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Supreme Court Rejects Industry Challenge of 2015 Net Neutrality Rules (arstechnica.com) 56

The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday refused a request by the Trump administration and the telecommunications industry to wipe away a lower court decision that had upheld Obama-era net neutrality rules aimed at ensuring a free and open internet. The justices' action, however, does not undo the 2017 repeal of the policy. A report adds: The Federal Communications Commission's 2015 order to impose net neutrality rules and strictly regulate broadband was already reversed by Trump's pick for FCC chairman, Ajit Pai. But AT&T and broadband industry lobby groups were still trying to overturn court decisions that upheld the FCC order. A win for the broadband industry could have prevented future administrations from imposing a similarly strict set of rules. The Trump administration supported the industry's case, asking the US Supreme Court to vacate the Obama-era ruling.

But the Supreme Court today said it has denied petitions filed by AT&T and broadband lobby groups NCTA, CTIA, USTelecom, and the American Cable Association. Four of nine justices must agree to hear a case, but only three voted to grant the petitions.
Further reading: Reuters and Variety.
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Supreme Court Rejects Industry Challenge of 2015 Net Neutrality Rules

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  • by xxxJonBoyxxx ( 565205 ) on Monday November 05, 2018 @02:47PM (#57595382)
    Is net neutrality the law of the land or not?
    • No. But nor is it beyond the reach of the FCC to add it (again), which was the point of this ruling.

      • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Monday November 05, 2018 @03:13PM (#57595574)

        No. But nor is it beyond the reach of the FCC to add it (again), which was the point of this ruling.

        There was no "ruling". The SCOTUS simply declined to hear the case. This lets the lower court decision stand, but sets no precedent. The lower court decision only has precedent in the DC circuit.

        The SCOTUS can only hear a limited number of cases each year, and they likely declined to hear this case since it is pointless because the regulation in question has already been repealed.

        • by duckintheface ( 710137 ) on Monday November 05, 2018 @04:52PM (#57596208)

          Justice Roberts and Kavenaugh recused themselves. That's the only reason that there were not enough votes (4 required) to hear the appeal from the DC Circuit. No guarantee they will recuse themselves again in the future.

          • who is going to bring a suit? the DC Circuit already ruled and they are the circuit court with authority to hear cases about administrative agencies of the US government.

        • by e3m4n ( 947977 )

          basically it would have to be challenged in every district and then the precedent would be referenced for consideration. Its not binding since its a different district but decisions do carry some weight.

        • Uhh.....the DC Circuit has authority over all US government administrative agencies so this does set precedence for how the FCC can govern it's domain into the future.

    • No. The 2017 repeal stands but the lawsuit that tried to force the government from implementing NN failed.

      The FCC can do NN if it wants and is not bared by the courts is what this decision means. This has no effect on the 2017 FCC decision to repeal it.

    • by the_skywise ( 189793 ) on Monday November 05, 2018 @02:55PM (#57595436)
      tl;dr
      The courts said the government had the power to enact Net Neutrality through the FCC (without an actual law). Now that never got argued up through to the supreme court yet and the attempt here was to get the SC to decide one way or the other but the SC declined because the issue no longer applies as the FCC reversed direction (which is typical for the FCC).
      It's a nothing burger.
    • by mysidia ( 191772 )

      Neutrality is not the law of the land, but that wasn't good enough for ATT and various lobbyists groups ---
      they wanted to appeal to the Supreme Court seeking a ruling that it is not within the FCC's power to impose network neutrality, or, essentially that it is beyond the FCC's power to regulate their industry in the first place.

      However, the Supreme Court's time is precious, therefore, they are one of the only courts in the US that gets to decide whether they will
      hear a case in the first place....

    • Is net neutrality the law of the land or not?

      Not...

      It was never a law anyway, it was a regulation.

  • by MaryannG ( 5181397 ) <mgarza@texasboysballoons.com> on Monday November 05, 2018 @03:02PM (#57595480) Homepage
    The court simply decided to not determine which way NN will be implemented (if it's implemented at all). It allows for the FCC to enact a NN rule administratively. This is good for the functioning of the government while it could be potentially bad for the topic at hand (NN). This is appropriate though as NN really ought to be a law (coming from Congress) and not an administrative ruling.
    • NN is not "implemented" in the common way: it only forbids traffic shaping use by ISPs :P
      • Only forbids traffic shaping on similar content.

        Net neutrality does not make QoS illegal, just puts QoS's definition in the hands of lawyers...What could go wrong?

    • by Anonymous Coward

      I'm not 100% sure it applies here, but there's a legal concept called Chevron deference. Basically it means the court system stays out of regulatory actions. If you have a problem with a regulation by the executive branch of the government, you take it up with the executive branch. Unless the regulation infringes on constitutional rights or is beyond the scope of regulation as set out by laws passed by congress, you can't go to court over it.

      The right way to fix it is for congress to pass a law saying FCC m

  • by fbobraga ( 1612783 ) on Monday November 05, 2018 @03:08PM (#57595526) Homepage
    It does not infringe NN? I think it does... besides this, zero rating for WhatsApp is very common here in Brazil (all popular cellphone carriers do it here...), and, I think, it have a very negative impact on elections here, collaborating to "fake news" spread: it's very difficult to verify sources, when the internet access is limited only to this app...
    • by e3m4n ( 947977 )

      remember the joke 'everything you read on the internet is true. I read that on the internet somewhere' ? Nowadays I have to assume most of the shit I read is either outright fake, or seriously worded in a way to discourage critical thought.

  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Monday November 05, 2018 @03:14PM (#57595584)

    Kavanaugh dissented from the ruling upholding net neutrality rules in 2017, arguing that the rules violate the First Amendment rights of Internet service providers by preventing them from "exercising editorial control" over Internet content.

    The RIAA/MPAA would have a field day with this. If you've got editorial control then you're no longer a common carrier. Of course I'm not convinced the current Supreme Court wouldn't let them have it both ways. The above is so crazy on the face of it. "exercising editorial control"? ISP and phone companies don't have editorial control. They're a pipe. If they don't like that they can give up their monopoly to somebody who wants to follow the rules.

  • Does this mean that we will keep Net Neutrality in place? Does it mean nothing? Does it mean that we may be able to repeal the FCC rules that overturned net neutrality under the heavily bribed and set for life because of industrial lobbying and then congressional appointment staff person known as Ajit Pal?
    • Re:??CONFUSED?? (Score:4, Informative)

      by bobbied ( 2522392 ) on Monday November 05, 2018 @04:07PM (#57595902)

      Does this mean that we will keep Net Neutrality in place? Does it mean nothing? Does it mean that we may be able to repeal the FCC rules that overturned net neutrality under the heavily bribed and set for life because of industrial lobbying and then congressional appointment staff person known as Ajit Pal?

      It means nothing really. It has zero impact on anything about NN, it doesn't force the FCC to enforce NN, undo the repeal or affect any future regulations the FCC may or may not choose to enforce in the future. About the ONLY thing I can imagine this does is give us a pretty good picture of how the SC would chose to not be involved in other such cases. 6 to 3 is pretty open and shut.

      • Thank you for your response. Your answer seems complete and accurate. I just don't like it because it is probably true.
  • So, the petition is put forth by AT&T along with broadband lobbyist groups NCTA, CTIA, USTelecom, and the American Cable Association... but you're gonna headline this as the SCOTUS rejecting a request by the "Trump administration"?
    • The Trump administration supported the industry's case, asking the US Supreme Court to vacate the Obama-era ruling.

      Reading past the headlines can be pretty tricky for some folks. But it turns out there's more information there.

      • by bblb ( 5508872 )
        Article says "refused a request by the Trump administration"... the request didn't come from the Trump administration so that statement is untrue and, whether or not they supported it isn't relevant to anyone but the legion of snowflakes looking to blame Trump for everything. The request came from AT&T and the lobbyist groups NCTA, CTIA, USTelecom, along with the American Cable Association. So the article should have said "refused a request by AT&T, the NCTA, CTIA, USTelecom, and the American Cable
  • Ajit Pai's FCC's definition of internet service as an "enhanced service" relies upon a ludicrous claim that DHCP service, which advertises a DNS service, that a user has no obligation to use whatsoever, qualifies it. Everyone is free to use whatever DNS service they wish just by sending DNS requests to someone else, but the FCC definition assumes that an ISP's DNS service is irrevocably bundled with the handling of IP packets. The FCC is simply wrong, and someone, someone, anyone, please, with enough legal

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