Say Goodbye to Net Neutrality. Say Hello to the FCC's Trickle-Down Experiment
20
November, 2017
Ajit
Pai, the Federal Communications Commission's Trump-appointed
chairman, is moving to gut the net neutrality rules that progressive
activists and a massive online movement successfully pushed for
during the Obama administration.
The
effort to kill net neutrality adds to a
long list of
deregulatory moves that media rights advocates say will hurt people
the FCC is charged with protecting: everyday consumers, low-income
families, underserved Indigenous communities, disabled people, as
well as women and people of color, who remain underrepresented
in broadcast media.
Last
week, Pai and the FCC's Republican majority began overhauling
the Lifeline
program that
subsidizes phone and internet service for low-income people, an
effort that Democratic commissioners say will
punitively cripple
the crucial
safety net.
Commissioners also voted along party lines to repeal a list of media
ownership regulations, a move that critics say will usher in a new
era of media consolidation in local markets and help a massive,
right-leaning broadcasting company gobble up TV stations without
selling others off.
The
FCC's agenda may be good news for the
class of mostly white men who
own big telecom companies and broadcasting
stations and
are eager to consolidate their control over the media landscape.
Consider Sinclair Broadcast Group, the TV broadcasting giant
that reportedly
"struck a deal" with
the Trump campaign for favorable coverage and has since seen
regulatory hurdles standing in the way of a proposed merger with
Tribune Media cleared by Pai and the FCC.
Sinclair
is known for pushing
a conservative agenda and
could soon reach 72 percent of local TV viewers nationwide if the
merger is approved.
"To
some extent Trump TV already exists; it's just going to be Trump TV
on steroids," Tim Karr, spokesperson for the digital rights
group Free Press, said of Sinclair in an interview.
Pai
has been talking about killing the FCC's historic net neutrality
rules since they were established in 2015 (well before his
appointment as chairman). He's been taking comments on a draft
proposal to do so for months and circulated a final draft among his
fellow commissioners today. A final draft will be released to the
public on Wednesday. Observers expect the FCC to vote on a measure
that will largely gut the rules at a meeting scheduled for December
14.
Pai
also announced on Tuesday that the FCC would take public comments on
whether to change or eliminate a rule that caps the percentage of US
households that TV stations owned by a single broadcasting company
can reach at 39 percent -- the major remaining regulatory roadblock
standing in the way of Sinclair's proposed merger with Tribune
Media.
Like
his counterparts in other agencies under the Trump administration,
Pai argues that slashing regulations and allowing big businesses to
maximize profits will lead to new media models and investments in
telecom infrastructure that will benefit everyone else. It's the same
"trickle-down" theory driving Trump and many GOP
politicians.
Speaking
before the right-libertarian Cato Institute on Friday, Pai said the
FCC's role isn't to support "any particular company or
industry," but rather to "foster a light-touch regulatory
framework" that allows different companies to compete.
"And
then we'll let American consumers choose who succeeds and who
doesn't," Pai said. "After all, competition is a far better
guarantor of consumer welfare than preemptive regulation."
However,
there are only so many airwaves and broadcasting licenses available
in local TV and radio markets, and by relaxing media ownership rules,
the FCC is setting the stage for newsroom consolidations that could
reduce the number of journalists working local beats, as well as the
already-small number of voices from communities of color on the
airwaves.
"It's
a giveaway to [broadcasting] companies without expecting, or frankly,
having a realistic case for competition in return," said Phillip
Berenbroick, a senior policy counsel at Public
Knowledge,
in an interview with Truthout.
Pai
argues the deregulation is necessary to help newspapers and local
broadcasters compete with large online platforms such as Facebook
that deliver news, but Democratic FCC Commissioner Mignon Clyburn
points out that big internet firms are not producing local news
reporting on their own.
"Citing
to 'simple fairness,' the Chairman is fond of making a comparison
between local broadcasters and tech companies like Google, Twitter
and Facebook," Clyburn wrote in her dissenting statement. "Yet
the last time I checked, none of these companies are in the
newsgathering business nor to my knowledge are they engaged in local
news production."
Consumers
also have limited choices when it comes to internet providers. In
many parts of the country, only one or two companies provide cable
and high-speed internet service. Some rural and impoverished areas do
not have any options, and experts say slashing regulations is not
going to help.
"Killing
net neutrality is not going to move the needle on broadband
deployment in areas [where] it's not economical," Berenbroick
said.
Net
neutrality supporters say that without the rules, big broadband
providers like AT&T and Comcast would be free to censor competing
web content and extract fees from big players like Google and Amazon
in exchange for priority speeds that would put smaller companies at a
disadvantage. Providers say they would never do such things, but
advocates counter that the incentives are there and attempts
at priority deals have already been made.
Rashad
Robinson, executive director of the online civil rights group Color
Of Change,
said net neutrality has been an "indispensible tool" for
those fighting for justice and civil rights.
"Net
neutrality ensures that the internet is a place for innovation and
opportunity for all, allowing the voices and ideas of everyday Black
folks to spread based on substance, rather than financial backing,"
Robinson said in a statement.
Some
net neutrality advocates fear providers would eventually "cable-ize"
the internet by providing lower-income consumers with access to only
certain websites, rather than the entire internet, in exchange for
lower service rates.
However,
Pai says the regulations have impeded profit margins and prevented
telecom companies from investing in broadband infrastructure. If the
FCC repeals them, he argues, broadband companies will have extra cash
to deploy high-speed internet in needy areas.
Yet,
both Karr and Berenbroick said that there is no evidence that the net
neutrality rules have kept broadband companies from laying new cables
and fiber wires to expand internet access.
"The
notion that he is fixing a problem is a bogus premise to begin with,"
Karr said.
In
May, a study by
Free Press found a 5 percent increase in capital investments among
providers after net neutrality was established.
In
fact, broadband companies tell investors that they are expanding
infrastructure more than ever before, particularly in high-income
areas where they are seeing high profits. Rural and low-income areas
remain disconnected because bringing services to them is expensive
and will not reap large returns for these private companies.
Repealing net neutrality is not going to change that, according to
Berenbroick.
"If
they were going to deploy there, they would be there already,"
Berenbroick said of areas in need of high-speed connection, adding
that government investment would ultimately be necessary to fix the
problem.
If
we are to believe Pai, then his deregulatory efforts will unleash a
new wave of innovation and investment in both local media and the
internet. If instead we see rampant consolidation, the closing of
local newsrooms and big telecom companies increasingly shaping how we
access the internet, could voters respond by punishing Republicans in
the midterm elections?
Karr
said net neutrality remains popular among voters and consumers,
including Republicans, and millions of comments supporting the rules
have flooded the FCC. (Perhaps this is why Pai is scheduling his
major moves on the issue around major holidays.) Meanwhile, internet
service providers that enjoy monopolies and duopolies across the
country consistently score
lower than any other industry when
it comes to customer satisfaction.
With
all the buzz around net neutrality, Karr said, the issue could very
well be "part of a progressive/Democratic platform that is
featured in the 2018 midterms."
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