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Unlike FCC, FTC cannot protect net neutrality

 |  August 21, 2017

Posted by The Hill

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    Unlike FCC, FTC cannot protect net neutrality

    By Anant Raut

    To distract you while they smother net neutrality, Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Chairman Ajit Pai and acting Federal Trade Commission (FTC) Chair Maureen Ohlhausen have offered confident assurances that the FTC can step into the role abdicated by the FCC and protect net neutrality with its antitrust and consumer protection enforcement authority.

    It sounds plausible (plus most people aren’t entirely sure what the FTC does), so you nod along, but don’t fall for it; it’s a ruse. The FTC would be far more limited in how it can protect net neutrality, because:

    • The FTC is prohibited from enforcing its laws against common carriers, like telephone companies;

    • the US Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit has broadly interpreted that law to mean that the FTC can’t act against even the non-telephonic services of telephone companies, like broadband;

    • even if the 9th Circuit decision gets reversed, the FTC can’t use antitrust law to protect individual websites and content providers and

    • it’s doubtful whether net neutrality could be enforced through the FTC’s other enforcement tool, consumer protection laws.

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