The fight is the latest battle over Obama administration rules
requiring broadband providers to treat all data equally, rather than
giving or selling access to a so-called Web "fast lane."
A three-judge panel, in a hearing that lasted over three hours,
questioned lawyers for the FCC and broadband backers about whether
the FCC properly extended the sweeping authority it has to regulate
telecommunications to Internet service providers.
So-called net neutrality is a major issue for broadband providers
like Verizon Communications Inc and Comcast Corp, which fear the
rules may make it harder to manage Internet traffic and make
investment to provide additional capacity less likely. It is also a
big concern for content providers like Netflix Inc and Yelp Inc,
worried that access to customers could be limited without net
neutrality.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit has
ruled twice against the FCC since 2010 and Judge David Tatel, who
wrote both opinions, is on the panel that heard the case.
The issue, Tatel said, is whether the FCC had authority to
reclassify the Internet as a more heavy-regulated telecommunications
service rather than an information service.
Lawyers for the Internet service providers argued that because they
exercise some control over functions like cached pages they met the
burden as an information service provider, which would limit how
extensively the FCC could impose net neutrality rules.
But the FCC said broadband providers were acting merely to transport
data, not making content decisions.
An open Internet spurs innovation and helps improve broadband
infrastructure, the FCC argued, saying network companies plowed $230
billion into the Web over 2011-2013, when open Internet rules were
in effect.
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Judge Tatel wrote the majority opinion in 2010 ruling against the
FCC after it cited Comcast for slowing Internet traffic speeds to
some customers who were downloading very large data files from
peer-to-peer networks.
The FCC then issued new rules that blocked broadband providers from
slowing or discriminating against Internet traffic and Tatel wrote
the opinion that blocked those rules in 2014.
Congress has considered writing its own rules on net neutrality but
has not voted on any proposals. The appeals court ruled in 2014 that
the FCC had used the wrong legal reasoning to issue the rules, but
said without net neutrality "broadband providers represent a threat
to Internet openness."
The net neutrality rules are backed by the American Civil Liberties
Union, library groups and companies including Twitter Inc, Medium,
Yelp, Reddit.
The case is U.S. Telecom Association, et al v. FCC, et al, U.S.
Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, No. 15-1063.
(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Christopher Cushing and
Tom Brown)
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