google, Skype, Amazon.com and other Internet firms that have been huge propoents of net neutrality. Google has led the charge for “open” platforms that prevent Internet service providers and wireless companies from discriminating against certain applications and devices.
FCC Chairman Juilus Genachowski has indicated he will try to reclassify broadband as a Title II service in the communications statute, which would allow the FCC to enact net neutrality. Currently, broadband is classified as a Title I service, which, according to the court, does not give the FCC the necessary authority.
The court’s decision is a victory for big telecom companies that provide the bulk of U.S. broadband services. AT&T and Verizon are on Comcast’s side in this debate and have forcefully pushed back against net neutrality. The top Washington lobbyists for both AT&T and Verizon have said that the FCC will wind up back in court if it tries to reclassify broadband