The Federal Trade Commission is drawing support in its battle with AT&T from other policymakers, including Senator Richard Blumenthal (D-Connecticut) and the Federal Communications Commission,
as well as privacy experts and advocacy groups.
Blumenthal, the FCC and others are asking the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals to reconsider a recent decision dismissing an enforcement action
against AT&T. The FTC alleged in an October 2014 complaint that AT&T duped more than 3.5 million people by selling them unlimited data plans, but slowing their connections after they exceeded
monthly allotments ranging from 3 GB to 5 GB.
AT&T countered that the FTC lacks authority to bring an enforcement action against common carriers. A three-judge panel of the 9th Circuit
recently sided with AT&T, ruling that the FTC can't sue common carriers -- even when the lawsuit centers on a non-common carrier service. (Mobile broadband wasn't considered a common carrier
service when the FTC brought the case.)
Earlier this month, the FTC sought a new hearing in front of at least 11 of the 9th Circuit's judges.
Blumenthal argues in a proposed
friend-of-the-court brief that the panel's ruling creates "a wide hole in FTC jurisdiction that undermines the agency’s ability to remedy deceptive acts committed by the growing range of
companies that engage in common-carrier activity as well as non-common-carrier activity."
"If the panel opinion stands, it will greatly limit the government’s ability to police unfair
and deceptive practices in fields that Congress has long considered within the FTC’s authority," the lawmaker adds.
He goes on to argue that the decision could leave the FTC unable to
police companies like Google, which owns the Internet service provider Fiber. "A sprawling Internet behemoth with revenues from selling advertising, hardware (e.g., smartphones, tablets, laptops), and
software (e.g., the Android operating system), Google has historically been subject to FTC jurisdiction," Blumenthal writes. "But Google also owns Google Fiber, a broadband internet service. In light
of the panel opinion, Google could argue that Google Fiber renders it immune from government oversight."
The Federal Communications Commission said in a separate proposed friend-of-the-court
brief that the panel's decision is "at odds with the realities of the marketplace, in which entities that provide communications common carrier services have expanded their lines of business to
include non-common-carrier offerings (or vice versa)."
A group of law professors with expertise in privacy and data security also are weighing in on the FTC's side. The professors say the
earlier opinion "creates serious risks for the privacy rights of every American.
"The panel opinion’s sweeping interpretation would immunize many of the largest information
intermediaries in the modern economy -- potentially including companies such as Facebook, Google, and Yahoo -- from almost all meaningful privacy oversight," the law professors say in a proposed
friend-of-the-court brief. "This outcome would be disastrous."
A host of outside advocacy groups, including Public Knowledge, New America’s Open Technology Institute and Consumer Union
also filed papers supporting the FTC.
AT&T is expected to respond later this month to the FTC's request for a new hearing. The company revised its throttling practices last year. AT&T
now only throttles people who consume more than 22 GB of data in a month, and only when the network is congested.