Federal Communications Commission
Chairman Ajit Pai has vowed to reverse at least some of the recent net neutrality rules, but some Republican foes of the open Internet order want to go even further.
On Monday, Sen. Mike Lee
(R-Utah) introduced the Orwellian-named "Restoring Internet Freedom Act," which he says
would "nullify the Federal Communications Commission’s 2015 Open Internet Order and prohibit the FCC from issuing a similar rule in the future."
The bill would prohibit the FCC from
categorizing broadband access as a utility service, regulated under Title II of the Telecommunications Act. The measure currently has eight GOP co-sponsors -- Sens. John Cornyn (Texas), Tom Cotton
(Arkansas), Ted Cruz (Texas), Ron Johnson (Wisconsin), Rand Paul (Kentucky), Thom Tillis (North Carolina), Ben Sasse (Nebraska), and James Inhofe (R-Oklahoma).
The FCC's 2015 net neutrality
rules reclassified broadband as a utility and imposed some common carrier restrictions on providers -- including prohibitions on blocking content and on charging higher fees for prioritized
delivery.
Internet service providers challenged those regulations in court, but lost. Last year, a three-judge panel of the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the FCC had the authority
to issue the open Internet order. This week, the full court refused to reconsider the question.
Pai, a vocal critic of the net neutrality order, recently unveiled a plan to reverse the
decision to classify broadband as a utility service. He also wants to seek comments on the rules that prohibit ISPs from blocking or degrading traffic and creating paid fast lanes.
Net
neutrality advocates are trying to rally opposition to Pai's proposal as well as Lee's bill.
The group Public Knowledge stated today that Lee's latest bill "underscores the need for all
Americans to defend the current open internet rules.”
Meanwhile, Democratic Senators Brian Schatz (Michigan) and Cory Booker (New Jersey) said they opposed Pai's attempts to roll back
net neutrality rules.
"The public does not accept Republicans taking away their rights online in the name of corporate profit," Schatz and Booker wrote in an open letter to Pai.
They went on to compare the potential net
neutrality revocation with the recent repeal of the FCC's broadband privacy regulations. In March, lawmakers voted to scrap the privacy regulations, which would have required broadband providers to
obtain consumers' opt-in consent before drawing on their Web browsing history for ad purposes. That move proved unpopular with the public. It also appears to have sparked a backlash in
at least 10 states, which are reportedly considering new laws aimed at protecting the
privacy of Internet users.
"Like with the Republican repeal of the FCC’s online privacy rules, there is little public support for your actions," Schatz and Booker write. "Following an
onslaught of public furor, congressional Republicans regretted voting to repeal online privacy protection for the public. We believe that public uproar was just a preview of what you can expect as you
initiate a proceeding to eliminate net neutrality protections."