Safeguarding and Securing the Open Internet, 76048-76096 [2023-23630]
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 212 / Friday, November 3, 2023 / Proposed Rules
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
COMMISSION
47 CFR Parts 8 and 20
[WC Docket No. 23–320; FCC 23–83; FR
ID 179272]
Safeguarding and Securing the Open
Internet
Federal Communications
Commission.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
In this document, the Federal
Communications Commission’s
(Commission) adopted a Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) that
proposes to reestablish the
Commission’s authority over broadband
internet access service by classifying it
as a telecommunications service under
Title II of the Communications Act. This
NPRM proposes to classify broadband
internet access service as a
telecommunications service and provide
the Commission with authority
necessary to safeguard the open
internet, advance national security, and
protect public safety. The NPRM also
proposes to reestablish conduct rules for
internet service providers that would
provide a national approach for
safeguarding internet openness.
DATES: Comments are due on or before
December 14, 2023, and reply comments
are due on or before January 17, 2024.
Written comments on the Paperwork
Reduction Act proposed information
collection requirements must be
submitted by the public and other
interested parties on or before January 2,
2024.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by WC Docket No. 23–320 by
any of the following methods:
• Electronic Filers: Comments may be
filed electronically using the internet by
accessing ECFS: https://www.fcc.gov/
ecfs/.
• Paper Filers: Parties who choose to
file by paper must file an original and
one copy of each filing.
Filings can be sent by commercial
overnight courier, or by first-class or
overnight U.S. Postal Service mail. All
filings must be addressed to the
Commission’s Secretary, Office of the
Secretary, Federal Communications
Commission.
• Commercial overnight mail (other
than U.S. Postal Service Express Mail
and Priority Mail) must be sent to 9050
Junction Drive, Annapolis Junction, MD
20701.
• U.S. Postal Service first-class,
Express, and Priority mail must be
addressed to 45 L Street NE,
Washington, DC 20554.
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SUMMARY:
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• Effective March 19, 2020, and until
further notice, the Commission no
longer accepts any hand or messenger
delivered filings. This is a temporary
measure taken to help protect the health
and safety of individuals, and to
mitigate the transmission of COVID–19.
See FCC Announces Closure of FCC
Headquarters Open Window and
Change in Hand-Delivery Policy, Public
Notice, 35 FCC Rcd 2788 (2020). https://
www.fcc.gov/document/fcc-closesheadquarters-open-window-andchanges-hand-delivery-policy.
People with Disabilities: To request
materials in accessible formats for
people with disabilities (braille, large
print, electronic files, audio format),
send an email to fcc504@fcc.gov or call
the Consumer & Governmental Affairs
Bureau at (202) 418–0530 (voice).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Wireline Competition Bureau,
Competition Policy Division,
Openinternet2023@fcc.gov. For
additional information concerning the
Paperwork Reduction Act information
collection requirements contained in
this document, send an email to PRA@
fcc.gov or contact Nicole Ongele,
Nicole.Ongele@fcc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a
summary of the Commission’s Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) in WC
Docket No. 23–320, FCC 23–83, adopted
on October 19, 2023 and released on
October 20, 2023. The full text of the
document is available on the
Commission’s website at https://
docs.fcc.gov/public/attachments/FCC23-83A1.pdf. To request materials in
accessible formats for people with
disabilities (e.g., braille, large print,
electronic files, audio format, etc.), send
an email to FCC504@fcc.gov or call the
Consumer & Governmental Affairs
Bureau at (202) 418–0530 (voice).
Initial Paperwork Reduction Act of
1995 Analysis
This document contains proposed
information collection requirements.
The Commission, as part of its
continuing effort to reduce paperwork
burdens, invites the general public to
comment on the information collection
requirements contained in this
document, as required by the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995, Public Law 104–
13. Public and agency comments are
due January 2, 2024.
Comments should address: (a)
whether the proposed collection of
information is necessary for the proper
performance of the functions of the
Commission, including whether the
information shall have practical utility;
(b) the accuracy of the Commission’s
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burden estimates; (c) ways to enhance
the quality, utility, and clarity of the
information collected; (d) ways to
minimize the burden of the collection of
information on the respondents,
including the use of automated
collection techniques or other forms of
information technology; and (e) way to
further reduce the information
collection burden on small business
concerns with fewer than 25 employees.
In addition, pursuant to the Small
Business Paperwork Relief Act of 2002,
Public Law 107–198, see 44 U.S.C.
3506(c)(4), we seek specific comment on
how we might further reduce the
information collection burden for small
business concerns with fewer than 25
employees.
Providing Accountability Through
Transparency Act
The Providing Accountability
Through Transparency Act, Public Law
118–9, requires each agency, in
providing notice of a rulemaking, to
post online a brief plain-language
summary of the proposed rule. The
required summary of this Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking/Further Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking is available at
https://www.fcc.gov/proposedrulemakings.
Synopsis
I. Proposed Classification of Broadband
Internet Access Service
1. Today, we propose to return BIAS
to its classification as a
telecommunications service under Title
II of the Act. We further propose to
reclassify mobile BIAS as a commercial
mobile service. In the time since the RIF
Order (83 FR 7852 (Feb. 22, 2018)),
propelled by the COVID–19 pandemic,
BIAS has become even more essential to
consumers for work, health, education,
community, and everyday life. In light
of this reality, we believe that looking
anew at the classification of BIAS is
necessary and timely given the critical
importance of ensuring the
Commission’s authority to fulfill policy
objectives and responsibilities to protect
this vital service. Notable among these
is enabling the Commission to safeguard
the fair and open internet though a
national regulatory approach. The
Commission also has an important
statutory mandate to protect ‘‘life and
property’’ by supporting national
security and public safety. We
anticipate that the proper classification
of BIAS as a telecommunications service
will enhance the Commission’s ability
to advance these and other important
interests, including protection of
consumers’ privacy and data security
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interests and consumers’ ability to
access BIAS. Beyond these areas, we
believe that classification of BIAS as a
telecommunications service represents
the best reading of the text of the Act in
light of the marketplace reality of how
the service is offered and perceived
today. Below, we seek comment on our
proposed classification framework, and
particularly seek comment on its
benefits and burdens. Additionally, we
seek comment on the impact of
reclassification on small businesses and
entities, including small ISPs.
A. Broadband Internet Access Service Is
Essential
2. While BIAS connections have long
been important to full participation in
our society and economy, we believe the
COVID–19 pandemic dramatically
changed the importance of the internet
today, and seek comment on our belief.
Not unlike other essential utilities, such
as electricity and water, BIAS
connections have proved essential to
every aspect of our daily lives, from
work, education, and healthcare, to
commerce, community, and free
expression. BIAS connections were so
critical during the pandemic that
Congress undertook a number of federal
initiatives to improve the accessibility
and affordability of BIAS across
America, finding in the preamble to
§ 60101 of the bipartisan Infrastructure
Investment and Jobs Act (Infrastructure
Act) that ‘‘access to affordable, reliable,
high-speed broadband is essential to full
participation in modern life in the
United States.’’ A Pew Research Center
survey highlighted this reality, showing
that high speed internet was essential or
important to 90 percent of U.S. adults
during the COVID–19 pandemic. That
finding is backed by the tremendous use
during the pandemic of text messaging
applications, voice services, and video
conferencing for work, school, civic
engagement, and connecting with family
and communities, accessed through
consumers’ fixed and mobile broadband
connections. The increased importance
of BIAS connections has persisted postpandemic. Compared to last year, nearly
45 percent of respondents to one survey
said their internet usage had increased,
while the average amount of time
respondents spent actively using the
internet on a phone, tablet, or computer
was eight hours, excluding passive
activities, such as streaming music or
video in the background. OpenVault
reports that almost 50 percent of fixed
broadband subscribers in the U.S. used
533 gigabytes (GB) or more of
bandwidth per month through the
fourth quarter of 2022, compared to
about 10 percent of subscribers in 2017.
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From year-end 2020 to year-end 2021,
monthly data usage per smartphone
subscriber rose to an average of 12.1 GB
per subscriber per month—an increase
of approximately 12 percent. We seek
comment on how consumers’ usage and
view of BIAS has changed since 2018,
when Title II classification was
reversed, and particularly since the
onset of the pandemic in 2020. In what
ways has the importance of BIAS to
consumers stayed the same? How
should any evolution in the importance
of BIAS to consumers drive our analysis
today? We also seek comment on how
the importance of BIAS is expected to
evolve going forward.
3. We tentatively conclude that
developments in the importance of the
internet to consumers demonstrate that
consumers perceive and use BIAS as a
standalone service that provides
telecommunications. In the 2015 Open
Internet Order (80 FR 19737 (April 13,
2015)), the Commission concluded that
consumers perceive BIAS both as a
standalone offering and as providing
telecommunications. The D.C. Circuit
found in USTA that these conclusions
had ‘‘extensive support in the record
and together justify the Commission’s
decision to reclassify broadband as a
telecommunications service.’’ As the
D.C. Circuit recognized, ‘‘[e]ven the
most limited examination of
contemporary broadband usage reveals
that consumers rely on the service
primarily to access third-party content.’’
We believe that the increased
importance of BIAS to consumers since
the onset of the pandemic shows that
consumers’ perception and use of BIAS
as a standalone telecommunications
service is even more pronounced now
than it was in 2015. Indeed, consumers’
use of BIAS today appears to go to the
very heart of the purposes for which
consumers have historically utilized
‘‘telecommunication services’’: to
‘‘transmi[t], between or among points
specified by the user, of information of
the user’s choosing, without change in
the form or content of the information
as sent and received.’’ We seek
comment on our tentative conclusion
and this analysis.
4. We also believe that the COVID–19
pandemic, and the increased
importance of BIAS to consumers, has
spurred ISPs to market BIAS as a
telecommunications service that is
essential to accessing separate datarelated ‘‘add-on’’ offerings. In the 2015
Open Internet Order, the Commission
concluded that ISPs ‘‘market and offer
consumers separate services that are
best characterized as (1) a broadband
internet access service that is a
telecommunications service; and (2)
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‘add-on’ applications, content, and
services that are generally information
services’’ separate from the underlying
broadband service. The Commission
specifically found that ISPs market their
BIAS ‘‘primarily as a conduit for the
transmission of data across the
internet,’’ with fixed providers
distinguishing service offerings on the
basis of transmission speeds, while
mobile providers advertise speed,
reliability, and coverage of their
networks. Although the RIF Order
contended that ‘‘ISPs generally market
and provide information processing
capabilities and transmission
capabilities together as a single service,’’
it did not provide examples. Examples
of ISP marketing today appear even
more focused than in 2015 on the
capability of BIAS to transmit
information of users’ choosing between
internet endpoints, rather than its
capability to generate, acquire, store,
transform, process, retrieve, utilize, or
make available that information. Such
marketing emphasizes faster speeds
aimed at connecting multiple devices,
unlimited data for mobile service, and
reliable and secure coverage. At the
same time, ISPs appear to advertise
data-related offerings as separate
services that can be bundled with or
added on to their BIAS services,
including subscriptions to unaffiliated
video and music streaming services,
new devices, access to Wi-Fi hotspots,
or mobile security apps. We seek
comment generally on how BIAS
offerings are advertised today. Have
fixed or mobile ISPs changed their
marketing or advertising of BIAS since
2018? We seek evidence and examples
of how the BIAS market is shaped
today, and particularly how it has
changed in response to developments in
consumers’ perception about the
essential nature of BIAS connections.
How does the current marketing of BIAS
by ISPs bear on our tentative
determination that such service is a
telecommunications service? We also
seek comment on ways ISPs’ advertising
of bundled services and devices as
‘‘add-ons’’ to their BIAS offerings has
evolved as a result of recent changes in
the importance of BIAS to consumers.
How do these additional offerings
modify the underlying BIAS offered by
the ISP, if at all?
5. We further seek comment on the
development of third-party services and
devices that utilize BIAS. We believe
that since the 2018 reclassification of
BIAS, and particularly as a result of the
COVID–19 pandemic, there is
substantial market proliferation of thirdparty services and devices and that
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consumers’ use of these offerings
significantly outweigh their use of ISPs’
affiliated offerings. We seek comment
on this observation. How have trends in
third-party services and devices
impacted consumer use of BIAS? In
what ways have these services and
devices driven demand for fixed and
mobile BIAS?
considerations we should examine in
our analysis of BIAS classification. For
instance, to what extent are there any
reasonable reliance interests we should
consider? We expect any commenters
claiming reliance to submit evidence
demonstrating the existence, magnitude,
and reasonableness of any alleged
reliance interests.
B. Reclassification is Necessary To
Ensure Internet Openness, Safeguard
National Security, Protect Public Safety,
and Support Other Public Interest Goals
6. Given how essential BIAS is to
consumers’ daily lives, we believe that
our proposed reclassification of BIAS as
a telecommunications service is
necessary to unlock tools the
Commission needs to fulfill its
objectives and responsibilities to
safeguard this vital service. Critical
among these is enabling the
Commission to ensure that the internet
is open and fair, including by
establishing a national regulatory
approach that would provide consistent
protections for consumers and certainty
for ISPs. We also believe that the
proposed reclassification would
enhance the Commission’s ability to
safeguard national security and protect
public safety. Further, we anticipate that
returning BIAS to its
telecommunications service
classification would provide us with
better tools to address policy initiatives
to protect consumers when they use
communications services and support
their ability to access BIAS, including
through the Commission’s universal
service programs. We believe the RIF
Order’s reclassification of BIAS as an
information service not only inhibits the
Commission’s ability to achieve these
outcomes, but that its policy rationales
failed to support that reclassification.
Below, we seek comment on these views
and on any other considerations bearing
on the grounds for us to return to a
telecommunications service
classification of BIAS, including the
impact of our proposed reclassification
on small ISPs and other small entities.
In seeking comment on potential
reclassification, we also welcome the
submission of economic analyses that
weigh the costs and benefits of the
Commission taking such action. We also
invite commenters to identify whether
there are any other regulatory
frameworks administered by the
Commission, not discussed below, that
might be affected by our proposed
reclassification, and seek comment on
how such reclassification would affect
those frameworks.
7. Beyond these issues, we invite
comment on additional public policy
1. Ensuring Internet Openness
8. In light of how essential BIAS
connectivity is to consumers following
the COVID–19 pandemic, we believe
that the open internet must be protected
to ensure consumers can use their BIAS
connections in all the lawful ways they
see fit. We tentatively conclude that
reclassification of BIAS as a
telecommunications service will allow
the Commission to safeguard the open
internet and seek comment on this
tentative conclusion. As an initial
manner, following Title II classification,
the Commission could rely on its
authority in sections 201 and 202 of the
Act to address practices that are unjust,
unreasonable, or unreasonably
discriminatory. Below, we also propose
to reinstate rules that prohibit ISPs from
blocking or throttling the information
transmitted over their networks or
engaging in paid or affiliated
prioritization arrangements.
Additionally, we propose to reinstate a
general conduct standard that would
prohibit practices that cause
unreasonable interference or
unreasonable disadvantage to
consumers or edge providers. Our
proposal would leave the existing
transparency requirements undisturbed.
The proposed rules would establish
clear standards for ISPs to maintain
internet openness and would give the
Commission a solid basis on which to
take enforcement action against conduct
that prevents consumers from fully
accessing all of the critical services
available through the internet. We seek
comment on this analysis. In particular,
how would these rules ensure that
consumers can continue to use their
internet connections for healthcare,
education, work, commerce, and civic
engagement? What would be the
potential impact on these uses if the
open internet is not secured?
9. We further believe reclassification
would enable the Commission to
establish a nationwide framework of
open internet rules for ISPs. In both the
2015 Open Internet Order and the RIF
Order, the Commission expressed
concern that potentially inconsistent
state laws could increase burdens for
ISPs and hinder the broadband market.
With the goal of avoiding this, the
Commission, in each instance,
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attempted to establish a framework that
would preempt any inconsistent state
laws. However, by reclassifying
broadband as a Title I service and
eliminating the conduct rules
established in the 2015 Open Internet
Order, the RIF Order failed to achieve
this goal, because the Mozilla court
vacated the RIF Order’s blanket
preemption of inconsistent state laws,
concluding that the Commission
‘‘fail[ed] to ground its sweeping
Preemption Directive . . . in a lawful
source of statutory authority.’’ Thus,
instead of creating ‘‘a uniform set of
federal regulations,’’ the RIF Order’s
hands-off approach to BIAS has led to
the existence of state-by-state open
internet requirements it sought to avoid.
We remain concerned that differing
state open internet requirements may be
burdensome for ISPs, particularly small
ISPs, thus hindering the broadband
market, and at the same time, fail to
ensure that all consumers are protected
from conduct harmful to internet
openness. We believe that
reclassification will put our authority to
preempt any inconsistent state laws on
substantially stronger legal footing,
thereby enabling the Commission to
create a set of open internet standards
that will apply nationwide. We seek
comment on this analysis.
2. Safeguarding National Security and
Preserving Public Safety
10. We tentatively conclude that the
demonstrated need to address national
security and public safety concerns
makes it necessary and timely to revisit
the statutory classification of BIAS. The
D.C. Circuit criticized the RIF Order for
giving short shrift to the evidence of
public safety concerns in the record
before it. The RIF Remand Order (86 FR
994 (Jan. 7, 2021)), in declining to
reclassify BIAS as a telecommunications
service on that basis, largely dismissed
such concerns as speculative. But
developments in recent years have
highlighted national security and public
safety concerns arising in connection
with the U.S. communications sector,
ranging from the security risks posed by
malicious cyber actors targeting network
equipment and infrastructure to the loss
of communications capability in
emergencies through service outages.
We believe it is now timely for us to
reevaluate the classification of BIAS to
ensure the Commission can use all of its
capabilities to address threats to
national security and public safety.
11. National Security and Law
Enforcement. We tentatively conclude
that authority under applicable Title II
provisions, reinforced by the
Commission’s existing authority, would
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enhance the Commission’s efforts to
protect the national defense. The
Commission’s attention to national
security is a responsibility that
underlies its other statutory obligations,
as evidenced by Congress’s statement in
the Communications Act that among the
reasons it created the Commission was
‘‘for the purpose of the national
defense.’’ This responsibility was
affirmed by Presidential Policy Directive
21, which described how the FCC could,
to the extent permitted by law, exercise
its authority and expertise to identify
and address vulnerabilities in the
communications sector. We seek
comment generally on how
reclassification would advance the
Commission’s fulfillment of its national
security responsibilities and how it
specifically would affect the
Commission’s efforts, in coordination
with other agencies, and with ISPs
themselves, to protect the nation’s
communications networks from entities
and equipment and services that pose
threats to national security and law
enforcement.
12. We tentatively conclude that our
proposed reclassification would
enhance the Commission’s ability to
protect the nation’s communications
networks from entities that pose threats
to national security and law
enforcement pursuant to its authority
under section 214 of the Act, and we
seek comment on this tentative
conclusion. Under section 214, carriers
must be authorized by the Commission
to provide domestic and international
telecommunications service in the
United States. Section 214, however,
applies to common carriers, and thus
does not apply to BIAS under its current
classification as an information service,
potentially exposing the nation’s
communications networks to national
security and law enforcement threats by
entities providing BIAS. In the China
Telecom Americas Order on Revocation
and Termination, China Unicom
Americas Order on Revocation, and
Pacific Networks and ComNet Order on
Revocation and Termination, the
Commission extensively evaluated
national security and law enforcement
considerations raised by existing section
214 authorizations and determined,
based on the record, that the present
and future public interest, convenience,
and necessity was no longer served by
those carriers’ retention of their section
214 authority. In particular, the
Commission identified national security
and law enforcement concerns with
respect to those entities’ access to
Internet Points of Presence (PoPs)
(usually located within data centers)
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and other harms in relation to the
services provided by those entities
pursuant to section 214 authorization.
The Commission concluded that China
Telecom Americas’ (CTA) provision of
services pursuant to its section 214
authority, ‘‘whether offered individually
or as part of a suite of services—
combined with CTA’s physical presence
in the United States, CTA’s ultimate
ownership and control by the Chinese
government, and CTA’s relationship
with its indirect parent [China
Telecommunications Corporation],
which itself maintains a physical
presence in the United States—present
unacceptable national security and law
enforcement risks to the United States,’’
and it reached similar conclusions in
the other proceedings. We believe the
same national security and law
enforcement threats identified in those
proceedings equally exist with respect
to entities providing BIAS, and that
reclassifying BIAS as a
telecommunications service would
allow the Commission to use its section
214 authority to address those threats
and other threats to our
communications networks. We seek
comment on this analysis.
13. We also seek comment on other
ways the proposed reclassification
would enhance the Commission’s
ability to address national security and
law enforcement threats by entities
providing BIAS. Are there other specific
national security and law enforcement
risks in connection with the provision
of BIAS resulting from the current
classification of BIAS as an information
service? Have there been relevant and
demonstrable changes with respect to
how nation-states have sought to exploit
the technological convergence of
broadband and other services that
present vulnerabilities affecting the
national defense? We ask commenters to
provide detailed comments on any
regulatory requirements designed to
address such risks that would newly
apply to these entities if the
Commission were to reclassify BIAS as
a telecommunications service. For
instance, could the Commission
prohibit ISPs from entering into internet
traffic exchange arrangements with
certain companies that operate data
centers or other Internet Exchange
Points in the U.S.? Would
reclassification enable the Committee
for the Assessment of Foreign
Participation in the United States
Telecommunications Services Sector to
review telecommunications licenses or
authorizations meeting appropriate
thresholds of foreign ownership or
control for national security and law
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enforcement concerns? Would
reclassification increase law
enforcement agencies’ ability to seek
lawful assistance, including
identification and disruption of illegal
activity, for investigations involving ISP
networks? For mobile BIAS, would
reclassification extend the foreign
ownership restrictions for wireless
common carriers that the Commission
applies under section 310(b) of the Act
and its implementing rules? In the
absence of reclassification, does the
Commission have other authority that it
could use that is sufficient to protect the
nation’s communications networks
against ISPs that pose national security
and law enforcement threats? If so, we
ask commenters to indicate the statutory
authority and how the Commission
could use such authority to ensure
national security and law enforcement
concerns are addressed.
14. We also seek comment on how
reclassification would support the
Commission’s efforts to safeguard the
nation’s communications network
infrastructure from equipment and
services that pose a security threat.
Pursuant to its universal service
authority in section 254 of the Act, its
authority to regulate equipment in
sections 302 and 303 of the Act, and
new mandates established by Congress
through the Secure and Trusted
Communications Networks Act of 2019,
as amended, and the Secure Equipment
Act of 2021 to address communications
equipment and service that poses an
unacceptable risk to national security,
the Commission has undertaken
significant efforts to improve supply
chain security. In particular, the
Commission has: prohibited the use of
universal service fund (USF) support to
purchase or obtain any equipment or
services produced or provided by
companies posing a national security
threat; prohibited the use of federal
subsidies administered by the
Commission and used for capital
expenditures to provide advanced
communications service to purchase,
rent, lease, or otherwise obtain such
equipment or services; created and
maintained a list of communications
equipment and services that pose an
unacceptable risk to the national
security (‘‘covered equipment and
services’’); established the Secure and
Trusted Communications Networks
Reimbursement Program
(Reimbursement Program) to reimburse
the costs providers incur to remove,
replace, and dispose of covered Huawei
and ZTE equipment and services from
their networks; and prohibited the
authorization of equipment that poses a
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threat and the marketing and
importation of such equipment in the
United States. We seek comment on
how reclassification may allow the
Commission to further these efforts. For
instance, would reclassification give the
Commission additional authority to
restrict a larger class of entities from
using equipment and services that pose
a threat? Additionally, would
reclassification give the Commission
more robust authority to require more
entities to remove and replace covered
Huawei and ZTE communications
equipment and services? Could the
Commission prohibit the use of covered
equipment or services in any network
infrastructure that is used to route or
transmit communications, including
data centers and internet exchange
facilities? Could we use the additional
authority under Title II to prohibit
carriers from interconnecting with other
carriers who have a PoP within the U.S.
and its territories that use such
equipment and services? Are there other
ways Title II authority could be used to
address national security threats arising
from equipment and services outside
the scope of our prior actions? How
does the Commission’s role fit with that
of other agencies that help to address
potential security threats from foreign
actors to the nation’s communications
network and equipment, and how
would enhancements to the
Commission’s regulatory authority as a
result of reclassification bolster that
role?
15. Cybersecurity. We believe that
returning BIAS to its
telecommunications service
classification would reinforce the
Commission’s authority to support its
efforts to enhance cybersecurity in the
communications sector, and we seek
comment on this tentative conclusion.
Among such efforts are those pursuant
to Presidential Policy Directive 21,
which tasks the Commission with
‘‘identifying communications sector
vulnerabilities and working with
industry and other stakeholders to
address those vulnerabilities . . . [and]
to increase the security and resilience of
critical infrastructure within the
communications sector. . . .’’ The
Commission is actively involved in
federal interagency cybersecurity
planning, coordination, and response
activities. However, the current
classification of BIAS limits the
regulatory and operational actions that
the Commission can take to address
cyber incidents impacting the
communications sector, as well as other
critical infrastructure sectors. For
example, the Commission has limited
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authority to require providers of nonTitle II services (e.g., ISPs) to adopt
cybersecurity standards or performance
goals, which inhibits the Commission’s
ability to protect U.S. communications
services and infrastructure from cyberattacks and to ensure that
communications devices and equipment
do not pose security risks to other
critical infrastructure sectors. While the
Commission will continue to work
closely with ISPs to secure their
networks, reclassification of BIAS as
telecommunications service would
provide the Commission with the
authority to act in the absence of
voluntary action by ISPs or in cases of
emergency or significant risk. We
tentatively conclude that the proposed
reclassification could address this issue
by enhancing the Commission’s
cybersecurity authority, and we seek
comment on this tentative conclusion.
16. Another initiative is the
Commission’s inquiry into
vulnerabilities threatening the security
and integrity of the Border Gateway
Protocol (BGP), which impacts ‘‘the
transmission of data from email, ecommerce, and bank transactions to
interconnected Voice-over Internet
Protocol (VoIP) and 9–1–1 calls.’’ The
Commission noted that ‘‘BGP’s initial
design, which remains widely deployed
today, does not include security features
to ensure trust in the information that it
is used to exchange,’’ which allows a
bad network actor to ‘‘deliberately
falsify BGP reachability information to
redirect traffic to itself or through a
specific third-party network, and
prevent that traffic from reaching its
intended recipient.’’ Would
reclassification provide the Commission
with additional authority to address
BGP vulnerabilities, including, for
example, by requiring providers to
deploy solutions to address BGP
vulnerabilities in the absence of
voluntary action?
17. In what other ways could
reclassification bolster the
Commission’s authority to address
cybersecurity in the communications
sector? For instance, would it strengthen
the Commission’s ability to establish
rules mandating that service providers
implement cybersecurity practices and
risk management plans? Similarly,
would reclassification permit the
Commission to consider cybersecurity
in its annual inquiry under section 706
of the Telecommunications Act 1996?
For example, could the Commission
determine that only broadband services
that meet certain cybersecurity
standards constitute ‘‘advanced
telecommunications capability’’? To
what extent would reclassification allow
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us to address threats related to the DNS,
which enables domain names to resolve
to the correct IP addresses, and other
naming protocols? Could the
Commission use Title II authority to
require ISPs to block IP addresses that
originate malicious software and
ransomware? Would reclassification
allow the Commission to mandate the
adoption of Communications Security,
Reliability, and Interoperability Council
(CSRIC) best practices directed to ISPs
and audit or enforce the
implementation? Would it likewise
enable the Commission to use Title II
authority to require ISPs to implement
or certify to their implementation of
network security practices, such as
those recommended in Executive Order
14028, the National Cybersecurity
Strategy, or related cybersecurity
measures recommended by the Deputy
National Security Advisor, the Office of
National Cyber Director, and other
government agencies or
intergovernmental agencies, such as the
Federal Acquisition Security Council
(FASC)? Would reclassification give the
Commission sufficient authority to
establish cybersecurity requirements for
other components that facilitate
communications between end points,
such as internet exchange facilities and
data centers that route communications
and deliver applications? Could the
Commission rely on authority in section
218 to require more comprehensive
cyber incident reporting? Would
reclassification permit the Commission
to rely on a broader range of regulatory
tools to ensure network and service
reliability and better support an
effective 911 and emergency
preparedness efforts?
18. Public Safety. We next tentatively
conclude that reclassifying BIAS as a
telecommunications service would
enable the Commission to advance
several public safety initiatives, and we
seek comment on this tentative
conclusion. As the Commission
recognized in the RIF Remand Order,
‘‘[a]dvancing public safety is one of our
fundamental obligations.’’ Indeed, the
Commission is ‘‘required to consider
public safety by . . . its enabling act.’’
The Mozilla court explained that when
‘‘‘Congress has given an agency the
responsibility to regulate a market such
as the telecommunications industry that
it has repeatedly deemed important to
protecting public safety,’ then the
agency’s decisions ‘must take into
account its duty to protect the public.’ ’’
We believe that the Commission’s
responsibility to address public safety is
becoming increasingly important as the
severity and frequency of natural
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disasters are on the rise. We tentatively
conclude that reclassification would
enhance the Commission’s jurisdiction
over ISPs, which it could use in
combination with other statutory
authority to ensure BIAS meets the
needs of public safety entities and
individuals when they use those
services for public safety purposes. We
seek comment on this tentative
conclusion and analysis below. We note
that the RIF Order concluded that Title
I classification advances, and does not
harm, public safety, primarily based on
its overarching policy rationales for
reversing Title II classification. We seek
comment on the RIF Order’s policy
rationales and framework for protecting
against harms elsewhere in this Notice,
and we invite commenters to address
whether those rationales sufficiently
advance public safety. In particular, we
invite comment on whether the
Commission’s ability to adopt ex ante
regulations would provide better public
safety protections than an ex post
enforcement framework.
19. We seek comment on how our
proposed reclassification would enable
the Commission to support public safety
officials’ use of BIAS for public safety
purposes. As a general matter,
broadband services play an important
role in how public safety officials
communicate with each other and how
they deliver and receive information
from the public. Although much of the
communications between public safety
entities and first responders take
advantage of enterprise-level dedicated
public safety broadband services, they
often rely on commercial broadband
services to communicate during
emergency situations. Increasingly,
public safety entities rely on retail BIAS
to access various databases, share data
with emergency responders, and stream
video into 911 and emergency
operations centers. We also are aware
that public safety officials often use
services accessible over-the-top (OTT) of
broadband connections, such as social
media, to communicate important and
timely information to the public and to
gain valuable information from the
public and build on-the-ground
situational awareness. We seek
comment on the extent to which public
safety officials rely on BIAS for public
safety purposes and on our tentative
conclusion that reclassification would
give us additional jurisdiction to
advance the existing uses of BIAS by
these officials.
20. We also seek comment on how
reclassification could further other
public safety initiatives. For instance,
while the Commission has taken
important steps to improve the
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effectiveness of Wireless Emergency
Alerts (WEAs), would classification of
BIAS as a telecommunications service
enable the Commission to make the
nation’s alert and warning capabilities
more effective and resilient by, for
instance, requiring ISPs to transmit
emergency alerts to their subscribers?
More recently, the Commission
modernized its priority services rules to
authorize service providers to offer, on
a voluntary basis, priority treatment of
data, video, and IP-based voice services
for public safety personnel and first
responders, including by removing
outdated requirements that may impede
the use of IP-based technologies. Would
reclassification allow the Commission to
go a step further by requiring service
providers to offer prioritized routing for
all IP-based services and prioritized
restoration for all network
infrastructure? Could the Commission
require ISPs to participate in
Telecommunications Service Priority
(TSP), Government Emergency
Telecommunications Service (GETS),
and Wireless Priority Service (WPS)?
How, if at all, would reclassification
allow the Commission to expand the
applicability, and therefore the public
safety benefits, of the Communications
Assistance for Law Enforcement Act
(CALEA) requirements?
21. We tentatively conclude that BIAS
also plays an increasingly important
role in allowing the public to
communicate with first responders
during emergency situations and seek
comment on this tentative conclusion.
In the RIF Remand Order, the
Commission noted that retail broadband
services are used to translate
communications with 911 callers and
patients in the field and to deliver
critical information about 911 callers
that is not delivered through the
traditional 911 network. Are there other
ways in which BIAS can or does
supplement traditional 911
communications? The Commission has
undertaken various efforts in recent
years to improve how the public reaches
and shares information with emergency
service providers. What effect, if any,
would Title II classification of BIAS
have on these and future efforts? Would
reclassification enhance the
Commission’s jurisdiction to improve
the flow of voice communications,
photos, videos, text messages, real-time
text (RTT), or any other type of
communication from the public to
emergency service providers through
Next Generation 911 or over the use of
Wi-Fi calling to reach emergency service
providers? If so, how? We also believe
BIAS is critical when used by
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individuals with disabilities to
communicate with public safety
services, and the Commission has taken
several steps to improve access to IPenabled 911 communications for people
with disabilities. How will
reclassification fortify our existing
jurisdiction to ensure these
communications are not interrupted or
degraded? To what extent does or will
BIAS support alternatives to 911
communications, and will
reclassification help to ensure that
BIAS-based emergency communications
meet certain reliability and security
standards? Would reclassification of
BIAS enhance the access to, availability
of, and service quality for IP-based
communication services used by people
with disabilities in emergencies,
including the IP-based forms of
telecommunications relay services
(TRS)?
22. BIAS is also critical for allowing
the public to easily and efficiently
access public safety resources and
information. In particular, members of
the public often rely on BIAS during
emergencies to enable them to find and
receive potentially life-saving
information. As the Commission stated
in the RIF Remand Order, ‘‘consumers
regularly use their mobile devices and
broadband connections ‘to access
broadly available information regarding
threatening weather, shelter-in-place
mandates, ongoing active-shooter
scenarios, and other matters essential to
public safety.’ ’’ The COVID–19
pandemic, severe natural disasters, and
other incidents have demonstrated the
importance of the public being able to
access public safety information using
their BIAS connections. We seek
comment on how reclassification would
allow the Commission to ensure that the
public can access life-saving public
safety resources and information using
BIAS.
23. Furthermore, BIAS is important
for public safety communications that
occur outside of emergencies. The
Commission observed in the RIF
Remand Order that the COVID–19
pandemic demonstrated that many
Americans rely on telemedicine over
mass-market broadband services for
routine health care, triage, and basic
health advice, and that the ability of 5G
networks to transmit massive amounts
of data in real time will also help enable
new applications for advanced
communications between the public
and health care officials, such as
through the use of wireless sensors to
for remote patient monitoring and data
transmission so doctors can identify
problems before they become
emergencies, and through the
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development of connected ambulance
services for faster patient transport.
BIAS connections are also playing a
more important role in home safety and
security as consumers increasingly
purchase home security and monitoring
systems that use connected devices to
monitor, deter, and address theft,
breaking and entering, and other home
threats and BIAS connections are
increasingly important for in-home
monitoring of individuals who are
elderly or disabled. We seek comment
on the impact that reclassification may
have on these and other public safety
applications that rely on BIAS.
24. Network Resiliency and
Reliability. We tentatively conclude that
reclassifying BIAS as a
telecommunications service would
enhance the Commission’s ability to
ensure the nation’s communications
networks are resilient and reliable, and
we seek comment on this tentative
conclusion. For instance, under the
Commission’s Network Outage
Reporting System (NORS), qualifying
communications providers are required
to report to the Commission network
outages that satisfy certain criteria, and
the Commission uses this information to
advance network resiliency and
reliability. Because this reporting
requirement has generally been limited
to outages affecting voice services, the
Commission has historically lacked
reliable outage information for today’s
modern, essential broadband networks,
which inhibits the Commission from
fully ensuring the resiliency and
reliability of those networks. Would
reclassification support the
Commission’s ability to expand the
scope of NORS to require ISPs to submit
outage reports in response to service
incidents that cause outages or the
degradation of communications
services, such as cybersecurity breaches,
wire cuts, infrastructure damages from
natural disaster, and operator errors or
misconfigurations? Under rules
implemented in 2022, Federal, State,
Tribal and Territorial public safety
agencies are eligible to obtain direct
read-only access to outage information
filed in NORS and the Disaster
Information Reporting System (DIRS) for
their jurisdictions. Would
reclassification and enhanced NORS
reporting afford public safety officials
greater transparency during outages and
disasters to assess the operational status
of networks for dissemination of
emergency information or to assess
where support is needed? Would it
support reliability efforts for calls and
texts to 911 and the 988 Suicide and
Crisis Lifeline? How, if at all, would
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reclassification allow us to further our
goal to improve the reliability of
wireless networks? Would broadband
reclassification give the Commission
additional authority to facilitate the use
of Wi-Fi calling during emergencies or
network outages, and if so, to what
extent could the Commission apply
reliability standards for Wi-Fi calling?
Are there other ways that
reclassification of BIAS would help us
improve network resiliency and
reliability, such as requirements for
network upgrades and changes, rules
relating to recovery from network
outages, and improving our incident
investigation and enforcement
authority? What impact would any such
actions have on ISPs, particularly small
ISPs?
3. Protecting Consumers’ Privacy and
Data Security
25. Since before the adoption of the
1996 Act, the Commission has
consistently protected consumers from
activities that undermine their ability to
use communications services freely,
fairly, and free from abuse by bad actors.
As the communications industry has
changed and the tactics used by bad
actors have evolved, so too have the
Commission’s efforts. The current
information service classification of
BIAS, however, appears to inhibit the
Commission’s ability to fully ensure that
consumers are protected from harmful
conduct when they use communications
services today and able to utilize these
services in a fair and secure manner. We
believe that classification of BIAS as a
telecommunications service could
support the Commission’s efforts to
protect consumers’ privacy and data
security and relieve them from unlawful
robocalls and robotexts. We seek
comment on this view.
26. Privacy and Data Protection. We
tentatively conclude that reclassification
of BIAS as a telecommunications service
would support the Commission’s efforts
to safeguard consumers’ privacy and
data security, and we seek comment on
this tentative conclusion. Highlighting
the Commission’s important role in this
area, earlier this year, Chairwoman
Rosenworcel established the FCC
Privacy and Data Protection Task Force
to coordinate the agency’s efforts to
protect against and respond to consumer
privacy infringements and data breaches
by communications providers. The
Commission’s efforts will rely on,
among other things, its authority under
section 222 of the Act. That provision
governs telecommunications carriers’
protection and use of information
obtained from their customers or other
carriers, and calibrates the protection of
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such information based on its
sensitivity. Congress imposed a duty on
every telecommunications carrier to
protect the confidentiality of its
customers’ proprietary information,
according the category of customer
proprietary network information (CPNI)
the greatest level of protection.
27. When the Commission classified
BIAS as a telecommunications service
in the 2015 Open Internet Order, it
declined to forbear from applying
section 222 of the Act, citing the need
to protect consumers’ privacy regardless
of whether they communicate via
broadband or telephone services. The
RIF Order eliminated these statutory
protections for broadband customers
and surrendered the Commission’s
authority over ISPs’ privacy and data
protection practices. We believe that
ISPs are situated to collect vast swaths
of information about their customers,
including personal information,
financial information, and information
regarding subscriber online activity. We
further believe that consumers currently
may not fully comprehend—and
therefore may not be able to
meaningfully consent to—ISPs’
collection, processing, and disclosure of
customer information, including
potentially through the use of artificial
intelligence models. We are also
concerned that, absent statutory and
regulatory requirements to do so, ISPs
may not adopt adequate administrative,
technical, physical, and procedural
safeguards to protect their customers’
data. Indeed, ISPs appear to continue to
be attractive targets to hackers and other
bad actors, putting BIAS customer data
at significant risk of compromise. We
seek comment on these views.
28. Based on the foregoing, we once
again propose herein not to forbear from
section 222. Returning BIAS to its
telecommunications service
classification would bring ISPs back
under the section 222 privacy and data
security framework, and therefore
restore those protections for consumers.
Additionally, classifying BIAS as a
telecommunications service could
support a consistent privacy and data
security framework for voice and data
services, which we believe consumers
often subscribe to from one provider in
a bundle and perceive to be part of the
same service, particularly for mobile
services. We seek comment on this
proposed analysis.
29. We further believe that, in
addition to protecting consumers,
reclassifying BIAS as a
telecommunications service and
declining to forbear from section 222
would protect information concerning
entities that interact with ISPs. Section
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222 places an obligation on
telecommunications carriers to protect
the confidentiality of the proprietary
information of and relating to other
telecommunication carriers (including
resellers), equipment manufacturers,
and business customers. We seek
comment on how reclassification of
BIAS will affect telecommunications
carriers and equipment manufacturers
who interact with ISPs, as well as the
customers those entities serve, such as
content creators and edge providers.
Would these protections also have
national security benefits by, for
example, deterring ISPs from
contracting with foreign companies that
may pose a national security threat or
are owned by, controlled by, or subject
to the jurisdiction or direction of foreign
adversaries? Would these section 222
requirements create a meaningful
burden on ISPs, especially small ISPs?
30. Robocalls and Robotexts. We seek
comment on whether reclassification
can serve to enhance the Commission’s
authority to support consumer privacy
by combating illegal robocalls and
robotexts. In recent years, the
Commission has undertaken extensive
efforts to address these invasive
communications, including by
establishing rules for call
authentication, robocall mitigation, and
call blocking; expanding requirements
and restrictions to robotexts; and taking
enforcement action against providers
who originate and transport these
communications. Yet bad actors
continue to evolve their techniques to
find new ways to interrupt consumers
and perpetuate fraud. We note that
many illegal robocalls are transmitted
via VoIP networks and many illegal
robotexts are transmitted by OTT
messaging services (e.g., iMessage,
WhatsApp, and Signal). We seek
comment on the extent to which Title II
classification would help the
Commission in its efforts to combat
these practices. Would Title II
classification grant the Commission
oversight to reach a larger class of
entities, particularly for messages and
calls delivered via broadband networks?
For example, to the extent robotext
scams include links to spoofed websites
designed to defraud consumers, would
reclassification allow us to require that
ISPs block traffic to IP addresses
associated with those websites? Would
reclassification allow the Commission to
apply new requirements and restrictions
beyond what it can achieve under the
sources of authority the Commission has
relied on to date for its robocall and
robotext actions? If so, how? Are there
other ways in which reclassification
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would help the Commission combat
illegal robocalls and robotexts? How
would this affect ISPs, especially small
ISPs?
4. Supporting Access to Broadband
Internet Access Service
31. From the Commission’s inception,
it has played a critical role in facilitating
the proliferation of communications
networks and ensuring that consumers
have access to the services these
networks provide. While these efforts
are crucial to the Commission’s mission,
we believe that the information service
classification of BIAS has limited the
Commission’s efforts to achieve these
goals for the communications service
that has become fundamental to
consumers’ everyday lives. Classifying
BIAS as a telecommunications service
will enable the Commission to better
support the deployment of wireline and
wireless infrastructure, advance
universal service, and increase the
accessibility of communications
networks. We seek comment on this
tentative conclusion. We also seek
comment on whether, and how, we
could leverage our proposed
reclassification in other proceedings to
further encourage access to BIAS by all
consumers.
32. Wireline and Wireless
Infrastructure. We seek comment on the
public policy impact of our proposed
reclassification of BIAS on the
Commission’s goals to support
investment in and deployment of
wireline and wireless infrastructure. For
example, section 224(b) of the Act
grants the Commission clear authority to
regulate the rates, terms, and conditions
of pole attachments by a cable television
system or provider of
telecommunications service. Since
2011, the Commission has undertaken a
series of reforms with the goal of
improving access to poles to, among
other things, help speed the deployment
of broadband infrastructure. However,
in the RIF Order, the Commission
effectively eliminated section 224 pole
attachment rights of broadband-only
providers as a result of its classifying
broadband as an information service. In
2020, following the Mozilla court’s
direction that the Commission ‘‘grapple
with the lapse in legal safeguards’’ for
broadband-only providers that resulted
from the RIF Order, the Commission
concluded that while there were
potentially adverse effects to this class
of providers resulting from the loss of
pole attachment rights, the benefits of
returning BIAS to an information
service classification outweighed any
drawbacks. We tentatively conclude that
the Commission erred in its 2020
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analysis and believe that reclassifying
BIAS as a telecommunications service
will help support the Commission’s
goals to facilitate broadband
deployment, and we seek comment on
this tentative conclusion. How has the
market for broadband-only ISPs changed
since 2015, in particular for new
entrants and those ISPs seeking
infrastructure access via pole
attachments? What effect has the
Commission’s elimination of pole
attachment rights for broadband-only
ISPs had on the deployment of
broadband, particularly to unserved or
underserved areas? How would
reinstatement of pole attachment rights
benefit or burden ISPs, particularly
small ISPs? As the Commission has
recognized, Congress recently has made
available unprecedented levels of
federal funding for broadband buildout,
including a variety of programs
administered by the National
Telecommunications and Information
Administration (NTIA), including the
Broadband, Equity, Access, and
Deployment Program (BEAD), the State
Digital Equity Capacity Grant Program
and its federal counterpart, the Middle
Mile Infrastructure Grant Program, and
the Tribal Broadband Connectivity
Program. We believe that ensuring the
protections of section 224 are restored to
all ISPs, including broadband-only
providers, will pave the way for quicker
and less expensive broadband
deployment, thereby enabling that
funding to go as far as possible. We seek
comment on that view.
33. We also seek comment on how
reclassifying BIAS as a
telecommunications service and
classifying mobile BIAS as a commercial
mobile service will impact the
Commission’s authority over wireless
infrastructure. Although section
332(e)(7) of the Act, and Commission
interpretation thereof, regulate state and
local authority over the placement,
construction, and modification of
personal wireless service facilities, are
there ways in which classifying
broadband as a telecommunications
service can further advance the
Commission’s goals to ‘‘improve service
quality and lower prices for consumers’’
for broadband access? Finally, we also
seek comment on how reclassification of
BIAS as a telecommunications service
may affect the Commission’s application
of the Act’s preemption frameworks in
sections 253(d) and 332(c)(3) regarding
infrastructure used to provide
broadband-only services.
34. Universal Service. We tentatively
conclude that classifying BIAS as a
telecommunications service will
strengthen our policy initiatives to
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support the availability and affordability
of BIAS through USF programs, and we
seek comment on this tentative
conclusion. The Communications Act
defines universal service as an
‘‘evolving level of telecommunications
services,’’ and charges the Commission
with periodically establishing such
services. BIAS is now clearly an
essential service upon which consumers
rely, and we believe that placing BIAS
outside of the Commission’s Title II
authority weakens the Commission’s
ability to deliver universal service
support for that essential service,
especially in rural areas. We seek
comment on this view. In Mozilla, the
court found that the Commission failed
to explain how its universal service
authority over telecommunications
carriers in section 254(e) of the Act
could extend to ISPs without BIAS
classified as a telecommunications
service for purposes of the Lifeline
program, and it remanded the issue back
to the Commission. Although the
Commission conceded in the RIF
Remand Order that under a Title I
regime, BIAS could not be a section
254(c) supported service because
section 254(c) defines universal service
as an ‘‘evolving level of
telecommunications services,’’ it
nevertheless asserted a theory under
section 254(e) to enable Lifeline support
for BIAS offered by eligible
telecommunications carriers (ETCs),
similar to the theory under which the
Commission has funded broadbandcapable networks through the High-Cost
Program.
35. We tentatively conclude that
reclassifying BIAS as a
telecommunications service will bolster
the Commission’s ability to provide
High-Cost and low-income support, and
seek comment on this tentative
conclusion. Among other things, we
believe that reclassifying BIAS as a
telecommunications service could
eventually allow broadband-only
providers to once again participate in
the Lifeline program, and would give
the Commission the ability to adjust
certain service obligations for ETCs. We
further believe that reclassifying BIAS
as a telecommunications service would
enhance our ability to connect lowincome households in rural areas,
including through the Link Up program,
which provides support to reduce
connection charges for eligible residents
of Tribal lands who subscribe to
telecommunications service from a
telecommunications carrier receiving
high-cost support. We seek comment on
these views, including how this may
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impact ISPs, especially smaller ISPs and
ISPs serving rural areas.
36. We also tentatively conclude that
classification of BIAS as a
telecommunications service protects
public investments in BIAS access and
affordability. Since the inception of
BIAS, the Commission, along with other
federal and state entities, have made
significant investments to ensure that
BIAS networks reach all consumers and
are affordable, particularly through the
Affordable Connectivity Program. These
efforts increased dramatically since the
beginning of the COVID–19 pandemic as
Congress directed a large influx of
funding in broadband deployment and
consumer access. We believe our
proposed reclassification will enable the
Commission to protect these
investments on an ongoing basis by
enabling the Commission to ensure the
connections supported by these funds
align with the other policy goals we
detail here: advancing national security
and public safety and protecting
consumers. In doing so, we believe we
can ensure these connections continue
to achieve their primary purpose of
benefiting consumers. We seek
comment on these views.
37. Multiple-Tenant Environments
(MTEs). We seek comment on how
reclassification may impact the
Commission’s authority to take action to
promote tenant choice and competition
in the provision of broadband services
to the benefit of those who live and
work in MTEs. The Commission has
long prohibited agreements between
providers of certain communications
services and MTE owners that grant the
provider exclusive access and rights to
provide service to the MTE. In 2019, the
Commission released a Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking that sought
comment about these practices and
others that could have the effect of
dampening competition or deployment,
and on the Commission’s authority to
target different kinds of entities,
including telecommunications
providers, MVPDs, and broadband-only
providers. In 2022, relying on sections
201 and 628 of the Act, the Commission
adopted rules to prohibit
telecommunications carriers and
MVPDs from entering into exclusive and
graduated revenue sharing agreements,
and to require that telecommunications
carriers and MVPDs include disclaimers
on marketing materials distributed to
MTE tenants that inform tenants of the
existence of an exclusive marketing
arrangement, among other things. The
Commission determined that it was
appropriate to ‘‘proceed incrementally,’’
but cautioned that it would ‘‘continue to
monitor competition in MTEs to
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determine whether we should alter the
scope of our rules to cover other
providers,’’ including broadband-only
providers. We seek comment whether
reclassification of BIAS would provide
additional authority for the Commission
to further promote competition and
consumer choice in communications
services in MTEs.
38. Free Expression. We believe BIAS
connections promote diversity of
viewpoints by allowing traditionally
disadvantaged communities to express
themselves outside of traditional media.
Social media websites and other
platforms particularly have become
important platforms for free expression,
political engagement, and social
activism. Indeed, Congress has
recognized that ‘‘the internet offer[s] a
forum for a true diversity of political
discourse, unique opportunities for
cultural development, and myriad
avenues for intellectual activity.’’
Accordingly, we invite comment on any
free expression-related considerations
associated with classifying BIAS as a
telecommunications service and any
benefits or drawbacks of such
classification for relevant
communications.
39. Digital Equity. The Commission,
as part of its continuing effort to
advance digital equity for all, including
people of color, persons with
disabilities, persons who live in rural or
Tribal areas, and others who have been
historically underserved, marginalized,
and adversely affected by persistent
poverty and inequality, invites
comments on any equity-related
considerations and benefits (if any) that
may be associated with the proposals
and issues discussed herein.
Specifically, we seek comment on how
our proposals may promote or inhibit
advances in diversity, equity, inclusion,
and accessibility, as well as the scope of
the Commission’s relevant legal
authority.
5. Access for Persons With Disabilities
40. We seek comment on how
reclassification may impact the
Commission’s authority to ensure that
individuals with disabilities can
communicate using BIAS. People with
disabilities ‘‘increasingly rely upon
internet-based video communications,
both to communicate directly (point-topoint) with other persons who are deaf
or hard of hearing who use sign
language, and through video relay
service.’’ Section 716 of the Act requires
that interoperable video conferencing
services be accessible, regardless of how
those services are transmitted—by
broadband or otherwise—and also
requires that text messaging, email,
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other electronic messaging services, and
interconnected and non-interconnected
VoIP services, be accessible. In addition,
section 718 of the Act requires that
internet browsers installed on mobile
phones must be accessible to people
who are blind or visually impaired to
ensure the accessibility of mobile
broadband. How would reclassification
affect the Commission’s ability to
implement and enforce these
provisions? We seek comment on the
impact, if any, that reclassification may
have on the Commission’s goals to
ensure that BIAS remains accessible to
individuals with disabilities. For
instance, if the Commission declines to
forbear from section 255 of the Act, as
we propose below, would that provide
additional authority for the Commission
to require that ISPs’ telecommunications
services and equipment be accessible to
and usable by people with disabilities?
6. The RIF Order’s Policy Rationales Did
Not Justify Reversing the Classification
of Broadband Service
41. In the RIF Order, the
Commission’s primary policy
justifications for reclassifying BIAS as a
Title I service were its conclusions
regarding the alleged harm to
investment by Title II classification and
the benefits to investment by Title I
classification. However, the RIF Order
gave little weight to the 2015 Open
Internet Order’s showing that
investment continued for broadband
services that were regulated as Title II
common carrier services, including
digital subscriber line (DSL), which was
regulated as such until 2005.
42. We tentatively conclude that the
Commission’s conclusions in the RIF
Order that ISP investment is closely tied
to the classification of BIAS were
unsubstantiated. Instead, we agree with
the RIF Order’s statement that ‘‘owners
of network infrastructure make longterm, irreversible investments,’’ which
we believe makes it unlikely that
changes in investment shortly following
the adoption of each Order were
actually related to the effects of each
Order. We seek comment on this belief.
We note that the Commission received
conflicting viewpoints regarding the
actual effect of Title II classification on
investment. Instead of concluding, as
the 2015 Open Internet Order did, that
conflicting viewpoints concerning the
effect of classification on investment
prevented the Commission from being
certain which viewpoint was more
accurate, the Commission chose to rely
on certain studies purporting to show
that Title II classification in the 2015
Open Internet Order hurt investment to
reach its conclusion about the effect of
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Title II classification on investment,
even as the Commission seemed to
recognize the weaknesses of those
studies. Additionally, similar to the
2015 Open Internet Order record, the
RIF Order’s record showed opposing
views on the likely long-term effects of
the Commission’s regulatory decisions
on investment. We believe, as the
Commission did in 2015, that ‘‘no party
[could] quantify with any reasonable
degree of accuracy how either a Title I
or a Title II approach may affect future
investment.’’ As such, we tentatively
conclude that changes in ISP investment
following the adoption of each Order
were more likely the result of other
factors unrelated to the classification of
BIAS, such as broader economic
conditions at the time, technology
changes such as the transition from 3G
to 4G LTE networks, and ISPs’ general
business development decisions. We
seek comment on this tentative
conclusion. Is there any evidence that
ISP investment is closely tied to the
regulatory classification of BIAS? Can
any declines or increases in investment
following adoption of either the 2015
Open Internet Order or the RIF Order be
directly attributed to the classification
of BIAS in those Orders? What other
factors besides the regulatory
classification of broadband impact
investment decisions? We invite parties
to comment on the strength of any
evidence submitted on these issues.
43. Notwithstanding these tentative
conclusions, we seek comment
generally on how, and the extent to
which, our proposed classification of
BIAS as a telecommunications service
will affect ISPs’ investment incentives
today. How will it affect small ISPs? Is
it possible to evaluate ISPs’ investment
incentives independent of any
incentives and investment activity that
may result from the billions of dollars
in federal and state funding that has
been and will be provided to ISPs to
support infrastructure deployment and
broadband connectivity?
C. Scope of Reclassification
44. Broadband Internet Access
Service. We propose to continue using
the definition of ‘‘broadband internet
access service’’ as a ‘‘mass-market retail
service by wire or radio that provides
the capability to transmit data to and
receive data from all or substantially all
internet endpoints, including any
capabilities that are incidental to and
enable the operation of the
communications service, but excluding
dial-up internet access service,’’ as well
as ‘‘any service that the Commission
finds to be providing a functional
equivalent of the service described [in
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the definition] or that is used to evade
the protections set forth’’ in part 8 of the
Commission’s rules. The Commission
has chiefly retained this definition since
it first defined broadband internet
access service in the 2010 Open Internet
Order (76 FR 60754 (Sept. 30, 2011)).
We seek comment on whether there is
any reason to depart from this definition
of broadband internet access service.
45. Similarly, we propose to continue
to define ‘‘mass market’’ as the
Commission did in the 2015 Open
Internet Order and RIF Order—‘‘a
service marketed and sold on a
standardized basis to residential
customers, small businesses, and other
end-user customers such as school and
libraries.’’ In addition to including
broadband internet access service
purchased with support from the E-Rate,
Lifeline, and Rural Health Care
programs, as well as any broadband
internet access service offered using
networks supported by the Connect
America Fund or the Rural Digital
Opportunity Fund, we propose that
such ‘‘mass market’’ services would also
include any broadband internet access
service purchased with support from the
Affordable Connectivity Program and
the Connected Care Pilot Program.
Consistent with the 2015 Open Internet
Order and RIF Order, the proposed
definition excludes enterprise service
offerings, which are typically offered to
larger organizations through customized
or individually negotiated
arrangements, and special access
services. We seek comment on our
proposal. Should we apply the modified
definition of broadband internet access
service used for the broadband label
requirement in this context to make
clear that enterprise services are
excluded even when they are supported
by the Commission’s broadband access
and affordability programs?
46. We also propose to remain
consistent with the Commission’s
conclusions in prior Orders to include
in the term ‘‘broadband internet access
service’’ those services provided over
any technology platform, including but
not limited to wire, terrestrial wireless
(including fixed and mobile wireless
services using licensed or unlicensed
spectrum), and satellite. We seek
comment on this proposal. We continue
to intend broadband internet access
service ‘‘to cover the entire universe of
internet access services at issue in the
Commission’s prior broadband
classification decisions, as well as all
other broadband internet access services
offered over other technology platforms
that were not addressed by prior
classification orders.’’ As in prior
orders, we propose that ‘‘fixed’’
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broadband internet access service refers
to a broadband internet access service
that serves end users primarily at fixed
endpoints using stationary equipment,
such as the modem that connects an end
user’s home router, computer, or other
internet access device to the internet,
and encompasses the delivery of fixed
broadband service over any medium,
including various forms of wired
broadband service (e.g., cable, DSL,
fiber), fixed wireless broadband service
(including fixed services using
unlicensed spectrum), and fixed
satellite broadband service. Likewise,
we propose that ‘‘mobile’’ broadband
internet access service refers to a
broadband internet access service that
serves end users primarily using mobile
stations, and includes, among other
things, services that use smartphones or
mobile-network-enabled tablets as the
primary endpoints for connection to the
internet, as well as mobile satellite
broadband service. Consistent with the
existing definition, we propose to
include within the definition of
broadband internet access service any
such service, regardless of whether the
ISP leases or owns the facilities used to
provide the service. We seek comment
on our proposals.
47. We also propose that to the extent
coffee shops, bookstores, airlines,
private end-user networks such as
libraries and universities, and other
businesses acquire broadband internet
access service from an ISP to enable
patrons to access the internet from their
respective establishments, provision of
such service by the premise operator
would not itself be considered BIAS
unless it was offered to patrons as a
retail mass-market service. Likewise,
when a user employs, for example, a
wireless router or a Wi-Fi hotspot to
create a personal Wi-Fi network that is
not intentionally offered for the benefit
of others, we believe he or she is not
offering a broadband internet access
service under our proposed definition,
because the user is not marketing and
selling such service to residential
customers, small businesses, and other
end-user customers. Such proposed
findings are consistent with the manner
in which the Commission has
historically defined broadband internet
access service, and we seek comment on
any changed circumstances that would
justify a different outcome.
48. We seek comment on whether
there are other types of services we
should address in defining the scope of
broadband internet access service. For
example, with respect to 5G
deployments, new network
architectures and uses of the technology
are emerging, including some that offer
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both private and public 5G connectivity,
like 5G Internet of Things (IoT). We seek
comment on how we should view these
services for purposes of defining
broadband internet access service—are
these types of services best viewed as
enterprise services excluded from the
definition of broadband internet access
service or should they be treated as nonBIAS data services?
49. Non-BIAS Data Services. We also
seek comment on whether to continue
excluding non-BIAS data services
(formerly ‘‘specialized services’’) from
the scope of broadband internet access
service. In the 2015 Open Internet
Order, the Commission explained that
certain services offered by ISPs that
share capacity with broadband internet
access service over ISPs’ last-mile
facilities were not broadband internet
access service and provided examples
and characteristics of services that, at
that time, likely fit within this category
of non-BIAS data services. The
Commission defined characteristics of
these services, explaining that they (1)
are not used to reach large parts of the
internet; (2) are not a generic platform,
but rather a specific ‘‘application level’’
service; and (3) use some form of
network management to isolate the
capacity used by these services from
that used by broadband internet access
service. We seek comment on whether
these characteristics still appropriately
describe non-BIAS data services. Are
there any other characteristics of such
services on which we should rely? Are
these still appropriate examples of data
services that are outside the scope of
broadband internet access service? Have
the distinctions between mass-market
retail and non-BIAS data services
changed, particularly from a consumer,
technical, or other perspective, to
warrant reconsideration of this
exclusion?
50. We also tentatively conclude that
we should maintain the 2015 Open
Internet Order’s approach to continue
closely monitoring the development of
non-BIAS data services. In the 2015
Open Internet Order, the Commission
emphasized that non-BIAS data services
might still be subject to enforcement
action if the Commission determined
that: (1) a particular service is providing
the functional equivalent of BIAS; (2) an
ISP claimed or attempted to claim that
a service that is the equivalent of BIAS
is a non-BIAS data service not subject to
any rules that would otherwise apply; or
(3) a non-BIAS data service offering is
undermining investment, innovation,
competition, and end-user benefits. We
are especially concerned about activities
that may undermine national security
and public safety, consumers’ use of
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broadband internet access service, and
the ability of consumers to access
broadband internet access service. We
also share the Commission’s concern in
the 2015 Open Internet Order ‘‘that
over-the-top services offered over the
internet are not impeded in their ability
to compete with other data services.’’
We seek comment on our proposed
approach.
51. Internet Traffic Exchange. We
next tentatively conclude that
broadband internet access service, as we
propose to define it, includes
arrangements for the exchange of
internet traffic by an edge provider or an
intermediary with the ISP’s network,
referred to as internet peering, traffic
exchange or interconnection, to the
extent they provide the ‘‘capability to
transmit data to and receive data from
all or substantially all internet
endpoints . . . [and] enable the
operation of the communications
service.’’ We seek comment on this
position. As the Commission explained
in 2015, ‘‘[t]he representation to retail
customers that they will be able to reach
‘all or substantially all internet
endpoints’ necessarily includes the
promise to make the interconnection
arrangements necessary to allow that
access’’ and ‘‘the promise to transmit
traffic to and from those internet end
points back to the user.’’ We tentatively
conclude that the Commission’s
findings and rationale regarding internet
traffic exchange in the 2015 Open
Internet Order—that such ‘‘edge
service’’ is derivative of broadband
internet access service and constitutes
the same traffic—remain valid, and we
seek comment on our tentative
conclusion. We observe that the RIF
Order does not appear to dispute the
Commission’s previous conclusion that
broadband internet access service
includes this ‘‘edge service,’’ and
instead determined that internet traffic
exchange arrangements were
appropriately regulated as an
information service by virtue of its
conclusion that broadband internet
access service is an information service.
We seek comment on whether there are
circumstances under which ‘‘edge
service’’ would not be best characterized
as a part of broadband internet access
service, and how commenters would
characterize that service, given the
Verizon court’s conclusion that, in
addition to the retail service provided to
consumers, ‘‘broadband providers
furnish a service to edge providers, thus
undoubtedly functioning as edge
providers’ ‘carriers.’ ’’ We seek comment
on the Verizon court’s characterization
of broadband internet access service in
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relation to service provided to both
consumers and edge providers. How, if
at all, has edge service changed in
relation to broadband internet access
service? Are there any grounds to depart
from the Commission’s prior treatment
of edge service and edge providers as a
‘‘derivative’’ service of broadband
internet access service?
52. We also seek comment on whether
we should exclude any particular
services or functions from the definition
of broadband internet access service.
For example, should we exclude virtual
private network (VPN) services, web
hosting services, and/or data storage
services from the scope of broadband
internet access service? For purposes of
this NPRM, ‘‘data storage services’’
refers to the provision of access to data
storage platforms. The term is distinct
from ‘‘caching,’’ which involves the
temporary storage of data for purposes
of delivering content to specific
endpoints. While the Commission has
previously excluded content delivery
networks (CDNs) and internet backbone
services, including transit arrangements,
we seek comment whether a different
approach may be warranted because
these services are integral to
transmitting data and delivering
communications to internet endpoints,
thus falling within the proposed
definition of ‘‘broadband internet access
service.’’ We observe that these services
directly or indirectly provide data on
behalf of their clients. For example,
while VPN servers reflect one end-point
of an underlying communication
stream, they act as a launching pad to
forward traffic to the destination
identified by the user. We seek
comment on this proposed analysis. Do
these services fall within the scope of
broadband internet access service, as we
propose to define it?
D. Classifying Broadband Internet
Access Service as a
Telecommunications Service
53. The 1996 Act enacted the
‘‘telecommunications service’’ and
‘‘information service’’ definitional
frameworks, and since that time, the
Commission and courts have grappled
with the classification of internet access
services as technology and the
communications marketplace have
evolved and the internet has become
essential to our daily lives. Courts have
long recognized the Commission’s
authority to interpret and implement the
Communications Act of 1934. Both the
2015 Open Internet Order and the RIF
Order recognized this authority. And on
review of each of those decisions, the
D.C. Circuit accepted the Commission’s
authority to make classification
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decisions, even when this involved a
change in course. In addressing a prior
Commission decision classifying BIAS,
in Brand X, the Supreme Court
confirmed not only that an
administrative agency can change its
interpretation of an ambiguous statute,
but that it ‘‘must consider varying
interpretations and the wisdom of its
policy on a continuing basis, for
example in response to . . . a change in
administrations.’’ In light of this
precedent, we believe that we not only
have the authority to classify BIAS, but
that we must reevaluate the 2018
information service classification in
consideration of the policy rationales
and marketplace developments we have
described above as warranting a return
to the telecommunications service
classification. We seek comment on this
view.
54. In evaluating the classification of
BIAS, three definitional terms are
relevant. First, the Act defines
‘‘telecommunications’’ as ‘‘the
transmission, between or among points
specified by the user, of information of
the user’s choosing, without change in
the form or content of the information
as sent and received.’’ Second, the Act
defines ‘‘telecommunications service’’
as ‘‘the offering of telecommunications
for a fee directly to the public, or to
such classes of users as to be effectively
available directly to the public,
regardless of the facilities used.’’
Finally, the Act defines ‘‘information
service’’ as ‘‘the offering of a capability
for generating, acquiring, storing,
transforming, processing, retrieving,
utilizing, or making available
information via telecommunications
. . . , but does not include any use of
any such capability for the management,
control, or operation of a
telecommunications system or the
management of a telecommunications
service.’’ When Congress enacted the
definitions of ‘‘telecommunications
service’’ and ‘‘information service’’ in
the 1996 Act, it substantially
incorporated the ‘‘basic’’ and
‘‘enhanced’’ service classifications from
the Computer Inquiries line of
decisions. Under the Computer
Inquiries, facilities-based telephone
companies were obligated to offer the
transmission component of their
enhanced service offerings—including
broadband internet access service
offered via DSL—to unaffiliated
enhanced service providers on
nondiscriminatory terms and conditions
pursuant to tariffs or contracts governed
by Title II. Thus, there is no disputing
that until 2005, Title II applied to the
transmission component of DSL service.
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Further, because the statutory
definitions substantially incorporated
the Commission’s terminology under
the Computer Inquiries, Commission
decisions regarding the distinction
between basic and enhanced services—
in particular, decisions regarding
features that are ‘‘adjunct to basic’’
services—are relevant to our analysis, as
discussed further below, because the
Commission’s definition of ‘‘adjunct to
basic’’ services has been instrumental in
determining which functions fall within
the ‘‘telecommunications systems
management’’ exception to the
‘‘information service’’ definition.
55. We tentatively conclude that both
a reasonable and the best reading of
these definitional provisions supports
classifying BIAS as a
telecommunications service. As
explained in the 2015 Open Internet
Order, ‘‘the critical distinction between
a telecommunications and an
information service turns on what the
provider is ‘offering.’ ’’ If the provider is
offering ‘‘telecommunications’’ to the
public for a fee, then the service is
necessarily a telecommunications
service. Thus, in 2015, the Commission
interpreted these terms to classify BIAS
as a telecommunications service,
finding that BIAS, as then offered, is
sufficiently independent from the
information services that ISPs may also
offer. Consistent with the Commission’s
finding in 2015, we believe that BIAS is
best understood as making available
high-speed access to the internet (that
may be bundled with other applications
and functions)—and therefore that it
provides telecommunications—and that
ISPs offer BIAS to the public for a fee.
Accordingly, we tentatively conclude
the best reading of the Act is that BIAS,
as offered to and understood by
consumers today, is a
telecommunications service rather than
an information service. We seek
comment on this tentative conclusion.
56. Broadband Internet Access Service
Provides Telecommunications. We
tentatively conclude that BIAS provides
‘‘telecommunications’’ as it is defined
under the Act, and seek comment on
this conclusion. As discussed above, the
Act defines ‘‘telecommunications’’ as
‘‘the transmission, between or among
points specified by the user, of
information of the user’s choosing,
without change in the form or content
of the information as sent and
received.’’ As discussed above, we
believe that users rely on BIAS to
transmit ‘‘information of the user’s
choosing,’’ ‘‘between or among points
specified by the user.’’ We further
believe, as the Commission has
previously found, that the term ‘‘points
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specified by the user’’ is ambiguous, and
that ‘‘uncertainty concerning the
geographic location of an endpoint of
communication is irrelevant for the
purpose of determining whether a
broadband internet access service is
providing ‘telecommunications.’ ’’ We
also contend that these points are not
constrained to be defined in one
particular format. They may be in the
form of an IP address or perhaps more
commonly associated with fully
qualified domain names resolved by the
DNS, such as www.example.com. This
is consistent with the Commission’s
prior deduction that while consumers
often do not know the precise physical
or virtual location of the edge provider
or other user they want to access, ‘‘there
is no question that users specify the end
points of their internet
communications’’ and ‘‘would be quite
upset if their internet communications
did not make it to their intended
recipients or the website addresses they
entered into their browser would take
them to unexpected web pages.’’ As the
Commission explained, ‘‘numerous
forms of telephone service qualify as
telecommunications even though the
consumer typically does not know the
geographic location of the called party,’’
including cell phone service, toll free
800 service, and call bridging service.
Likewise, the fact that DNS may resolve
the same domain name to one or more
virtual locations (e.g., due to load
balancing), just as in the toll free arena
a single telephone number may route to
multiple locations, ‘‘does not transform
that service to something other than
telecommunications.’’ In the RIF Order,
the Commission conceded that at least
some telecommunications are used as
an input into BIAS and ‘‘an ISP makes
use of telecommunications’’ in the
provision of BIAS, but found that it
‘‘need not further address the scope of
the ‘telecommunications’ definition in
order to justify [its] classification of
broadband internet access service,’’ and
did not further address the
Commission’s interpretation and
application of the
‘‘telecommunications’’ definition in the
2015 Open Internet Order. We seek
comment on the analysis that BIAS
provides ‘‘telecommunications,’’
including whether there is any reason to
depart from it.
57. We further tentatively conclude
that there is no change or modification
to the form or content of information
during transmission, and seek comment
on this analysis. In 2015, the
Commission explained that ‘‘the packet
payload (i.e., the content requested or
sent by the user) is not altered by the
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variety of headers that a provider may
use to route a given packet’’ and
therefore, the ‘‘form and content of the
information’’ is the same when an IP
packet is sent by the sender as when the
same packet is received by the recipient.
We seek comment on whether this
analysis of packet transmission remains
accurate and relevant today. Have there
been any developments or changes in
how BIAS is provisioned that would
cause us to reconsider this analysis?
How do ISPs transmit data information
from one point on the network to
another? How does it differ from how
PSTN calls are transmitted today?
58. Broadband Internet Access Service
is a Telecommunications Service. Here,
we propose to build off our tentative
conclusion that BIAS provides
telecommunications and our belief that
current factual circumstances show that
consumers perceive BIAS as a
standalone offering used to access thirdparty services and, as such, ISPs
routinely market BIAS widely to the
general public. Viewed together, ISPs
would necessarily offer BIAS ‘‘for a fee
directly to the public, or to such classes
of users as to be effectively available
directly to the public, regardless of the
facilities used,’’ and therefore we
tentatively conclude that BIAS is a
telecommunications service as defined
in the Act. We seek comment on our
tentative conclusion and assessment.
We further propose to find that the
implied promise to make arrangements
for exchange of internet traffic as part of
the BIAS offering does not constitute a
private carriage arrangement, and that
the rationale adopted in the 2015 Open
Internet Order remains persuasive. We
seek comment on this approach. How
do internet traffic arrangements with
negotiated terms differ from massmarket services offered to the public?
Have there been any significant
developments in the internet traffic
exchange market since 2015 that would
cause us to reconsider these proposals?
We observe that in 2015, the
Commission concluded that ‘‘some
individualization in pricing or terms is
not a barrier to finding that a service is
a telecommunications service,’’ and the
RIF Order does not appear to disturb
this finding. We seek comment on this
analysis.
59. Broadband Internet Access Service
Is Not Best Classified an Information
Service. We tentatively conclude that, as
offered today, BIAS is not an
information service under the best
reading of the Act. The Act defines an
information service as the offering ‘‘of a
capability for generating, acquiring,
storing, transforming, processing,
retrieving, utilizing, or making available
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information via telecommunications.’’
We believe that the Commission’s
reasoning in the RIF Order—that
because BIAS has the ‘‘capability’’ to be
used to engage in the activities within
the information service definition, it is
best interpreted as an information
service—is flawed. Concluding that
BIAS ‘‘is an information service
irrespective of whether it provides the
entirety of any end user functionality or
whether it provides end user
functionality in tandem with edge
providers,’’ as the Commission did in
the RIF Order, fails to recognize the
relationship of BIAS transmission
services to other functions, which may
be offered by either the ISP or a third
party of the end user’s choice. Logically,
under the framework set out in the RIF
Order, even traditional switched
telephone service would be classified as
an information service, as it provides
customers with the ability to make
information available to others (e.g.,
public service announcements), retrieve
information from others, and process
and utilize stored information from
others (e.g., by interacting with a call
menu). We tentatively conclude that the
best and more reasonable interpretation
of the statutory language is that BIAS is
a telecommunications service, while the
applications that run over BIAS either
constitute distinct information services
or fall within the exception to the
information service definition for
capabilities used ‘‘for the management,
control, or operation of a
telecommunications system or the
management of a telecommunications
service.’’ We seek comment on this
proposed analysis.
60. We tentatively conclude that
companion services, such as DNS and
caching, when provided with BIAS, fit
within the telecommunications systems
management exception to the definition
of ‘‘information service,’’ and therefore
when these services are provided with
BIAS, they do not convert BIAS into an
information service. We seek comment
on this tentative conclusion. The Act’s
telecommunications systems
management exception excludes from
the definition of ‘‘information service’’
‘‘any use of any such capability for the
management, control, or operation of a
telecommunications system or the
management of a telecommunications
service.’’ In the 2015 Open Internet
Order, the Commission concluded that
when DNS and caching are offered with
BIAS, they ‘‘either fall within the
telecommunications systems
management exception or are separate
offerings that are not inextricably
integrated with broadband internet
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access service, or both.’’ In the RIF
Order, the Commission took a contrary
view, concluding that ‘‘DNS and
caching functionalities . . . offered by
ISPs[ ] are integrated information
processing capabilities offered as part of
broadband internet access service to
consumers today.’’ On review of the RIF
Order, Judge Millet explained in her
concurrence that ‘‘the question is
whether the combination of
transmission with DNS and caching
alone can justify the information service
classification. If we were writing on a
clean slate, that question would seem to
have only one answer given the current
state of technology: No.’’ She added that
‘‘new factual developments call[ed] for
serious technological reconsideration
and engagement through expert
judgment. Instead, the Commission’s
exclusive reliance on DNS and caching
blinkered itself off from modern
broadband reality, and untethered the
service ‘offer[ed]’ from both the realworld marketplace and the most
ordinary of linguistic conventions.’’ We
intend to guide our decisionmaking
about the role of DNS and caching based
on today’s broadband reality, and we
seek information on the present
circumstances.
61. We tentatively conclude that the
Commission’s 2015 analysis provides
the more reasonable application of the
relevant statutory terms and
Commission precedent to DNS
functionality with respect to BIAS, and
we seek comment on this tentative
conclusion. In the 2015 Open Internet
Order, the Commission analogized DNS
to adjunct-to-basic services, such as
speed dialing, call forwarding, and
computer-provided directory assistance,
and concluded that because it is
effectively equivalent to routing
information and does not alter the
fundamental character of the
telecommunications service, it falls
within the telecommunications systems
management exception to the definition
of ‘‘information service.’’ ‘‘Adjunct-tobasic’’ functions were those features and
services that met the literal definition of
‘‘enhanced service’’ but did not alter the
fundamental character of the associated
basic transmission service and thus
were treated as basic (i.e.,
telecommunications) services even
though they went beyond mere
transmission. The Commission has held
that such functions: (1) must be
‘‘incidental’’ to an underlying
telecommunications service—i.e.,
‘‘ ‘basic’ in purpose and use’’ in the
sense that they facilitate use of the
network; and (2) must ‘‘not alter the
fundamental character of [the
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telecommunications service].’’ The RIF
Order rejected the adjunct-to-basic
comparison largely based on its
contention that adjunct-to-basic services
and the telecommunications systems
management exception must be viewed
narrowly, effectively to only include
functions that solely facilitate
transmission. Because it concluded that
DNS, as then used, is a core function of
BIAS that provides more than a
functionally integrated addresstranslation capability, it determined that
DNS did not fall within the exception.
We tentatively disagree with the RIF
Order’s narrow characterization of
adjunct-to-basic services and the
telecommunications systems
management exception as not mandated
by the statutory language; however,
even under that unnecessarily narrow
characterization, we believe DNS would
fall under the telecommunications
management exception, as its
fundamental purpose is to route
information—i.e., to facilitate
transmission.
62. We further believe that even if
DNS did not fall within the
telecommunications systems
management exception to the Act’s
definition of ‘‘information services,’’ it
is not so inextricably intertwined so as
to convert the entire BIAS offering into
an information service, consistent with
the Commission’s finding in 2015. In
support of the 2015 Open Internet
Order’s conclusion, the Commission
explained that IP packet transfer can
work without DNS and that DNS lookup
is available through third parties. In the
RIF Order, the Commission argued that
even though DNS can also be provided
by third parties, the focus should
remain on the capabilities that ISPs
offer, which it concluded is a single,
inextricably intertwined information
service. However, in her Mozilla
concurrence, Judge Millet noted that
‘‘DNS, much like email, is now free and
widely available to consumers in the
internet marketplace.’’ We tentatively
conclude that the 2015 Open Internet
Order’s showing that DNS is not a
necessary component of BIAS, which
the RIF Order did not dispute, provides
the better rationale for evaluating
whether DNS transforms the entire BIAS
offering into an information service, and
tentatively conclude that it does not. We
seek comment on this tentative
conclusion. Does the Commission’s
2015 analysis of DNS as it relates to
BIAS remain relevant, accurate, and
persuasive? Why or why not? Are there
any technical or commercial
developments that should cause us to
reconsider this analysis?
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63. For the same reasons the
Commission found in 2015, we believe
that caching, when provided in
connection with BIAS, is ‘‘used to
facilitate the transmission of
information so that users can access
other services, in this case by enabling
the user to obtain ‘more rapid retrieval
of information’ through the network,’’
and thus falls within the
telecommunications systems
management exception. We seek
comment on this analysis. The
Commission concluded otherwise in the
RIF Order, finding that ‘‘ISP-provided
caching does not merely ‘manage’ an
ISP’s broadband internet access service
and underlying network, it enables and
enhances consumers’ access to and use
of information online’’ and that because
it is ‘‘useful to the consumer,’’ caching
does not fall within the
telecommunications systems
management exception. However, we do
not believe consumers consider caching
capabilities when purchasing BIAS. We
seek comment regarding the technical
and commercial aspects of caching, how
caching functionality is both
provisioned by ISPs and offered to
customers, as well as the relevance (if
any) of Commission precedent as
applied to caching today.
64. In particular, given that web pages
today change constantly and are often
customized on a per-user basis, we
question whether ISPs cache popular
content requested by multiple users to
supply the same web page when
requested later, rather than fetching the
page anew. Further, as Judge Millett
observed in Mozilla, caching ‘‘does not
work when users employ encryption,’’
which as of 2017 constituted a majority
of internet traffic, which suggests ‘‘that
caching no longer enjoys the pride of
place ascribed to it’’ by the RIF Order.
We seek comment on whether ISPs use
this practice and, to the extent that
commenters contend they do, why
(given the ever-changing nature and
high customization of contemporary
web pages). In addition, should the
Commission distinguish between
caching by ISPs and the kind of caching
that third-party content providers use to
keep copies of content (such as videos
and images, but possibly also web
pages) closer to users? We preliminarily
conclude that caching of this kind is not
provided by ISPs and thus is not a part
of BIAS, and as such does not transform
BIAS into an information service.
65. We also seek comment on whether
there are other functionalities provided
or offered with BIAS, besides DNS and
caching, that might fall into the
telecommunications systems
management exception, as well as on
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other add-on information services
offered in conjunction with BIAS and
how they might affect our analysis with
respect to the classification of BIAS. The
2015 Open Internet Order identified
examples of processing-related
capabilities that fall within the
telecommunications systems
management functions, such as security
virus protection and blocking denial of
service attacks, as well as add-on
information services such as cloudbased storage services, email, and spam
protection that were often offered in
conjunction with BIAS but were not
inextricably intertwined with it.
Consistent with the Commission’s
finding in 2015, we propose that ‘‘such
services are not inextricably intertwined
with [BIAS], but rather are a product of
the provider’s marketing decision not to
offer the two separately,’’ and seek
comment on this proposal. We believe
that, to the extent BIAS is offered along
with other capabilities that would
otherwise fall into the ‘‘information
service’’ definition, such an offering
does not turn BIAS into a functionally
integrated information service. Are there
examples of other information services
or capabilities that are often offered by
ISPs in conjunction with BIAS? How do
consumers view and use these products
in relation to their BIAS subscription?
How has the market for third-party
information services offered in tandem
with BIAS developed since the RIF
Order was adopted? We also seek
comment on any devices or
applications, such as Wi-Fi hotspots,
wearables, appliances, and other IoT
devices that an ISP may include with its
BIAS offering and how they may
function both in conjunction with and
apart from the underlying BIAS. How
does a secondary market for such
devices and applications impact our
interpretation that they are separable
information services?
66. Major Questions Doctrine
Applicability. We seek comment on
whether, and if so how, the major
questions doctrine—the notion that
Congress is expected to speak clearly
when delegating authority in certain
extraordinary cases—should inform the
conclusions we reach based on the text
and structure of the Act. In the USTA
decision, the D.C. Circuit reasoned that
Brand X conclusively held that the
Commission has the authority to
determine the proper statutory
classification of BIAS and that its
determinations are entitled to deference,
and so there is no need to consult the
major questions doctrine here. In
opinions respecting the denial of
rehearing en banc, several judges
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debated how (if at all) the major
questions doctrine would otherwise
apply to the issue. The RIF Order did
not directly dispute this conclusion, but
stated that the doctrine supported its
decision to classify BIAS as an
information service in order to steer
clear of any major questions doctrine
issues.
67. What factors are relevant to the
Commission’s consideration of whether
the major questions doctrine applies to
the classification of BIAS, taking
account of evolving Supreme Court
precedent? Among other factors, we ask
that commenters consider the extent to
which this matter falls within the
Commission’s recognized expertise and
authority as the federal regulator
responsible for ‘‘regulating interstate
and foreign commerce in
communications by wire and radio so as
to make available, so far as possible,
. . . wire and radio communications
service with adequate communications
facilities at reasonable charges.’’ In light
of relevant Commission precedent, both
before and shortly after Congress
adopted the 1996 Act, classifying
analogous transmission services—
including the transmission component
of broadband internet access service
offered via digital subscriber line
(DSL)—as common carrier services,
what basis is there, if any, for
concluding that the Commission’s
proposed classification action here is an
exercise of ‘‘newfound power’’ not
previously recognized? Has Congress
acted or failed to act on proposals to
clarify the proper classification of
broadband in subsequent years, and to
what extent does such action or inaction
inform the Commission’s exercise of its
claimed classification authority or the
application of the major questions
doctrine?
68. We also seek comment on how
and to what extent each relevant factor
should affect the Commission’s analysis
of whether the classification of BIAS
implicates the major questions doctrine.
Commenters should consider how the
relevant factors apply to the specific
proposals here. For example, should the
Commission evaluate the applicability
of the major questions doctrine for BIAS
as a whole, or should it distinguish
between or among particular categories
of BIAS offerings? How would the major
questions doctrine apply in the case of
particular rules we might adopt if we
determine BIAS meets a given statutory
classification?
69. Separately, even assuming
arguendo that the major questions
doctrine were applied to our
classification of BIAS, we seek comment
on whether Congress has spoken
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sufficiently clearly in the Act—in
definitional provisions or more
generally—to satisfy that standard.
E. Classifying Mobile Broadband
Internet Access Service as a Commercial
Mobile Service
70. In addition to our proposed return
to the 2015 Open Internet Order’s
classification of BIAS as a
telecommunications service, we propose
to return to that Order’s classification of
mobile BIAS as a commercial mobile
service. In the alternative, even if
mobile BIAS does not meet the
definition of ‘‘commercial mobile
service,’’ we propose to find that it is
the functional equivalent of a
commercial mobile service and,
therefore, not private mobile service.
71. Section 332(d)(1) of the Act
defines ‘‘commercial mobile service’’ as
‘‘any mobile service . . . that is
provided for profit and makes
interconnected service available (A) to
the public or (B) to such classes of
eligible users as to be effectively
available to a substantial portion of the
public, as specified by regulation by the
Commission.’’ As an initial matter, we
tentatively conclude that mobile BIAS is
a ‘‘mobile service’’ because subscribers
access the service through their mobile
devices. Next, we tentatively conclude
that mobile BIAS is provided ‘‘for
profit’’ because ISPs offer it to
subscribers with the intent of receiving
compensation. We also tentatively
conclude that mobile BIAS is widely
available to the public, without
restriction on who may receive it.
72. We also propose to return to the
2015 Open Internet Order’s
determination that mobile BIAS is an
interconnected service. Section
332(d)(2) states that the term
‘‘interconnected service’’ means
‘‘service that is interconnected with the
public switched network (as such terms
are defined by regulation by the
Commission). . . .’’ In the 2015 Open
Internet Order, the Commission reached
the conclusion that mobile BIAS was an
interconnected service through the
application of an updated definition of
‘‘public switched network’’ that
included networks that use public IP
addresses. In doing so, the Commission
highlighted the Commission’s
longstanding determination from the
Second CMRS Report and Order (59 FR
18493 (Apr. 19, 1994)) that the term
‘‘public switched network’’ ‘‘should not
be defined in a static way’’ as ‘‘the
network is continuously growing and
changing because of new technology
and increasing demand.’’ The
Commission reversed course in the RIF
Order, reinstating the prior definition of
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‘‘public switched network.’’ We believe
the Commission’s decision in the RIF
Order fails to align with the
technological reality and widespread
use of mobile BIAS. The ubiquity of
mobile BIAS that the Commission
recognized in 2015 is even more
pronounced today, as mobile broadband
networks have continued to develop
and grow in the intervening years, with
more users and increased mobile data
traffic. In 2022, there was more than 73
trillion megabytes of mobile data traffic
exchanged in the United States,
representing a 38 percent increase from
the previous year. Continued growth of
mobile BIAS is expected, with one
forecast predicting that there will be 410
million 5G mobile subscriptions in
North America by 2028. In light of these
factors, we propose to return to the 2015
Open Internet Order’s modernized
definition of ‘‘public switched network’’
in § 20.3 of the Commission’s rules,
specifically defining the term to mean
‘‘the network that includes any common
carrier switched network, whether by
wire or radio, including local exchange
carriers, interexchange carriers, and
mobile service providers, that use[s] the
North American Numbering Plan, or
public IP addresses, in connection with
the provision of switched services.’’ We
believe this definition, which includes
IP addresses, embodies the current
technological landscape and the
widespread use of mobile broadband
networks, and is therefore more
consistent with the Commission’s
recognition that the public switched
network will grow and change over
time. We seek comment on this analysis
and our proposed approach.
73. We further propose to reach the
same conclusion the Commission did in
the 2015 Open Internet Order that
mobile BIAS is interconnected with the
‘‘public switched network,’’ as we
propose to define it today. The 2015
Open Internet Order found that mobile
BIAS should be considered
interconnected because it was a broadly
available mobile service that provided
users with the ability to send and
receive communications to all other
users of the internet. Given the
‘‘universal access’’ and expected future
growth of mobile BIAS, the 2015 Open
Internet Order determined that finding
mobile BIAS to be interconnected and a
commercial mobile service was
consistent with Congress’ objective in
section 332 of the Act in creating a
symmetrical regulatory framework
among similar mobile services that were
available to the public. Mobile BIAS
remains a broadly available mobile
service that provides its users with the
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ability to send and receive
communications and is an essential
component of today’s technology
landscape. As discussed above, there
has been a marked increase in the
amount of mobile data traffic in recent
years, and continued growth is
predicted. Given the continued
widespread use and availability of
mobile BIAS, we propose to find that
mobile BIAS is an interconnected
service, and propose to support this
finding by applying the Commission’s
analysis from the 2015 Open Internet
Order to today’s marketplace. We seek
comment on our proposed approach.
74. We also propose to rely on the
Commission’s analysis from the 2015
Open Internet Order that mobile BIAS is
an interconnected service for the
additional reason that it provides users
with the capability to communicate
with other users of the internet and with
people using telephone numbers
through VoIP applications. The 2015
Open Internet Order found that ‘‘users
on mobile networks can communicate
with users on traditional copper based
networks and IP based networks,
making more and more networks using
different technologies interconnected.’’
It further identified mobile VoIP, as well
as over-the-top mobile messaging, as
‘‘among the increasing number of ways
in which users communicate
indiscriminately between [North
American Numbering Plan (NANP)] and
IP endpoints on the public switched
network.’’ Since 2015, mobile BIAS
users continue to communicate using
these tools, with 85 percent of
Americans owning a smartphone that
offers access to VoIP and over-the-top
communications apps. We seek
comment on whether there have been
any material changes in technology, the
marketplace, or other facts that would
warrant refinement or revision of the
analysis regarding the interconnected
nature of mobile BIAS from the 2015
Open Internet Order.
75. In connection with this approach,
we seek comment on whether we
should readopt the 2015 Open Internet
Order’s revised definition of
‘‘interconnected service’’ in § 20.3 of the
Commission’s rules. That Order defined
‘‘interconnected service’’ to mean a
service that gives subscribers the ability
to ‘‘communicate to or receive
communications from other users of the
public switched network,’’ removing the
requirement that such service provide
the ability to communicate with all
other users of the public switched
network. It did so to ensure that services
that provide the capability to access all
other users, including through the use of
OTT services, but limit that access in
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certain limited ways, are not excluded
from the definition of ‘‘interconnected
service.’’ The RIF Order reverted to the
prior definition, concluding that ‘‘the
best reading of ‘interconnected service’
is one that enables communication
between its users and all other users of
the public switched network’’ and that
the service ‘‘must itself provide
interconnection to the public switched
network using the NANP.’’ We seek
comment on whether it is necessary to
return to the definition of
‘‘interconnected service’’ in the 2015
Open Internet Order to ensure that all
appropriate services are covered by the
definition.
76. Because we also propose to
reclassify mobile BIAS as a
telecommunications service, we believe
that classifying it as a commercial
mobile service would avoid the
inconsistency that would result if the
service were both a telecommunications
service and a private service. The
Commission explained this reasoning in
the 2015 Open Internet Order, and we
propose to adopt a consistent rationale
here. The Commission stated that,
because it determined mobile BIAS to
be a telecommunications service,
‘‘designating it also as commercial
mobile service subject to Title II is most
consistent with Congressional intent to
apply common carrier treatment to
telecommunications services.’’ The
Commission found that classifying
mobile BIAS as a commercial mobile
service was necessary ‘‘to avoid a
statutory contradiction that would result
if the Commission were to conclude
both that mobile broadband internet
access was a telecommunications
service and also that it was not a
commercial mobile service. A statutory
contradiction would result from such a
finding because, while the Act requires
that providers of telecommunications
services be treated as common carriers,
it prohibits common carrier treatment of
mobile services that do not meet the
definition of commercial mobile service.
Finding mobile broadband internet
access service to be commercial mobile
service avoids this statutory
contradiction and is most consistent
with the Act’s intent to apply common
carrier treatment to providers of
telecommunication services.’’ We seek
comment on this proposal.
77. In the alternative, to the extent
that mobile BIAS falls outside the
definition of ‘‘commercial mobile
service,’’ we propose to find that it is
the functional equivalent of a
commercial mobile service and, thus,
not private mobile service. The
Commission found that mobile BIAS
service was functionally equivalent to
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commercial mobile service because,
‘‘like commercial mobile service, it is a
widely available, for profit mobile
service that offers mobile subscribers
the capability to send and receive
communications on their mobile device
to and from the public. Although the
services use different addressing
identifiers, from an end user’s
perspective, both are commercial
services that allow users to
communicate with the vast majority of
the public.’’ The RIF Order found that
the 2015 Open Internet Order’s focus on
the public’s ‘‘ubiquitous access’’ to
mobile BIAS alone was ‘‘insufficient’’ to
establish functional equivalency and
that the test established in the Second
CMRS Report and Order provided a
more thorough consideration of factors
of whether a service is closely
substitutable for a commercial mobile
service. We seek comment on both of
these analyses. As the RIF Order
acknowledged, however, the
Commission has discretion to determine
whether services are functionally
equivalent. Congress expressly
delegated authority to the Commission
to determine whether a particular
mobile service may be the functional
equivalent of a commercial mobile
service, defining ‘‘private mobile
service’’ as ‘‘any mobile service . . .
that is not a commercial mobile service
or the functional equivalent of a
commercial mobile service, as specified
by regulation by the Commission.’’ For
the reasons outlined in the 2015 Open
Internet Order and in light of the
continued increased use and
distribution of mobile broadband
services and devices, we propose to find
that mobile BIAS is the functional
equivalent of commercial mobile
service. We seek comment on this
proposal and on any other or different
definition of ‘‘functional equivalent’’
that the Commission should adopt.
78. We anticipate that returning
mobile BIAS to its classification as a
commercial mobile service and
reinstating openness requirements on a
larger set of mobile ISPs will allow
mobile providers that would become
subject to such rules to continue to be
able to compete successfully in the
marketplace and continue to have
incentives to develop new products and
services. For example, the Commission
has applied open access rules to upper
700 MHz C Block licensees, including
Verizon Wireless, for more than a
decade, and the mobile operators
subject to these requirements have
continued to compete successfully in
the marketplace. We seek comment on
this view and on any policy
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consequences that commenters believe
may result from the proposed
reclassification of mobile BIAS.
F. Preemption of State and Local
Regulation of Broadband Service
79. We seek comment on how best to
exercise our preemption authority to
ensure that BIAS is governed primarily
by a national framework, including a
uniform floor of ISP conduct rules. The
RIF Order adopted an expansive
preemption decision, but the D.C.
Circuit in Mozilla concluded that the
RIF Order ‘‘fail[ed] to ground its
sweeping Preemption Directive . . . in
a lawful source of statutory authority,’’
and vacated that preemption action. The
D.C. Circuit concluded that ‘‘in any area
where the Commission lacks the
authority to regulate, it equally lacks the
power to preempt state law.’’ A number
of states quickly stepped in to fill that
void, adopting their own unique
regulatory approaches for BIAS,
including their own versions of open
internet requirements, and even
measures like regulation of retail rates
that the 2015 Open Internet Order found
unnecessary. We anticipate that our
proposed regulatory approach to BIAS
will remedy the infirmities the D.C.
Circuit identified in the RIF Order’s
approach, and we seek comment on the
best way to use our preemption
authority.
80. We seek comment on the best
sources of preemption authority for us,
if needed. For one, we anticipate that
the regulatory approach proposed here
would give us authority to oversee BIAS
under Title II with forbearance, under
Title III in the case of mobile ISPs, as
well as under section 706 of the 1996
Act. These sources of authority could
enable us to adopt regulations that
preempt contrary state requirements.
We also expect that our proposed
regulatory approach could make it more
straightforward to rely on various
express preemption provisions in the
Act, such as the preemption that
accompanies forbearance under section
10(e), the preemption that arises when
state requirements hinder provision of
services covered under sections 253 or
332(c)(7) of the Act, the preemption of
state requirements contrary to federal
universal service policies under section
254(f), and other possible preemption
provisions. We expect that Commission
decisions finding BIAS to be interstate
for regulatory purposes largely resolve
possible arguments premised on the
limitation on FCC authority over state
communications services under section
2(b) of the Act that otherwise could
arise here. We seek comment on these
views and on any additional sources of
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statutory authority for preemption, if
needed.
81. We seek comment on how far to
go in this proceeding in exercising our
preemption authority to ensure that
BIAS principally is governed by a
federal framework. Should we adopt a
broad preemption decision like the
Commission attempted to do in the RIF
Order? Or should the Commission
proceed more incrementally, such as by
only addressing in this proceeding those
state or local legal requirements
squarely raised in the record, and
otherwise deferring to future case-bycase adjudications of preemption?
Under an incremental approach, should
we identify in this proceeding issues
where the Commission will decline to
preempt state requirements and thereby
share regulatory responsibility with the
states, such as state privacy and
consumer protection laws? For what
issues, if any, is the Commission
required to share regulatory
responsibility with the states? What are
the benefits and drawbacks of
permitting state regulation in specific
issue areas? What issues may benefit
most from shared regulatory
responsibility with states?
82. We also seek comment on how
best to define the scope of preemption
to ensure that BIAS is principally
governed by a federal framework. For
example, should open internet conduct
rules of the sort proposed below be seen
not only as an appropriate nationwide
floor providing those protections to
everyone, but also as an appropriate
ceiling to reflect the balancing of
relevant policy considerations? The
2015 Open Internet Order stated that
‘‘should a state elect to restrict entry
into the broadband market through
certification requirements or regulate
the rates of BIAS through tariffs or
otherwise, we expect that we would
preempt such state regulations as in
conflict with our regulations.’’ Should
the Commission affirmatively preempt
in those scenarios here rather than
leaving those scenarios for future caseby-case evaluation as it did in 2015? In
addition, how should the Commission
define what state or local actions are
within the scope of any affirmative
preemption it might adopt here? To
what extent should these decisions be
informed by traditional preemption
frameworks, such as express
preemption, field preemption, or
conflict preemption?
II. Proposed Forbearance
83. We propose to forbear from
applying some Title II provisions to
BIAS in the event that we reclassify the
service, and we seek comment on what
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the parameters of such forbearance
should be, taking into account as a
primary matter that we believe we must
enable the Commission to fulfill its
responsibility under the Act to protect
national security and public safety
when executing its other statutory
obligations. In the 2015 Open Internet
Order, the Commission accompanied
Title II classification with ‘‘substantial’’
forbearance for BIAS in a way that was
designed to ‘‘strike the right balance at
this time of minimizing the burdens on
ISPs while still adequately protecting
the public, particularly given the
objectives of section 706 of the 1996
Act.’’ We propose to return to largely
the same forbearance that was adopted
in the 2015 Open Internet Order,
tailored as appropriate in light of any
updated conclusions the Commission
reaches in this proceeding regarding the
need for particular rules, requirements,
or sources of authority covering BIAS.
Notably, we propose to forbear from
Title II provisions insofar as they would
support the adoption of ex ante rate
regulations for broadband internet
access service.
84. However, subsequent
developments have highlighted the
importance of retaining statutory
authority to enable the Commission to
address national security and public
safety concerns that could arise with
respect to BIAS. Those considerations
provide a leading basis for revisiting the
statutory classification of BIAS, and
therefore we propose to depart from the
forbearance approach reflected in the
2015 Open Internet Order by declining
to forbear from applying section 214 of
the Act, and expressly clarifying that
our proposed forbearance would not
encompass Title III licensing and
authorization authorities, given that
those statutory provisions could provide
important additional tools to advance
the Act’s national security and public
safety objectives. We seek comment on
that proposal and on any issues related
to forbearance with respect to BIAS if
classified as a Title II service, including
the best understanding of the current
status of the forbearance granted in the
2015 Open Internet Order, the
appropriate analytical approach to
evaluating forbearance, and the
substantive scope of forbearance that
should be granted. We also seek
comment on the impact of our proposed
forbearance approach on ISPs,
particularly small ISPs.
A. Forbearance Framework
85. As a threshold matter, we seek
comment on the best way to interpret
the effect of the RIF Order on the
forbearance previously granted in the
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2015 Open Internet Order. The RIF
Order stated that, due to the
reclassification decision there, ‘‘the
forbearance granted in the [2015 Open
Internet Order] is now moot,’’ and that
‘‘carriers are no longer permitted to use
the [2015 Open Internet Order]
forbearance framework (i.e., no carrier
will be permitted to maintain, or newly
elect, the [2015 Open Internet Order]
forbearance framework).’’ We seek
comment on how to interpret those
statements in the RIF Order.
86. Next, we seek comment on the
appropriate analytical approach to use
when evaluating the statutory
forbearance criteria. In the 2015 Open
Internet Order, the Commission stated
that ‘‘[b]ecause the Commission is not
responding to a petition under section
10(c), we conduct our forbearance
analysis under the general reasoned
decision making requirements of the
Administrative Procedure Act [(APA)],
without the burden of proof
requirements that section 10(c)
petitioners face.’’ The Commission
explained how its approach to
forbearance in the 2015 Open Internet
Order satisfied the statutory forbearance
criteria, other relevant statutory
objectives such as section 706 of the
1996 Act, and applicable procedural
requirements under the Act and the
APA, and the D.C. Circuit rejected
challenges to that forbearance approach
in its USTA decision. We propose to
follow the same analytical approach
here and seek comment on that
proposal. We also seek comment on
alternative analytical approaches or
other ways to effectuate the forbearance
analysis.
87. We seek comment on the interplay
between our approach to forbearance
and the argument in the RIF Order that
the scope of forbearance granted in the
2015 Open Internet Order suggests that
classification of BIAS as a Title II
service is contrary to the statutory
scheme. In particular, does such an
argument fail to account for important
aspects of the approach to forbearance
in the 2015 Open Internet Order? For
example, we note that in many cases the
2015 Open Internet Order evaluated
forbearance assuming arguendo that
particular provisions of the Act or
Commission rules apply to BIAS, rather
than ‘‘first exhaustively determining
provision-by-provision and regulationby-regulation whether and how
particular provisions and rules apply to
this service.’’ Do objections to Title II
classification premised on the scope of
forbearance adequately account for that
fact, or do they draw unduly broad
conclusions based on simple counts of
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rules or statutory provisions subject to
the forbearance decision?
88. Separately, we propose to leave
ISPs’ broadband transmission services—
as distinguished from BIAS that relies
on that transmission as an input—
subject by default to the framework of
the Wireline Broadband Classification
Order (70 FR 60222 (Oct. 17, 2005)) as
the Commission has done previously.
The RIF Order observed that such
services ‘‘have never been subject to the
[2015 Open Internet Order] forbearance
framework,’’ and stated that ‘‘carriers
that choose to offer transmission service
on a common carriage basis are, as
under the Wireline Broadband
Classification Order, subject to the full
set of Title II obligations, to the extent
they applied before the’’ 2015 Open
Internet Order. The 2015 Open Internet
Order did, however, allow a provider
previously offering broadband
transmission on a common carrier basis
‘‘to change to offer internet access
services pursuant to the construct
adopted in’’ that Order subject to filing
with and review by the Wireline
Competition Bureau of the provider’s
proposal for the steps it would take to
convert to such an approach. We
propose to follow the same approach
here, and seek comment on that
proposal.
B. Proposed Forbearance
89. We seek comment on the
particular statutory provisions and rules
that should or should not be subject to
forbearance. In this regard, we propose
to use the forbearance granted in the
2015 Open Internet Order as the starting
point for our consideration of the
appropriate scope of forbearance. There,
although the Commission granted broad
forbearance, the Commission did not
forbear from a number of specific
protections or authorities:
• The open internet rules and section
706 of the 1996 Act;
• ‘‘[S]ections 201, 202, and 208, along
with key enforcement authority under
the Act, both as a basis of authority for
adopting open internet rules as well as
for the additional protections those
provisions directly provide’’;
• Section 222 of the Act, ‘‘which
establishes core customer privacy
protections’’;
• Section 224 of the Act and the
Commission’s implementing rules,
‘‘which grant certain benefits that will
foster network deployment by providing
telecommunications carriers with
regulated access to poles, ducts,
conduits, and rights-of-way’’;
• Sections 225, 255, and 251(a)(2) of
the Act and the Commission’s
implementing rules, ‘‘which collectively
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advance access for persons with
disabilities; except that the Commission
forbears from the requirement that
providers of broadband internet access
service contribute to the
Telecommunications Relay Service
(TRS) Fund at this time’’;
• Section 254 of the Act and ‘‘the
interrelated requirements of section
214(e), and the Commission’s
implementing regulations to strengthen
the Commission’s ability to support
broadband, supporting the
Commission’s ongoing efforts to support
broadband deployment and adoption’’;
and
• Requirements governing the
wireless licensing process in section
309(b) and (d)(1) of the Act and
§§ 1.931, 1.933, 1.939, 22.1110, and
27.10 of the Commission’s rules.
90. We propose to forbear from all
provisions of Title II that would permit
Commission regulation of BIAS rates.
We believe that Commission rate
regulation is unnecessary because the
tailored approach we adopt here will
enable the Commission to promote
broadband deployment and
competition, and because we will be
able to rely on sections 201 and 202 to
address non-rate related issues.
Therefore, while we do not propose to
forbear from sections 201 and 202 of the
Act as a general matter, we ‘‘do not and
cannot envision adopting new ex ante
rate regulation’’ or ex post rate
regulation of BIAS, and we therefore
propose to forbear from applying
sections 201 and 202 to BIAS insofar as
they would support adoption of rate
regulations for BIAS. We seek comment
on this proposal. With respect to section
254, we propose to forbear in part from
the first sentence in section 254(d) and
our associated rules ‘‘insofar as they
would immediately require new
universal service contributions
associated with’’ BIAS, as the
Commission did in 2015, and seek
comment on this proposal.
91. In addition to declining to forbear
from applying those specifically
enumerated provisions of the Act and
Commission rules, the Commission also
more generally limited its forbearance to
the scope of its section 10 forbearance
authority, and thus did not forbear from
applying statutory provisions or rules
that ‘‘are not applied to
telecommunications carriers or
telecommunications services.’’ The
Commission also did not forbear from
applying provisions of the Act or
Commission rules that already applied
to BIAS irrespective of the Title II
classification of that service. The
Commission cited illustrative examples
falling within one or both of those
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categories, including provisions
imposing obligations on the
Commission, like section 257 of the Act,
provisions that simply reserve state
authority, and the CALEA requirements
in section 229. In addition, the
Commission did not forbear from
provisions that would benefit ISPs. This
would include, for example, preemption
provisions such as those in sections 253
and 332(c) of the Act, as well as liability
limitation provisions in sections 223,
230, and 231 of the Act. To the extent
that forbearance was considered and
rejected in the 2015 Open Internet Order
for particular statutory provisions, we
propose to once again decline to grant
forbearance here, and we seek comment
on that proposal. As part of that
analysis, we seek updated information
and analyses regarding the application
of the statutory forbearance criteria
regarding these provisions and rules
that were not subject to forbearance in
the 2015 Open Internet Order. We also
seek comment on any relevant analyses
or conclusions in the RIF Order.
92. Other than in the specific areas
described above, the 2015 Open Internet
Order broadly granted forbearance from
applying provisions of the Act and
Commission rules that newly applied by
virtue of the Title II classification of
BIAS. We generally propose to again
adopt broad forbearance consistent with
that outcome, with the exception of
statutory authorities that could enable
the Commission to advance the Act’s
goals of national security and public
safety. For example, section 1 of the Act
makes clear that the Commission was
established, among other reasons, ‘‘for
the purpose of the national defense,
[and] for the purpose of promoting
safety of life and property through the
use of wire and radio communications.’’
Section 4(n) of the Act directs the
Commission to takes steps to promote
the ‘‘maximum effectiveness from the
use of radio and wire communications
in connection with safety of life and
property.’’ In addition, the D.C. Circuit
in Mozilla emphasized the need to
consider the potential benefits of Title II
classification of BIAS for the
Commission’s authority to protect
public safety. Although public safety
considerations were an important
element of the Commission’s overall
decision in the 2015 Open Internet
Order, preserving the Commission’s
public safety authority above and
beyond that granted in sections 201 and
202 of the Act was not as explicit a
focus in much of the Commission’s
tailoring of forbearance there. We thus
seek comment on what specific
provisions should be excluded from the
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scope of forbearance here in light of
those national security and public safety
interests, as discussed in greater detail
above.
93. Given the role section 214 of the
Act has played in the Commission’s
efforts to address national security and
law enforcement concerns related to
U.S. telecommunications networks, we
tentatively conclude that we should
exclude that provision from any
forbearance granted here. How should
the Commission apply its existing
procedures for international section 214
authorizations, which include
coordination of applications that have
reportable foreign ownership with the
relevant Executive Branch agencies, to
BIAS providers? We seek comment on
any implementation issues arising from
our tentative conclusion and how we
could best address them. For example,
would implementation challenges arise
if the Commission immediately applied
to BIAS providers its existing
procedures for international section 214
authorizations, which include
coordination of applications that have
reportable foreign ownership with the
relevant Executive Branch agencies? We
note that the 2015 Open Internet Order
recognized that certain implementation
issues could arise from the application
of section 222 and the Commission’s
implementing rules to BIAS, and sought
to mitigate those effects pending a
rulemaking specifically focused on
implementing section 222 for BIAS.
Should we proceed in a similar manner
with respect to some or all aspects of
international section 214 authorizations,
whether by adopting temporary
forbearance, temporary grants of blanket
international section 214 authority, or in
some other manner? We also seek
comment on any implementation issues
concerning our domestic section 214
requirements.
94. We also make clear that our
proposed forbearance would not
encompass Title III licensing
authorities, including sections 301–303,
307–309, 312, and 316 of the Act, which
we believe likewise grant us important
authority that can be used to advance
national security and public safety with
respect to the services and equipment
subject to licensing. We also seek
comment on whether we should
exclude from the scope of our
forbearance provisions sections 218 and
220 of the Act, which authorize the
Commission to obtain information from
common carriers, which could provide
important tools to investigate public
safety and security-related issues that
arise. We seek comment on those
proposals and on any other provisions
of the Act or Commission rules that
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likewise should be expressly excluded
from the scope of forbearance based on
national security and/or public safety
considerations, including, for example,
sections 305, 310, and 332 of the Act.
95. The D.C. Circuit’s Mozilla
decision also highlighted the potential
benefits of Title II classification of BIAS
for the Commission’s authority to
encourage deployment through
regulation of pole attachments and to
provide universal service support for
low income households. In
consideration of those interests, the
Commission previously excluded
sections 224 and 254 of the Act from the
scope of its forbearance in the 2015
Open Internet Order. We seek comment
on whether there are additional or
different ways those interests should be
reflected in the tailoring of forbearance
here.
96. We believe that the RIF Remand
Order was too quick to dismiss concerns
regarding public safety, pole
attachments, and low income universal
service support as speculative or
unproven, and we seek comment on that
view. Do commenters agree that the RIF
Remand Order gave insufficient weight
to the potential additional benefits that
could be achieved through additional
authority retained by virtue of Title II
classification of BIAS?
97. We also seek comment on any
additional or different ways that
forbearance could be tailored here. For
example, the 2015 Open Internet Order
adopted conditional forbearance from
common carrier roaming regulations,
subject to mobile ISPs complying with
the data roaming requirements.
Conditioned in that manner, the
Commission was able to find the
statutory forbearance criteria satisfied.
We propose to follow the same
approach with respect to our roaming
rules here, and also seek comment on
whether there are other provisions of
the Act or Commission rules where
conditional forbearance would satisfy
the statutory forbearance criteria, even if
unconditional forbearance would not.
More generally, we also seek comment
on alternative frameworks we might
draw upon in deciding on how to tailor
forbearance here. For example, in the
2015 Open Internet Order, the
Commission elected to grant broader
forbearance despite some calls to limit
forbearance just to the scope of relief
previously granted to CMRS providers.
We seek renewed comment on that
approach, as well as any alternative
options for tailoring forbearance here
based on the regulatory experience in
other contexts.
98. We also seek comment on whether
forbearance should be differently
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tailored in the specific context of the
internet traffic exchange portion of
BIAS. In the 2015 Open Internet Order,
the Commission’s ‘‘definition for
broadband internet access service
include[d] the exchange of internet
traffic by an edge provider or an
intermediary with the broadband
provider’s network.’’ Consequently,
under the 2015 Open Internet Order,
internet traffic exchange was subject to
the same forbearance as BIAS more
generally. We propose to continue that
uniform approach here, but also seek
comment on whether and to what extent
the internet traffic exchange component
of BIAS should be subject to different
tailoring of forbearance.
99. Finally, we also seek comment on
any relevant new rules or statutory
requirements enacted subsequent to the
forbearance analysis in the 2015 Open
Internet Order.
III. Proposed Open Internet Rules
100. Today we propose to return to
the basic framework the Commission
adopted in 2015 to protect the openness
of the internet. In 2015, consistent with
its longstanding policy approach to
protect internet openness through basic
conduct ‘‘rules of the road,’’ the
Commission adopted a set of carefully
tailored conduct rules to prevent
specific practices harmful to an open
internet—blocking, throttling, and paid
prioritization—as well as a strong
standard of conduct designed to prevent
deployment of new practices that would
harm internet openness, and
enhancements to the existing
transparency rule. In the RIF Order, the
Commission broke with this
longstanding approach by altogether
eliminating the open internet conduct
rules, which we believe left consumers
exposed to behavior that can hinder
their ability to access the open internet.
Below, we propose to reinstate
straightforward, clear rules that are
designed to prevent ISPs from engaging
in practices harmful to consumers,
competition, and public safety, and that
would provide the basis for a national
regulatory approach toward BIAS.
101. We first propose to reinstate the
rules adopted in the 2015 Open Internet
Order that prohibit ISPs from blocking,
throttling, or engaging in paid or
affiliated prioritization arrangements.
We similarly propose to reinstate the
general conduct standard adopted in the
2015 Open Internet Order, which would
prohibit practices that cause
unreasonable interference or
unreasonable disadvantage to
consumers or edge providers. Finally,
with regard to transparency, we propose
to retain the current disclosures, and we
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seek comment on the means of
disclosure, the interplay between the
transparency rule and the broadband
label requirements, and any additional
enhancements or changes we should
consider. The rules we propose today
are consistent with numerous other
steps the Commission has taken to
ensure that this country has access to
affordable, competitive, secure, and
reliable broadband. The proposed rules
would establish clear standards for ISPs
to maintain internet openness and
would give the Commission a solid
basis on which to take enforcement
action against conduct that prevents
people from fully accessing all of the
critical services available through the
internet.
A. Need for Rules
102. We believe that the rules we
propose today will establish a baseline
that the Commission can use to prevent
and address conduct that harms
consumers and competition when it
occurs. Above, we express our belief
that consumers perceive and use BIAS
as an essential service, critical to
accessing healthcare, education, work,
commerce, and civic engagement.
Because of its importance, we further
believe it is paramount that consumers
be able to use their BIAS connections
without degradation due to blocking,
throttling, paid prioritization, or other
harmful conduct. The rules we propose
today are designed to ensure these
protections. Below, we seek comment
on particular issues that inspire the
need for these rules, including
protecting public safety, ISPs’ incentives
and abilities to harm internet openness,
the effects of harmful conduct on
consumer demand and edge innovation,
reliance on the Commission’s
communications sector expertise to
address harmful conduct, and how the
RIF Order’s oversight framework
addresses harmful conduct. We invite
commenters to submit economic
analyses that weigh the costs and
benefits of the Commission potentially
adopting open internet rules.
1. Promoting Innovation and Free
Expression
103. In the 2015 Open Internet Order,
the Commission found that internet
openness helps promote innovation,
investment, and free expression, among
other goals. Among other things, the
Commission found that the record there
‘‘overwhelmingly support[ed] the
proposition that the internet’s openness
is critical to its ability to serve as a
platform for speech and civic
engagement,’’ facilitate ‘‘the
development of diverse content,
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applications, and services,’’ and enable
‘‘a virtuous cycle of innovation.’’ We
continue to place high importance on
innovation, investment, and free
expression, and we believe that conduct
rules designed to ensure internet
openness will better advance those
goals, consistent with the reasoning in
the 2015 Open Internet Order. We seek
comment on that view.
104. We are skeptical of the RIF
Order’s rejection of free expression as a
likely benefit of internet conduct rules
designed to advance internet openness.
The RIF Order theorized that
competition ‘‘will protect values such as
free expression, to the extent that
consumers value free expression as a
service attribute and are aware of how
their ISPs’ actions affect free
expression.’’ We question, however,
whether the RIF Order was correct to
place such confidence in the
marketplace as sufficient to advance free
expression on the internet. Do
consumers and the public have
information about how ISP actions
affect free expression on a sufficiently
granular and detailed basis to act on that
information? Separately, the RIF Order
acknowledged that ‘‘[t]he competitive
process and antitrust would not protect
free expression in cases where
consumers have decided that they are
willing to tolerate some blocking or
throttling in order to obtain other things
of value.’’ We doubt that consumers are
likely to act uniformly as a single,
undifferentiated group, particularly
where issues like free expression are
concerned. We thus question how well
the RIF Order’s analysis accounts for the
interests of consumers who place
different values on free expression.
More generally, we seek updated
information and analysis about the
anticipated effects of internet conduct
rules on free expression.
2. Protecting Public Safety
105. We believe that blocking,
throttling, paid prioritization, and other
potential conduct have the potential to
impair public safety communications in
a variety of circumstances and therefore
harm the public. As discussed above,
one of the Commission’s fundamental
obligations under the Act is to advance
public safety. The Mozilla court
highlighted this charge and recognized
the significance of it, emphasizing that
‘‘whenever public safety is involved,
lives are at stake.’’ It went on to note
that ‘‘[a]ny blocking or throttling of
[safety officials’] internet
communications during a public safety
crisis could have dire, irreversible
results.’’ Similarly, in the 2015 Open
Internet Order, the Commission
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recognized that paid prioritization and
peering disagreements can negatively
affect public safety communications
traveling over the same networks.
Above, we detail and seek comment on
the wide range of public safety
communications and applications that
rely on broadband networks and on the
related national security concerns
implicating broadband service
providers. We now seek comment on
our belief that maintaining the RIF
Order’s ex post enforcement framework
will provide insufficient protection
against conduct harms, which includes
harms to public safety or national
security. We note that the Mozilla court
expressed specific skepticism about the
Commission’s contention in the RIF
Order that post-activity enforcement is a
suitable method to address harmful
conduct in the public safety context,
emphasizing that ‘‘even if
discriminatory practices might later be
addressed on a post-hoc basis by entities
like the Federal Trade Commission, the
harm to the public cannot be undone.’’
We believe that the conduct rules we
propose are necessary to prevent and
mitigate harms to those public safety
uses that would result from blocking,
throttling, and other conduct, and we
seek comment on our tentative
conclusion. Our proposed conduct rules
may also support consumer use of
telehealth service and remote healthcare
monitoring, such as through connected
devices, by ensuring consumers can
continue to access these services
without the threat of blocking,
throttling, or other degradation. We seek
comment on consumer experiences
where they have been harmed.
106. We further believe our proposed
conduct rules would have particular
benefits for the safety of individuals
with disabilities. Above, we highlighted
that these individuals increasingly rely
on internet-based communications, and
that ‘‘[t]hese applications often require
significant bandwidth, making their use
particularly sensitive to data caps and
network management practices.’’ We
believe the use of broadband to facilitate
internet-based communications by
persons with disabilities for public
safety purposes, such as to contact
emergency service providers, has a
higher likelihood of being degraded by
prioritization of latency-sensitive
applications on the same facilities than
less data-intensive uses, such as email,
software updates, or cached video. We
accordingly believe that our proposed
rules would prevent such degradation
and seek comment on this proposed
analysis.
107. We seek comment on any other
public safety harms or unaddressed
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concerns that the proposed rules would
help to alleviate. For example, would
the proposed rules help to improve
public safety officials’ ability to
communicate via alerting systems to
help improve emergency preparedness?
Would they help to provide additional
necessary bandwidth for IP-based
communications to Public Safety
Answering Points via 9–1–1? Would
such rules help the authorities
responding to such calls to have better
or more complete information about an
emergency to ensure a more
comprehensive or timely response?
Would such rules help public safety and
law enforcement authorities to better
communicate with one another during
their responses to emergencies? What
public safety issues have arisen since
the Commission’s prior 2015 and 2018
orders that the proposed rules would
help to address?
3. ISPs’ Incentive and Ability To Harm
Internet Openness
108. In both the 2010 Open Internet
Order and 2015 Open Internet Order,
the Commission concluded that open
internet rules were needed because ISPs
have the incentive and ability to engage
in practices that pose a threat to internet
openness. In particular, the Commission
found that because ISP networks serve
as platforms for internet ecosystem
participants to communicate, ISPs ‘‘are
in a position to act as a ‘gatekeeper’
between end users’ access to edge
providers’ applications, services, and
devices and reciprocally for edge
providers’ access to end users.’’ The
2015 Open Internet Order highlighted
several economic incentives ISPs have
to exploit this gatekeeper role, ‘‘such as
preferring their own or affiliated
content, demanding fees from edge
providers, or placing technical barriers
to reaching end users.’’ This behavior,
the Commission found, ‘‘has the
potential to cause a variety of other
negative externalities that hurt the open
nature of the internet,’’ which ISPs do
not internalize. The Commission also
concluded that ISPs ‘‘have the technical
ability to act on incentives to harm the
open internet.’’
109. The RIF Order offered several
reasons for rejecting the prior rationales,
including ISPs’ economic incentives
and supposed material competitive
restraints. We believe these conclusions
presumed that there were other ISPs to
which consumers can switch if they
were suffering open internet harms, and
that the switching costs would not deter
such switching. In addition, we
tentatively agree with the Mozilla court,
which found that, ‘‘[t]aken together, the
Commission fail[ed] to provide a fully
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satisfying analysis of the competitive
constraints faced by broadband
providers.’’ The Commission also
claimed that ‘‘from the perspective of
many edge providers, end users do not
single home, but subscribe to more than
one platform (e.g., one fixed and one
mobile) capable of granting the end user
effective access to the edge provider’s
content (i.e., they multi-home),’’ and ‘‘to
the extent multihoming occurs in the
use of an application, there is no
terminating monopoly.’’ However,
consumers may lack access to both fixed
and mobile connections, and even when
they do have access to both, the
Commission did not show that these
connections allow consumers to access
all edge provider services unhindered,
and therefore are truly competitive
alternatives. Indeed, the Commission
has since concluded that ‘‘fixed
broadband and mobile wireless
broadband are not substitutes in all
cases,’’ finding that each type of service
‘‘enables different situational uses.’’ We
seek comment on this analysis.
110. The RIF Order also found the
Commission’s action in the 2015 Open
Internet Order was unjustified because
it lacked evidence of harms to internet
openness. Setting aside the several
examples of harmful conduct discussed
in the 2015 Open Internet Order and
detailed in the record for the RIF Order,
we believe the RIF Order’s conclusion
gave inadequate consideration to the
effects of the Commission’s consistent
efforts to apply and enforce the open
internet standards since early 2005,
which we believe deterred harmful ISP
conduct. Thus, to the extent there is
limited evidence of harmful conduct
prior to the 2015 Open Internet Order,
we believe that demonstrates the
Commission’s consistent efforts to apply
and enforce open internet standards
since 2005 were effective and are
needed, not that the 2015 Open Internet
Order and the protections it adopted
were unjustified. We seek comment on
this analysis.
111. We tentatively conclude that
ISPs continue to have the incentive and
ability to engage in practices that pose
a threat to internet openness, and seek
comment on this tentative conclusion
and the above analysis. We also seek to
update the record underlying the
conclusions in the 2010 Open Internet
Order and 2015 Open Internet Order.
How have changes in the marketplace or
technology since 2015 affected ISPs’,
including smaller ISPs, incentives and
ability to engage in such practices? To
what extent do ISPs have economic
incentives and mechanisms to block or
disadvantage a particular edge provider
or class of edge providers? To what
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extent do vertically integrated providers
have particularized incentives to
discriminate—on price, quality, or other
bases—in favor of affiliated products?
For instance, we believe that many
major ISPs are affiliated with OTT
services or continue to offer competitive
vertically integrated OTT services, and
frequently provide consumers with
promotional offers that bundle OTT
services with BIAS. Do these affiliate
relationships and vertically integrated
offerings create additional incentive for
ISPs to favor those services over others?
To what extent should the Commission
evaluate the ability and incentives of
other intermediaries involved in the
exchange of internet traffic, such as
middle mile and backbone providers, to
engage in conduct harmful to internet
openness, particularly with respect to
their relationships with ISPs? We seek
comment on this analysis.
112. We also seek comment on
whether ISPs are incentivized to
increase revenues by charging edge
providers for access or prioritized access
to the ISPs’ end users. Are there
justifications for charging fees to edge
providers that were not present in 2015?
We seek comment on these and other
economic incentives and abilities that
ISPs may have to limit openness.
113. We seek comment on the state of
competition in the BIAS market. We
note that the Commission’s 2022
Communications Marketplace Report
found that, as of 2021, approximately 36
percent of households lack a
competitive option for fixed broadband
at speeds of 100/20 Mbps and that 70
percent of households in rural areas lack
such an option. Preliminary FCC staff
calculations using December 2022
Broadband Deployment Collection data
yield similar results. While competition
in the mobile BIAS market is somewhat
more significant, fixed and mobile
services have not proven to be
substitutable. To what extent does the
state of competition affect ISPs’
incentives to limit openness? Are there
different incentives for small ISPs?
Similarly, to what extent does the state
of competition affect ISPs’ incentives to
innovate and invest in their networks?
We seek insight into whether consumers
in all areas of the country have adequate
choices in the fixed and mobile
broadband service market. Also, to what
extent do broadband services with
substantially different technical
characteristics serve as competitive
substitutes? How, if at all, do
commercial practices differ in places
where consumers have only one or two
choices, particularly when those choices
use different technologies? Although the
Commission previously found that its
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authority is not predicated on a finding
of market power, and this finding has
twice been upheld, is there a reason we
should engage in a market power
analysis now with respect to ISPs and,
if so, how? We further seek comment on
whether there are other economic
theories that we should consider to
better understand and assess ISP
incentives to engage in practices that
affect the internet’s openness. We also
seek comment on the extent to which
the state of competition in the BIAS
market should play a role in our
decision as to whether or not to
reclassify BIAS as a Title II service.
114. We further seek information on
ISP conduct since the RIF Order was
adopted. Are there examples of conduct
that has harmed internet openness? We
note that one 2019 study suggested that
ISPs regularly throttle video content.
Aside from specific examples of harm,
could other factors have deterred ISPs
from engaging in any behavior that
might have violated open internet
principles? For instance, while the RIF
Order was published in the Federal
Register in February of 2018, it was not
until the Mozilla case concluded in
October of 2019 that it was clear open
internet rules would no longer be in
effect. To what degree might long-term
contracts, and the general difficulty of
implementing new business models,
also have played a role in making it
difficult for ISPs to exploit
opportunities the RIF Order created?
Could the threat of regulation have led
ISPs to make voluntary commitments to
maintain service consistent with certain
conduct rules established in the 2015
Open Internet Order, as they did, and if
so, would this threat have dimmed with
time? Because broadband connections
were so essential during the pandemic,
we believe ISPs have been under
increased scrutiny by the Commission,
the media, and the public since March
2020, and therefore have had a strong
incentive to follow their voluntary
commitments. Further, following the
RIF Order, ISPs have been subject to
state laws and executive orders
addressing internet conduct. How have
state regulations addressing ISP conduct
affected ISP conduct nationwide? We
also observe that unprecedented
consumer demand for BIAS and edge
innovation that occurred during the
pandemic also led to unprecedented
growth for ISPs. How did this growth
impact providers’ incentives either to
comply with open internet principles or
to engage in behavior that might
increase their revenues at the expense of
internet openness? Are smaller ISPs’
incentives or ability to engage in
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effective competition, might expect to
see higher profits if it sets prices for
edge providers that recover in
expectation a little more than its longterm costs. However, consistent with the
reasoning of the RIF Order, it will not
set prices for edge providers that are so
high that the impact on the quality of
edge provider service would cause the
ISP to lose more because it would be
forced to lower prices to its own
consumers. We believe that the
difficulty with the RIF Order analysis is
that in setting its profit-maximizing
prices for edge providers, the ISP lowers
service quality for all ISPs, but that
4. Consumer Demand and Edge
harm does not feature in the ISP’s profitInnovation
maximizing calculation. While the
115. We believe that an important
impact on content quality of a single ISP
byproduct of an open internet is the
setting prices for edge providers
edge innovation and consumer demand
somewhat above the competitive level
that promotes ISP investment, and seek
will be small and spread out over all
comment on this position. In the 2015
ISPs, all similarly situated ISPs face
Open Internet Order, the Commission
similar incentives. Thus, since ISPs
recognized that ‘‘innovations at the
have no means of coordinating their
edges of the network enhance consumer behavior, and doing so could be illegal,
demand, leading to expanded
each will behave in this way with
investments in broadband infrastructure material negative cumulative effects.
that, in turn, spark new innovations at
The result is a breaking of the virtuous
the edge.’’ The Commission referred to
cycle described in the 2010 Open
this as the ‘‘virtuous cycle,’’ and it was
Internet Order: not only will ISPs
the foundation for the action the
collectively be worse off, but so will the
Commission took in both the 2010 Open broader economy. We seek comment on
Internet Order and 2015 Open Internet
this analysis and other bases for
Order. The validity of the virtuous cycle validating or questioning the RIF
was upheld by both the Verizon court
Order’s analysis.
and the USTA court. The RIF Order,
117. We believe it is necessary to
however, discounted the 2015 Open
secure the open internet to preserve the
Internet Order’s reliance on the virtuous virtuous cycle wherein market signals
cycle, contending there was a two-sided on both sides of ISPs’ platforms
market in which ISPs acted as platforms encourage consumer demand, content
and benefited from facilitating
creation, and innovation, with each
interactions between both sides of the
respectively increasing the other,
market—edge providers and end users— providing ISPs incentives to invest in
and profits from inducing both sides of
their networks. We further believe that
the market to use its platform.
if innovative edge services are subject to
116. We tentatively conclude that the
blocking, throttling, paid prioritization,
RIF Order’s explanation of how twoor other conduct by ISPs that harms
sided markets work does not address a
internet openness, that conduct will
central problem open internet rules are
reduce edge innovation. This will, in
intended to address. When an ISP’s
turn, reduce the quality and quantity of
actions harm content creators and edge
edge services available to consumers,
providers, the impact is distributed
and, specifically with blocking and
across all ISPs, not just the ISP
throttling, directly inhibit consumers
undertaking the action. Yet, each ISP
from accessing the edge services they
only accounts for the impact on its own desire. The impacts on edge services
operations. Consequently, a profitand consumers will reduce demand for
making decision from the perspective of broadband connections and ultimately
the individual ISP creates repercussions suppress the need for ISPs to invest in
across all ISPs that harm the industry
upgrades to their networks or new
and the economy at large. When an ISP
deployments to meet that demand.
makes the profit-maximizing decisions
Stalled ISP network improvements
the RIF Order describes, it only accounts ultimately will undermine new edge
for the impacts of its decision on its
innovation and consumer demand. We
own company. It does not account for
seek comment on this proposed
the impact of those actions on ISPs that
analysis.
118. We believe the conduct rules we
lie outside its geographic market. These
propose will protect edge innovation
constitute the bulk of ISPs. Thus, an
ISP, for example, that does not face fully and the ability of consumers to access
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conduct that might harm internet
openness different from those facing
larger ISPs? What are the costs and
advantages of waiting to act only after
ISPs begin to take actions that might
harm internet openness? Would such
conduct be immediately identifiable?
How quickly could ISPs comply with
new rules and what harms would occur
in the meantime? Going forward, is
there reason to believe that ISPs will
engage in conduct that harms the open
internet, particularly if the Commission
chooses not to adopt open internet
rules?
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those new and developing services,
thereby promoting both edge and ISP
investment. We seek comment on this
view. In particular, what is the role of
the internet’s openness in facilitating
consumer demand and edge innovation
that encourages edge and ISP
investment? We are also interested in
understanding the role the open internet
may play in the promotion of edge
competition or in the reduction or
elimination of barriers to edge entry and
investment.
5. The Commission’s Ability To Address
Conduct That Undermines an Open
Internet
119. We believe that, as the expert
agency on communications, the
Commission is best positioned to
safeguard internet openness. The RIF
Order removed the Commission’s
authority to enforce open internet
requirements and left to the FTC the
responsibility to address harmful ISP
conduct. The current Chair of the FTC
agrees that the Federal Communications
Commission ‘‘has the clearest legal
authority and expertise to fully oversee
internet service providers,’’ noting
specifically that she supports efforts by
the Commission ‘‘to reassert that
authority and once again put in place
the nondiscrimination rules, privacy
protections, and other basic
requirements needed to create a
healthier market.’’ We seek comment on
whether the Commission’s longstanding
oversight of the communications
industry gives it unique technical,
economic, and public interest aptitude
in evaluating ISP conduct. To what
extent does the Commission’s
enforcement apparatus provide it with
sufficient authority and capabilities to
address harmful conduct by ISPs,
including by securing administrative
relief? What efficiencies would be
achieved as a result of the Commission
having authority over BIAS along with
other communications services (e.g.,
voice and cable) that providers offer to
customers as part of bundled offerings?
6. The RIF Order’s Framework
120. When the Commission repealed
the open internet rules in the RIF Order,
it broke from the Commission’s
persistent efforts to preserve an open
internet. The RIF Order did not address
the longstanding bipartisan agreement
that the Commission should prohibit
ISPs from engaging in blocking,
throttling, and other conduct that
undermines an open internet and—
importantly—that it should have the
authority to enforce those restrictions.
This was echoed by the Mozilla court,
which was ‘‘troubled by the
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Commission’s failure to grapple with
the fact that, for much of the past two
decades, ISPs were subject to some
degree of open Internet restrictions.’’
The Mozilla court explained, that
‘‘[w]hile outside observers may
associate ‘light touch’ with a distinct era
in regulation and ‘open Internet’ with
another era, the successive Commission
majorities have consistently vowed
fealty to both.’’ We believe the RIF
Order failed to ensure the most basic
protections for the open internet—
prohibitions on blocking and
throttling—let alone other threats to the
open internet identified in the 2015
Open Internet Order. We seek comment
on this analysis.
121. We believe that the 2015 Open
Internet Order was consistent with
Commission precedent by applying a
light-touch regulatory framework to
preserve an open internet. When the
Verizon court struck down the 2010
Open Internet Order, the Commission
sought to implement a solution to
preserve longstanding open internet
standards that supported the
unprecedented growth in fixed and
mobile subscribership, edge innovation,
and network investment that occurred
up to that point. The Commission
determined that classifying BIAS as a
Title II service was not only more
consistent with a modern assessment of
how the definition of
‘‘telecommunications service’’ applies
to current BIAS offerings, but would
also enable it to apply and enforce open
internet rules. Thus, in establishing
open internet rules using a light-touch
application of Title II, we believe the
2015 Open Internet Order ensured
maintenance of the status quo that had
existed for more than ten years prior to
that Order. As such, we tentatively
conclude that the action we propose
today restores the status quo that had
existed up until the Commission
adopted the RIF Order, in which clear
rules of the road ensure that edge
innovation and investment flourish and
consumers can access all lawful content
they see fit. We seek comment on our
proposed assessment.
122. Transparency. The Commission’s
transparency rule requires ISPs to
publicly disclose the network practices,
performance characteristics, and
commercial terms of the BIAS they
offer, including disclosure of any
blocking, throttling, and affiliated or
paid prioritization practices. We
recognize that transparency is a valuable
tool to protect the open internet, but
that it is only one element of a
comprehensive framework that prevents
consumers from experiencing harms
that inhibit their access to an open
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internet. While the transparency
requirements currently in place provide
consumers and edge providers the
ability to make informed decisions, we
believe their effectiveness is limited
because they do not restrict ISPs from
engaging in activities that have long
enjoyed bipartisan opposition—
blocking, throttling, and
discrimination—let alone other conduct
that has the potential to cause harm,
such as paid prioritization. Indeed, the
RIF Order only requires that companies
disclose their blocking, throttling, and
paid or affiliated prioritization in their
transparency disclosures; it does not
prohibit companies from engaging in
these practices. We tentatively conclude
that these are the types of conduct that
require ex ante intervention to ensure
they do not happen in the first instance,
and therefore tentatively conclude that
the comprehensive set of conduct rules
that we propose today are needed to
protect consumers from this conduct.
We seek comment on this tentative
conclusion.
123. Consumer Protection and
Antitrust Law. We seek comment on
whether, in practice, consumer
protection and antitrust laws provide
sufficient protections against blocking,
throttling, paid prioritization, and other
conduct that harms the open internet, as
the RIF Order asserted. The Mozilla
court explained that the RIF Order
‘‘theorized why antitrust and consumer
protection law is preferred to ex ante
regulations but failed to provide any
meaningful analysis of whether these
laws would, in practice, prevent
blocking and throttling.’’ The RIF Order
also seems to concede that blocking,
throttling, and discrimination may be
permitted under its chosen oversight
and enforcement framework, and that
paid prioritization may be found to be
permissible in many instances.
124. We seek comment on the
application of consumer protection laws
by the FTC. Notably, a 2021 Supreme
Court ruling restricted the FTC’s ability
to seek monetary relief on behalf of
consumers, thereby reducing the
deterrent effect of the FTC’s actions.
Congress has also created other
exceptions to the FTC’s consumer
protection authority and assigned
consumer protection responsibilities to
other agencies that have expertise in
both consumer protection and the
relevant industry. Finally, we also
observe that while the FTC has
generally proceeded through ex post
enforcement actions and public
guidance, reclassification would allow
the Commission to proceed by
establishing ex ante, commonly
applicable rules. We seek comment on
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the benefits and burdens of such an
approach.
125. We also seek comment on
whether the FTC’s and Department of
Justice’s (DOJ) antitrust enforcement
authority is limited in its ability to
protect against open internet harms. The
RIF Order claims that antitrust would be
effective because harmful conduct
would be evaluated under the ‘‘rule of
reason,’’ which it claims amounts to a
‘‘consumer welfare test.’’ However, the
‘‘rule of reason’’ analysis includes a
subjective determination about whether
alleged economic benefits outweigh
recognized consumer harms. Because
the analysis focuses on economic
factors, does it provide sufficient weight
to important non-economic factors,
which courts have recognized are
appropriate to consider under the public
interest standard of the Act? Even if
strict application of antitrust law does
not reveal a violation of section 1 or
section 2 of the Sherman Act, could
there still be market distortions and
power asymmetries, both between ISPs
and other market players and between
ISPs and consumers, that require ex
ante intervention in the public interest,
at least in instances where the
Commission may find that conduct is
unjust, unreasonable, or unreasonably
discriminatory? For example, would
regulatory intervention be necessary in
instances when there is a high
likelihood of harm to consumers and the
likelihood or availability of effective
remedies for consumers is speculative?
126. Consumer Relief. Even if the RIF
Order’s oversight and enforcement
framework were to provide some
protection, we seek comment on
whether it gives consumers a
meaningful opportunity to secure relief.
The RIF Order concluded that its
framework ‘‘ensures that consumers
have means to take remedial action if an
ISP engages in behavior inconsistent
with an open Internet.’’ It appears that
consumers’ primary means for seeking
recourse under that framework is to
submit complaints to the FTC with the
goal of spurring the agency to direct its
resources to investigate and address the
alleged harms. With antitrust, in
particular, it appears that to pursue
relief, consumers must submit
complaints that describe conduct that
inhibits their access to the internet,
attempt to tie that conduct to
anticompetitive behavior that harms
other entities, and otherwise rely on the
FTC or other entities to bring suits
alleging anticompetitive conduct that
also harms the open internet. We seek
comment on whether consumers can
effectively use these mechanisms to
obtain relief, and do so in a timely
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manner, and we seek comment
generally regarding consumers’
experiences obtaining relief following
the RIF Order.
127. Aside from the remedies offered
by law, we seek comment on the
adequacy of other methods the RIF
Order offers that consumers can use to
secure relief. First, the RIF Order
suggests that consumers may be able to
seek service from another ISP if they are
experiencing harmful conduct, but as
discussed above, it is not clear there is
adequate local competition in many
areas, especially rural areas, to give
consumers a meaningful choice among
providers, and we seek comment on this
assessment. For instance, 36 percent of
households lack a competitive option
for broadband at speeds of 100/20 Mbps
and 70 percent of households in rural
areas lack such an option. At higher
speeds, the level of competition
becomes non-existent in most areas with
approximately 96 percent of households
lacking a competitive option for gigabit
broadband service. Even when
consumers have access to another
provider not engaging in behavior that
is inconsistent with an open Internet, to
what extent is their choice between
providers often negated because the
alternatives charge significantly higher
prices or provide lower performance
and quality of service? Second, the RIF
Order states that if ISPs engage in
conduct that harms the open internet,
public attention from consumer
backlash would police their behavior,
but it seems to assume that the harmful
conduct by ISPs would be obvious or
widespread—rather than surreptitious
or sporadic—such that a sufficient
number of consumers would be aware of
the conduct and vocal in their
objections to have the necessary force to
influence ISP conduct. Third, even if
ISP conduct was sufficiently egregious
to result in a consumer backlash, how
would that backlash police ISP
behavior? We seek comment on the
foregoing.
128. Further, to the extent the RIF
Order’s oversight and enforcement
framework can address harmful conduct
when it occurs, we seek comment on
whether the framework will still result
in fewer instances where ISPs will be
subject to enforcement action for
conduct that is clearly harmful to an
open internet. If the RIF Order’s
framework becomes the settled
approach, will consumers suffer a
greater amount of harmful conduct than
would exist under the open internet
rules we propose, and receive fewer
remedies when that harm occurs? Even
when remedies are achieved, will they
provide sufficient redress to harms
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resulting from ISPs’ conduct? Does the
RIF Order’s regulatory framework
adequately serve the public interest,
given how essential broadband is to full
participation in today’s society and
economy?
129. Edge Provider Protections. We
believe the RIF Order’s reliance on
antitrust protections undermines the
virtuous cycle by failing to protect the
small edge services that comprise an
important part of the internet. While
antitrust protections would apply
where, for example, an ISP favored its
own edge provider, or sought to harm a
competing edge provider, antitrust
protections do not forbid the unjust or
unreasonable exercise of market powers.
But it is exactly those practices that
could unravel the virtuous cycle. As
part of its justification for reliance on
antitrust law, the RIF Order expresses
particular concern about the effect of
regulations on small ISPs. But we
believe that there are far more edge
services that are small—typically many
times smaller than the smallest ISPs—
which the RIF Order does not
acknowledge or evaluate. We seek
comment on this belief and on the
extent to which providers of these edge
services would have any leverage in
negotiations with ISPs of any size, let
alone large, vertically integrated ISPs.
Should large, or even small, ISPs begin
seeking paid prioritization
arrangements, for example, would this
disproportionately harm small edge
providers, for example, because larger
edge providers could use their own
countervailing power to better manage
the situation? Would this increase entry
barriers, harming edge provider
competition and innovation, for
example, by discouraging new entry
against larger established edge
providers? In all of these cases, what
legal case would a harmed edge
provider be able to bring under antitrust
law and what would the likelihood of
success be? The RIF Order argues that
ISPs have incentives to support nascent
competition as more edge provider
competition will reduce the
countervailing power of large,
entrenched ISPs. We seek comment on
whether this is accurate, and in
particular whether any efforts or
investments by an ISP to help nascent
edge providers would produce diffuse
benefits to all ISPs, and thus whether
any single ISP would have appropriate
incentives to help develop edge
provider competition.
130. Research in innovation
economics suggests that edge innovation
is heterogeneous. Some types of edge
innovation will thrive under general
purpose open networks. Such
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innovations could have significant
positive spillover effects that benefit the
broader internet ecosystem. However,
other types of edge innovation,
especially during the early phases of the
innovation process, may be facilitated
by quality of service differentiation of
the network. This suggests that a
forward-looking open internet policy
will be most supportive of innovation if
it protects the openness of the access
platforms for innovations with high
spillover effects while at the same time
allowing non-discriminatory forms of
network differentiation to support edge
innovations that are facilitated by such
support. We seek comment on this
proposed analysis.
131. Costs of Oversight Regime. We
seek comment generally on the costs to
ISPs resulting from the RIF Order’s
chosen oversight regime. The RIF Order
claims that its approach would lower
compliance costs for ISPs. We reiterate,
however, that because the RIF Order’s
preemption directive was vacated by the
D.C. Circuit in Mozilla, ISPs are now
subject to a patchwork of state
requirements for BIAS, rather than a
national regulatory framework. We seek
comment on the costs of this patchwork
approach.
132. We also seek comment on the
costs of the RIF Order’s consumer
protection and antitrust oversight
framework. We observe that whether an
act is unfair or deceptive under
consumer protection law each depends
on its own three-prong subjective test,
which can result in unforeseen
outcomes, and the antitrust rule of
reason relies on a case-by-case
evaluation. In light of these factors, we
seek comment on whether the RIF
Order’s removal of bright-line, ex ante
rules can result in significant
compliance cost for ISPs. Relatedly,
what are the costs to ISPs for having to
evaluate the risks of their planned
conduct under this consumer protection
and antitrust oversight framework?
B. Conduct Rules
133. We propose to adopt rules to
prohibit ISPs from blocking, throttling,
or engaging in paid or affiliated
prioritization arrangements, and also
seek comment on the adoption of a
proposed general conduct standard for
ISPs. The last several years have
demonstrated not only broadband’s
essential value, but also the
consequences to consumers of its
absence or degradation, and we
therefore believe it important to
establish clear, bright-line rules. We
seek comment on the proposals and
analyses herein.
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134. The conduct rules we propose
track the language of the rules the
Commission adopted in the 2015 Open
internet Order. In 2015, the Commission
found that blocking, throttling, and paid
prioritization arrangements were three
practices that ‘‘in particular
demonstrably harm the open internet.’’
The Commission adopted rules to ban
these three practices, finding that they
are ‘‘inherently unjust and
unreasonable, in violation of section
201(b) of the Act, and that these
practices threaten the virtuous cycle of
innovation and investment that the
Commission intends to protect under its
obligation and authority to take steps to
promote broadband deployment under
section 706 of the 1996 Act.’’ Even
while eliminating these protections in
2018, the RIF Order still recognized the
harms of blocking and throttling
practices and required disclosure of
such practices under its revised
transparency rule. Below, we seek
comment on how experience since the
RIF Order would help inform the scope
and language of prohibitions on
blocking, throttling, and paid
prioritization arrangements. At the
outset, however, we seek comment at a
broader level on whether these three
practices are still the key threats to
internet openness.
135. We do not anticipate that the
open Internet rules we propose today
will have a harmful effect on
investment. ISP investment was not
inhibited from 2005 through 2016, when
the Commission consistently sought to
impose and enforce open internet
standards. We also believe that many
ISP investment decisions over the next
several years will be significantly
influenced by the influx of federal and
state funding allocated to ISPs to
support infrastructure deployment and
broadband connectivity. In light of these
facts, we do not expect that adopting
open internet rules will change ISP
investment decisions. Do commenters
agree? Furthermore, we believe that
‘‘[w]ithout an open Internet, there
would be less broadband investment
and deployment’’ because of the
expected harm to the virtuous cycle. As
the Commission concluded in the 2015
Open Internet Order, ‘‘to the extent that
our decision might in some cases reduce
providers’ investment incentives, we
believe any such effects are far
outweighed by positive effects on
innovation and investment in other
areas of the ecosystem that our core
broadband policies will promote.’’ We
seek comment on these views.
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1. Preventing Blocking of Lawful
Content, Applications, Services, and
Non-Harmful Devices
136. We propose to adopt a bright-line
rule prohibiting ISPs from blocking
lawful content, applications, services, or
non-harmful devices. In 2015, the
Commission found that ISPs function as
gatekeepers for both their end-user
customers who access the internet, and
for various transit providers, CDNs, and
edge providers attempting to reach the
broadband provider’s end-user
subscribers. The Commission concluded
that ISPs have the economic incentives
and technical ability to engage in
practices that pose a threat to internet
openness by harming other network
providers, edge providers, and end
users. Reversing course in 2018, the
Commission determined, in contrast,
that ‘‘ISPs have strong incentives to
preserve internet openness, and these
interests typically outweigh any
countervailing incentives an ISP might
have.’’ As discussed above, we
tentatively conclude that ISPs continue
to have the incentive and ability to
engage in practices that threaten
internet openness, and as such, we
believe rules are needed to protect a
consumer’s right to access lawful
content, applications, and services, and
to use non-harmful devices. We seek
comment on this proposed analysis.
137. As the Commission found in the
2010 Open Internet Order and the 2015
Open Internet Order, we believe that
‘‘the freedom to send and receive lawful
content and to use and provide
applications and services without fear of
blocking is essential to the Internet’s
openness.’’ To that end, we propose to
adopt the following no-blocking rule
applicable to both fixed and mobile
providers of BIAS, which tracks the
language of the prohibition adopted by
the 2015 Open Internet Order:
blocking rule would prohibit ISPs from
charging edge providers a fee to avoid
having the edge providers’ content,
service, or application blocked from
reaching the broadband provider’s enduser customers. As in 2015, we also
propose that this prohibition will apply
to transmission of lawful content only
and does not prevent or restrict an ISP
from refusing to transmit unlawful
material. We seek comment on these
proposals. What other consequences of
a no-blocking rule should we consider?
138. As far back as the Commission’s
Internet Policy Statement in 2005, major
ISPs have broadly accepted a noblocking principle. Even after the repeal
of the no-blocking rule, many ISPs
continue to advertise a commitment to
open internet principles on their
websites, which include commitments
not to block traffic except in certain
circumstances. Rather than reflect a lack
of potential harm to consumers and the
open internet, we believe that these
continued commitments to no-blocking
principles emphasize their importance
to the internet as we know it. We
believe that codifying this principle in
the Commission’s rules is necessary to
protect consumers and internet
openness against any ISP’s decision in
the future to move away from this
widely accepted principle. Furthermore,
because this principle is so widely
accepted, including by ISPs, we
anticipate compliance costs will be
minimal. We seek comment on this
analysis. We seek comment on whether
the predictive reasoning underlying the
Commission’s repeal of the no-blocking
rule in 2018 proved accurate. We also
seek specific comment regarding any
instances of an ISP blocking lawful
content, applications, services or nonharmful devices in the years since the
Commission repealed the no-blocking
rule. Finally, we seek comment on the
costs and benefits of a no-blocking rule.
A person engaged in the provision of
broadband Internet access service, insofar as
such person is so engaged, shall not block
lawful content, applications, services, or nonharmful devices, subject to reasonable
network management.
2. Preventing Throttling of Lawful
Content, Applications, Services, and
Non-Harmful Devices
139. Next, we propose to adopt a rule
to prevent ISPs from throttling lawful
content, applications, services, and nonharmful devices. As part of the noblocking rule that the Commission
adopted in the 2010 Open Internet
Order, the Commission prohibited ISPs
from ‘‘impairing or degrading particular
content, applications, services, or nonharmful devices so as to render them
effectively unusable (subject to
reasonable network management),’’
because such conduct ‘‘can have the
same effects as outright blocking.’’ In
2015, the Commission concluded that a
standalone prohibition was required to
We seek comment on this proposed
rule and whether this remains the best
formulation of a no-blocking principle
for ISPs. As in 2015, we intend that the
phrase ‘‘content, applications, and
services’’ refers to all traffic transmitted
to or from end users of a broadband
internet access service, including traffic
that may not fit clearly into any of these
categories. Is this language expansive
enough to encompass all types of
internet traffic, or are there additional
categories that we should include? We
also propose to make clear that the no-
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prevent ISPs from impairing or
degrading lawful internet traffic. The
Commission used the term ‘‘throttling’’
to refer to such conduct that is not
outright blocking, but that inhibited the
delivery of particular content,
applications, or services, or particular
classes of content, applications, or
services.
140. We propose to adopt the
following no-throttling rule applicable
to both fixed and mobile providers of
BIAS, which tracks the language of the
Commission’s 2015 Open Internet
Order, and seek comment on our
proposal:
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A person engaged in the provision of
broadband internet access service, insofar as
such person is so engaged, shall not impair
or degrade lawful internet traffic on the basis
of internet content, application, or service, or
use of a non-harmful device, subject to
reasonable network management.
As in 2015, we intend this rule to
prohibit conduct that impairs or
degrades lawful traffic to a non-harmful
device or class of devices, which
includes any conduct by an ISP to
impair, degrade, slow down, or render
effectively unusable particular content,
services, applications, or devices, that is
not reasonable network management.
We also propose to give the same
meaning to ‘‘content, applications, and
services’’ as we propose in the context
of the no-blocking rule, and we seek
comment on this proposal. Have there
been any technological changes or
advancements in network management
since 2015 that we should reflect in the
proposed rule? As written, does the
proposed rule provide clear guidance to
ISPs and customers on what is
considered prohibited conduct? As in
2015, we propose that transfers of
unlawful content or unlawful transfers
of content would not be protected by the
no-throttling rule. Further, as with our
proposed no-blocking rule, we propose
to prohibit ISPs from imposing a fee on
edge providers to avoid having the edge
providers’ content, service, or
application throttled. We seek comment
on these proposals. What other aspects
and consequences of a no-throttling rule
should we consider?
141. As in 2015, we propose that
while a no-throttling rule would address
instances in which an ISP targets
particular content, applications,
services, or non-harmful devices, it
would not address the practice of
slowing down an end user’s connection
to the internet based on a choice clearly
made by the end user. For example, an
ISP may offer a data plan in which a
subscriber receives a set amount of data
at one speed tier and any remaining data
at a lower tier. We seek comment on our
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proposal to maintain this distinction.
We do not intend to leave such data
plans without oversight, however, and
therefore propose to allow the
Commission to review the particulars of
a certain data plan, as required by
sections 201 and 202 of the Act, which
prohibit unjust and unreasonable
charges and practices, or our proposed
general conduct standard, discussed
below.
142. As discussed above, because
BIAS connections were so essential
during the pandemic, we believe ISPs
have been under increased scrutiny by
the Commission, the media, and the
public since March 2020, and therefore
have had a strong incentive to follow
their voluntary commitments to
maintain service consistent with certain
conduct rules established in the 2015
Open Internet Order. We believe that
this, coupled with unprecedented
consumer demand for BIAS during the
pandemic and state regulations
addressing ISP conduct, helped to
constrain ISPs from engaging in conduct
that could harm internet openness.
These constraints, however, are neither
permanent nor uniform, and we believe
that incentives for ISPs to degrade
competitors’ content, applications, or
devices remain; as such, we propose
that rules are needed to protect
consumers’ right to access lawful
internet traffic of their choice without
impairment or degradation. We seek
comment on this proposed analysis, and
invite comment on ISPs’ incentives to
engage in throttling conduct harmful to
internet openness. As the Commission
recognized in the RIF Order, ‘‘[t]he
potential consequences of blocking and
throttling lawful content on the internet
ecosystem are well-documented in the
record and in Commission precedent.’’
Even after the repeal of the no-throttling
rule, ISPs continue to advertise on their
websites that they do not throttle traffic
except in limited circumstances. As a
result, we anticipate that prohibiting
throttling of lawful internet traffic will
impose a minimal compliance burden
on ISPs. Do commenters agree? We seek
comment on specific costs or technical
concerns that our proposed rule would
impose on ISPs, including small
providers. We also seek comment on the
reasoning underlying the Commission’s
repeal of the no-throttling rule in 2018.
We seek specific comment regarding
any instances of an ISP throttling lawful
content, applications, services, or nonharmful devices in the years since the
no-throttling rule was repealed.
3. No Paid or Affiliated Prioritization
143. We next propose to ban
arrangements in which an ISP accepts
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consideration (monetary or otherwise)
from a third party to manage its network
in a manner that benefits particular
content, applications, services, or
devices. Under this proposal, we would
also prohibit arrangements in which a
provider manages its network in a
manner that favors the content,
applications, services, or devices of an
affiliated entity. The Act defines
‘‘affiliate’’ as ‘‘a person that (directly or
indirectly) owns or controls, is owned
or controlled by, or is under common
ownership or control with, another
person. For purposes of this paragraph,
the term ‘own’ means to own an equity
interest (or the equivalent thereof) of
more than 10 percent.’’ In 2015, the
Commission adopted a rule banning
these type of paid or affiliated
prioritization agreements, finding that
such practices ‘‘harm consumers,
competition, and innovation, as well as
create disincentives to promote
broadband deployment.’’ We tentatively
conclude that this reasoning remains
applicable today. We seek comment on
this proposal and the underlying
analysis.
144. Tracking the language of the
Commission’s 2015 Open Internet
Order, we propose to adopt the
following definition of ‘‘paid
prioritization’’ and rule banning such
arrangements:
A person engaged in the provision of
broadband internet access service, insofar as
such person is so engaged, shall not engage
in paid prioritization. ‘‘Paid prioritization’’
refers to the management of a broadband
provider’s network to directly or indirectly
favor some traffic over other traffic, including
through use of techniques such as traffic
shaping, prioritization, resource reservation,
or other forms of preferential traffic
management, either (a) in exchange for
consideration (monetary or otherwise) from a
third party, or (b) to benefit an affiliated
entity.
In adopting a ban on paid
prioritization in 2015, the Commission
sought to prevent the bifurcation of the
internet into a ‘‘fast’’ lane for those with
the means and will to pay and a ‘‘slow’’
lane for everyone else. This
development, the Commission reasoned,
would introduce artificial barriers to
entry, distort the market, harm
competition, harm consumers,
discourage innovation, undermine
public safety and universal service, and
harm free expression. The Commission
was concerned that preferential
treatment arrangements would create a
chilling effect, disrupting the internet’s
virtuous cycle of innovation, consumer
demand, and investment, and that the
widespread use of paid prioritization
practices would cause damage to
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internet openness that would be
difficult to reverse and challenging to
track. We tentatively conclude that
these concerns remain valid today, and
we seek comment on this conclusion.
What are some examples of harms or
categories of harms that paid
prioritization arrangements might cause
to the open internet and to consumers?
Does the language of the proposed rule
make clear the scope of this proposed
prohibition? What other aspects or
consequences of a ban on paid
prioritization practices should we
consider?
145. Previously, the Commission has
found it well-established that ISPs have
both the incentive and the ability to
engage in paid prioritization. In its
Verizon opinion, the D.C. Circuit noted
the powerful incentives ISPs have to
accept fees from edge providers in
return for excluding their competitors or
for granting prioritized access to end
users. Some ISPs continue to advertise
that they do not engage in paid or
affiliated prioritization practices. Even
with similar promises from ISPs in
2015, the Commission concluded that
the potential harm to the open internet
was too significant to rely on mere
promises from ISPs because ‘‘the future
openness of the internet should not turn
on the decision of a particular
company.’’ We tentatively conclude that
this reasoning remains valid today, and
we seek comment on this tentative
conclusion, and any alternatives we
should consider.
146. In choosing to repeal the ban on
paid prioritization in 2018, the
Commission found that the costs of a
ban outweighed the benefits, and that
the transparency rule and the
enforcement of existing antitrust and
consumer protection laws would
sufficiently address many of the
concerns regarding the dangers of paid
prioritization arrangements. We seek
comment on that assessment from 2018.
In weighing the costs and benefits, the
Commission did not identify specific
compliance costs, but rather identified
the costs in the form of forgone benefits.
While we do not dispute that some
potential benefits may result from paid
prioritization arrangements, we
tentatively conclude that the potential
harms to consumers and the open
internet outweigh any speculative
benefits. Do commenters agree? Why or
why not? What compliance costs might
ISPs incur as a result of such a ban,
including small providers? The
Commission also found in 2018 that
paid prioritization could be a tool in
helping to close the digital divide by
reducing BIAS subscription prices for
consumers. Do commenters agree with
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this assessment? We tentatively
conclude that the Commission’s 2018
finding that existing antitrust and
consumer protection laws, in
conjunction with some form of a
transparency rule, offer enough
protection against the potential harms
caused by paid prioritization
arrangements was erroneous. We seek
comment on this tentative conclusion.
147. As part of a rule prohibiting paid
prioritization arrangements, we also
propose to adopt a rule concerning
waiver of such a ban that establishes a
balancing test. Under our waiver rules,
the Commission may waive any rule in
whole or in part, ‘‘for good cause
shown.’’ A general waiver of the
Commission’s rules is only appropriate
if special circumstances warrant a
deviation from the general rule and such
a deviation will service the public
interest. In 2015, the Commission found
that it was appropriate to adopt specific
rules concerning the factors that it will
use to examine a waiver request of the
paid prioritization ban. We tentatively
conclude that it remains appropriate to
accompany a rule prohibiting paid
prioritization arrangements with
specific guidance on how the
Commission would evaluate subsequent
waiver requests. We seek comment on
this conclusion. Tracking the language
of the 2015 Open Internet Order, we
propose to adopt the following rule, and
seek comment on this proposal:
The Commission may waive the ban on
paid prioritization only if the petitioner
demonstrates that the practice would provide
some significant public interest benefit and
would not harm the open nature of the
internet.
148. Following the framework the
Commission established in 2015, we
propose to require an applicant seeking
a waiver of our proposed rule to
prohibit paid prioritization
arrangements to make two related
showings. First, the applicant would
need to demonstrate that the practice
will have some significant public
interest benefit. The applicant could
make such a showing by providing
evidence that the practice furthers
competition, innovation, consumer
demand, or investment. Second, the
applicant would need to demonstrate
that the practice does not harm the
nature of the open internet. This second
showing would include, but is not
limited to, providing evidence that the
practice: (i) does not materially degrade
or threaten to materially degrade the
BIAS of the general public; (ii) does not
hinder consumer choice; (iii) does not
impair competition, innovation,
consumer demand, or investment; and
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(iv) does not impede any forms of
expression, types of service, or points of
view. We seek comment on the
continued relevance of these four
examples. Should the Commission
consider other factors when considering
a request to waive our proposed ban on
paid prioritization arrangements? Do
commenters agree that this language
creates a ‘‘high bar’’ for potential
applicants to meet, ensuring that the
Commission would only grant waiver
relief in exceptional cases?
4. General Conduct Rule
149. We propose to adopt a general
conduct standard, which would prohibit
practices that unreasonably interfere
with or disadvantage consumers or edge
providers. In 2015, the Commission
adopted a standard to prohibit, on a
case-by-case basis, practices that
unreasonably interfere with or
unreasonably disadvantage the ability of
consumers to reach the internet content,
services, and applications of their
choosing or of edge providers to access
consumers using the internet. The
Commission reasoned that while the
bright-line rules against blocking,
throttling, and paid prioritization
arrangements would act as ‘‘critical
cornerstone[s] in protecting and
promoting the open internet,’’ it also
needed a mechanism to respond to
‘‘other current or future practices that
cause the type of harms our rules are
intended to address.’’ The general
conduct standard was necessary, in
other words, to ensure that ISPs did not
find a technical or economic means to
evade these bright line bans to wield
their gatekeeper power in a way that
would compromise the open internet.
We agree with the Commission’s
conclusion in 2015 that it is ‘‘critical
that access to a robust, open internet
remains a core feature of the
communications landscape, but also
that there remains leeway for
experimentation with innovative
offerings.’’ We believe that this
reasoning continues to support the
adoption of a general conduct standard
to operate as the catch-all backstop to
the three bright-line prohibitions, and
we seek comment on this analysis.
150. We propose to adopt a general
conduct standard that tracks the
language of the 2015 Open Internet
Order, and we seek comment on this
proposal:
Any person engaged in the provision of
broadband internet access service, insofar as
such person is so engaged, shall not
unreasonably interfere with or unreasonably
disadvantage (i) end users’ ability to select,
access, and use broadband internet access
service or the lawful internet content,
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applications, services, or devices of their
choice, or (ii) edge providers’ ability to make
lawful content, applications, services, or
devices available to end users. Reasonable
network management shall not be considered
a violation of this rule.
In 2015, the Commission found that
careful application of this standard
would act to not only balance the
benefits of innovation against the harms
to end users and edge providers, but
also act to protect free expression. If
adopted, we anticipate that this general
conduct standard would accomplish
these same goals going forward, and we
seek comment on this prediction. Does
the proposed language capture the scope
of behaviors that the Commission might
need to address? Have there been any
technical or market developments that
should affect our approach? Is there an
alternative standard we should adopt to
establish a general conduct rule?
151. Consistent with the
Commission’s 2015 approach, we
propose to enforce this standard with a
framework and in a manner that would
provide certainty and flexibility to the
industry and encourage innovation,
while best protecting the open internet.
First, we propose to follow a case-bycase approach that would consider the
totality of the circumstances when
analyzing whether conduct satisfies the
standard. Second, we propose a nonexhaustive list of factors that we would
consider to aid in our analysis. These
factors would include: (i) whether a
practice allows end-user control and
enables consumer choice; (ii) whether a
practice has anti-competitive effects in
the market for applications, services,
content, or devices; (iii) whether a
practice affects consumers’ ability to
select, access, or use lawful broadband
services, applications, or content; (iv)
the effect a practice has on innovation,
investment, or broadband deployment;
(v) whether a practice threatens free
expression; (vi) whether a practice is
application agnostic; and (v) whether a
practice conforms to best practices and
technical standards adopted by open,
broadly representative, and independent
internet engineering, governance
initiatives, or standards-setting
organizations. Do all of these factors
remain relevant in today’s internet
ecosystem? If not, why not? Are there
other factors we should consider
including in this non-exhaustive list
that would aid with industry
compliance or Commission
enforcement?
152. We believe that the general
conduct standard we propose today,
mirroring that adopted in the 2015 Open
Internet Order, provides sufficient
guidance to ISPs for purpose of
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compliance, a conclusion affirmed by
the D.C. Circuit. Nonetheless, in 2018,
the Commission repealed the general
conduct standard because it found that
it was ‘‘vague and ha[d] created
regulatory uncertainty in the
marketplace hindering investment and
innovation.’’ We seek comment on
whether there are additional steps we
should take to ensure that ISPs
understand the types of conduct and
practices that might be prohibited under
our proposal. Are there any specific
practices that would or would not
violate this proposed rule, and if so,
should we provide examples of those
practices? For example, are there any
zero rating or sponsored data practices
that raise particular concerns under the
proposed general conduct standard?
What would the compliance costs be for
ISPs, particularly small providers? How
would our proposed general conduct
standard affect current and future ISP
business practices? What other aspects
or consequences of imposing a general
conduct standard should we consider?
We seek comment on whether the
Commission’s prediction in 2018 that
eliminating the internet conduct
standard will ‘‘benefit consumers,
increase competition, and eliminate
regulatory uncertainty that has a
‘corresponding chilling effect on
broadband investment and innovation’ ’’
has been borne out. Is it reasonable to
attribute any growth and development
in broadband markets and services to
elimination of the general conduct rule,
or is such a potential connection too
attenuated? The RIF Order also found
that ‘‘the benefits of the internet
conduct standard provides
approximately zero additional benefits’’
when compared to the antitrust and
consumer protection enforcement in
place through the FTC, while imposing
negative benefits in the form of delayed
or never-brought-to-market innovations.
We seek comment on whether
elimination of the general conduct rule
has resulted in new innovations which
would not have been permissible under
the general conduct rule.
153. In the alternative, we seek
comment on whether we should instead
rely on the ‘‘just and reasonable’’
standards in sections 201 and 202 of the
Act. In 2015, the Commission explained
that the general conduct rule was its
interpretation of sections 201 and 202 in
the broadband context. We seek
comment on whether it remains
necessary to enunciate a specific rule,
like the proposed general conduct
standard described above, by
interpreting sections 201 and 202 in the
context of broadband, or whether it
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would be sufficient to rely on sections
201 and 202 alone to address potential
harmful practices and behaviors. Would
the latter alternative approach provide
sufficient certainty and clarity to ISPs
regarding what practices would violate
the Act’s standard? If we choose not to
adopt a general conduct rule, are there
other ways for us to aid our enforcement
efforts related to sections 201 and 202
in the broadband context?
C. Transparency Rule
154. Policymakers have consistently
recognized the importance of
transparency regarding the terms and
service characteristics of broadband
offerings, even as certain details of the
Commission’s transparency
requirements have changed over time.
This includes not only transparency
requirements that have been in place
since they originally were adopted in
the 2010 Open Internet Order, but also
the broadband label the Commission
adopted in 2022, which gives
consumers a convenient tool to research
and compare broadband offerings. We
propose to build upon the foundation of
our existing transparency rule, informed
by our recent experience in adopting
broadband label requirements, and we
seek comment on possible modifications
or additions to update the transparency
rule to ensure that end users, edge
providers, the broader internet
community, and the Commission have
the information they need to assess
ISPs’ terms and conditions for BIAS in
a timely and effective manner.
1. Policy Benefits of Transparency
Requirements
155. We anticipate transparency
requirements are likely to continue
playing a key role in the broadband
marketplace. In the 2010 Open Internet
Order, the Commission adopted its
original BIAS transparency rule,
explaining that ‘‘[e]ffective disclosure of
broadband providers’ network
management practices and the
performance and commercial terms of
their services promotes competition—as
well as innovation, investment, enduser choice, and broadband adoption.’’
The Commission echoed this policy
judgment in the 2015 Open Internet
Order, going on to adopt additional
clarifications and enhancements to the
transparency rule—along with a
broadband label safe harbor—to ‘‘better
enable end-user consumers to make
informed choices about broadband
services by providing them with timely
information tailored more specifically to
their needs,’’ and to ‘‘provide edge
providers with the information
necessary to develop new content,
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applications, services, and devices that
promote the virtuous cycle of
investment and innovation.’’ In
discussing transparency in the RIF
Order, the Commission noted that
‘‘[d]isclosure supports innovation,
investment, and competition by
ensuring that entrepreneurs and other
small businesses have the technical
information necessary to create and
maintain online content, applications,
services, and devices, and to assess the
risks and benefits of embarking on new
projects.’’ In that Order, however, the
Commission elected to ‘‘return, with
minor adjustments, to the transparency
rule adopted in the 2010 Open Internet
Order,’’ under the theory that such an
approach would ‘‘provide[ ] consumers
and the Commission with essential
information while minimizing the
burdens imposed on ISPs.’’ We seek
comment on how the Commission can
ensure that its transparency rule most
effectively advances these longstanding
policy goals.
156. In 2021, Congress enacted and
the President signed the Infrastructure
Act, which, in relevant part, directs the
Commission ‘‘to promulgate regulations
to require the display of broadband
consumer labels,’’ using as an initial
point of reference the broadband label
established in connection with the
enhanced transparency rule adopted in
the 2015 Open Internet Order. The
Infrastructure Act recognizes the
benefits of a label ‘‘to disclose to
consumers information regarding
broadband internet access service
plans,’’ further observing that
consumers need the ability to ‘‘evaluate
broadband internet access service
plans’’ through information that is
‘‘available, effective, and sufficient’’ to
meet that need. In November 2022, the
Commission adopted the broadband
consumer label rules and sought further
comment in the accompanying
Broadband Label Further Notice. These
broadband label requirements promote
‘‘consumer access to clear, easy-tounderstand, and accurate information
about the cost for broadband services
and will empower consumers to choose
services that best meet their needs and
match their budgets and ensures that
they are not surprised by unexpected
charges or service quality that falls short
of their expectations.’’ We seek
comment on the interplay between the
broadband label requirements adopted
in the Broadband Label Order, the
possible amendments raised in the
Broadband Label Further Notice, and
any modifications to the transparency
rule that we might adopt here. For
example, to the extent that the content
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of the required disclosures under the
two requirements diverge, how can we
avoid any undue duplication of effort in
making each required disclosure,
particularly for small providers? Should
the broadband label requirements and
the transparency rule as it might be
modified here be legally distinct, or
legally interrelated, requirements?
2. Content of Required Disclosures
157. We seek comment on what, if
any, additional disclosures should be
required under the transparency rule.
As a starting point, we believe that the
disclosures required under the current
transparency rule are an appropriate
baseline, and we propose to retain them
in the transparency rule going forward.
We seek comment on this proposal. As
the Commission recently explained
when adopting broadband label
requirements, ‘‘the transparency rule
seeks to enable a deeper dive into
details of broadband internet service
offerings, which could be relevant not
only for consumers as a whole, but also
for consumers with particularized
interests or needs, as well as a broader
range of participants in the internet
community—notably including the
Commission itself.’’ Are the current
requirements of the transparency rule
sufficient to enable that deeper dive into
details of broadband internet service
offerings?
158. We seek comment on whether
enhancements to the content of
disclosures required by the transparency
rule under the 2015 Open Internet Order
should be incorporated in a revised
transparency rule here. With respect to
required disclosure of commercial
terms, the 2015 Open Internet Order
provided additional specifications
regarding ISPs’ disclosures about price
and related terms and their relationship
with disclosures regarding privacy and
redress options. Regarding the
disclosure of performance
characteristics, the 2015 Open Internet
Order provided additional
specifications regarding the disclosure
of network performance and network
practices. The RIF Order eliminated
those enhancements under the theory
that their burdens to ISPs exceeded their
benefits. The Broadband Label Order,
on the other hand, required ISPs to
disclose in the broadband labels their
typical upload and download speeds
and typical latency metrics associated
with their broadband services, noting
that speed in particular ‘‘remains the
network performance metric of greatest
interest to the consumer.’’ The
Commission similarly found that low
delay or latency is important to any
application involving users interacting
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with each other, a device, or an
application. We seek comment on these
assessments, including updated
evidence regarding the relative costs
and benefits of the transparency
enhancements based on experience
following the RIF Order. To the extent
that the transparency requirements were
intended to provide needed information
not only to consumers but also edge
providers, the broader internet
community, and the Commission, how
should that affect our assessment of the
overall benefits of the enhanced
transparency requirements? Would the
enhancements to the transparency rule
adopted in the 2015 Open Internet
Order, or other modifications to the
current transparency rule, assist the
Commission in monitoring and
enforcing compliance with the conduct
rules proposed here? Are there any
metrics that are particularly important
to some subset of consumers that we
should consider including despite those
metrics not being of significant value to
the average consumer?
159. In addition, we seek comment on
other considerations relevant to possible
changes to the content ISPs may be
required to disclose under the
transparency rule. For one, we seek
comment on whether we should revise
the transparency rule to incorporate the
Commission’s clarifications and
guidance regarding prior versions of the
transparency rule. For example, a 2011
Public Notice (2011 Advisory Guidance)
provided ‘‘examples of approaches to
disclosure that would satisfy the
transparency rule,’’ discussing point-ofsale disclosures, service descriptions,
the extent of required disclosures,
disclosures for the benefit of edge
providers, and disclosures regarding
security measures. A 2014 Public Notice
(2014 Advisory Guidance) summarized
the applicability and requirements of
the transparency rule and the potential
enforcement consequences if it were
violated, and emphasized the
importance of consistency between
ISPs’ disclosures under the transparency
rule and their advertising claims or
other public statements. And a 2016
Public Notice (2016 Advisory Guidance)
provided guidance regarding acceptable
methodologies for disclosure of network
performance information and point-ofsale disclosures consistent with the
2015 Open Internet Order. The RIF
Order subsequently eliminated the
enhancements adopted in 2015, and the
clarifications in the 2016 Advisory
Guidance along with it. The RIF Order
endorsed the clarifications in the 2011
Advisory Guidance, but neither
endorsed nor disclaimed the
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clarifications in the 2014 Advisory
Guidance. We seek comment on
whether and to what extent the
Commission should reaffirm, reject, or
elaborate on any of that prior guidance
in connection with any modification of
the transparency rule here. Are there
other areas where additional
clarification or guidance would be
beneficial either under the existing
transparency rule or a revised
transparency rule?
160. We also seek comment on the
availability of information that ISPs can
or should use to comply with the
content of disclosures required under
the current or modified transparency
rule. For example, the RIF Order
allowed fixed ISPs participating ‘‘in the
Measuring Broadband America (MBA)
program [to] disclose their results as a
sufficient representation of the actual
performance their customers can expect
to experience.’’ Should we continue that
approach here, or make use of the MBA
program in some other way? To what
extent can or should we allow ISPs to
use other specific information sources
or measurement approaches to provide
transparency disclosures? Should we
clarify that certain sources of
information are permissible to rely on in
making the required disclosures? Or
should we go further in particular cases
and require the use of certain data
sources for reasons of uniformity,
reliability, or otherwise? Should the
Commission require ISPs to include
additional information in transparency
disclosures regarding their measurement
methodologies and practices?
161. Finally, we seek comment on any
other considerations relevant to our
evaluation of the appropriate content of
required disclosures under the
transparency rule. Is there additional
content that we should require? For
example, the 2015 Open Internet Order
considered, but ultimately did not
adopt, additional disclosure
requirements regarding ‘‘the source,
location, timing, or duration of network
congestion,’’ packet corruption and
jitter, and ‘‘disclosures that permit end
users to identify application-specific
usage or to distinguish which user or
device contributed to which part of the
total data usage.’’ In light of subsequent
experience, should we revisit the
decisions not to require such
disclosures? Should the Commission
consider requiring more detailed
disclosures regarding the requirements,
restrictions, or standards for
enforcement of data caps, and if so,
how? We also seek comment on whether
different content disclosures should be
required for mobile ISPs than for fixed
ISPs.
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3. Means of Disclosure
162. We seek comment on how best
to ensure that the content of the
required disclosures is made available
in a timely and effective manner
without undue burdens on ISPs, both as
a general matter and in the specific
respects discussed below. In the RIF
Order, the Commission allowed
providers to make the required
disclosures either ‘‘on a publicly
available, easily accessible website,’’ or
by ‘‘transmit[ting] their disclosures to
the Commission,’’ which would then
make them ‘‘available on a publicly
available, easily accessible website.’’ We
seek comment on practical experiences
with that approach, and whether that
approach should be retained in its
current form, modified, or eliminated in
favor of disclosures required specifically
on provider websites—as had been the
case under prior versions of the
transparency rule. When the
Commission recently adopted
broadband label rules, it required ISPs
to display labels on their websites, as
well as at other points of sale. While it
‘‘aim[ed] to give providers flexibility in
how they display labels,’’ the
Commission also sought ‘‘to ensure that
the labels are prominently displayed on
any device on which the consumer
accesses and views the labels, including
mobile devices’’ and in a uniform
format that will best assist consumers in
comparing pricing, fees, performance
characteristics, and data allowances
across different providers. Are there
lessons from the Commission’s recent
experience crafting broadband label
requirements that should inform our
approach to the manner of making
disclosures under the transparency rule?
163. We also seek comment on
whether any additional requirements
are warranted regarding ISPs’ website
disclosures under the transparency rule.
For ISPs electing to make the required
disclosures on a ‘‘publicly available,
easily accessible website,’’ the RIF
Order ‘‘reaffirm[ed] the means of
disclosure requirement from the [2010]
Open Internet Order and the
clarification found in the 2011 Advisory
Guidance.’’ Should the approach
reflected in the current transparency
rule, as informed by the 2010 Open
Internet Order and 2011 Advisory
Guidance, be retained or modified?
Should we require the disclosures to be
in machine-readable format, akin to the
Commission’s recently-adopted
approach for broadband consumer
labels?
164. We also seek comment on
whether disclosures under the
transparency rule should be required in
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additional locations. For instance, are
there places on an ISP’s website besides
a point of sale where disclosures should
be made?
165. Ensuring that disclosures under
the transparency rule are accessible to
individuals with disabilities is a
priority. The RIF Order explained that
ISPs making website disclosures under
the transparency rule must make them
‘‘in a manner accessible by people with
disabilities.’’ Has this direction been
adequate, or are additional requirements
warranted to ensure that disclosures
under the transparency rule are
accessible to individuals with
disabilities? For example, should we
encourage or require that website
disclosures under the transparency rule
follow guidance developed by the Web
Accessibility Initiative? Most recently,
the Commission required ISPs to post
broadband label information on their
websites in an accessible format, and
strongly encouraged them to use the
most current version of the Web Content
Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG). In the
Broadband Label Further Notice, it
sought comment on whether to adopt
specific criteria, based on the WCAG
standard. Are there other industry
guidelines that providers should be
encouraged or required to follow? To
the extent that we ultimately require
transparency disclosures in locations
other than websites and in alternative
formats besides websites, is there
additional guidance or requirements we
should adopt to ensure accessibility to
individuals with disabilities?
166. Further, we seek comment on
possible ‘‘direct notification’’
requirements, including the costs and
benefits of such requirements. The 2015
Open Internet Order had imposed such
an obligation, but the RIF Order
eliminated that requirement. The
Commission also recently declined to
adopt a direct notification requirement
in the context of its broadband label
rules, finding that the broadband labels
are specifically intended to inform
consumers at the time of purchase. We
note, however, the broader purpose of
the transparency rule compared to the
broadband labels. We therefore seek
further comment and updated
information on the benefits and burdens
of such a requirement in the specific
context of the transparency rule, in light
of this more recent experience.
167. Finally, we seek comment on any
other changes to our transparency rule
regarding the means of disclosure. Are
there additional requirements regarding
the means of disclosure under the
transparency rule that the Commission
should adopt to ensure that information
is available in a timely and effective
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manner? Conversely, are there existing
requirements regarding the means of
disclosure that commenters believe
impose burdens that outweigh their
benefits, and thus should be eliminated?
4. Implementation and Other Issues
168. We seek comment on any
implementation issues associated with
potential modifications to the
transparency rule, and whether we
should consider additional time for
compliance by small providers.
169. We also seek comment on
whether the Commission should adopt
new safe harbors for compliance with
the transparency rule. Are there
particular data sources or methodologies
for complying with particular elements
of the transparency rule, whether in its
current form or as it may be modified,
that the Commission should treat as a
safe harbor or otherwise presumptively
reasonable? Are there safe harbors the
Commission should adopt for
compliance with the transparency rule
as a whole, akin to the broadband label
safe harbor adopted in the 2015 Open
Internet Order?
170. Further, we seek comment on
whether we should adopt recordkeeping
requirements governing the types of
information or records ISPs rely upon to
support the content of their disclosures
made under the transparency rule.
Would such a requirement be helpful to
our enforcement of the transparency
rule by enabling us to evaluate the
reasonableness of ISPs’ claims? Would
such requirements help inform our
evaluation of the effectiveness of the
rule and the need for changes over time?
This requirement could, for example,
help to identify and account for
particular data sources or methodologies
that prove to be especially reliable or
unreliable. In the Broadband Label
Order, the Commission required ISPs to
maintain an archive of all labels no
longer posted on their websites and at
alternate sales channels, along with
evidence sufficient to support the
accuracy of the labels’ content. Given
that ISPs must have a basis for the
claims made in their disclosures under
the transparency rule, are there
particular ways of retaining that
information that could minimize the
burden on ISPs? If we elect to adopt
recordkeeping requirements, what
period of time would best balance the
benefits to the Commission from having
the information available against the
compliance burden for ISPs?
171. In addition, we seek comment on
the overall cost effectiveness of
modifications we might adopt to the
transparency rule. What are the most
cost-effective ways of ensuring that
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consumers and edge providers receive
the information they need in a timely
and effective manner? How can we
minimize implementation and
compliance burdens for ISPs, consistent
with those goals?
D. Scope of Open Internet Rules
172. Internet Traffic Exchange. We
propose to decline to apply any open
internet rules to internet traffic
exchange. We tentatively conclude,
consistent with the 2015 Open Internet
Order and as discussed further below,
that case-by-case review under sections
201 and 202 is ‘‘an appropriate vehicle
for enforcement where disputes are
primarily over commercial terms and
that involve some very large
corporations, including companies like
transit providers and CDNs, that act on
behalf of smaller edge providers.’’ We
believe that the best approach with
respect to internet traffic exchange is to
‘‘watch, learn, and act as required’’ but
to not intervene with prescriptive rules.
We seek comment on our proposed
approach.
173. Reasonable Network
Management. We also propose that
reasonable network management would
not be considered a violation of
prohibitions on blocking and throttling,
or the general conduct rule, and seek
comment on our proposal. In 2015, the
Commission concluded that a
reasonable network management
exception to the conduct rules was
necessary for ISPs to optimize overall
network performance and maintain a
consistent quality experience for
consumers while carrying a variety of
traffic over their networks. We
tentatively conclude this analysis
remains equally applicable today and
seek comment on this tentative
conclusion. Is excluding reasonable
network management practices still both
necessary and advisable? In the RIF
Order, the Commission defined
‘‘reasonable network management’’ to
mean ‘‘a practice ‘appropriate and
tailored to achieving a legitimate
network management purpose, taking
into account the particular network
architecture and technology of the
broadband internet access service,’ ’’
returning to the definition the
Commission adopted in the 2010 Open
Internet Order. In 2015, the Commission
had slightly modified that definition,
adding that ‘‘a network management
practice is a practice that has a
primarily technical network
management justification, but does not
include other business practices.’’ We
seek comment on how we should define
‘‘reasonable network management’’ for
the purposes of our proposed open
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internet rules, and invite commenters to
provide examples of how this term is
best interpreted with regard to
management of today’s broadband
networks. Is it necessary for the
Commission to provide further guidance
on the reasonable network management
exception to provide certainty for ISPs?
How can we ensure that the reasonable
network management exception is not
used to circumvent the proposed rules,
while also providing regulatory
certainty to ISPs and enabling them to
appropriately manage their networks?
E. Enforcement of Open Internet Rules
174. We seek comment on the best
framework for enforcing any potential
open internet rules. Our aims are to
enable effective and timely conflict
resolution and to provide clear guidance
on allowed and prohibited practices. We
seek comment on what enforcement
regime will be most efficient and least
burdensome for customers, edge
providers, and ISPs, including small
entities.
175. In 2010, the Commission adopted
a multipart framework to ensure prompt
and effective enforcement of the open
internet rules and encouraged informal
and private resolution of matters. The
first component involved informal
complaints filed under § 1.41 of the
Commission’s rules. The Commission
noted that this vehicle was ‘‘already
available’’ and that ‘‘no filing fee is
required.’’ ‘‘Although individual
informal complaints will not typically
result in written Commission orders,’’
the Commission explained that the
Enforcement Bureau ‘‘will examine
trends or patterns in [informal]
complaints to identify potential targets
for investigation and enforcement
action.’’ Should informal or other means
fail to resolve a dispute, the
Commission adopted new procedures
for filing formal complaints that would
‘‘permit anyone—including individual
end users and edge providers—to file a
claim alleging that another party has
violated a statute or rule, and asking the
Commission to rule on the dispute.’’
The Commission opted to base the
formal complaint rules on the Part 76
cable access complaint rules, finding
that those rules are ‘‘more streamlined
and thus preferable.’’ Citing sections
403 and 503(b) of the Act, the
Commission further observed that it has
the authority to initiate enforcement
actions on its own motion, including the
issuance of forfeitures.
176. Advisory Opinions and
Enforcement Advisories. In 2015, the
Commission concluded that the use of
advisory opinions, similar to those
issued by DOJ’s Antitrust Division,
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would be in the public interest and had
the potential to provide clarity,
guidance, and predictability concerning
the Commission’s open internet rules.
The RIF Order eliminated the advisory
opinion process established in the 2015
Open Internet Order, reasoning that
without conduct rules, advisory
opinions were no longer necessary, and
concluding that the advisory opinion
process did not diminish regulatory
uncertainty, particularly for small
providers, but rather added costs,
caused uncertain timelines, and
inhibited innovations. The elimination
of the advisory opinion process was
based on predictive comments in the
record because no ISP had yet requested
an advisory opinion through the
Commission’s process. When the D.C.
Circuit in USTA rejected the challenge
to the 2015 Open Internet Order’s
general conduct standard as being
unconstitutionally vague, the Court
relied in part on the advisory opinion
process the Commission had created in
that Order. The D.C. Circuit found that
the opportunity for parties to obtain
prospective guidance through the
advisory opinion process ‘‘provide[d]
regulated entities with relief from
[remaining] uncertainty.’’
177. In light of the D.C. Circuit’s
reasoning in USTA, and to advance our
goal of legal certainty in the
enforcement of any potential open
internet rules, we propose to adopt an
advisory opinion process if we adopt a
general conduct standard. We seek
comment on this proposal. In practice,
we believe that advisory opinions have
the potential to lower costs for providers
by creating certainty up front, rather
than risking potentially costly formal
complaint litigation, remediation, or
fines after the fact. Do commenters
agree? Are there examples of other
federal or state advisory opinion
processes from which the Commission
could learn? Are there specific barriers
that would prevent smaller ISPs from
engaging with the advisory opinion
process, and if so, how could we
address them? We seek comment on
whether we should adopt the
mechanisms delineated in the 2015
Open Internet Order for the issuance of
advisory opinions and enforcement
advisories. What changes, if any, should
we make to the process the Commission
established in the 2015 Open Internet
Order? As an alternative to adopting an
advisory opinion process, would a
detailed explanation of the factors the
Commission would use when analyzing
potential violations of the general
conduct standard be sufficient under the
D.C. Circuit’s reasoning to provide fair
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warning to regulated entities of what the
standard requires?
F. Investigations and Complaints
178. We next seek comment on
whether it would be beneficial to reestablish a formal complaint process for
complaints arising under our open
internet rules, as the Commission did in
2015. In 2015, the Commission
preserved the three avenues for
enforcement of its open internet rules
that the Commission had created in the
2010 Open Internet Order: (i) parties
could file informal complaints under
§ 1.41 of the Commission’s existing
rules; (ii) parties could file formal
complaints under a new process that the
Commission had created for this
purpose; or (iii) the Commission could
initiate enforcement actions on its own
motion. While the informal complaint
process under § 1.41 of the
Commission’s rules would remain
available to parties with respect to any
concerns arising out of any open
internet rules that may be ultimately
adopted, we seek comment on whether
we should also adopt a formal
complaint process. Is there value in
providing parties with both of these
options? Is our formal complaint
process established pursuant to section
208 of the Act sufficient for this
purpose, or is it necessary to establish
a standalone formal complaint process?
The Commission eliminated the open
internet-specific formal complaint
process in 2018. If we were to adopt a
formal complaint process, should we
implement one that returns to the rules
the Commission adopted in the 2010
Open Internet Order and preserved in
the 2015 Open Internet Order? If not,
what alternatives do commenters
recommend? The section 208 formal
complaint rules were modified in 2018
and consolidated with the
Commission’s pole attachment rules.
Should we use these existing rules for
open internet disputes? We also seek
comment on whether the Commission’s
informal complaint mechanism would
be sufficient to resolve disputes under
our proposed open internet rules.
G. Legal Authority
179. We seek comment on our
authority to adopt open internet rules,
including both the proposed conduct
rules and any revised transparency
rules. With respect to our proposed
conduct rules, we propose to rely on the
same sources of authority that the
Commission relied upon when it
adopted rules in the 2015 Open Internet
Order. As discussed below, we propose
to return to our prior interpretation,
upheld by the D.C. Circuit, that sections
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706(a) and (b) of the 1996 Act are grants
of regulatory authority and rely on that
as a basis for our open internet rules.
We also propose to rely on our authority
under Title II of the Act with
forbearance where appropriate under
section 10 of the Act, insofar as we
reclassify BIAS as a Title II service. And
we propose to once again rely on our
broad spectrum management authority
under Title III of the Act as additional
authority specifically in the case of
mobile providers. With respect to any
modifications to the transparency rule,
we propose to rely on those same
sources of authority along with section
257 (and associated authority now in
section 13) of the Act, consistent with
the reasoning of the 2010 Open Internet
Order and the RIF Order. We seek
comment on those proposals, and any
additional sources of authority for our
proposed open internet rules, both as a
general matter and in the specific
respects discussed below. We also seek
comment on how policy goals
enumerated in the Act or other federal
statutes should inform our exercise of
regulatory authority here.
1. Section 706 of the 1996 Act
180. We seek comment on returning
to an interpretation of section 706 of the
1996 Act as granting the Commission
regulatory authority and, in turn, relying
on that authority as a basis for open
internet rules. In particular, although
the RIF Order departed from the
Commission’s prior interpretation of
section 706 and instead concluded that
the provision was merely hortatory, we
propose to return to the Commission’s
prior view and interpret sections 706(a)
and (b) of the 1996 Act as grants of
regulatory authority. We propose to do
so in light of the considerations that
persuaded the Commission to adopt
such interpretations in the past, and that
persuaded courts to affirm those
interpretations. Consistent with that
prior approach, we propose to rely on
section 706(a) as part of our authority
for open internet rules. We also propose
to rely on section 706(b), in the event
that the Commission were to conclude
under section 706(a) that advanced
telecommunications capability is not
being deployed to all Americans in a
reasonable and timely fashion. We seek
comment on those proposals generally.
181. First, we seek comment on the
grounds for returning to the prior
judicially affirmed interpretations of
sections 706(a) and (b) of the 1996 Act
as granting the Commission regulatory
authority. The RIF Order principally
grounded its rationale for changing the
interpretation of section 706 on its view
that section 706 was better interpreted
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as hortatory, rather than as a grant of
regulatory authority. To the extent that
we instead believe that interpreting
sections 706(a) and (b) as grants of
regulatory authority represent the better
reading of the statute, we believe that
likewise should provide a basis for us to
change our interpretation. We seek
comment on this view. In addition, we
seek comment on any other arguments
bearing on whether and to what extent
we should return to the prior
interpretation of sections 706(a) and (b)
as grants of regulatory authority.
182. Second, we seek comment on
specific rationales for interpreting
sections 706(a) and (b) of the 1996 Act
as grants of regulatory authority. In the
2010 Open Internet Order, the
Commission explained why sections
706(a) and (b) each represent a grant of
regulatory authority to the Commission
after considering the statutory text,
regulatory and judicial precedent, and
legislative history, and rejecting
objections to that interpretation. In
addition, in the 2015 Open Internet
Order, the Commission built on the
foundation of its explanations in the
2010 Open Internet Order, rejecting
various objections to the interpretation
of sections 706(a) and (b) as grants of
regulatory authority and elaborating on
the Commission’s authority to adopt
rules implementing that provision, and
to enforce those rules. We seek
comment on that reasoning and
conclusions regarding the interpretation
and implementation of section 706, and
on the extent to which we should rely
on that today. We also seek comment on
whether and to what extent we also
should draw upon the reasoning of
court decisions affirming the
Commission’s interpretation of section
706 of the 1996 Act as granting
regulatory authority—in particular, the
D.C. Circuit’s 2014 decision in Verizon
and its 2016 decision in USTA, as well
as the Tenth Circuit’s 2014 decision in
In re FCC 11–161.
183. Third, to the extent that we
interpret sections 706(a) and (b) of the
1996 Act as grants of regulatory
authority, we propose to use that
authority to adopt open internet rules
here. The Commission previously
concluded in the 2015 Open Internet
Order and 2010 Open Internet Order
that open internet rules were a
reasonable way to implement
Commission authority under sections
706(a) and (b), and the nexus between
open internet rules and the directives in
sections 706(a) and (b) was affirmed by
the D.C. Circuit in Verizon. For those
same reasons, we believe the open
internet rules we seek comment on here
would be a reasonable exercise of
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section 706(a) authority. We likewise
believe that, in the event that the
Commission concludes that advanced
telecommunications capability is not
being deployed to all Americans in a
reasonable and timely fashion under
section 706(b), the open internet rules
we seek comment on here would be a
reasonable exercise of authority under
that provision as well.
184. Finally, we seek comment on any
other issues bearing on our
interpretation and implementation of
section 706 of the 1996 Act here,
including possible objections to the
interpretation of sections 706(a) and (b)
as grants of regulatory authority. For
example, when the D.C. Circuit
concluded that the RIF Order
permissibly reinterpreted section 706 as
hortatory, rather than as a grant of
regulatory authority, the court focused
on the recognized ambiguity of the
statutory language and the
Commission’s justification ‘‘that Section
706 lacks details ‘identify[ing] the
providers or entities whose conduct
could be regulated,’ whereas other
provisions of the Act that
unambiguously grant regulatory
authority do specify such details.’’ We
seek comment on that rationale. How is
section 706 of the 1996 Act distinct in
this regard from other provisions
understood as grants of authority in the
Telecommunications Act of 1996, the
Communications Act of 1934, or other
federal statutes? The RIF Order itself
recognized that, in relying on section
257 of the Act as authority for the
transparency rule, it was interpreting
that provision as a grant of authority
notwithstanding its lack of any
identified universe of entities from
which information could be obtained,
explaining that ‘‘other aspects of section
257 persuade us that our interpretation
of that provision as a grant of
authority.’’ To what extent do other
aspects of section 706 bear on the
reasonableness of interpreting sections
706(a) and (b) as grants of authority?
185. We also seek comment on other
theories discussed in the RIF Order as
a basis for why section 706 of the 1996
Act not just permissibly could, but
affirmatively should, be interpreted as
merely hortatory, rather than a grant of
regulatory authority to the Commission.
For example, the RIF Order contended
that interpreting sections 706(a) and (b)
as grants of regulatory authority would
allow the Commission ‘‘to impose
duties or adopt regulations equivalent to
those directly addressed by the
provisions of the Communications Act
focused on promoting competition and/
or deployment that go beyond the
entities, contexts, and circumstances
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that bounded the Communications Act
provisions.’’ The RIF Order also argued
that if sections 706(a) and (b) were
interpreted as grants of regulatory
authority that would enable the internet
and information services to be heavily
regulated in a manner inconsistent with
policy goals reflected in the Act. We
seek comment on those theories. The
RIF Order acknowledged that the
Commission’s prior interpretation of
section 706 was, by its own terms,
constrained to be consistent with the
Act, but claimed that such constraints
did not adequately address the Order’s
statutory concerns. In the view of the
RIF Order, seemingly the only outcomes
of interpreting section 706 as granting
regulatory authority would be extreme
results where those constraints had little
meaning and left the Commission with
essentially unbounded authority or were
such severe limitations as to render
section 706 of little possible use. We
tentatively conclude that this view is
unfounded and invite more robust
analysis of these issues in the record
here, along with any related arguments.
186. The RIF Order also cited
concerns about the Commission’s ability
to enforce rules implementing section
706 of the 1996 Act as further grounds
for interpreting it as merely hortatory.
The Order did not reject the theory that
section 706 could be read to include
implicit enforcement authority, but
contended that such implicit authority
‘‘might enable actions like declaratory
rulings or cease-and-desist orders, but
would not appear to encompass
authority to impose penalties given the
absence of statutory language clearly
granting that authority.’’ We seek
comment on this understanding of the
scope of potential enforcement authority
that could be implicit in section 706.
Even assuming arguendo that scope of
enforcement authority were accurate,
why should we conclude that the
resulting scope of our enforcement
authority is so insignificant as to
counsel against interpreting sections
706(a) and (b) as grants of regulatory
authority? Further, the RIF Order
rejected the view that the use of section
4(i) of the Act to adopt rules
implementing section 706 of the 1996
Act would be sufficient to bring those
rules within the purview of the
Commission’s enforcement authority
under section 503 of the Act. The RIF
Order reasoned that enforcement
authority under section 503 is limited to
rules based on substantive regulatory
authority under the Act itself, rather
than the rulemaking authority in section
4(i). We seek comment on the merits of
this interpretation.
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2. Title II of the Act With Forbearance
187. As in the 2015 Open Internet
Order, we propose again to rely on
sections 201, 202, and 208 of the Act,
along with the related enforcement
authorities of sections 206, 207, 209,
216, and 217, as additional legal
authority for the proposed open internet
rules. And consistent with the 2010
Open Internet Order and the RIF Order,
and as affirmed by the D.C. Circuit in
Mozilla, we propose also to rely on
section 257 of the Act (now in
conjunction with section 13 of the Act)
as additional legal authority for the
transparency rule, as we may modify it.
We seek comment on these proposals.
188. We also seek comment on any
additional sources of authority under
Title II of the Act that could serve as
authority for open internet rules. For
example, the RIF Order cataloged
arguments about other possible sources
of Title II authority for open internet
rules in sections 251(a), 256, and 275 of
the Act identified in the record there.
The Commission at the time ultimately
declined to rely on those sources of
authority due to perceived shortcomings
in the record regarding the justification
for their use, and also took the view that
they would not, even in the aggregate,
provide authority for the Commission to
adopt open internet rules addressing the
full array of ISPs. We seek comment on
those possible sources of authority,
including both more-developed
explanations for how and when they
could serve as regulatory authority for
open internet rules and whether there
would be grounds for exercising that
authority under the regulatory approach
we propose here.
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3. Title III of the Act for Mobile
Providers
189. As in the 2015 Open Internet
Order, we propose to rely on our broad
legal authority under Title III of the Act
to protect the public interest through
spectrum licensing and regulations—
including sections 303 and 316 of the
Act—as additional legal authority for
the proposed open internet rules in the
case of mobile BIAS. The RIF Order
conceded the viability of Title III
authority in this regard, but declined to
exercise that authority because it would
be limited to rules for mobile ISPs,
rather than providing authority for rules
governing all ISPs. We do not believe
that concern of the RIF Order is likely
to arise under our proposed regulatory
approach here, and we seek comment
on that understanding. We recognize
that the D.C. Circuit’s Mozilla decision
includes a brief statement as part of its
review of the RIF Order’s preemption
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decision stating that BIAS is not ‘‘radio
transmission,’’ so Title III does not
apply. But the RIF Order did not attempt
to apply (or justify applying) Title III,
and the Mozilla decision did not
develop any reasoning in support of that
assertion. Particularly given that
backdrop, we do not believe the court’s
statement should be read to call into
question the Commission’s prior
recognition that mobile BIAS falls
within the scope of Title III. We seek
comment on these views and on any
additional provisions in Title III of the
Act that could serve as authority for
open internet rules in the case of mobile
BIAS or otherwise.
4. Other Possible Sources of Legal
Authority
190. We seek comment on any other
possible sources of legal authority for
open internet rules. For example, the
2010 Open Internet Order relied on
additional sources of authority apart
from section 706 of the 1996 Act and
Titles II and III of the Act—in particular,
sources under Title VI of the Act. The
RIF Order expressly declined to rely on
those sources of authority given what
that Order identified as limitations
regarding the justification for the use of
those authorities, as well as the RIF
Order’s view that they would not, even
in the aggregate, provide authority for
the Commission to adopt open internet
rules addressing the full array of ISPs.
We seek more developed comment on
that possible Title VI authority and on
any other possible sources of authority
under the Act.
191. In addition, we seek comment on
additional sources of authority outside
the Act. For example, the recent
bipartisan Infrastructure Act built upon
the foundation of the transparency rule
and broadband label requirements from
the 2015 Open Internet Order to require
the Commission to adopt new
broadband label rules. Does that law
provide additional authority for rules
here, particularly as it relates to possible
modifications of the transparency rule?
192. We also seek comment on
whether the Commission should rely on
ancillary authority in conjunction with
other primary sources of legal authority
in adopting open internet rules in any
respects. To the extent that commenters
advocate such an approach, they should
explain how the prerequisites for
ancillary authority would be met,
particularly by explaining why the
action would help effectuate regulatory
authority granted to the Commission
under other statutory provisions. To
exercise ancillary authority ‘‘two
conditions [must be] satisfied: (1) the
Commission’s general jurisdictional
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grant under Title I [of the
Communications Act] covers the
regulated subject and (2) the regulations
are reasonably ancillary to the
Commission’s effective performance of
its statutorily mandated
responsibilities.’’
H. Other Laws and Considerations
193. The 2015 Open Internet Order
discussed the relationship between the
open internet rules adopted there and
ISPs’ rights or obligations with respect
to other laws, safety and security
considerations, or the ability of ISPs to
make reasonable efforts to address
transfers of unlawful content and
unlawful transfers of content. We
propose continuing that approach in the
case of the rules upon which we seek
comment here, and seek comment on
that proposal, along with specific
language for open internet rules
intended to achieve the objectives
discussed below, and any additional
ways in which we should account for
similar interests in the codified rules.
194. Consistent with the 2015 Open
Internet Order, we propose that the
open internet rules upon which we seek
comment here would not expand or
contract ISPs’ rights or obligations with
respect to other laws or preclude them
from responding to safety and security
considerations—including the needs of
emergency communications and law
enforcement, public safety, and national
security authorities. The 2015 Open
Internet Order specifically highlighted
examples of other laws imposing
requirements in these respects, such as
the Communications Assistance for Law
Enforcement Act, the Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Act, and the
Electronic Communications Privacy Act,
and we again seek comment as to those
specific laws along with any others that
should inform our analysis. We propose
to adopt the same rule language in this
regard as was adopted in the 2015 Open
Internet Order:
Nothing in this part supersedes any
obligation or authorization a provider of
broadband internet access service may have
to address the needs of emergency
communications or law enforcement, public
safety, or national security authorities,
consistent with or as permitted by applicable
law, or limits the provider’s ability to do so.
We seek comment on this approach
and on alternative approaches to
protecting these interests, including
whether the rule should capture other
possible emergency communications
and safety and security scenarios. For
example, the 2015 Open Internet Order
elected not to expand the application of
its rule in this regard to public utilities
and other critical infrastructure
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operators, reasoning that those interests
otherwise were protected under the
approach it adopted. Is that same
approach appropriate here, or should
we address safety and security interests
related to public utilities and other
critical infrastructure operators in some
other way in any rules we may adopt
here? Should our rules go further to
affirmatively require ISPs to take certain
steps to address the needs of emergency
communications or law enforcement,
public safety, or national security
authorities? For example, should the
rules go further in addressing the
categories of concerns raised before the
Commission on remand of the RIF
Order, such as the needs of public safety
personnel; concerns about particular
harms to public safety that could result
from blocking, throttling, or paid
prioritization; concerns about public
safety needs for individuals with
disabilities; or concerns related to
critical infrastructure?
195. Also consistent with the 2015
Open Internet Order, we propose that
the open internet rules upon which we
seek comment here would protect only
lawful content, and would not be
intended to inhibit efforts by ISPs to
address unlawful transfers of content or
transfers of unlawful content. We
propose to adopt the same rule language
in this regard as was adopted in the
2015 Open Internet Order:
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Nothing in this part prohibits reasonable
efforts by a provider of broadband internet
access service to address copyright
infringement or other unlawful activity.
We seek comment on that approach
and on alternative approaches to
protecting these interests, including
whether the rule should capture other
possible scenarios where ISPs might
seek to address unlawful transfers of
content or transfers of unlawful content.
196. We also seek comment on
whether there are other categories of
otherwise-applicable laws or legal
requirements that should be addressed
through comparable rules as those we
propose to address emergency
communications and safety and security
scenarios and efforts by ISPs to address
unlawful transfers of content or
transfers of unlawful content. For
example, the RIF Remand Order noted
comments expressing concern about the
possible interplay between ISPs’
practices and laws protecting
individuals with disabilities. Given that
the regulatory approach proposed here
differs significantly from the one at
issue in the RIF Remand Order, would
such concerns still be relevant here? If
so, would it be appropriate to address
them through a rule specifically focused
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on those categories of laws? Are there
additional otherwise-existing legal
requirements imposed on ISPs that we
should expressly accommodate in any
rules we adopt?
IV. Constitutional Considerations
197. Consistent with the
constitutional considerations the
Commission has evaluated in
connection with its regulatory approach
to BIAS in the past, we seek comment
on First Amendment speech issues and
Fifth Amendment takings issues. In
addition, we also seek comment on any
other constitutional considerations that
should inform our evaluation of the
issues raised in this proceeding.
A. First Amendment
198. We seek comment on any First
Amendment implications of the issues
raised in this proceeding, both as a
general matter and in the specific
respects discussed below. Consistent
with prior Commission analyses, we
believe our open internet conduct rule
proposals and any modifications to the
transparency rule are permissible
exercises of authority under the First
Amendment.
1. Free Speech Rights
199. We anticipate that our proposals
would withstand any review under the
First Amendment for the same reasons
explained by the Commission in the
2015 Open Internet Order. In particular,
as explained in that Order, and
ultimately affirmed by the D.C. Circuit
in USTA, under traditional First
Amendment doctrine there are no First
Amendment concerns raised by the
conduct regulation of common carriers.
We think the same reasoning is likely to
apply here, and seek comment on that
view.
200. Even if a court departed from the
traditional common carrier First
Amendment precedent, we believe that
our proposed conduct rules are likely to
satisfy First Amendment scrutiny for the
same reasons further identified in the
2015 Open Internet Order. Consistent
with the explanation there, we believe
the conduct rules are likely to be seen
as content-neutral and thus subject to
intermediate First Amendment scrutiny
in this scenario. We also find it likely
that the proposed rules readily could
survive that level of scrutiny—
advancing an important or substantial
government interest unrelated to
limiting speech without burdening more
speech than necessary—based on the
same governmental interests and nexus
to the conduct rules identified by the
Commission in the 2015 Open Internet
Order. We seek comment on that view
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and on any additional evidence and
arguments bearing on the potential
application of the First Amendment in
the case of the conduct rules proposed
here.
201. Because the 2015 Open Internet
Order was limited to offers of ‘‘massmarket’’ broadband access to ‘‘all or
substantially all internet endpoints,’’ it
would not have applied to offerings that
were clearly as advertised as providing
only ‘‘filtered’’ internet access catering
to a particular audience or as providing
access only to curated content. We
propose to adopt the same approach
here and we seek comment on this
proposal. We also seek comment on
whether or to what extent ISPs engage
in content moderation, curation, or
otherwise limit or exercise control over
what third-party content their users are
able to access on the internet. We are
aware that some social media platforms
and other edge providers purport to
engage in various forms of content
moderation or editorial control over
content they host or transmit, and
typically announce that they engage in
such practices in their terms of service
of user agreements; is there any record
of ISPs announcing and engaging in
comparable activity?
202. We also seek comment on the
competing First Amendment views
expressed by judges in separate
opinions accompanying the D.C.
Circuit’s denial of requests to rehear the
USTA case en banc. On one hand, thenJudge Kavanaugh’s dissent expressed
First Amendment concerns with the
2015 Open Internet Order on the theory
that ‘‘the First Amendment bars the
Government from restricting the
editorial discretion of internet service
providers, absent a showing that an
internet service provider possesses
market power in a relevant geographic
market’’—a showing that the
Commission had not made there. On the
other hand, Judges Srinivasan and Tatel,
concurring in the denial of rehearing en
banc, responded to the dissent by
arguing that ‘‘no Supreme Court
decision supports the counterintuitive
notion that the First Amendment
entitles an ISP to engage in the kind of
conduct barred by the net neutrality
rule—i.e., to hold itself out to potential
customers as offering them an unfiltered
pathway to any web content of their
own choosing, but then, once they have
subscribed, to turn around and limit
their access to certain web content
based on the ISP’s own commercial
preferences.’’ We seek comment on
those views.
203. Referencing statements in the
First Amendment analysis in Judges
Srinivasan’s and Tatel’s concurrence,
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the RIF Order contended that the 2015
Open Internet Order ‘‘allows ISPs to
offer curated services, which would
allow ISPs to escape the reach of the
[2015 Open Internet Order] and to filter
content on viewpoint grounds.’’ We
seek comment on the accuracy of that
characterization and how it should
inform our analysis and approach here.
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2. Compelled Disclosure
204. We also believe that any
modifications to the transparency rule
are likely to satisfy the First
Amendment for the same reasons relied
on by the Commission in its justification
of the transparency rules at issue in the
2015 Open Internet Order and the RIF
Order. As a threshold matter, as
explained in the RIF Order, we believe
the speech addressed by our
transparency rule is likely to be limited
to commercial speech. We seek
comment on that view.
205. We also believe that our
transparency rule, as we may modify it,
is likely to be understood by a court as
limited to compelling the disclosure of
factual, noncontroversial information
under circumstances that fall within the
Zauderer First Amendment framework,
consistent with the Commission’s
analysis in the 2015 Open Internet
Order. Also consistent with the analysis
in the 2015 Open Internet Order, we
believe any modifications to the
transparency rule are likely to be a
reasonable way of advancing
government interests in preventing
consumer deception, among other
things, and thus would satisfy the
Zauderer standard. We believe any
modifications to the disclosures in our
transparency rule would be the sort of
‘‘purely factual and uncontroversial
information about the terms under
which . . . services will be available’’ to
which Zauderer applies. We seek
comment on the continued applicability
of that analysis from the 2015 Open
Internet Order.
206. Alternatively, to the extent that
a court evaluated any modifications to
the transparency rule under the Central
Hudson framework, which applies
generally to commercial speech, we
believe it also likely would satisfy First
Amendment scrutiny under that
standard for the same reasons given in
that regard in the RIF Order. We believe
any modifications to the transparency
rule are likely to directly advance
substantial government interests and be
no more extensive than necessary, for
reasons such as those identified in the
RIF Order. We seek comment on these
views and any other First Amendment
considerations.
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B. Fifth Amendment Takings
207. Consistent with the conclusions
in the 2015 Open Internet Order, we do
not believe the proposals in this
Notice—either the proposed
classification decisions or the proposed
rules—are likely to result in per se
takings because we do not anticipate
that they would grant third parties a
right to physical occupation of the ISPs’
property. And as the 2015 Open Internet
Order recognized, where private parties
voluntarily open their networks to end
users and edge providers, reasonable
regulation of the use of their property
poses no takings issue. We seek
comment on the continued applicability
of those analyses here and any other
considerations relevant to possible per
se takings arguments.
208. Also consistent with the
conclusions in the 2015 Open Internet
Order, we do not believe the proposals
in this Notice—either the proposed
classification decisions or the proposed
rules—are likely to result in regulatory
takings. Outside of per se takings cases,
courts analyze putative government
takings through ‘‘essentially ad hoc,
factual inquiries’’ into a variety of
unweighted factors such as the
‘‘economic impact of the regulation,’’
the degree of interference with
‘‘investment-backed expectations,’’ and
‘‘the character of the government
action.’’ The 2015 Open Internet Order
weighed these factors and concluded
that the actions taken there did not
constitute regulatory takings, and we
believe the same is likely to be true of
our proposals here. We seek comment
on these views.
V. Procedural Matters
209. Ex Parte Rules. This proceeding
shall be treated as a ‘‘permit-butdisclose’’ proceeding in accordance
with the Commission’s ex parte rules.
Persons making ex parte presentations
must file a copy of any written
presentation or a memorandum
summarizing any oral presentation
within two business days after the
presentation (unless a different deadline
applicable to the Sunshine period
applies). Persons making oral ex parte
presentations are reminded that
memoranda summarizing the
presentation must (1) list all persons
attending or otherwise participating in
the meeting at which the ex parte
presentation was made, and (2)
summarize all data presented and
arguments made during the
presentation. If the presentation
consisted in whole or in part of the
presentation of data or arguments
already reflected in the presenter’s
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written comments, memoranda, or other
filings in the proceeding, the presenter
may provide citations to such data or
arguments in his or her prior comments,
memoranda, or other filings (specifying
the relevant page and/or paragraph
numbers where such data or arguments
can be found) in lieu of summarizing
them in the memorandum. Documents
shown or given to Commission staff
during ex parte meetings are deemed to
be written ex parte presentations and
must be filed consistent with Rule
1.1206(b). In proceedings governed by
Rule 1.49(f) or for which the
Commission has made available a
method of electronic filing, written ex
parte presentations and memoranda
summarizing oral ex parte
presentations, and all attachments
thereto, must be filed through the
electronic comment filing system
available for that proceeding, and must
be filed in their native format (e.g., .doc,
.xml, .ppt, searchable .pdf). Participants
in this proceeding should familiarize
themselves with the Commission’s ex
parte rules.
210. Initial Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis. Pursuant to the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (RFA), the Commission
has prepared an Initial Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) of the
possible significant economic impact on
small entities of the policies and actions
considered in this NPRM. Written
public comments are requested on this
IRFA. Comments must be identified as
responses to the IRFA and must be filed
by the deadlines for comments on the
NPRM. The Commission’s Office of the
Secretary, Reference Information Center,
will send a copy of the NPRM, including
the IRFA, to the Chief Counsel for
Advocacy of the Small Business
Administration.
211. Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
Analysis. This document contains
proposed new or modified information
collection requirements. The
Commission, as part of its continuing
effort to reduce paperwork burdens,
invites the general public and the Office
of Management and Budget (OMB) to
comment on the information collection
requirements contained in this
document, as required by the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995, Public Law 104–
13. In addition, pursuant to the Small
Business Paperwork Relief Act of 2002,
Public Law 107–198, we seek specific
comment on how we might further
reduce the information collection
burden for small business concerns with
fewer than 25 employees.
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VI. Initial Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis
212. As required by the Regulatory
Flexibility Act of 1980, as amended
(RFA), the Commission has prepared
this Initial Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis (IRFA) of the possible
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
from the policies and rules proposed in
the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
(Notice). Written public comments are
requested on this IRFA. Comments must
be identified as responses to the IRFA
and must be filed by the deadlines for
comments provided on the first page of
the Notice. The Commission will send a
copy of the Notice, including this IRFA,
to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the
Small Business Administration (SBA).
In addition, the Notice and IRFA (or
summaries thereof) will be published in
the Federal Register.
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A. Need for, and Objectives of, the
Proposed Rules
213. In the Notice, we propose to
reestablish the Commission’s authority
over broadband internet access service
(BIAS) by classifying BIAS as a
telecommunications service under Title
II of the Communications Act of 1934,
as amended (Act). We further propose to
reclassify mobile BIAS as a commercial
mobile service. The COVID–19
pandemic showed how essential BIAS
connections are for consumers’
participation in today’s society and
economy, for work, health, education,
community, and everyday life. In light
of this reality, we believe that looking
anew at the classification of BIAS is
necessary and timely given the critical
importance of ensuring the
Commission’s authority to fulfill policy
objectives and responsibilities to protect
this vital service. Notable among these
is enabling the Commission to safeguard
the fair and open internet though a
national regulatory approach. The
Commission also has an important
statutory mandate to protect ‘‘life and
property’’ by supporting national
security and public safety.
214. Restoring Title II authority will
allow the Commission to safeguard and
secure the open internet in three
significant ways. First, this authority
will allow the Commission to protect
consumers, including by issuing
straightforward, clear rules to prevent
internet service providers from engaging
in practices harmful to consumers,
competition, and public safety, and by
establishing a national regulatory
approach rather than disparate
requirements that vary state-by-state.
Second, reclassification will strengthen
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the Commission’s ability to secure
communications networks and critical
infrastructure against national security
threats. Third, the reclassification will
enable the Commission to protect public
safety during natural disasters and other
emergencies. We also anticipate that the
proper classification of BIAS as a
telecommunications service will
enhance the Commission’s ability to
advance other important interests,
including protection of consumers’
privacy and data security interests and
consumers’ ability to access BIAS.
Beyond these areas, we believe that
classification of BIAS as a
telecommunications service represents
the best reading of the text of the Act in
light of the marketplace reality of how
the service is offered and perceived
today.
215. To protect the openness of the
internet, we propose to return to the
basic framework the Commission
adopted in 2015 by reinstating
straightforward, clear rules that are
designed to prevent internet service
providers (ISPs) from engaging in
practices harmful to consumers,
competition, and public safety, and that
would provide the basis for a national
regulatory approach toward BIAS,
consistent with the Commission’s
longstanding policy approach to protect
internet openness prior to the RIF
Order. We first propose to reinstate the
rules adopted in the 2015 Open Internet
Order that prohibit ISPs from blocking,
throttling, or engaging in paid or
affiliated prioritization arrangements.
We similarly propose to reinstate the
general conduct standard adopted in the
2015 Open Internet Order, which would
prohibit practices that cause
unreasonable interference or
unreasonable disadvantage to
consumers or edge providers. Finally,
with regard to transparency, we propose
to retain the current disclosures, and we
seek comment on the means of
disclosure, the interplay between the
transparency rule and the broadband
label requirements, and any additional
enhancements or changes we should
consider. We believe that the rules we
propose today will establish a baseline
that the Commission can use to prevent
and address conduct that harms
consumers and competition when it
occurs.
B. Legal Basis
216. The proposed action is
authorized pursuant to sections 1, 2,
4(i)–(j), 13, 201, 202, 208, 257, 303, and
316, of the Communications Act of
1934, as amended, and section 706 of
the Telecommunications Act of 1996, as
amended, 47 U.S.C. 151, 152, 154(i)–(j),
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163, 201, 202, 208, 257, 303, 316, and
1302.
C. Description and Estimate of the
Number of Small Entities to Which the
Proposed Rules Would Apply
217. The RFA directs agencies to
provide a description of, and where
feasible, an estimate of the number of
small entities that may be affected by
the proposed rules, if adopted. The RFA
generally defines the term ‘‘small
entity’’ as having the same meaning as
the terms ‘‘small business,’’ ‘‘small
organization,’’ and ‘‘small governmental
jurisdiction.’’ In addition, the term
‘‘small business’’ has the same meaning
as the term ‘‘small-business concern’’
under the Small Business Act. A ‘‘smallbusiness concern’’ is one which: (1) is
independently owned and operated; (2)
is not dominant in its field of operation;
and (3) satisfies any additional criteria
established by the Small Business
Administration (SBA).
1. Total Small Entities
218. Small Businesses, Small
Organizations, Small Governmental
Jurisdictions. Our actions, over time,
may affect small entities that are not
easily categorized at present. We
therefore describe, at the outset, three
broad groups of small entities that could
be directly affected herein. First, while
there are industry specific size
standards for small businesses that are
used in the regulatory flexibility
analysis, according to data from the
SBA’s Office of Advocacy, in general a
small business is an independent
business having fewer than 500
employees. These types of small
businesses represent 99.9% of all
businesses in the United States, which
translates to 33.2 million businesses.
219. Next, the type of small entity
described as a ‘‘small organization’’ is
generally ‘‘any not-for-profit enterprise
which is independently owned and
operated and is not dominant in its
field.’’ The Internal Revenue Service
(IRS) uses a revenue benchmark of
$50,000 or less to delineate its annual
electronic filing requirements for small
exempt organizations. Nationwide, for
tax year 2020, there were approximately
447,689 small exempt organizations in
the U.S. reporting revenues of $50,000
or less according to the registration and
tax data for exempt organizations
available from the IRS.
220. Finally, the small entity
described as a ‘‘small governmental
jurisdiction’’ is defined generally as
‘‘governments of cities, counties, towns,
townships, villages, school districts, or
special districts, with a population of
less than fifty thousand.’’ U.S. Census
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Bureau data from the 2017 Census of
Governments indicate there were 90,075
local governmental jurisdictions
consisting of general purpose
governments and special purpose
governments in the United States. Of
this number, there were 36,931 general
purpose governments (county,
municipal, and town or township) with
populations of less than 50,000 and
12,040 special purpose governments—
independent school districts with
enrollment populations of less than
50,000. Accordingly, based on the 2017
U.S. Census of Governments data, we
estimate that at least 48,971 entities fall
into the category of ‘‘small
governmental jurisdictions.’’
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2. Wired Broadband Internet Access
Service Providers
221. Wired Broadband Internet Access
Service Providers (Wired ISPs).
Providers of wired broadband internet
access service include various types of
providers except dial-up internet access
providers. Wireline service that
terminates at an end user location or
mobile device and enables the end user
to receive information from and/or send
information to the internet at
information transfer rates exceeding 200
kilobits per second (kbps) in at least one
direction is classified as a broadband
connection under the Commission’s
rules. Wired broadband internet services
fall in the Wired Telecommunications
Carriers industry. The SBA small
business size standard for this industry
classifies firms having 1,500 or fewer
employees as small. U.S. Census Bureau
data for 2017 show that there were 3,054
firms that operated in this industry for
the entire year. Of this number, 2,964
firms operated with fewer than 250
employees.
222. Additionally, according to
Commission data on internet access
services as of June 30, 2019, nationwide
there were approximately 2,747
providers of connections over 200 kbps
in at least one direction using various
wireline technologies. The Commission
does not collect data on the number of
employees for providers of these
services, therefore, at this time we are
not able to estimate the number of
providers that would qualify as small
under the SBA’s small business size
standard. However, in light of the
general data on fixed technology service
providers in the Commission’s 2022
Communications Marketplace Report,
we believe that the majority of wireline
internet access service providers can be
considered small entities.
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3. Wireline Providers
223. Wired Telecommunications
Carriers. The U.S. Census Bureau
defines this industry as establishments
primarily engaged in operating and/or
providing access to transmission
facilities and infrastructure that they
own and/or lease for the transmission of
voice, data, text, sound, and video using
wired communications networks.
Transmission facilities may be based on
a single technology or a combination of
technologies. Establishments in this
industry use the wired
telecommunications network facilities
that they operate to provide a variety of
services, such as wired telephony
services, including Voice-over Internet
Protocol (VoIP) services, wired (cable)
audio and video programming
distribution, and wired broadband
internet services. By exception,
establishments providing satellite
television distribution services using
facilities and infrastructure that they
operate are included in this industry.
Wired Telecommunications Carriers are
also referred to as wireline carriers or
fixed local service providers.
224. The SBA small business size
standard for Wired Telecommunications
Carriers classifies firms having 1,500 or
fewer employees as small. U.S. Census
Bureau data for 2017 show that there
were 3,054 firms that operated in this
industry for the entire year. Of this
number, 2,964 firms operated with
fewer than 250 employees.
Additionally, based on Commission
data in the 2022 Universal Service
Monitoring Report, as of December 31,
2021, there were 4,590 providers that
reported they were engaged in the
provision of fixed local services. Of
these providers, the Commission
estimates that 4,146 providers have
1,500 or fewer employees.
Consequently, using the SBA’s small
business size standard, most of these
providers can be considered small
entities.
225. Incumbent Local Exchange
Carriers (Incumbent LECs). Neither the
Commission nor the SBA have
developed a small business size
standard specifically for incumbent
local exchange carriers. Wired
Telecommunications Carriers is the
closest industry with an SBA small
business size standard. The SBA small
business size standard for Wired
Telecommunications Carriers classifies
firms having 1,500 or fewer employees
as small. U.S. Census Bureau data for
2017 show that there were 3,054 firms
in this industry that operated for the
entire year. Of this number, 2,964 firms
operated with fewer than 250
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employees. Additionally, based on
Commission data in the 2022 Universal
Service Monitoring Report, as of
December 31, 2021, there were 1,212
providers that reported they were
incumbent local exchange service
providers. Of these providers, the
Commission estimates that 916
providers have 1,500 or fewer
employees. Consequently, using the
SBA’s small business size standard, the
Commission estimates that the majority
of incumbent local exchange carriers
can be considered small entities.
226. Competitive Local Exchange
Carriers (Competitive LECs). Neither the
Commission nor the SBA has developed
a size standard for small businesses
specifically applicable to local exchange
services. Providers of these services
include several types of competitive
local exchange service providers. Wired
Telecommunications Carriers is the
closest industry with an SBA small
business size standard. The SBA small
business size standard for Wired
Telecommunications Carriers classifies
firms having 1,500 or fewer employees
as small. U.S. Census Bureau data for
2017 show that there were 3,054 firms
that operated in this industry for the
entire year. Of this number, 2,964 firms
operated with fewer than 250
employees. Additionally, based on
Commission data in the 2022 Universal
Service Monitoring Report, as of
December 31, 2021, there were 3,378
providers that reported they were
competitive local exchange service
providers. Of these providers, the
Commission estimates that 3,230
providers have 1,500 or fewer
employees. Consequently, using the
SBA’s small business size standard,
most of these providers can be
considered small entities.
227. Interexchange Carriers (IXCs).
Neither the Commission nor the SBA
have developed a small business size
standard specifically for Interexchange
Carriers. Wired Telecommunications
Carriers is the closest industry with an
SBA small business size standard. The
SBA small business size standard for
Wired Telecommunications Carriers
classifies firms having 1,500 or fewer
employees as small. U.S. Census Bureau
data for 2017 show that there were 3,054
firms that operated in this industry for
the entire year. Of this number, 2,964
firms operated with fewer than 250
employees. Additionally, based on
Commission data in the 2022 Universal
Service Monitoring Report, as of
December 31, 2021, there were 127
providers that reported they were
engaged in the provision of
interexchange services. Of these
providers, the Commission estimates
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that 109 providers have 1,500 or fewer
employees. Consequently, using the
SBA’s small business size standard, the
Commission estimates that the majority
of providers in this industry can be
considered small entities.
228. Operator Service Providers
(OSPs). Neither the Commission nor the
SBA has developed a small business
size standard specifically for operator
service providers. The closest applicable
industry with an SBA small business
size standard is Wired
Telecommunications Carriers. The SBA
small business size standard classifies a
business as small if it has 1,500 or fewer
employees. U.S. Census Bureau data for
2017 show that there were 3,054 firms
in this industry that operated for the
entire year. Of this number, 2,964 firms
operated with fewer than 250
employees. Additionally, based on
Commission data in the 2022 Universal
Service Monitoring Report, as of
December 31, 2021, there were 20
providers that reported they were
engaged in the provision of operator
services. Of these providers, the
Commission estimates that all 20
providers have 1,500 or fewer
employees. Consequently, using the
SBA’s small business size standard, all
of these providers can be considered
small entities.
229. Other Toll Carriers. Neither the
Commission nor the SBA has developed
a definition for small businesses
specifically applicable to Other Toll
Carriers. This category includes toll
carriers that do not fall within the
categories of interexchange carriers,
operator service providers, prepaid
calling card providers, satellite service
carriers, or toll resellers. Wired
Telecommunications Carriers is the
closest industry with an SBA small
business size standard. The SBA small
business size standard for Wired
Telecommunications Carriers classifies
firms having 1,500 or fewer employees
as small. U.S. Census Bureau data for
2017 show that there were 3,054 firms
in this industry that operated for the
entire year. Of this number, 2,964 firms
operated with fewer than 250
employees. Additionally, based on
Commission data in the 2022 Universal
Service Monitoring Report, as of
December 31, 2021, there were 90
providers that reported they were
engaged in the provision of other toll
services. Of these providers, the
Commission estimates that 87 providers
have 1,500 or fewer employees.
Consequently, using the SBA’s small
business size standard, most of these
providers can be considered small
entities.
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4. Wireless Providers—Fixed and
Mobile
230. The broadband internet access
service provider category covered by
this Notice may cover multiple wireless
firms and categories of regulated
wireless services. Thus, to the extent the
wireless services listed below are used
by wireless firms for broadband internet
access services, the proposed actions
may have an impact on those small
businesses as set forth above and further
below. In addition, for those services
subject to auctions, we note that, as a
general matter, the number of winning
bidders that claim to qualify as small
businesses at the close of an auction
does not necessarily represent the
number of small businesses currently in
service. Also, the Commission does not
generally track subsequent business size
unless, in the context of assignments
and transfers or reportable eligibility
events, unjust enrichment issues are
implicated.
231. Wireless Broadband internet
Access Service Providers (Wireless ISPs
or WISPs). Providers of wireless
broadband internet access service
include fixed and mobile wireless
providers. The Commission defines a
WISP as ‘‘[a] company that provides
end-users with wireless access to the
internet[.]’’ Wireless service that
terminates at an end user location or
mobile device and enables the end user
to receive information from and/or send
information to the internet at
information transfer rates exceeding 200
kilobits per second (kbps) in at least one
direction is classified as a broadband
connection under the Commission’s
rules. Neither the SBA nor the
Commission have developed a size
standard specifically applicable to
Wireless Broadband internet Access
Service Providers. The closest
applicable industry with an SBA small
business size standard is Wireless
Telecommunications Carriers (except
Satellite). The SBA size standard for this
industry classifies a business as small if
it has 1,500 or fewer employees. U.S.
Census Bureau data for 2017 show that
there were 2,893 firms in this industry
that operated for the entire year. Of that
number, 2,837 firms employed fewer
than 250 employees.
232. Additionally, according to
Commission data on internet access
services as of June 30, 2019, nationwide
there were approximately 1,237 fixed
wireless and 70 mobile wireless
providers of connections over 200 kbps
in at least one direction. The
Commission does not collect data on the
number of employees for providers of
these services, therefore, at this time we
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are not able to estimate the number of
providers that would qualify as small
under the SBA’s small business size
standard. However, based on data in the
Commission’s 2022 Communications
Marketplace Report on the small
number of large mobile wireless
nationwide and regional facilities-based
providers, the dozens of small regional
facilities-based providers and the
number of wireless mobile virtual
network providers in general, as well as
on terrestrial fixed wireless broadband
providers in general, we believe that the
majority of wireless internet access
service providers can be considered
small entities.
233. Wireless Telecommunications
Carriers (except Satellite). This industry
comprises establishments engaged in
operating and maintaining switching
and transmission facilities to provide
communications via the airwaves.
Establishments in this industry have
spectrum licenses and provide services
using that spectrum, such as cellular
services, paging services, wireless
internet access, and wireless video
services. The SBA size standard for this
industry classifies a business as small if
it has 1,500 or fewer employees. U.S.
Census Bureau data for 2017 show that
there were 2,893 firms in this industry
that operated for the entire year. Of that
number, 2,837 firms employed fewer
than 250 employees. Additionally,
based on Commission data in the 2022
Universal Service Monitoring Report, as
of December 31, 2021, there were 594
providers that reported they were
engaged in the provision of wireless
services. Of these providers, the
Commission estimates that 511
providers have 1,500 or fewer
employees. Consequently, using the
SBA’s small business size standard,
most of these providers can be
considered small entities.
234. Wireless Communications
Services. Wireless Communications
Services (WCS) can be used for a variety
of fixed, mobile, radiolocation, and
digital audio broadcasting satellite
services. Wireless spectrum is made
available and licensed for the provision
of wireless communications services in
several frequency bands subject to part
27 of the Commission’s rules. Wireless
Telecommunications Carriers (except
Satellite) is the closest industry with an
SBA small business size standard
applicable to these services. The SBA
small business size standard for this
industry classifies a business as small if
it has 1,500 or fewer employees. U.S.
Census Bureau data for 2017 show that
there were 2,893 firms that operated in
this industry for the entire year. Of this
number, 2,837 firms employed fewer
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than 250 employees. Thus under the
SBA size standard, the Commission
estimates that a majority of licensees in
this industry can be considered small.
235. The Commission’s small
business size standards with respect to
WCS involve eligibility for bidding
credits and installment payments in the
auction of licenses for the various
frequency bands included in WCS.
When bidding credits are adopted for
the auction of licenses in WCS
frequency bands, such credits may be
available to several types of small
businesses based on average gross
revenues (small, very small, and
entrepreneur) pursuant to the
competitive bidding rules adopted in
conjunction with the requirements for
the auction and/or as identified in the
designated entities section in part 27 of
the Commission’s rules for the specific
WCS frequency bands.
236. In frequency bands where
licenses were subject to auction, the
Commission notes that as a general
matter, the number of winning bidders
that qualify as small businesses at the
close of an auction does not necessarily
represent the number of small
businesses currently in service. Further,
the Commission does not generally track
subsequent business size unless, in the
context of assignments or transfers,
unjust enrichment issues are implicated.
Additionally, since the Commission
does not collect data on the number of
employees for licensees providing these
services, at this time we are not able to
estimate the number of licensees with
active licenses that would qualify as
small under the SBA’s small business
size standard.
237. Wireless Resellers. Neither the
Commission nor the SBA have
developed a small business size
standard specifically for Wireless
Resellers. The closest industry with an
SBA small business size standard is
Telecommunications Resellers. The
Telecommunications Resellers industry
comprises establishments engaged in
purchasing access and network capacity
from owners and operators of
telecommunications networks and
reselling wired and wireless
telecommunications services (except
satellite) to businesses and households.
Establishments in this industry resell
telecommunications and they do not
operate transmission facilities and
infrastructure. Mobile virtual network
operators (MVNOs) are included in this
industry. Under the SBA size standard
for this industry, a business is small if
it has 1,500 or fewer employees. U.S.
Census Bureau data for 2017 show that
1,386 firms in this industry provided
resale services during that year. Of that
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number, 1,375 firms operated with
fewer than 250 employees. Thus, for
this industry under the SBA small
business size standard, the majority of
providers can be considered small
entities.
238. 1670–1675 MHz Services. These
wireless communications services can
be used for fixed and mobile uses,
except aeronautical mobile. Wireless
Telecommunications Carriers (except
Satellite) is the closest industry with an
SBA small business size standard
applicable to these services. The SBA
size standard for this industry classifies
a business as small if it has 1,500 or
fewer employees. U.S. Census Bureau
data for 2017 show that there were 2,893
firms that operated in this industry for
the entire year. Of this number, 2,837
firms employed fewer than 250
employees. Thus under the SBA size
standard, the Commission estimates that
a majority of licensees in this industry
can be considered small.
239. According to Commission data as
of November 2021, there were three
active licenses in this service. The
Commission’s small business size
standards with respect to 1670–1675
MHz Services involve eligibility for
bidding credits and installment
payments in the auction of licenses for
these services. For licenses in the 1670–
1675 MHz service band, a ‘‘small
business’’ is defined as an entity that,
together with its affiliates and
controlling interests, has average gross
revenues not exceeding $40 million for
the preceding three years, and a ‘‘very
small business’’ is defined as an entity
that, together with its affiliates and
controlling interests, has had average
annual gross revenues not exceeding
$15 million for the preceding three
years. The 1670–1675 MHz service band
auction’s winning bidder did not claim
small business status.
240. In frequency bands where
licenses were subject to auction, the
Commission notes that as a general
matter, the number of winning bidders
that qualify as small businesses at the
close of an auction does not necessarily
represent the number of small
businesses currently in service. Further,
the Commission does not generally track
subsequent business size unless, in the
context of assignments or transfers,
unjust enrichment issues are implicated.
Additionally, since the Commission
does not collect data on the number of
employees for licensees providing these
services, at this time we are not able to
estimate the number of licensees with
active licenses that would qualify as
small under the SBA’s small business
size standard.
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241. Wireless Telephony. Wireless
telephony includes cellular, personal
communications services, and
specialized mobile radio telephony
carriers. The closest applicable industry
with an SBA small business size
standard is Wireless
Telecommunications Carriers (except
Satellite). The size standard for this
industry under SBA rules is that a
business is small if it has 1,500 or fewer
employees. For this industry, U.S.
Census Bureau data for 2017 show that
there were 2,893 firms that operated for
the entire year. Of this number, 2,837
firms employed fewer than 250
employees. Additionally, based on
Commission data in the 2022 Universal
Service Monitoring Report, as of
December 31, 2021, there were 331
providers that reported they were
engaged in the provision of cellular,
personal communications services, and
specialized mobile radio services. Of
these providers, the Commission
estimates that 255 providers have 1,500
or fewer employees. Consequently,
using the SBA’s small business size
standard, most of these providers can be
considered small entities.
242. Broadband Personal
Communications Service. The
broadband personal communications
services (PCS) spectrum encompasses
services in the 1850–1910 and 1930–
1990 MHz bands. The closest industry
with an SBA small business size
standard applicable to these services is
Wireless Telecommunications Carriers
(except Satellite). The SBA small
business size standard for this industry
classifies a business as small if it has
1,500 or fewer employees. U.S. Census
Bureau data for 2017 show that there
were 2,893 firms that operated in this
industry for the entire year. Of this
number, 2,837 firms employed fewer
than 250 employees. Thus under the
SBA size standard, the Commission
estimates that a majority of licensees in
this industry can be considered small.
243. Based on Commission data as of
November 2021, there were
approximately 5,060 active licenses in
the Broadband PCS service. The
Commission’s small business size
standards with respect to Broadband
PCS involve eligibility for bidding
credits and installment payments in the
auction of licenses for these services. In
auctions for these licenses, the
Commission defined ‘‘small business’’
as an entity that, together with its
affiliates and controlling interests, has
average gross revenues not exceeding
$40 million for the preceding three
years, and a ‘‘very small business’’ as an
entity that, together with its affiliates
and controlling interests, has had
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average annual gross revenues not
exceeding $15 million for the preceding
three years. Winning bidders claiming
small business credits won Broadband
PCS licenses in C, D, E, and F Blocks.
244. In frequency bands where
licenses were subject to auction, the
Commission notes that as a general
matter, the number of winning bidders
that qualify as small businesses at the
close of an auction does not necessarily
represent the number of small
businesses currently in service. Further,
the Commission does not generally track
subsequent business size unless, in the
context of assignments or transfers,
unjust enrichment issues are implicated.
Additionally, since the Commission
does not collect data on the number of
employees for licensees providing these,
at this time we are not able to estimate
the number of licensees with active
licenses that would qualify as small
under the SBA’s small business size
standard.
245. Specialized Mobile Radio
Licenses. Special Mobile Radio (SMR)
licenses allow licensees to provide land
mobile communications services (other
than radiolocation services) in the 800
MHz and 900 MHz spectrum bands on
a commercial basis including but not
limited to services used for voice and
data communications, paging, and
facsimile services, to individuals,
Federal Government entities, and other
entities licensed under Part 90 of the
Commission’s rules. Wireless
Telecommunications Carriers (except
Satellite) is the closest industry with an
SBA small business size standard
applicable to these services. The SBA
size standard for this industry classifies
a business as small if it has 1,500 or
fewer employees. For this industry, U.S.
Census Bureau data for 2017 show that
there were 2,893 firms in this industry
that operated for the entire year. Of this
number, 2,837 firms employed fewer
than 250 employees. Additionally,
based on Commission data in the 2022
Universal Service Monitoring Report, as
of December 31, 2021, there were 95
providers that reported they were of
SMR (dispatch) providers. Of this
number, the Commission estimates that
all 95 providers have 1,500 or fewer
employees. Consequently, using the
SBA’s small business size standard,
these 119 SMR licensees can be
considered small entities.
246. Based on Commission data as of
December 2021, there were 3,924 active
SMR licenses. However, since the
Commission does not collect data on the
number of employees for licensees
providing SMR services, at this time we
are not able to estimate the number of
licensees with active licenses that
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would qualify as small under the SBA’s
small business size standard.
Nevertheless, for purposes of this
analysis the Commission estimates that
the majority of SMR licensees can be
considered small entities using the
SBA’s small business size standard.
247. Lower 700 MHz Band Licenses.
The lower 700 MHz band encompasses
spectrum in the 698–746 MHz
frequency bands. Permissible operations
in these bands include flexible fixed,
mobile, and broadcast uses, including
mobile and other digital new broadcast
operation; fixed and mobile wireless
commercial services (including FDDand TDD-based services); as well as
fixed and mobile wireless uses for
private, internal radio needs, two-way
interactive, cellular, and mobile
television broadcasting services.
Wireless Telecommunications Carriers
(except Satellite) is the closest industry
with an SBA small business size
standard applicable to licenses
providing services in these bands. The
SBA small business size standard for
this industry classifies a business as
small if it has 1,500 or fewer employees.
U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017 show
that there were 2,893 firms that operated
in this industry for the entire year. Of
this number, 2,837 firms employed
fewer than 250 employees. Thus under
the SBA size standard, the Commission
estimates that a majority of licensees in
this industry can be considered small.
248. According to Commission data as
of December 2021, there were
approximately 2,824 active Lower 700
MHz Band licenses. The Commission’s
small business size standards with
respect to Lower 700 MHz Band
licensees involve eligibility for bidding
credits and installment payments in the
auction of licenses. For auctions of
Lower 700 MHz Band licenses the
Commission adopted criteria for three
groups of small businesses. A very small
business was defined as an entity that,
together with its affiliates and
controlling interests, has average annual
gross revenues not exceeding $15
million for the preceding three years, a
small business was defined as an entity
that, together with its affiliates and
controlling interests, has average gross
revenues not exceeding $40 million for
the preceding three years, and an
entrepreneur was defined as an entity
that, together with its affiliates and
controlling interests, has average gross
revenues not exceeding $3 million for
the preceding three years. In auctions
for Lower 700 MHz Band licenses
seventy-two winning bidders claiming a
small business classification won 329
licenses, twenty-six winning bidders
claiming a small business classification
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won 214 licenses, and three winning
bidders claiming a small business
classification won all five auctioned
licenses.
249. In frequency bands where
licenses were subject to auction, the
Commission notes that as a general
matter, the number of winning bidders
that qualify as small businesses at the
close of an auction does not necessarily
represent the number of small
businesses currently in service. Further,
the Commission does not generally track
subsequent business size unless, in the
context of assignments or transfers,
unjust enrichment issues are implicated.
Additionally, since the Commission
does not collect data on the number of
employees for licensees providing these
services, at this time we are not able to
estimate the number of licensees with
active licenses that would qualify as
small under the SBA’s small business
size standard.
250. Upper 700 MHz Band Licenses.
The upper 700 MHz band encompasses
spectrum in the 746–806 MHz bands.
Upper 700 MHz D Block licenses are
nationwide licenses associated with the
758–763 MHz and 788–793 MHz bands.
Permissible operations in these bands
include flexible fixed, mobile, and
broadcast uses, including mobile and
other digital new broadcast operation;
fixed and mobile wireless commercial
services (including FDD- and TDDbased services); as well as fixed and
mobile wireless uses for private,
internal radio needs, two-way
interactive, cellular, and mobile
television broadcasting services.
Wireless Telecommunications Carriers
(except Satellite) is the closest industry
with an SBA small business size
standard applicable to licenses
providing services in these bands. The
SBA small business size standard for
this industry classifies a business as
small if it has 1,500 or fewer employees.
U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017 show
that there were 2,893 firms that operated
in this industry for the entire year. Of
that number, 2,837 firms employed
fewer than 250 employees. Thus, under
the SBA size standard, the Commission
estimates that a majority of licensees in
this industry can be considered small.
251. According to Commission data as
of December 2021, there were
approximately 152 active Upper 700
MHz Band licenses. The Commission’s
small business size standards with
respect to Upper 700 MHz Band
licensees involve eligibility for bidding
credits and installment payments in the
auction of licenses. For the auction of
these licenses, the Commission defined
a ‘‘small business’’ as an entity that,
together with its affiliates and
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controlling principals, has average gross
revenues not exceeding $40 million for
the preceding three years, and a ‘‘very
small business’’ as an entity that,
together with its affiliates and
controlling principals, has average gross
revenues that are not more than $15
million for the preceding three years.
Pursuant to these definitions, three
winning bidders claiming very small
business status won five of the twelve
available licenses.
252. In frequency bands where
licenses were subject to auction, the
Commission notes that as a general
matter, the number of winning bidders
that qualify as small businesses at the
close of an auction does not necessarily
represent the number of small
businesses currently in service. Further,
the Commission does not generally track
subsequent business size unless, in the
context of assignments or transfers,
unjust enrichment issues are implicated.
Additionally, since the Commission
does not collect data on the number of
employees for licensees providing these
services, at this time we are not able to
estimate the number of licensees with
active licenses that would qualify as
small under the SBA’s small business
size standard.
253. 700 MHz Guard Band Licensees.
The 700 MHz Guard Band encompasses
spectrum in 746–747/776–777 MHz and
762–764/792–794 MHz frequency
bands. Wireless Telecommunications
Carriers (except Satellite) is the closest
industry with an SBA small business
size standard applicable to licenses
providing services in these bands. The
SBA small business size standard for
this industry classifies a business as
small if it has 1,500 or fewer employees.
U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017 show
that there were 2,893 firms that operated
in this industry for the entire year. Of
this number, 2,837 firms employed
fewer than 250 employees. Thus under
the SBA size standard, the Commission
estimates that a majority of licensees in
this industry can be considered small.
254. According to Commission data as
of December 2021, there were
approximately 224 active 700 MHz
Guard Band licenses. The Commission’s
small business size standards with
respect to 700 MHz Guard Band
licensees involve eligibility for bidding
credits and installment payments in the
auction of licenses. For the auction of
these licenses, the Commission defined
a ‘‘small business’’ as an entity that,
together with its affiliates and
controlling principals, has average gross
revenues not exceeding $40 million for
the preceding three years, and a ‘‘very
small business’’ as an entity that,
together with its affiliates and
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controlling principals, has average gross
revenues that are not more than $15
million for the preceding three years.
Pursuant to these definitions, five
winning bidders claiming one of the
small business status classifications
won 26 licenses, and one winning
bidder claiming small business won two
licenses. None of the winning bidders
claiming a small business status
classification in these 700 MHz Guard
Band license auctions had an active
license as of December 2021.
255. In frequency bands where
licenses were subject to auction, the
Commission notes that as a general
matter, the number of winning bidders
that qualify as small businesses at the
close of an auction does not necessarily
represent the number of small
businesses currently in service. Further,
the Commission does not generally track
subsequent business size unless, in the
context of assignments or transfers,
unjust enrichment issues are implicated.
Additionally, since the Commission
does not collect data on the number of
employees for licensees providing these
services, at this time we are not able to
estimate the number of licensees with
active licenses that would qualify as
small under the SBA’s small business
size standard.
256. Air-Ground Radiotelephone
Service. Air-Ground Radiotelephone
Service is a wireless service in which
licensees are authorized to offer and
provide radio telecommunications
service for hire to subscribers in aircraft.
A licensee may provide any type of airground service (i.e., voice telephony,
broadband internet, data, etc.) to aircraft
of any type, and serve any or all aviation
markets (commercial, government, and
general). A licensee must provide
service to aircraft and may not provide
ancillary land mobile or fixed services
in the 800 MHz air-ground spectrum.
257. The closest industry with an SBA
small business size standard applicable
to these services is Wireless
Telecommunications Carriers (except
Satellite). The SBA small business size
standard for this industry classifies a
business as small if it has 1,500 or fewer
employees. U.S. Census Bureau data for
2017 show that there were 2,893 firms
that operated in this industry for the
entire year. Of this number, 2,837 firms
employed fewer than 250 employees.
Thus under the SBA size standard, the
Commission estimates that a majority of
licensees in this industry can be
considered small.
258. Based on Commission data as of
December 2021, there were
approximately four licensees with 110
active licenses in the Air-Ground
Radiotelephone Service. The
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Commission’s small business size
standards with respect to Air-Ground
Radiotelephone Service involve
eligibility for bidding credits and
installment payments in the auction of
licenses. For purposes of auctions, the
Commission defined ‘‘small business’’
as an entity that, together with its
affiliates and controlling interests, has
average gross revenues not exceeding
$40 million for the preceding three
years, and a ‘‘very small business’’ as an
entity that, together with its affiliates
and controlling interests, has had
average annual gross revenues not
exceeding $15 million for the preceding
three years. In the auction of AirGround Radiotelephone Service licenses
in the 800 MHz band, neither of the two
winning bidders claimed small business
status.
259. In frequency bands where
licenses were subject to auction, the
Commission notes that as a general
matter, the number of winning bidders
that qualify as small businesses at the
close of an auction does not necessarily
represent the number of small
businesses currently in service. Further,
the Commission does not generally track
subsequent business size unless, in the
context of assignments or transfers,
unjust enrichment issues are implicated.
Additionally, the Commission does not
collect data on the number of employees
for licensees providing these services
therefore, at this time we are not able to
estimate the number of licensees with
active licenses that would qualify as
small under the SBA’s small business
size standard.
260. Advanced Wireless Services
(AWS)—(1710–1755 MHz and 2110–
2155 MHz bands (AWS–1); 1915–1920
MHz, 1995–2000 MHz, 2020–2025 MHz
and 2175–2180 MHz bands (AWS–2);
2155–2175 MHz band (AWS–3); 2000–
2020 MHz and 2180–2200 MHz (AWS–
4). Spectrum is made available and
licensed in these bands for the provision
of various wireless communications
services. Wireless Telecommunications
Carriers (except Satellite) is the closest
industry with an SBA small business
size standard applicable to these
services. The SBA small business size
standard for this industry classifies a
business as small if it has 1,500 or fewer
employees. U.S. Census Bureau data for
2017 show that there were 2,893 firms
that operated in this industry for the
entire year. Of this number, 2,837 firms
employed fewer than 250 employees.
Thus, under the SBA size standard, the
Commission estimates that a majority of
licensees in this industry can be
considered small.
261. According to Commission data as
December 2021, there were
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approximately 4,472 active AWS
licenses. The Commission’s small
business size standards with respect to
AWS involve eligibility for bidding
credits and installment payments in the
auction of licenses for these services.
For the auction of AWS licenses, the
Commission defined a ‘‘small business’’
as an entity with average annual gross
revenues for the preceding three years
not exceeding $40 million, and a ‘‘very
small business’’ as an entity with
average annual gross revenues for the
preceding three years not exceeding $15
million. Pursuant to these definitions,
57 winning bidders claiming status as
small or very small businesses won 215
of 1,087 licenses. In the most recent
auction of AWS licenses 15 of 37
bidders qualifying for status as small or
very small businesses won licenses.
262. In frequency bands where
licenses were subject to auction, the
Commission notes that as a general
matter, the number of winning bidders
that qualify as small businesses at the
close of an auction does not necessarily
represent the number of small
businesses currently in service. Further,
the Commission does not generally track
subsequent business size unless, in the
context of assignments or transfers,
unjust enrichment issues are implicated.
Additionally, since the Commission
does not collect data on the number of
employees for licensees providing these
services, at this time we are not able to
estimate the number of licensees with
active licenses that would qualify as
small under the SBA’s small business
size standard.
263. 3650–3700 MHz band. Wireless
broadband service licensing in the
3650–3700 MHz band provides for
nationwide, non-exclusive licensing of
terrestrial operations, utilizing
contention-based technologies, in the
3650 MHz band (i.e., 3650–3700 MHz).
Licensees are permitted to provide
services on a non-common carrier and/
or on a common carrier basis. Wireless
broadband services in the 3650–3700
MHz band fall in the Wireless
Telecommunications Carriers (except
Satellite) industry with an SBA small
business size standard that classifies a
business as small if it has 1,500 or fewer
employees. U.S. Census Bureau data for
2017 show that there were 2,893 firms
that operated in this industry for the
entire year. Of this number, 2,837 firms
employed fewer than 250 employees.
Thus under the SBA size standard, the
Commission estimates that a majority of
licensees in this industry can be
considered small.
264. The Commission has not
developed a small business size
standard applicable to 3650–3700 MHz
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band licensees. Based on the licenses
that have been granted, however, we
estimate that the majority of licensees in
this service are small internet access
service providers. As of November 2021,
Commission data shows that there were
902 active licenses in the 3650–3700
MHz band. However, since the
Commission does not collect data on the
number of employees for licensees
providing these services, at this time we
are not able to estimate the number of
licensees with active licenses that
would qualify as small under the SBA’s
small business size standard.
265. Fixed Microwave Services. Fixed
microwave services include common
carrier, private-operational fixed, and
broadcast auxiliary radio services. They
also include the Upper Microwave
Flexible Use Service (UMFUS),
Millimeter Wave Service (70/80/90
GHz), Local Multipoint Distribution
Service (LMDS), the Digital Electronic
Message Service (DEMS), 24 GHz
Service, Multiple Address Systems
(MAS), and Multichannel Video
Distribution and Data Service (MVDDS),
where in some bands licensees can
choose between common carrier and
non-common carrier status. Wireless
Telecommunications Carriers (except
Satellite) is the closest industry with an
SBA small business size standard
applicable to these services. The SBA
small size standard for this industry
classifies a business as small if it has
1,500 or fewer employees. U.S. Census
Bureau data for 2017 show that there
were 2,893 firms that operated in this
industry for the entire year. Of this
number, 2,837 firms employed fewer
than 250 employees. Thus under the
SBA size standard, the Commission
estimates that a majority of fixed
microwave service licensees can be
considered small.
266. The Commission’s small
business size standards with respect to
fixed microwave services involve
eligibility for bidding credits and
installment payments in the auction of
licenses for the various frequency bands
included in fixed microwave services.
When bidding credits are adopted for
the auction of licenses in fixed
microwave services frequency bands,
such credits may be available to several
types of small businesses based on
average gross revenues (small, very
small, and entrepreneur) pursuant to the
competitive bidding rules adopted in
conjunction with the requirements for
the auction and/or as identified in Part
101 of the Commission’s rules for the
specific fixed microwave services
frequency bands.
267. In frequency bands where
licenses were subject to auction, the
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Commission notes that as a general
matter, the number of winning bidders
that qualify as small businesses at the
close of an auction does not necessarily
represent the number of small
businesses currently in service. Further,
the Commission does not generally track
subsequent business size unless, in the
context of assignments or transfers,
unjust enrichment issues are implicated.
Additionally, since the Commission
does not collect data on the number of
employees for licensees providing these
services, at this time we are not able to
estimate the number of licensees with
active licenses that would qualify as
small under the SBA’s small business
size standard.
268. Broadband Radio Service and
Educational Broadband Service.
Broadband Radio Service systems,
previously referred to as Multipoint
Distribution Service (MDS) and
Multichannel Multipoint Distribution
Service (MMDS) systems, and ‘‘wireless
cable,’’ transmit video programming to
subscribers and provide two-way high
speed data operations using the
microwave frequencies of the
Broadband Radio Service (BRS) and
Educational Broadband Service (EBS)
(previously referred to as the
Instructional Television Fixed Service
(ITFS)). Wireless cable operators that
use spectrum in the BRS often
supplemented with leased channels
from the EBS, provide a competitive
alternative to wired cable and other
multichannel video programming
distributors. Wireless cable
programming to subscribers resembles
cable television, but instead of coaxial
cable, wireless cable uses microwave
channels.
269. In light of the use of wireless
frequencies by BRS and EBS services,
the closest industry with an SBA small
business size standard applicable to
these services is Wireless
Telecommunications Carriers (except
Satellite). The SBA small business size
standard for this industry classifies a
business as small if it has 1,500 or fewer
employees. U.S. Census Bureau data for
2017 show that there were 2,893 firms
that operated in this industry for the
entire year. Of this number, 2,837 firms
employed fewer than 250 employees.
Thus under the SBA size standard, the
Commission estimates that a majority of
licensees in this industry can be
considered small.
270. According to Commission data as
December 2021, there were
approximately 5,869 active BRS and
EBS licenses. The Commission’s small
business size standards with respect to
BRS involves eligibility for bidding
credits and installment payments in the
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auction of licenses for these services.
For the auction of BRS licenses, the
Commission adopted criteria for three
groups of small businesses. A very small
business is an entity that, together with
its affiliates and controlling interests,
has average annual gross revenues that
exceed $3 million and did not exceed
$15 million for the preceding three
years, a small business is an entity that,
together with its affiliates and
controlling interests, has average gross
revenues that exceed $15 million and
did not exceed $40 million for the
preceding three years, and an
entrepreneur is an entity that, together
with its affiliates and controlling
interests, has average gross revenues not
exceeding $3 million for the preceding
three years. Of the ten winning bidders
for BRS licenses, two bidders claiming
the small business status won four
licenses, one bidder claiming the very
small business status won three
licenses, and two bidders claiming
entrepreneur status won six licenses.
One of the winning bidders claiming a
small business status classification in
the BRS license auction has an active
license as of December 2021.
271. The Commission’s small
business size standards for EBS define
a small business as an entity that,
together with its affiliates, its
controlling interests, and the affiliates of
its controlling interests, has average
gross revenues that are not more than
$55 million for the preceding five (5)
years, and a very small business is an
entity that, together with its affiliates, its
controlling interests, and the affiliates of
its controlling interests, has average
gross revenues that are not more than
$20 million for the preceding five (5)
years. In frequency bands where
licenses were subject to auction, the
Commission notes that as a general
matter, the number of winning bidders
that qualify as small businesses at the
close of an auction does not necessarily
represent the number of small
businesses currently in service. Further,
the Commission does not generally track
subsequent business size unless, in the
context of assignments or transfers,
unjust enrichment issues are implicated.
Additionally, since the Commission
does not collect data on the number of
employees for licensees providing these
services, at this time we are not able to
estimate the number of licensees with
active licenses that would qualify as
small under the SBA’s small business
size standard.
5. Satellite Service Providers
272. Satellite Telecommunications.
This industry comprises firms
‘‘primarily engaged in providing
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telecommunications services to other
establishments in the
telecommunications and broadcasting
industries by forwarding and receiving
communications signals via a system of
satellites or reselling satellite
telecommunications.’’ Satellite
telecommunications service providers
include satellite and earth station
operators. The SBA small business size
standard for this industry classifies a
business with $38.5 million or less in
annual receipts as small. U.S. Census
Bureau data for 2017 show that 275
firms in this industry operated for the
entire year. Of this number, 242 firms
had revenue of less than $25 million.
Additionally, based on Commission
data in the 2022 Universal Service
Monitoring Report, as of December 31,
2021, there were 65 providers that
reported they were engaged in the
provision of satellite
telecommunications services. Of these
providers, the Commission estimates
that approximately 42 providers have
1,500 or fewer employees.
Consequently, using the SBA’s small
business size standard, a little more
than half of these providers can be
considered small entities.
273. All Other Telecommunications.
This industry is comprised of
establishments primarily engaged in
providing specialized
telecommunications services, such as
satellite tracking, communications
telemetry, and radar station operation.
This industry also includes
establishments primarily engaged in
providing satellite terminal stations and
associated facilities connected with one
or more terrestrial systems and capable
of transmitting telecommunications to,
and receiving telecommunications from,
satellite systems. Providers of internet
services (e.g. dial-up ISPs) or VoIP
services, via client-supplied
telecommunications connections are
also included in this industry. The SBA
small business size standard for this
industry classifies firms with annual
receipts of $35 million or less as small.
U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017 show
that there were 1,079 firms in this
industry that operated for the entire
year. Of those firms, 1,039 had revenue
of less than $25 million. Based on this
data, the Commission estimates that the
majority of ‘‘All Other
Telecommunications’’ firms can be
considered small.
6. Cable Service Providers
274. Cable and Other Subscription
Programming. The U.S. Census Bureau
defines this industry as establishments
primarily engaged in operating studios
and facilities for the broadcasting of
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programs on a subscription or fee basis.
The broadcast programming is typically
narrowcast in nature (e.g., limited
format, such as news, sports, education,
or youth-oriented). These
establishments produce programming in
their own facilities or acquire
programming from external sources. The
programming material is usually
delivered to a third party, such as cable
systems or direct-to-home satellite
systems, for transmission to viewers.
The SBA small business size standard
for this industry classifies firms with
annual receipts less than $41.5 million
as small. Based on U.S. Census Bureau
data for 2017, 378 firms operated in this
industry during that year. Of that
number, 149 firms operated with
revenue of less than $25 million a year
and 44 firms operated with revenue of
$25 million or more. Based on this data,
the Commission estimates that a
majority of firms in this industry are
small.
275. Cable Companies and Systems
(Rate Regulation). The Commission has
developed its own small business size
standard for the purpose of cable rate
regulation. Under the Commission’s
rules, a ‘‘small cable company’’ is one
serving 400,000 or fewer subscribers
nationwide. Based on industry data,
there are about 420 cable companies in
the U.S. Of these, only seven have more
than 400,000 subscribers. In addition,
under the Commission’s rules, a ‘‘small
system’’ is a cable system serving 15,000
or fewer subscribers. Based on industry
data, there are about 4,139 cable systems
(headends) in the U.S. Of these, about
639 have more than 15,000 subscribers.
Accordingly, the Commission estimates
that the majority of cable companies and
cable systems are small.
276. Cable System Operators
(Telecom Act Standard). The
Communications Act of 1934, as
amended, contains a size standard for a
‘‘small cable operator,’’ which is ‘‘a
cable operator that, directly or through
an affiliate, serves in the aggregate fewer
than one percent of all subscribers in
the United States and is not affiliated
with any entity or entities whose gross
annual revenues in the aggregate exceed
$250,000,000.’’ For purposes of the
Telecom Act Standard, the Commission
determined that a cable system operator
that serves fewer than 677,000
subscribers, either directly or through
affiliates, will meet the definition of a
small cable operator based on the cable
subscriber count established in a 2001
Public Notice. Based on industry data,
only six cable system operators have
more than 677,000 subscribers.
Accordingly, the Commission estimates
that the majority of cable system
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operators are small under this size
standard. We note however, that the
Commission neither requests nor
collects information on whether cable
system operators are affiliated with
entities whose gross annual revenues
exceed $250 million. Therefore, we are
unable at this time to estimate with
greater precision the number of cable
system operators that would qualify as
small cable operators under the
definition in the Communications Act.
7. Other
277. Electric Power Generators,
Transmitters, and Distributors. The U.S.
Census Bureau defines the utilities
sector industry as comprised of
‘‘establishments, primarily engaged in
generating, transmitting, and/or
distributing electric power.
Establishments in this industry group
may perform one or more of the
following activities: (1) operate
generation facilities that produce
electric energy; (2) operate transmission
systems that convey the electricity from
the generation facility to the distribution
system; and (3) operate distribution
systems that convey electric power
received from the generation facility or
the transmission system to the final
consumer.’’ This industry group is
categorized based on fuel source and
includes Hydroelectric Power
Generation, Fossil Fuel Electric Power
Generation, Nuclear Electric Power
Generation, Solar Electric Power
Generation, Wind Electric Power
Generation, Geothermal Electric Power
Generation, Biomass Electric Power
Generation, Other Electric Power
Generation, Electric Bulk Power
Transmission and Control, and Electric
Power Distribution.
278. The SBA has established a small
business size standard for each of these
groups based on the number of
employees which ranges from having
fewer than 250 employees to having
fewer than 1,000 employees. U.S.
Census Bureau data for 2017 indicate
that for the Electric Power Generation,
Transmission and Distribution industry
there were 1,693 firms that operated in
this industry for the entire year. Of this
number, 1,552 firms had less than 250
employees. Based on this data and the
associated SBA size standards, the
majority of firms in this industry can be
considered small entities.
279. All Other Information Services.
This industry comprises establishments
primarily engaged in providing other
information services (except news
syndicates, libraries, archives, internet
publishing and broadcasting, and Web
search portals). The SBA small business
size standard for this industry classifies
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firms with annual receipts of $30
million or less as small. U.S. Census
Bureau data for 2017 show that there
were 704 firms in this industry that
operated for the entire year. Of those
firms, 556 had revenue of less than $25
million. Consequently, we estimate that
the majority of firms in this industry are
small entities.
280. internet Service Providers (NonBroadband). internet access service
providers using client-supplied
telecommunications connections (e.g.,
dial-up ISPs) as well as VoIP service
providers using client-supplied
telecommunications connections fall in
the industry classification of All Other
Telecommunications. The SBA small
business size standard for this industry
classifies firms with annual receipts of
$35 million or less as small. For this
industry, U.S. Census Bureau data for
2017 show that there were 1,079 firms
in this industry that operated for the
entire year. Of those firms, 1,039 had
revenue of less than $25 million.
Consequently, under the SBA size
standard a majority of firms in this
industry can be considered small.
D. Description of Projected Reporting,
Recordkeeping, and Other Compliance
Requirements for Small Entities
281. In the Notice, we largely seek to
reestablish the framework the
Commission previously adopted in the
2015 Open Internet Order. We first
propose to reclassify BIAS as a
telecommunications service under Title
II of the Act and to reclassify mobile
BIAS as a commercial mobile service.
We also propose to reestablish rules to
prevent ISPs from engaging in practices
harmful to consumers, competition, and
public safety and that provide the
foundation for a national regulatory
approach toward BIAS. Specifically, we
propose to adopt rules to prohibit ISPs
from blocking, throttling, or engaging in
paid or affiliated prioritization
arrangements. We further propose to
reinstate the general conduct standard
adopted in the 2015 Open Internet
Order, which would prohibit practices
that cause unreasonable interference or
unreasonable disadvantage to
consumers or edge providers.
Additionally, we propose to retain
current disclosure obligations for ISPs,
and seek comment on the means of
disclosure, the interplay between the
transparency rule and current
broadband label requirements, as well
as any additional enhancements or
changes the Commission should
consider. While we expect the proposals
in the Notice will impose new or
additional reporting, recordkeeping
and/or other compliance obligations on
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small and other entities, we also
anticipate that the burden for small and
other entities to comply with the
reclassification and rules will be
minimal, as they will be entering a
regulatory framework with which they
are already and recently familiar. At this
time however, the Commission is not in
a position to determine whether, if
adopted, our proposals and the matters
upon which we seek comment will
require small entities to hire
professionals to comply with the
proposed rules in the Notice, and cannot
quantify the cost of compliance with the
potential rule changes discussed herein.
We seek comment from small entities
that have concerns about potential
hardships or other matters related to our
proposed rules, and with compliance,
should they be adopted.
282. Certain compliance obligations
regarding the content of transparency
disclosures that we discuss in the Notice
and seek comment on are beyond those
that currently exists. For instance, we
seek comment on additional disclosure
specifications that were established in
the 2015 Open Internet Order and
repealed by the RIF Order, including
commercial terms about price and
related terms and their relationship with
disclosures regarding privacy and
redress options, and about performance
characteristics related to network
performance and network practices. We
also seek comment on whether ISPs
should disclose additional information
regarding their performance
measurement methodologies and
practices. We discuss additional
disclosure requirements that were not
adopted in the 2015 Open Internet
Order, such as those regarding the
source, location, timing, or duration of
network congestion, packet corruption
and jitter, or disclosures that permit end
users to identify application-specific
usage or to distinguish which user or
device contributed to which part of the
total data usage. We also ask if ISPs
should be required to make more
detailed disclosures regarding the
requirements, restrictions, or standards
for enforcement of data caps. Further,
we seek comment on whether to
incorporate into the transparency rule
the Commission’s clarifications and
guidance regarding prior versions of the
transparency rule, such as point-of-sale
disclosures, service descriptions,
disclosures for the benefit of edge
providers, disclosures regarding security
measures, and consistency between
ISPs’ disclosures under the transparency
rule and their advertising claims or
other public statements. We also discuss
how providers would make the required
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could minimize the economic impact
for small entities that already have
experience operating under, and
complying with, the 2015 Open Internet
Order.
286. We also believe and tentatively
conclude that the proposed
reclassification of BIAS as a
telecommunications service will
enhance the Commission’s ability to
continue to advance national security
and preserve public safety by protecting
the nation’s communications networks
from potential entities, equipment, and
services that pose threats to national
security and law enforcement. However,
in the alternative to reclassification, we
consider, inquire, and seek comment on
whether there is other authority that can
be used by the Commission that would
allow it to protect the nation’s
communications networks against ISPs
that pose threats national security and
law enforcement. To the extent there is
such an alternative available to the
Commission, in the Notice, we request
that commenters specify the statutory
authority, and how this authority can be
used by the Commission to address
national security and law enforcement
E. Steps Taken To Minimize the
concerns. We believe reclassification
Significant Economic Impact on Small
also will protect the information of
Entities, and Significant Alternatives
small and other telecommunications
Considered
carriers, equipment manufacturers, and
284. The RFA requires an agency to
other entities that interact with ISPs that
describe any significant alternatives that are potential national security threats, or
it has considered in reaching its
are owned or controlled by, or subject
proposed approach, which may include to the jurisdiction or direction of foreign
(among others) the following four
adversaries. Accordingly, we seek
alternatives: (1) the establishment of
comment on how reclassification of
differing compliance or reporting
BIAS will affect ISPs as well as
requirements or timetables that take into telecommunications carriers and
account the resources available to small equipment manufacturers, and other
entities; (2) the clarification,
entities that interact with ISPs, if
consolidation, or simplification of
adopted.
compliance or reporting requirements
287. In the Notice, we indicate that as
under the rule for such small entities;
part of our proposal to reinstate the
(3) the use of performance, rather than
reclassification of BIAS as a
design, standards; and (4) an exemption telecommunications service, we will
from coverage of the rule, or any part
continue to define BIAS as defined in
thereof, for such small entities.
part 8 of the Commission’s rules and
285. At the outset of the
‘‘mass market’’ as defined in the 2015
reclassification discussion, we request
Open Internet Order and RIF Order. We
information on the benefits and burdens consider whether there are reasons for
of the proposed reclassification, and
the Commission to modify these
specifically request feedback on the
definitions. Similarly, we consider
impact on small businesses and small
whether there is any reason to depart
ISPs. We also request feedback on the
from our tentative conclusion that BIAS
proposed conduct rules prohibiting ISPs is a telecommunications service and our
from blocking or throttling the
supporting analysis. Further, while we
information transmitted over their
propose to reinstate the classification of
networks, or engaging in paid or
mobile BIAS as a commercial mobile
affiliated prioritization arrangements,
service as adopted in the 2015 Open
and the general conduct rule, all of
Internet Order, alternatively, we
which, as we discuss in the Notice, track propose to find that mobile BIAS is the
the specific language from the 2015
functional equivalent of a commercial
mobile service and, therefore, not
Open Internet Order. We believe our
private mobile service, even if mobile
proposal to reestablish the framework
BIAS does not meet the definition of
from the Commission’s 2015 decision
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disclosures, such as via a publicly
available website, by transmitting
disclosures directly to the Commission,
and by additional locations or means.
Additionally, we seek comment on
whether such disclosures should be in
a machine-readable format and
regarding the accessibility of such
disclosures to individuals with
disabilities. Lastly, we explore what, if
any, recordkeeping requirements we
should implement as a means for ISPs
to provide the types of information or
records needed to support the content of
their disclosures.
283. The Commission seeks comment
on all of the above proposals to evaluate
whether compliance with these
requirements would cause an undue
burden on small or other entities, if
adopted. We therefore expect the
information we receive in comments,
including cost and benefit data, to help
the Commission further identify and
evaluate relevant matters for small
entities, such as compliance costs, and
other burdens that may result from the
proposals and inquiries we make in the
Notice.
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‘‘commercial mobile service.’’ The
Notice seeks comment on these matters.
288. The specific conduct rules we
propose in the Notice would prohibit
ISPs from blocking, throttling, or
engaging in paid or affiliated
prioritization arrangements. In the
alternative, we consider whether the
need to prohibit any of these practices
has been eliminated by any new
technical advancements or market
developments. We also consider
whether our proposed no-blocking rule
which tracks the language of the rule we
adopted 2015 Open Internet Order, and
would apply to both fixed and mobile
ISPs, continues to be the best noblocking principle for ISPs. The noblocking rule is a broadly accepted
principle in the industry, including by
ISPs, and many ISPs continue to
advertise a commitment to open internet
principles on their websites, which
includes commitments not to block
traffic except in certain circumstances,
notwithstanding the 2017 repeal of the
no-blocking rule. Similarly, after the
repeal of the no-throttling rule, ISPs
continue to advertise on their websites
that they do not throttle traffic except in
limited circumstances. As a result, we
believe the economic impact on, and
costs to comply with the proposed noblocking rule, and the no throttling of
lawful internet traffic rule, will be
minimal for small ISPs. We however
seek information on specific costs and
burdens these rules would impose for
small ISPs.
289. Regarding our proposed ban on
paid prioritization practices, we take
steps to minimize the economic impact
for small ISPs by requesting information
on the compliance costs small ISPs
would incur as a result of such a ban,
and by exploring whether there are
alternatives we can take to protect
consumers, and the open internet from
the harms of paid prioritization
practices that should be considered as
an alternative to a flat ban. Similarly, we
consider whether there is another
standard we should adopt to establish a
general conduct rule, as an alternative to
the general conduct standard for ISPs
we propose in the Notice that tracks the
2015 Open Internet Order. We
specifically inquire whether we should
instead rely on the ‘‘just and
reasonable’’ and ‘‘unreasonable
discrimination’’ standards in sections
201 and 202 of the Act. The Notice seeks
comment on these matters.
290. We further propose to build upon
the foundation of our existing
transparency requirement adopted in
the 2010 Open Internet Order, and the
new broadband label requirements the
Commission put in place to give
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consumers a convenient tool to research
and compare broadband offerings. We
propose possible modifications or
additions to the requirements pertaining
to the content of required disclosure and
the means of disclosure to update the
transparency rule, to ensure that
sufficient information is made available
to end users, edge providers, the broader
internet community, and the
Commission, which allows for the
timely and effective assessment of ISPs’
terms and conditions for BIAS. Specific
disclosure modification alternatives we
consider, and seek comment on include
whether to: (1) require disclosures
regarding the source, location, timing, or
duration of network congestion, packet
corruption and jitter, or disclosures that
permit end users to identify applicationspecific usage or to distinguish which
user or device contributed to which part
of the total data usage, (2) require more
detailed disclosures regarding the
requirements, restrictions, or standards
for enforcement of data caps; (3) require
specific content of particular relevance
to edge providers, the broader internet
community, or the Commission, and (4)
require different disclosures tailored to
different audiences, and specifically,
whether different content disclosures
should be required for mobile ISPs than
for fixed ISPs. Further, as an alternative
to modifications that only add
disclosure requirements, we inquire,
and seek comment on whether under
the current transparency rule there is
certain content that is required to be
disclosed that should no longer be
required after weighing the relevant
policy considerations at stake.
291. As we discuss in the Notice, our
objectives for proposing modifications
to the means of disclosure requirements
for ISPs is to ensure that we are taking
the appropriate steps to facilitate the
availability of the content of the
required disclosures in a timely and
effective manner, without undue
burdens on ISPs. Thus, while we
consider and seek comment on
alternatives to modify the means of
disclosure requirements for ISPs such
as, (1) whether any additional
requirements are warranted regarding
ISPs’ website disclosures under the
transparency rule, (2) whether
disclosures under the transparency rule
should be required in additional
locations, and (3) possible direct
notification requirements, we also
consider whether there are existing
means of disclosure requirements that
should be eliminated because the
burdens imposed by these requirements
outweigh their benefits. We believe that
to the extent that there are content and/
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or means of disclosure requirements
that can be removed, removal of these
requirements could reduce the impact
for small entities of any additional
requirements that may be adopted.
292. Our assessment of how to
implement any rules we may adopt
relating to the transparency rule seeks to
identify any implementation issues for
small and other ISPs that may be
associated with potential modifications.
We specifically seek to understand the
impacts for small ISPs, such as whether
smaller ISPs need extra time to
implement any modifications to the
transparency rule.
293. More generally we consider
implementation alternatives that
include, (1) whether the Commission
should adopt new safe harbors for
compliance with the transparency rule,
(2) whether there are safe harbors the
Commission should adopt for
compliance with the transparency rule
as a whole, similar to the broadband
label safe harbor adopted in the 2015
Open Internet Order, and (3) whether
the Commission should adopt
recordkeeping requirements governing
the types of information or records ISPs
rely upon to support the content of their
disclosures made under the
transparency rule. With regard to any
recordkeeping requirements, we seek
information on specific ways
information could be retained that could
minimize the burden on small and other
ISPs, and what recordkeeping timeframe
would best balance the benefits to the
Commission of having the required
information available against the
compliance burden for small and other
ISPs. Overall, the Commission’s
objective is to determine the most costeffective ways of ensuring that
consumers, and edge providers receive
the information they need in a timely
and effective manner, while minimizing
the implementation and compliance
burdens for small and other ISPs,
consistent with these goals.
294. In the Notice and summarized
above, we discuss the potential effects
our rule proposals and alternatives
could have on small entities, and seek
comment on these matters. We also
discuss that the Commission envisions
the proposed BIAS reclassification as a
means to provide the basis for a national
regulatory approach rather than a
patchwork of state requirements, which
could help streamline and minimize
regulatory requirements for small
entities. Further, we propose broad
forbearance from statutory requirements
and Commission regulations for ISPs,
and note that the proposed forbearance
could substantially lessen the economic
impact of the proposed actions on small
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76095
entities. Accordingly, before reaching
final conclusions, and taking action in
this proceeding, the Commission
expects to further consider the
economic impact on small entities, and
additional alternatives that are
consistent with its goal of safeguarding
and securing the open internet, while
also imposing minimal burdens on
small entities, based on comments filed
in response to the Notice and this IRFA.
F. Federal Rules That May Duplicate,
Overlap, or Conflict With the Proposed
Rules
295. None.
VII. Ordering Clauses
296. Accordingly, it is ordered,
pursuant to the authority contained in
sections 1, 2, 3, 4(i)–(j), 10, 13, 201, 202,
208, 218, 230, 251, 254, 256, 257, 301,
303, 304, 307, 309, 316, 332, 403, 501,
503, 522, 536, and 548 of the
Communications Act of 1934, as
amended, and section 706 of the
Telecommunications Act of 1996, as
amended, 47 U.S.C. 151, 152, 153,
154(i)–(j), 160, 163, 201, 202, 208, 218,
230, 251, 254, 256, 257, 301, 303, 304,
307, 309, 316, 332, 403, 501, 503, 522,
536, 548, and 1302, that this Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking is adopted.
297. It is further ordered that,
pursuant to applicable procedures set
forth in §§ 1.415 and 1.419 of the
Commission’s rules, 47 CFR 1.415 and
1.419, interested parties may file
comments on the Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking on or before December 14,
2023, and reply comments on or before
January 17, 2024.
298. It is further ordered that the
Office of the Secretary, Reference
Information Center shall send a copy of
this Notice of Proposed Rulemaking,
including the Initial Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis, to the Chief
Counsel for Advocacy of the Small
Business Administration.
List of Subjects in 47 CFR Parts 8 and
20
Communications, Common carriers,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Telecommunications,
Telephone.
Federal Communications Commission.
Marlene Dortch,
Secretary.
Proposed Rules
For the reasons discussed in the
preamble, the Federal Communications
Commission proposes to amend 47 CFR
parts 8 and 20 as follows:
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 212 / Friday, November 3, 2023 / Proposed Rules
PART 8—[AMENDED]
1. The authority citation for part 8 is
revised to read as follows:
■
Authority: 47 U.S.C. 151, 152, 153, 154,
160, 163, 201, 202, 208, 218, 230, 251, 254,
256, 257, 301, 303, 304, 307, 309, 316, 332,
403, 501, 503, 522, 536, 548, 1302, 1753.
2. Amend part 8 by revising the part
heading to read as follows:
■
PART 8—SAFEGUARDING AND
SECURING THE OPEN INTERNET
■
3. Add § 8.2 to read as follows:
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§ 8.2
Conduct-based rules.
(a) Definitions. For purposes of this
section:
(1) Broadband internet access service
means a mass-market retail service by
wire or radio that provides the
capability to transmit data to and
receive data from all or substantially all
internet endpoints, including any
capabilities that are incidental to and
enable the operation of the
communications service, but excluding
dial-up internet access service. This
term also encompasses any service that
the Commission finds to be providing a
functional equivalent of the service
described in the previous sentence or
that is used to evade the protections set
forth in this part.
(2) Edge provider means any
individual or entity that provides any
content, application, or service over the
internet, and any individual or entity
that provides a device used for
accessing any content, application, or
service over the internet.
(3) End user means any individual or
entity that uses a broadband internet
access service.
(4) Reasonable network management
means a network management practice
that has a primarily technical network
management justification, but does not
include other business practices. A
network management practice is
reasonable if it is primarily used for and
tailored to achieving a legitimate
network management purpose, taking
into account the particular network
architecture and technology of the
broadband internet access service.
(b) No blocking. A person engaged in
the provision of broadband internet
access service, insofar as such person is
so engaged, shall not block lawful
content, applications, services, or nonharmful devices, subject to reasonable
network management.
(c) No throttling. A person engaged in
the provision of broadband internet
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access service, insofar as such person is
so engaged, shall not impair or degrade
lawful internet traffic on the basis of
internet content, application, or service,
or use of a non-harmful device, subject
to reasonable network management.
(d) No paid prioritization. (1) A
person engaged in the provision of
broadband internet access service,
insofar as such person is so engaged,
shall not engage in paid prioritization.
‘‘Paid prioritization’’ refers to the
management of a broadband provider’s
network to directly or indirectly favor
some traffic over other traffic, including
through use of techniques such as traffic
shaping, prioritization, resource
reservation, or other forms of
preferential traffic management, either:
(i) In exchange for consideration
(monetary or otherwise) from a third
party, or
(ii) To benefit an affiliated entity.
(2) The Commission may waive the
ban on paid prioritization only if the
petitioner demonstrates that the practice
would provide some significant public
interest benefit and would not harm the
open nature of the internet.
(e) General conduct standard. (1) Any
person engaged in the provision of
broadband internet access service,
insofar as such person is so engaged,
shall not unreasonably interfere with or
unreasonably disadvantage:
(i) End users’ ability to select, access,
and use broadband internet access
service or the lawful internet content,
applications, services, or devices of
their choice, or
(ii) Edge providers’ ability to make
lawful content, applications, services, or
devices available to end users.
(2) Reasonable network management
shall not be considered a violation of
this rule.
(f) Effect on other obligations or
authorizations. Nothing in this part
supersedes any obligation or
authorization a provider of broadband
internet access service may have to
address the needs of emergency
communications or law enforcement,
public safety, or national security
authorities, consistent with or as
permitted by applicable law, or limits
the provider’s ability to do so. Nothing
in this part prohibits reasonable efforts
by a provider of broadband internet
access service to address copyright
infringement or other unlawful activity.
PART 20—COMMERCIAL MOBILE
SERVICES
4. The authority citation for part 20
continues to read as follows:
■
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Fmt 4701
Sfmt 9990
Authority: 47 U.S.C. 151, 152(a), 154(i),
155, 157, 160, 201, 214, 222, 251(e), 301, 302,
303, 303(b), 303(r), 307, 307(a), 309, 309(j)(3),
316, 316(a), 332, 610, 615, 615a, 615b, and
615c, unless otherwise noted.
5. In § 20.3 amend paragraph (b) by
revising the definitions of ‘‘Commercial
mobile radio service’’ and ‘‘Public
Switched Network’’ to read as follows:
■
§ 20.3
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Commercial mobile radio service. A
mobile service that is:
(1)(i) Provided for profit, i.e., with the
intent of receiving compensation or
monetary gain;
(ii) An interconnected service; and
(iii) Available to the public, or to such
classes of eligible users as to be
effectively available to a substantial
portion of the public; or
(2) The functional equivalent of such
a mobile service described in paragraph
(1) of this definition, including a mobile
broadband internet access service as
defined in § 8.2 of this chapter.
(3) A variety of factors may be
evaluated to make a determination
whether the mobile service in question
is the functional equivalent of a
commercial mobile radio service,
including: Consumer demand for the
service to determine whether the service
is closely substitutable for a commercial
mobile radio service; whether changes
in price for the service under
examination, or for the comparable
commercial mobile radio service, would
prompt customers to change from one
service to the other; and market research
information identifying the targeted
market for the service under review.
(4) Unlicensed radio frequency
devices under part 15 of this chapter are
excluded from this definition of
Commercial mobile radio service.
*
*
*
*
*
Public Switched Network. The
network that includes any common
carrier switched network, whether by
wire or radio, including local exchange
carriers, interexchange carriers, and
mobile service providers, that uses the
North American Numbering Plan, or
public IP addresses, in connection with
the provision of switched services.
*
*
*
*
*
[FR Doc. 2023–23630 Filed 11–2–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 212 (Friday, November 3, 2023)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 76048-76096]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-23630]
[[Page 76047]]
Vol. 88
Friday,
No. 212
November 3, 2023
Part V
Federal Communications Commission
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47 CFR Parts 8 and 20
Safeguarding and Securing the Open Internet; Proposed Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 88 , No. 212 / Friday, November 3, 2023 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 76048]]
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FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
47 CFR Parts 8 and 20
[WC Docket No. 23-320; FCC 23-83; FR ID 179272]
Safeguarding and Securing the Open Internet
AGENCY: Federal Communications Commission.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In this document, the Federal Communications Commission's
(Commission) adopted a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) that
proposes to reestablish the Commission's authority over broadband
internet access service by classifying it as a telecommunications
service under Title II of the Communications Act. This NPRM proposes to
classify broadband internet access service as a telecommunications
service and provide the Commission with authority necessary to
safeguard the open internet, advance national security, and protect
public safety. The NPRM also proposes to reestablish conduct rules for
internet service providers that would provide a national approach for
safeguarding internet openness.
DATES: Comments are due on or before December 14, 2023, and reply
comments are due on or before January 17, 2024. Written comments on the
Paperwork Reduction Act proposed information collection requirements
must be submitted by the public and other interested parties on or
before January 2, 2024.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by WC Docket No. 23-320
by any of the following methods:
Electronic Filers: Comments may be filed electronically
using the internet by accessing ECFS: https://www.fcc.gov/ecfs/.
Paper Filers: Parties who choose to file by paper must
file an original and one copy of each filing.
Filings can be sent by commercial overnight courier, or by first-
class or overnight U.S. Postal Service mail. All filings must be
addressed to the Commission's Secretary, Office of the Secretary,
Federal Communications Commission.
Commercial overnight mail (other than U.S. Postal Service
Express Mail and Priority Mail) must be sent to 9050 Junction Drive,
Annapolis Junction, MD 20701.
U.S. Postal Service first-class, Express, and Priority
mail must be addressed to 45 L Street NE, Washington, DC 20554.
Effective March 19, 2020, and until further notice, the
Commission no longer accepts any hand or messenger delivered filings.
This is a temporary measure taken to help protect the health and safety
of individuals, and to mitigate the transmission of COVID-19. See FCC
Announces Closure of FCC Headquarters Open Window and Change in Hand-
Delivery Policy, Public Notice, 35 FCC Rcd 2788 (2020). https://www.fcc.gov/document/fcc-closes-headquarters-open-window-and-changes-hand-delivery-policy.
People with Disabilities: To request materials in accessible
formats for people with disabilities (braille, large print, electronic
files, audio format), send an email to [email protected] or call the
Consumer & Governmental Affairs Bureau at (202) 418-0530 (voice).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Wireline Competition Bureau,
Competition Policy Division, [email protected]. For additional
information concerning the Paperwork Reduction Act information
collection requirements contained in this document, send an email to
[email protected] or contact Nicole Ongele, [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a summary of the Commission's Notice
of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) in WC Docket No. 23-320, FCC 23-83,
adopted on October 19, 2023 and released on October 20, 2023. The full
text of the document is available on the Commission's website at
https://docs.fcc.gov/public/attachments/FCC-23-83A1.pdf. To request
materials in accessible formats for people with disabilities (e.g.,
braille, large print, electronic files, audio format, etc.), send an
email to [email protected] or call the Consumer & Governmental Affairs
Bureau at (202) 418-0530 (voice).
Initial Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 Analysis
This document contains proposed information collection
requirements. The Commission, as part of its continuing effort to
reduce paperwork burdens, invites the general public to comment on the
information collection requirements contained in this document, as
required by the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, Public Law 104-13.
Public and agency comments are due January 2, 2024.
Comments should address: (a) whether the proposed collection of
information is necessary for the proper performance of the functions of
the Commission, including whether the information shall have practical
utility; (b) the accuracy of the Commission's burden estimates; (c)
ways to enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of the information
collected; (d) ways to minimize the burden of the collection of
information on the respondents, including the use of automated
collection techniques or other forms of information technology; and (e)
way to further reduce the information collection burden on small
business concerns with fewer than 25 employees. In addition, pursuant
to the Small Business Paperwork Relief Act of 2002, Public Law 107-198,
see 44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(4), we seek specific comment on how we might
further reduce the information collection burden for small business
concerns with fewer than 25 employees.
Providing Accountability Through Transparency Act
The Providing Accountability Through Transparency Act, Public Law
118-9, requires each agency, in providing notice of a rulemaking, to
post online a brief plain-language summary of the proposed rule. The
required summary of this Notice of Proposed Rulemaking/Further Notice
of Proposed Rulemaking is available at https://www.fcc.gov/proposed-rulemakings.
Synopsis
I. Proposed Classification of Broadband Internet Access Service
1. Today, we propose to return BIAS to its classification as a
telecommunications service under Title II of the Act. We further
propose to reclassify mobile BIAS as a commercial mobile service. In
the time since the RIF Order (83 FR 7852 (Feb. 22, 2018)), propelled by
the COVID-19 pandemic, BIAS has become even more essential to consumers
for work, health, education, community, and everyday life. In light of
this reality, we believe that looking anew at the classification of
BIAS is necessary and timely given the critical importance of ensuring
the Commission's authority to fulfill policy objectives and
responsibilities to protect this vital service. Notable among these is
enabling the Commission to safeguard the fair and open internet though
a national regulatory approach. The Commission also has an important
statutory mandate to protect ``life and property'' by supporting
national security and public safety. We anticipate that the proper
classification of BIAS as a telecommunications service will enhance the
Commission's ability to advance these and other important interests,
including protection of consumers' privacy and data security
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interests and consumers' ability to access BIAS. Beyond these areas, we
believe that classification of BIAS as a telecommunications service
represents the best reading of the text of the Act in light of the
marketplace reality of how the service is offered and perceived today.
Below, we seek comment on our proposed classification framework, and
particularly seek comment on its benefits and burdens. Additionally, we
seek comment on the impact of reclassification on small businesses and
entities, including small ISPs.
A. Broadband Internet Access Service Is Essential
2. While BIAS connections have long been important to full
participation in our society and economy, we believe the COVID-19
pandemic dramatically changed the importance of the internet today, and
seek comment on our belief. Not unlike other essential utilities, such
as electricity and water, BIAS connections have proved essential to
every aspect of our daily lives, from work, education, and healthcare,
to commerce, community, and free expression. BIAS connections were so
critical during the pandemic that Congress undertook a number of
federal initiatives to improve the accessibility and affordability of
BIAS across America, finding in the preamble to Sec. 60101 of the
bipartisan Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (Infrastructure Act)
that ``access to affordable, reliable, high-speed broadband is
essential to full participation in modern life in the United States.''
A Pew Research Center survey highlighted this reality, showing that
high speed internet was essential or important to 90 percent of U.S.
adults during the COVID-19 pandemic. That finding is backed by the
tremendous use during the pandemic of text messaging applications,
voice services, and video conferencing for work, school, civic
engagement, and connecting with family and communities, accessed
through consumers' fixed and mobile broadband connections. The
increased importance of BIAS connections has persisted post-pandemic.
Compared to last year, nearly 45 percent of respondents to one survey
said their internet usage had increased, while the average amount of
time respondents spent actively using the internet on a phone, tablet,
or computer was eight hours, excluding passive activities, such as
streaming music or video in the background. OpenVault reports that
almost 50 percent of fixed broadband subscribers in the U.S. used 533
gigabytes (GB) or more of bandwidth per month through the fourth
quarter of 2022, compared to about 10 percent of subscribers in 2017.
From year-end 2020 to year-end 2021, monthly data usage per smartphone
subscriber rose to an average of 12.1 GB per subscriber per month--an
increase of approximately 12 percent. We seek comment on how consumers'
usage and view of BIAS has changed since 2018, when Title II
classification was reversed, and particularly since the onset of the
pandemic in 2020. In what ways has the importance of BIAS to consumers
stayed the same? How should any evolution in the importance of BIAS to
consumers drive our analysis today? We also seek comment on how the
importance of BIAS is expected to evolve going forward.
3. We tentatively conclude that developments in the importance of
the internet to consumers demonstrate that consumers perceive and use
BIAS as a standalone service that provides telecommunications. In the
2015 Open Internet Order (80 FR 19737 (April 13, 2015)), the Commission
concluded that consumers perceive BIAS both as a standalone offering
and as providing telecommunications. The D.C. Circuit found in USTA
that these conclusions had ``extensive support in the record and
together justify the Commission's decision to reclassify broadband as a
telecommunications service.'' As the D.C. Circuit recognized, ``[e]ven
the most limited examination of contemporary broadband usage reveals
that consumers rely on the service primarily to access third-party
content.'' We believe that the increased importance of BIAS to
consumers since the onset of the pandemic shows that consumers'
perception and use of BIAS as a standalone telecommunications service
is even more pronounced now than it was in 2015. Indeed, consumers' use
of BIAS today appears to go to the very heart of the purposes for which
consumers have historically utilized ``telecommunication services'': to
``transmi[t], between or among points specified by the user, of
information of the user's choosing, without change in the form or
content of the information as sent and received.'' We seek comment on
our tentative conclusion and this analysis.
4. We also believe that the COVID-19 pandemic, and the increased
importance of BIAS to consumers, has spurred ISPs to market BIAS as a
telecommunications service that is essential to accessing separate
data-related ``add-on'' offerings. In the 2015 Open Internet Order, the
Commission concluded that ISPs ``market and offer consumers separate
services that are best characterized as (1) a broadband internet access
service that is a telecommunications service; and (2) `add-on'
applications, content, and services that are generally information
services'' separate from the underlying broadband service. The
Commission specifically found that ISPs market their BIAS ``primarily
as a conduit for the transmission of data across the internet,'' with
fixed providers distinguishing service offerings on the basis of
transmission speeds, while mobile providers advertise speed,
reliability, and coverage of their networks. Although the RIF Order
contended that ``ISPs generally market and provide information
processing capabilities and transmission capabilities together as a
single service,'' it did not provide examples. Examples of ISP
marketing today appear even more focused than in 2015 on the capability
of BIAS to transmit information of users' choosing between internet
endpoints, rather than its capability to generate, acquire, store,
transform, process, retrieve, utilize, or make available that
information. Such marketing emphasizes faster speeds aimed at
connecting multiple devices, unlimited data for mobile service, and
reliable and secure coverage. At the same time, ISPs appear to
advertise data-related offerings as separate services that can be
bundled with or added on to their BIAS services, including
subscriptions to unaffiliated video and music streaming services, new
devices, access to Wi-Fi hotspots, or mobile security apps. We seek
comment generally on how BIAS offerings are advertised today. Have
fixed or mobile ISPs changed their marketing or advertising of BIAS
since 2018? We seek evidence and examples of how the BIAS market is
shaped today, and particularly how it has changed in response to
developments in consumers' perception about the essential nature of
BIAS connections. How does the current marketing of BIAS by ISPs bear
on our tentative determination that such service is a
telecommunications service? We also seek comment on ways ISPs'
advertising of bundled services and devices as ``add-ons'' to their
BIAS offerings has evolved as a result of recent changes in the
importance of BIAS to consumers. How do these additional offerings
modify the underlying BIAS offered by the ISP, if at all?
5. We further seek comment on the development of third-party
services and devices that utilize BIAS. We believe that since the 2018
reclassification of BIAS, and particularly as a result of the COVID-19
pandemic, there is substantial market proliferation of third-party
services and devices and that
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consumers' use of these offerings significantly outweigh their use of
ISPs' affiliated offerings. We seek comment on this observation. How
have trends in third-party services and devices impacted consumer use
of BIAS? In what ways have these services and devices driven demand for
fixed and mobile BIAS?
B. Reclassification is Necessary To Ensure Internet Openness, Safeguard
National Security, Protect Public Safety, and Support Other Public
Interest Goals
6. Given how essential BIAS is to consumers' daily lives, we
believe that our proposed reclassification of BIAS as a
telecommunications service is necessary to unlock tools the Commission
needs to fulfill its objectives and responsibilities to safeguard this
vital service. Critical among these is enabling the Commission to
ensure that the internet is open and fair, including by establishing a
national regulatory approach that would provide consistent protections
for consumers and certainty for ISPs. We also believe that the proposed
reclassification would enhance the Commission's ability to safeguard
national security and protect public safety. Further, we anticipate
that returning BIAS to its telecommunications service classification
would provide us with better tools to address policy initiatives to
protect consumers when they use communications services and support
their ability to access BIAS, including through the Commission's
universal service programs. We believe the RIF Order's reclassification
of BIAS as an information service not only inhibits the Commission's
ability to achieve these outcomes, but that its policy rationales
failed to support that reclassification. Below, we seek comment on
these views and on any other considerations bearing on the grounds for
us to return to a telecommunications service classification of BIAS,
including the impact of our proposed reclassification on small ISPs and
other small entities. In seeking comment on potential reclassification,
we also welcome the submission of economic analyses that weigh the
costs and benefits of the Commission taking such action. We also invite
commenters to identify whether there are any other regulatory
frameworks administered by the Commission, not discussed below, that
might be affected by our proposed reclassification, and seek comment on
how such reclassification would affect those frameworks.
7. Beyond these issues, we invite comment on additional public
policy considerations we should examine in our analysis of BIAS
classification. For instance, to what extent are there any reasonable
reliance interests we should consider? We expect any commenters
claiming reliance to submit evidence demonstrating the existence,
magnitude, and reasonableness of any alleged reliance interests.
1. Ensuring Internet Openness
8. In light of how essential BIAS connectivity is to consumers
following the COVID-19 pandemic, we believe that the open internet must
be protected to ensure consumers can use their BIAS connections in all
the lawful ways they see fit. We tentatively conclude that
reclassification of BIAS as a telecommunications service will allow the
Commission to safeguard the open internet and seek comment on this
tentative conclusion. As an initial manner, following Title II
classification, the Commission could rely on its authority in sections
201 and 202 of the Act to address practices that are unjust,
unreasonable, or unreasonably discriminatory. Below, we also propose to
reinstate rules that prohibit ISPs from blocking or throttling the
information transmitted over their networks or engaging in paid or
affiliated prioritization arrangements. Additionally, we propose to
reinstate a general conduct standard that would prohibit practices that
cause unreasonable interference or unreasonable disadvantage to
consumers or edge providers. Our proposal would leave the existing
transparency requirements undisturbed. The proposed rules would
establish clear standards for ISPs to maintain internet openness and
would give the Commission a solid basis on which to take enforcement
action against conduct that prevents consumers from fully accessing all
of the critical services available through the internet. We seek
comment on this analysis. In particular, how would these rules ensure
that consumers can continue to use their internet connections for
healthcare, education, work, commerce, and civic engagement? What would
be the potential impact on these uses if the open internet is not
secured?
9. We further believe reclassification would enable the Commission
to establish a nationwide framework of open internet rules for ISPs. In
both the 2015 Open Internet Order and the RIF Order, the Commission
expressed concern that potentially inconsistent state laws could
increase burdens for ISPs and hinder the broadband market. With the
goal of avoiding this, the Commission, in each instance, attempted to
establish a framework that would preempt any inconsistent state laws.
However, by reclassifying broadband as a Title I service and
eliminating the conduct rules established in the 2015 Open Internet
Order, the RIF Order failed to achieve this goal, because the Mozilla
court vacated the RIF Order's blanket preemption of inconsistent state
laws, concluding that the Commission ``fail[ed] to ground its sweeping
Preemption Directive . . . in a lawful source of statutory authority.''
Thus, instead of creating ``a uniform set of federal regulations,'' the
RIF Order's hands-off approach to BIAS has led to the existence of
state-by-state open internet requirements it sought to avoid. We remain
concerned that differing state open internet requirements may be
burdensome for ISPs, particularly small ISPs, thus hindering the
broadband market, and at the same time, fail to ensure that all
consumers are protected from conduct harmful to internet openness. We
believe that reclassification will put our authority to preempt any
inconsistent state laws on substantially stronger legal footing,
thereby enabling the Commission to create a set of open internet
standards that will apply nationwide. We seek comment on this analysis.
2. Safeguarding National Security and Preserving Public Safety
10. We tentatively conclude that the demonstrated need to address
national security and public safety concerns makes it necessary and
timely to revisit the statutory classification of BIAS. The D.C.
Circuit criticized the RIF Order for giving short shrift to the
evidence of public safety concerns in the record before it. The RIF
Remand Order (86 FR 994 (Jan. 7, 2021)), in declining to reclassify
BIAS as a telecommunications service on that basis, largely dismissed
such concerns as speculative. But developments in recent years have
highlighted national security and public safety concerns arising in
connection with the U.S. communications sector, ranging from the
security risks posed by malicious cyber actors targeting network
equipment and infrastructure to the loss of communications capability
in emergencies through service outages. We believe it is now timely for
us to reevaluate the classification of BIAS to ensure the Commission
can use all of its capabilities to address threats to national security
and public safety.
11. National Security and Law Enforcement. We tentatively conclude
that authority under applicable Title II provisions, reinforced by the
Commission's existing authority, would
[[Page 76051]]
enhance the Commission's efforts to protect the national defense. The
Commission's attention to national security is a responsibility that
underlies its other statutory obligations, as evidenced by Congress's
statement in the Communications Act that among the reasons it created
the Commission was ``for the purpose of the national defense.'' This
responsibility was affirmed by Presidential Policy Directive 21, which
described how the FCC could, to the extent permitted by law, exercise
its authority and expertise to identify and address vulnerabilities in
the communications sector. We seek comment generally on how
reclassification would advance the Commission's fulfillment of its
national security responsibilities and how it specifically would affect
the Commission's efforts, in coordination with other agencies, and with
ISPs themselves, to protect the nation's communications networks from
entities and equipment and services that pose threats to national
security and law enforcement.
12. We tentatively conclude that our proposed reclassification
would enhance the Commission's ability to protect the nation's
communications networks from entities that pose threats to national
security and law enforcement pursuant to its authority under section
214 of the Act, and we seek comment on this tentative conclusion. Under
section 214, carriers must be authorized by the Commission to provide
domestic and international telecommunications service in the United
States. Section 214, however, applies to common carriers, and thus does
not apply to BIAS under its current classification as an information
service, potentially exposing the nation's communications networks to
national security and law enforcement threats by entities providing
BIAS. In the China Telecom Americas Order on Revocation and
Termination, China Unicom Americas Order on Revocation, and Pacific
Networks and ComNet Order on Revocation and Termination, the Commission
extensively evaluated national security and law enforcement
considerations raised by existing section 214 authorizations and
determined, based on the record, that the present and future public
interest, convenience, and necessity was no longer served by those
carriers' retention of their section 214 authority. In particular, the
Commission identified national security and law enforcement concerns
with respect to those entities' access to Internet Points of Presence
(PoPs) (usually located within data centers) and other harms in
relation to the services provided by those entities pursuant to section
214 authorization. The Commission concluded that China Telecom
Americas' (CTA) provision of services pursuant to its section 214
authority, ``whether offered individually or as part of a suite of
services--combined with CTA's physical presence in the United States,
CTA's ultimate ownership and control by the Chinese government, and
CTA's relationship with its indirect parent [China Telecommunications
Corporation], which itself maintains a physical presence in the United
States--present unacceptable national security and law enforcement
risks to the United States,'' and it reached similar conclusions in the
other proceedings. We believe the same national security and law
enforcement threats identified in those proceedings equally exist with
respect to entities providing BIAS, and that reclassifying BIAS as a
telecommunications service would allow the Commission to use its
section 214 authority to address those threats and other threats to our
communications networks. We seek comment on this analysis.
13. We also seek comment on other ways the proposed
reclassification would enhance the Commission's ability to address
national security and law enforcement threats by entities providing
BIAS. Are there other specific national security and law enforcement
risks in connection with the provision of BIAS resulting from the
current classification of BIAS as an information service? Have there
been relevant and demonstrable changes with respect to how nation-
states have sought to exploit the technological convergence of
broadband and other services that present vulnerabilities affecting the
national defense? We ask commenters to provide detailed comments on any
regulatory requirements designed to address such risks that would newly
apply to these entities if the Commission were to reclassify BIAS as a
telecommunications service. For instance, could the Commission prohibit
ISPs from entering into internet traffic exchange arrangements with
certain companies that operate data centers or other Internet Exchange
Points in the U.S.? Would reclassification enable the Committee for the
Assessment of Foreign Participation in the United States
Telecommunications Services Sector to review telecommunications
licenses or authorizations meeting appropriate thresholds of foreign
ownership or control for national security and law enforcement
concerns? Would reclassification increase law enforcement agencies'
ability to seek lawful assistance, including identification and
disruption of illegal activity, for investigations involving ISP
networks? For mobile BIAS, would reclassification extend the foreign
ownership restrictions for wireless common carriers that the Commission
applies under section 310(b) of the Act and its implementing rules? In
the absence of reclassification, does the Commission have other
authority that it could use that is sufficient to protect the nation's
communications networks against ISPs that pose national security and
law enforcement threats? If so, we ask commenters to indicate the
statutory authority and how the Commission could use such authority to
ensure national security and law enforcement concerns are addressed.
14. We also seek comment on how reclassification would support the
Commission's efforts to safeguard the nation's communications network
infrastructure from equipment and services that pose a security threat.
Pursuant to its universal service authority in section 254 of the Act,
its authority to regulate equipment in sections 302 and 303 of the Act,
and new mandates established by Congress through the Secure and Trusted
Communications Networks Act of 2019, as amended, and the Secure
Equipment Act of 2021 to address communications equipment and service
that poses an unacceptable risk to national security, the Commission
has undertaken significant efforts to improve supply chain security. In
particular, the Commission has: prohibited the use of universal service
fund (USF) support to purchase or obtain any equipment or services
produced or provided by companies posing a national security threat;
prohibited the use of federal subsidies administered by the Commission
and used for capital expenditures to provide advanced communications
service to purchase, rent, lease, or otherwise obtain such equipment or
services; created and maintained a list of communications equipment and
services that pose an unacceptable risk to the national security
(``covered equipment and services''); established the Secure and
Trusted Communications Networks Reimbursement Program (Reimbursement
Program) to reimburse the costs providers incur to remove, replace, and
dispose of covered Huawei and ZTE equipment and services from their
networks; and prohibited the authorization of equipment that poses a
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threat and the marketing and importation of such equipment in the
United States. We seek comment on how reclassification may allow the
Commission to further these efforts. For instance, would
reclassification give the Commission additional authority to restrict a
larger class of entities from using equipment and services that pose a
threat? Additionally, would reclassification give the Commission more
robust authority to require more entities to remove and replace covered
Huawei and ZTE communications equipment and services? Could the
Commission prohibit the use of covered equipment or services in any
network infrastructure that is used to route or transmit
communications, including data centers and internet exchange
facilities? Could we use the additional authority under Title II to
prohibit carriers from interconnecting with other carriers who have a
PoP within the U.S. and its territories that use such equipment and
services? Are there other ways Title II authority could be used to
address national security threats arising from equipment and services
outside the scope of our prior actions? How does the Commission's role
fit with that of other agencies that help to address potential security
threats from foreign actors to the nation's communications network and
equipment, and how would enhancements to the Commission's regulatory
authority as a result of reclassification bolster that role?
15. Cybersecurity. We believe that returning BIAS to its
telecommunications service classification would reinforce the
Commission's authority to support its efforts to enhance cybersecurity
in the communications sector, and we seek comment on this tentative
conclusion. Among such efforts are those pursuant to Presidential
Policy Directive 21, which tasks the Commission with ``identifying
communications sector vulnerabilities and working with industry and
other stakeholders to address those vulnerabilities . . . [and] to
increase the security and resilience of critical infrastructure within
the communications sector. . . .'' The Commission is actively involved
in federal interagency cybersecurity planning, coordination, and
response activities. However, the current classification of BIAS limits
the regulatory and operational actions that the Commission can take to
address cyber incidents impacting the communications sector, as well as
other critical infrastructure sectors. For example, the Commission has
limited authority to require providers of non-Title II services (e.g.,
ISPs) to adopt cybersecurity standards or performance goals, which
inhibits the Commission's ability to protect U.S. communications
services and infrastructure from cyber-attacks and to ensure that
communications devices and equipment do not pose security risks to
other critical infrastructure sectors. While the Commission will
continue to work closely with ISPs to secure their networks,
reclassification of BIAS as telecommunications service would provide
the Commission with the authority to act in the absence of voluntary
action by ISPs or in cases of emergency or significant risk. We
tentatively conclude that the proposed reclassification could address
this issue by enhancing the Commission's cybersecurity authority, and
we seek comment on this tentative conclusion.
16. Another initiative is the Commission's inquiry into
vulnerabilities threatening the security and integrity of the Border
Gateway Protocol (BGP), which impacts ``the transmission of data from
email, e-commerce, and bank transactions to interconnected Voice-over
Internet Protocol (VoIP) and 9-1-1 calls.'' The Commission noted that
``BGP's initial design, which remains widely deployed today, does not
include security features to ensure trust in the information that it is
used to exchange,'' which allows a bad network actor to ``deliberately
falsify BGP reachability information to redirect traffic to itself or
through a specific third-party network, and prevent that traffic from
reaching its intended recipient.'' Would reclassification provide the
Commission with additional authority to address BGP vulnerabilities,
including, for example, by requiring providers to deploy solutions to
address BGP vulnerabilities in the absence of voluntary action?
17. In what other ways could reclassification bolster the
Commission's authority to address cybersecurity in the communications
sector? For instance, would it strengthen the Commission's ability to
establish rules mandating that service providers implement
cybersecurity practices and risk management plans? Similarly, would
reclassification permit the Commission to consider cybersecurity in its
annual inquiry under section 706 of the Telecommunications Act 1996?
For example, could the Commission determine that only broadband
services that meet certain cybersecurity standards constitute
``advanced telecommunications capability''? To what extent would
reclassification allow us to address threats related to the DNS, which
enables domain names to resolve to the correct IP addresses, and other
naming protocols? Could the Commission use Title II authority to
require ISPs to block IP addresses that originate malicious software
and ransomware? Would reclassification allow the Commission to mandate
the adoption of Communications Security, Reliability, and
Interoperability Council (CSRIC) best practices directed to ISPs and
audit or enforce the implementation? Would it likewise enable the
Commission to use Title II authority to require ISPs to implement or
certify to their implementation of network security practices, such as
those recommended in Executive Order 14028, the National Cybersecurity
Strategy, or related cybersecurity measures recommended by the Deputy
National Security Advisor, the Office of National Cyber Director, and
other government agencies or intergovernmental agencies, such as the
Federal Acquisition Security Council (FASC)? Would reclassification
give the Commission sufficient authority to establish cybersecurity
requirements for other components that facilitate communications
between end points, such as internet exchange facilities and data
centers that route communications and deliver applications? Could the
Commission rely on authority in section 218 to require more
comprehensive cyber incident reporting? Would reclassification permit
the Commission to rely on a broader range of regulatory tools to ensure
network and service reliability and better support an effective 911 and
emergency preparedness efforts?
18. Public Safety. We next tentatively conclude that reclassifying
BIAS as a telecommunications service would enable the Commission to
advance several public safety initiatives, and we seek comment on this
tentative conclusion. As the Commission recognized in the RIF Remand
Order, ``[a]dvancing public safety is one of our fundamental
obligations.'' Indeed, the Commission is ``required to consider public
safety by . . . its enabling act.'' The Mozilla court explained that
when ```Congress has given an agency the responsibility to regulate a
market such as the telecommunications industry that it has repeatedly
deemed important to protecting public safety,' then the agency's
decisions `must take into account its duty to protect the public.' ''
We believe that the Commission's responsibility to address public
safety is becoming increasingly important as the severity and frequency
of natural
[[Page 76053]]
disasters are on the rise. We tentatively conclude that
reclassification would enhance the Commission's jurisdiction over ISPs,
which it could use in combination with other statutory authority to
ensure BIAS meets the needs of public safety entities and individuals
when they use those services for public safety purposes. We seek
comment on this tentative conclusion and analysis below. We note that
the RIF Order concluded that Title I classification advances, and does
not harm, public safety, primarily based on its overarching policy
rationales for reversing Title II classification. We seek comment on
the RIF Order's policy rationales and framework for protecting against
harms elsewhere in this Notice, and we invite commenters to address
whether those rationales sufficiently advance public safety. In
particular, we invite comment on whether the Commission's ability to
adopt ex ante regulations would provide better public safety
protections than an ex post enforcement framework.
19. We seek comment on how our proposed reclassification would
enable the Commission to support public safety officials' use of BIAS
for public safety purposes. As a general matter, broadband services
play an important role in how public safety officials communicate with
each other and how they deliver and receive information from the
public. Although much of the communications between public safety
entities and first responders take advantage of enterprise-level
dedicated public safety broadband services, they often rely on
commercial broadband services to communicate during emergency
situations. Increasingly, public safety entities rely on retail BIAS to
access various databases, share data with emergency responders, and
stream video into 911 and emergency operations centers. We also are
aware that public safety officials often use services accessible over-
the-top (OTT) of broadband connections, such as social media, to
communicate important and timely information to the public and to gain
valuable information from the public and build on-the-ground
situational awareness. We seek comment on the extent to which public
safety officials rely on BIAS for public safety purposes and on our
tentative conclusion that reclassification would give us additional
jurisdiction to advance the existing uses of BIAS by these officials.
20. We also seek comment on how reclassification could further
other public safety initiatives. For instance, while the Commission has
taken important steps to improve the effectiveness of Wireless
Emergency Alerts (WEAs), would classification of BIAS as a
telecommunications service enable the Commission to make the nation's
alert and warning capabilities more effective and resilient by, for
instance, requiring ISPs to transmit emergency alerts to their
subscribers? More recently, the Commission modernized its priority
services rules to authorize service providers to offer, on a voluntary
basis, priority treatment of data, video, and IP-based voice services
for public safety personnel and first responders, including by removing
outdated requirements that may impede the use of IP-based technologies.
Would reclassification allow the Commission to go a step further by
requiring service providers to offer prioritized routing for all IP-
based services and prioritized restoration for all network
infrastructure? Could the Commission require ISPs to participate in
Telecommunications Service Priority (TSP), Government Emergency
Telecommunications Service (GETS), and Wireless Priority Service (WPS)?
How, if at all, would reclassification allow the Commission to expand
the applicability, and therefore the public safety benefits, of the
Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act (CALEA) requirements?
21. We tentatively conclude that BIAS also plays an increasingly
important role in allowing the public to communicate with first
responders during emergency situations and seek comment on this
tentative conclusion. In the RIF Remand Order, the Commission noted
that retail broadband services are used to translate communications
with 911 callers and patients in the field and to deliver critical
information about 911 callers that is not delivered through the
traditional 911 network. Are there other ways in which BIAS can or does
supplement traditional 911 communications? The Commission has
undertaken various efforts in recent years to improve how the public
reaches and shares information with emergency service providers. What
effect, if any, would Title II classification of BIAS have on these and
future efforts? Would reclassification enhance the Commission's
jurisdiction to improve the flow of voice communications, photos,
videos, text messages, real-time text (RTT), or any other type of
communication from the public to emergency service providers through
Next Generation 911 or over the use of Wi-Fi calling to reach emergency
service providers? If so, how? We also believe BIAS is critical when
used by individuals with disabilities to communicate with public safety
services, and the Commission has taken several steps to improve access
to IP-enabled 911 communications for people with disabilities. How will
reclassification fortify our existing jurisdiction to ensure these
communications are not interrupted or degraded? To what extent does or
will BIAS support alternatives to 911 communications, and will
reclassification help to ensure that BIAS-based emergency
communications meet certain reliability and security standards? Would
reclassification of BIAS enhance the access to, availability of, and
service quality for IP-based communication services used by people with
disabilities in emergencies, including the IP-based forms of
telecommunications relay services (TRS)?
22. BIAS is also critical for allowing the public to easily and
efficiently access public safety resources and information. In
particular, members of the public often rely on BIAS during emergencies
to enable them to find and receive potentially life-saving information.
As the Commission stated in the RIF Remand Order, ``consumers regularly
use their mobile devices and broadband connections `to access broadly
available information regarding threatening weather, shelter-in-place
mandates, ongoing active-shooter scenarios, and other matters essential
to public safety.' '' The COVID-19 pandemic, severe natural disasters,
and other incidents have demonstrated the importance of the public
being able to access public safety information using their BIAS
connections. We seek comment on how reclassification would allow the
Commission to ensure that the public can access life-saving public
safety resources and information using BIAS.
23. Furthermore, BIAS is important for public safety communications
that occur outside of emergencies. The Commission observed in the RIF
Remand Order that the COVID-19 pandemic demonstrated that many
Americans rely on telemedicine over mass-market broadband services for
routine health care, triage, and basic health advice, and that the
ability of 5G networks to transmit massive amounts of data in real time
will also help enable new applications for advanced communications
between the public and health care officials, such as through the use
of wireless sensors to for remote patient monitoring and data
transmission so doctors can identify problems before they become
emergencies, and through the
[[Page 76054]]
development of connected ambulance services for faster patient
transport. BIAS connections are also playing a more important role in
home safety and security as consumers increasingly purchase home
security and monitoring systems that use connected devices to monitor,
deter, and address theft, breaking and entering, and other home threats
and BIAS connections are increasingly important for in-home monitoring
of individuals who are elderly or disabled. We seek comment on the
impact that reclassification may have on these and other public safety
applications that rely on BIAS.
24. Network Resiliency and Reliability. We tentatively conclude
that reclassifying BIAS as a telecommunications service would enhance
the Commission's ability to ensure the nation's communications networks
are resilient and reliable, and we seek comment on this tentative
conclusion. For instance, under the Commission's Network Outage
Reporting System (NORS), qualifying communications providers are
required to report to the Commission network outages that satisfy
certain criteria, and the Commission uses this information to advance
network resiliency and reliability. Because this reporting requirement
has generally been limited to outages affecting voice services, the
Commission has historically lacked reliable outage information for
today's modern, essential broadband networks, which inhibits the
Commission from fully ensuring the resiliency and reliability of those
networks. Would reclassification support the Commission's ability to
expand the scope of NORS to require ISPs to submit outage reports in
response to service incidents that cause outages or the degradation of
communications services, such as cybersecurity breaches, wire cuts,
infrastructure damages from natural disaster, and operator errors or
misconfigurations? Under rules implemented in 2022, Federal, State,
Tribal and Territorial public safety agencies are eligible to obtain
direct read-only access to outage information filed in NORS and the
Disaster Information Reporting System (DIRS) for their jurisdictions.
Would reclassification and enhanced NORS reporting afford public safety
officials greater transparency during outages and disasters to assess
the operational status of networks for dissemination of emergency
information or to assess where support is needed? Would it support
reliability efforts for calls and texts to 911 and the 988 Suicide and
Crisis Lifeline? How, if at all, would reclassification allow us to
further our goal to improve the reliability of wireless networks? Would
broadband reclassification give the Commission additional authority to
facilitate the use of Wi-Fi calling during emergencies or network
outages, and if so, to what extent could the Commission apply
reliability standards for Wi-Fi calling? Are there other ways that
reclassification of BIAS would help us improve network resiliency and
reliability, such as requirements for network upgrades and changes,
rules relating to recovery from network outages, and improving our
incident investigation and enforcement authority? What impact would any
such actions have on ISPs, particularly small ISPs?
3. Protecting Consumers' Privacy and Data Security
25. Since before the adoption of the 1996 Act, the Commission has
consistently protected consumers from activities that undermine their
ability to use communications services freely, fairly, and free from
abuse by bad actors. As the communications industry has changed and the
tactics used by bad actors have evolved, so too have the Commission's
efforts. The current information service classification of BIAS,
however, appears to inhibit the Commission's ability to fully ensure
that consumers are protected from harmful conduct when they use
communications services today and able to utilize these services in a
fair and secure manner. We believe that classification of BIAS as a
telecommunications service could support the Commission's efforts to
protect consumers' privacy and data security and relieve them from
unlawful robocalls and robotexts. We seek comment on this view.
26. Privacy and Data Protection. We tentatively conclude that
reclassification of BIAS as a telecommunications service would support
the Commission's efforts to safeguard consumers' privacy and data
security, and we seek comment on this tentative conclusion.
Highlighting the Commission's important role in this area, earlier this
year, Chairwoman Rosenworcel established the FCC Privacy and Data
Protection Task Force to coordinate the agency's efforts to protect
against and respond to consumer privacy infringements and data breaches
by communications providers. The Commission's efforts will rely on,
among other things, its authority under section 222 of the Act. That
provision governs telecommunications carriers' protection and use of
information obtained from their customers or other carriers, and
calibrates the protection of such information based on its sensitivity.
Congress imposed a duty on every telecommunications carrier to protect
the confidentiality of its customers' proprietary information,
according the category of customer proprietary network information
(CPNI) the greatest level of protection.
27. When the Commission classified BIAS as a telecommunications
service in the 2015 Open Internet Order, it declined to forbear from
applying section 222 of the Act, citing the need to protect consumers'
privacy regardless of whether they communicate via broadband or
telephone services. The RIF Order eliminated these statutory
protections for broadband customers and surrendered the Commission's
authority over ISPs' privacy and data protection practices. We believe
that ISPs are situated to collect vast swaths of information about
their customers, including personal information, financial information,
and information regarding subscriber online activity. We further
believe that consumers currently may not fully comprehend--and
therefore may not be able to meaningfully consent to--ISPs' collection,
processing, and disclosure of customer information, including
potentially through the use of artificial intelligence models. We are
also concerned that, absent statutory and regulatory requirements to do
so, ISPs may not adopt adequate administrative, technical, physical,
and procedural safeguards to protect their customers' data. Indeed,
ISPs appear to continue to be attractive targets to hackers and other
bad actors, putting BIAS customer data at significant risk of
compromise. We seek comment on these views.
28. Based on the foregoing, we once again propose herein not to
forbear from section 222. Returning BIAS to its telecommunications
service classification would bring ISPs back under the section 222
privacy and data security framework, and therefore restore those
protections for consumers. Additionally, classifying BIAS as a
telecommunications service could support a consistent privacy and data
security framework for voice and data services, which we believe
consumers often subscribe to from one provider in a bundle and perceive
to be part of the same service, particularly for mobile services. We
seek comment on this proposed analysis.
29. We further believe that, in addition to protecting consumers,
reclassifying BIAS as a telecommunications service and declining to
forbear from section 222 would protect information concerning entities
that interact with ISPs. Section
[[Page 76055]]
222 places an obligation on telecommunications carriers to protect the
confidentiality of the proprietary information of and relating to other
telecommunication carriers (including resellers), equipment
manufacturers, and business customers. We seek comment on how
reclassification of BIAS will affect telecommunications carriers and
equipment manufacturers who interact with ISPs, as well as the
customers those entities serve, such as content creators and edge
providers. Would these protections also have national security benefits
by, for example, deterring ISPs from contracting with foreign companies
that may pose a national security threat or are owned by, controlled
by, or subject to the jurisdiction or direction of foreign adversaries?
Would these section 222 requirements create a meaningful burden on
ISPs, especially small ISPs?
30. Robocalls and Robotexts. We seek comment on whether
reclassification can serve to enhance the Commission's authority to
support consumer privacy by combating illegal robocalls and robotexts.
In recent years, the Commission has undertaken extensive efforts to
address these invasive communications, including by establishing rules
for call authentication, robocall mitigation, and call blocking;
expanding requirements and restrictions to robotexts; and taking
enforcement action against providers who originate and transport these
communications. Yet bad actors continue to evolve their techniques to
find new ways to interrupt consumers and perpetuate fraud. We note that
many illegal robocalls are transmitted via VoIP networks and many
illegal robotexts are transmitted by OTT messaging services (e.g.,
iMessage, WhatsApp, and Signal). We seek comment on the extent to which
Title II classification would help the Commission in its efforts to
combat these practices. Would Title II classification grant the
Commission oversight to reach a larger class of entities, particularly
for messages and calls delivered via broadband networks? For example,
to the extent robotext scams include links to spoofed websites designed
to defraud consumers, would reclassification allow us to require that
ISPs block traffic to IP addresses associated with those websites?
Would reclassification allow the Commission to apply new requirements
and restrictions beyond what it can achieve under the sources of
authority the Commission has relied on to date for its robocall and
robotext actions? If so, how? Are there other ways in which
reclassification would help the Commission combat illegal robocalls and
robotexts? How would this affect ISPs, especially small ISPs?
4. Supporting Access to Broadband Internet Access Service
31. From the Commission's inception, it has played a critical role
in facilitating the proliferation of communications networks and
ensuring that consumers have access to the services these networks
provide. While these efforts are crucial to the Commission's mission,
we believe that the information service classification of BIAS has
limited the Commission's efforts to achieve these goals for the
communications service that has become fundamental to consumers'
everyday lives. Classifying BIAS as a telecommunications service will
enable the Commission to better support the deployment of wireline and
wireless infrastructure, advance universal service, and increase the
accessibility of communications networks. We seek comment on this
tentative conclusion. We also seek comment on whether, and how, we
could leverage our proposed reclassification in other proceedings to
further encourage access to BIAS by all consumers.
32. Wireline and Wireless Infrastructure. We seek comment on the
public policy impact of our proposed reclassification of BIAS on the
Commission's goals to support investment in and deployment of wireline
and wireless infrastructure. For example, section 224(b) of the Act
grants the Commission clear authority to regulate the rates, terms, and
conditions of pole attachments by a cable television system or provider
of telecommunications service. Since 2011, the Commission has
undertaken a series of reforms with the goal of improving access to
poles to, among other things, help speed the deployment of broadband
infrastructure. However, in the RIF Order, the Commission effectively
eliminated section 224 pole attachment rights of broadband-only
providers as a result of its classifying broadband as an information
service. In 2020, following the Mozilla court's direction that the
Commission ``grapple with the lapse in legal safeguards'' for
broadband-only providers that resulted from the RIF Order, the
Commission concluded that while there were potentially adverse effects
to this class of providers resulting from the loss of pole attachment
rights, the benefits of returning BIAS to an information service
classification outweighed any drawbacks. We tentatively conclude that
the Commission erred in its 2020 analysis and believe that
reclassifying BIAS as a telecommunications service will help support
the Commission's goals to facilitate broadband deployment, and we seek
comment on this tentative conclusion. How has the market for broadband-
only ISPs changed since 2015, in particular for new entrants and those
ISPs seeking infrastructure access via pole attachments? What effect
has the Commission's elimination of pole attachment rights for
broadband-only ISPs had on the deployment of broadband, particularly to
unserved or underserved areas? How would reinstatement of pole
attachment rights benefit or burden ISPs, particularly small ISPs? As
the Commission has recognized, Congress recently has made available
unprecedented levels of federal funding for broadband buildout,
including a variety of programs administered by the National
Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA), including the
Broadband, Equity, Access, and Deployment Program (BEAD), the State
Digital Equity Capacity Grant Program and its federal counterpart, the
Middle Mile Infrastructure Grant Program, and the Tribal Broadband
Connectivity Program. We believe that ensuring the protections of
section 224 are restored to all ISPs, including broadband-only
providers, will pave the way for quicker and less expensive broadband
deployment, thereby enabling that funding to go as far as possible. We
seek comment on that view.
33. We also seek comment on how reclassifying BIAS as a
telecommunications service and classifying mobile BIAS as a commercial
mobile service will impact the Commission's authority over wireless
infrastructure. Although section 332(e)(7) of the Act, and Commission
interpretation thereof, regulate state and local authority over the
placement, construction, and modification of personal wireless service
facilities, are there ways in which classifying broadband as a
telecommunications service can further advance the Commission's goals
to ``improve service quality and lower prices for consumers'' for
broadband access? Finally, we also seek comment on how reclassification
of BIAS as a telecommunications service may affect the Commission's
application of the Act's preemption frameworks in sections 253(d) and
332(c)(3) regarding infrastructure used to provide broadband-only
services.
34. Universal Service. We tentatively conclude that classifying
BIAS as a telecommunications service will strengthen our policy
initiatives to
[[Page 76056]]
support the availability and affordability of BIAS through USF
programs, and we seek comment on this tentative conclusion. The
Communications Act defines universal service as an ``evolving level of
telecommunications services,'' and charges the Commission with
periodically establishing such services. BIAS is now clearly an
essential service upon which consumers rely, and we believe that
placing BIAS outside of the Commission's Title II authority weakens the
Commission's ability to deliver universal service support for that
essential service, especially in rural areas. We seek comment on this
view. In Mozilla, the court found that the Commission failed to explain
how its universal service authority over telecommunications carriers in
section 254(e) of the Act could extend to ISPs without BIAS classified
as a telecommunications service for purposes of the Lifeline program,
and it remanded the issue back to the Commission. Although the
Commission conceded in the RIF Remand Order that under a Title I
regime, BIAS could not be a section 254(c) supported service because
section 254(c) defines universal service as an ``evolving level of
telecommunications services,'' it nevertheless asserted a theory under
section 254(e) to enable Lifeline support for BIAS offered by eligible
telecommunications carriers (ETCs), similar to the theory under which
the Commission has funded broadband-capable networks through the High-
Cost Program.
35. We tentatively conclude that reclassifying BIAS as a
telecommunications service will bolster the Commission's ability to
provide High-Cost and low-income support, and seek comment on this
tentative conclusion. Among other things, we believe that reclassifying
BIAS as a telecommunications service could eventually allow broadband-
only providers to once again participate in the Lifeline program, and
would give the Commission the ability to adjust certain service
obligations for ETCs. We further believe that reclassifying BIAS as a
telecommunications service would enhance our ability to connect low-
income households in rural areas, including through the Link Up
program, which provides support to reduce connection charges for
eligible residents of Tribal lands who subscribe to telecommunications
service from a telecommunications carrier receiving high-cost support.
We seek comment on these views, including how this may impact ISPs,
especially smaller ISPs and ISPs serving rural areas.
36. We also tentatively conclude that classification of BIAS as a
telecommunications service protects public investments in BIAS access
and affordability. Since the inception of BIAS, the Commission, along
with other federal and state entities, have made significant
investments to ensure that BIAS networks reach all consumers and are
affordable, particularly through the Affordable Connectivity Program.
These efforts increased dramatically since the beginning of the COVID-
19 pandemic as Congress directed a large influx of funding in broadband
deployment and consumer access. We believe our proposed
reclassification will enable the Commission to protect these
investments on an ongoing basis by enabling the Commission to ensure
the connections supported by these funds align with the other policy
goals we detail here: advancing national security and public safety and
protecting consumers. In doing so, we believe we can ensure these
connections continue to achieve their primary purpose of benefiting
consumers. We seek comment on these views.
37. Multiple-Tenant Environments (MTEs). We seek comment on how
reclassification may impact the Commission's authority to take action
to promote tenant choice and competition in the provision of broadband
services to the benefit of those who live and work in MTEs. The
Commission has long prohibited agreements between providers of certain
communications services and MTE owners that grant the provider
exclusive access and rights to provide service to the MTE. In 2019, the
Commission released a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking that sought comment
about these practices and others that could have the effect of
dampening competition or deployment, and on the Commission's authority
to target different kinds of entities, including telecommunications
providers, MVPDs, and broadband-only providers. In 2022, relying on
sections 201 and 628 of the Act, the Commission adopted rules to
prohibit telecommunications carriers and MVPDs from entering into
exclusive and graduated revenue sharing agreements, and to require that
telecommunications carriers and MVPDs include disclaimers on marketing
materials distributed to MTE tenants that inform tenants of the
existence of an exclusive marketing arrangement, among other things.
The Commission determined that it was appropriate to ``proceed
incrementally,'' but cautioned that it would ``continue to monitor
competition in MTEs to determine whether we should alter the scope of
our rules to cover other providers,'' including broadband-only
providers. We seek comment whether reclassification of BIAS would
provide additional authority for the Commission to further promote
competition and consumer choice in communications services in MTEs.
38. Free Expression. We believe BIAS connections promote diversity
of viewpoints by allowing traditionally disadvantaged communities to
express themselves outside of traditional media. Social media websites
and other platforms particularly have become important platforms for
free expression, political engagement, and social activism. Indeed,
Congress has recognized that ``the internet offer[s] a forum for a true
diversity of political discourse, unique opportunities for cultural
development, and myriad avenues for intellectual activity.''
Accordingly, we invite comment on any free expression-related
considerations associated with classifying BIAS as a telecommunications
service and any benefits or drawbacks of such classification for
relevant communications.
39. Digital Equity. The Commission, as part of its continuing
effort to advance digital equity for all, including people of color,
persons with disabilities, persons who live in rural or Tribal areas,
and others who have been historically underserved, marginalized, and
adversely affected by persistent poverty and inequality, invites
comments on any equity-related considerations and benefits (if any)
that may be associated with the proposals and issues discussed herein.
Specifically, we seek comment on how our proposals may promote or
inhibit advances in diversity, equity, inclusion, and accessibility, as
well as the scope of the Commission's relevant legal authority.
5. Access for Persons With Disabilities
40. We seek comment on how reclassification may impact the
Commission's authority to ensure that individuals with disabilities can
communicate using BIAS. People with disabilities ``increasingly rely
upon internet-based video communications, both to communicate directly
(point-to-point) with other persons who are deaf or hard of hearing who
use sign language, and through video relay service.'' Section 716 of
the Act requires that interoperable video conferencing services be
accessible, regardless of how those services are transmitted--by
broadband or otherwise--and also requires that text messaging, email,
[[Page 76057]]
other electronic messaging services, and interconnected and non-
interconnected VoIP services, be accessible. In addition, section 718
of the Act requires that internet browsers installed on mobile phones
must be accessible to people who are blind or visually impaired to
ensure the accessibility of mobile broadband. How would
reclassification affect the Commission's ability to implement and
enforce these provisions? We seek comment on the impact, if any, that
reclassification may have on the Commission's goals to ensure that BIAS
remains accessible to individuals with disabilities. For instance, if
the Commission declines to forbear from section 255 of the Act, as we
propose below, would that provide additional authority for the
Commission to require that ISPs' telecommunications services and
equipment be accessible to and usable by people with disabilities?
6. The RIF Order's Policy Rationales Did Not Justify Reversing the
Classification of Broadband Service
41. In the RIF Order, the Commission's primary policy
justifications for reclassifying BIAS as a Title I service were its
conclusions regarding the alleged harm to investment by Title II
classification and the benefits to investment by Title I
classification. However, the RIF Order gave little weight to the 2015
Open Internet Order's showing that investment continued for broadband
services that were regulated as Title II common carrier services,
including digital subscriber line (DSL), which was regulated as such
until 2005.
42. We tentatively conclude that the Commission's conclusions in
the RIF Order that ISP investment is closely tied to the classification
of BIAS were unsubstantiated. Instead, we agree with the RIF Order's
statement that ``owners of network infrastructure make long-term,
irreversible investments,'' which we believe makes it unlikely that
changes in investment shortly following the adoption of each Order were
actually related to the effects of each Order. We seek comment on this
belief. We note that the Commission received conflicting viewpoints
regarding the actual effect of Title II classification on investment.
Instead of concluding, as the 2015 Open Internet Order did, that
conflicting viewpoints concerning the effect of classification on
investment prevented the Commission from being certain which viewpoint
was more accurate, the Commission chose to rely on certain studies
purporting to show that Title II classification in the 2015 Open
Internet Order hurt investment to reach its conclusion about the effect
of Title II classification on investment, even as the Commission seemed
to recognize the weaknesses of those studies. Additionally, similar to
the 2015 Open Internet Order record, the RIF Order's record showed
opposing views on the likely long-term effects of the Commission's
regulatory decisions on investment. We believe, as the Commission did
in 2015, that ``no party [could] quantify with any reasonable degree of
accuracy how either a Title I or a Title II approach may affect future
investment.'' As such, we tentatively conclude that changes in ISP
investment following the adoption of each Order were more likely the
result of other factors unrelated to the classification of BIAS, such
as broader economic conditions at the time, technology changes such as
the transition from 3G to 4G LTE networks, and ISPs' general business
development decisions. We seek comment on this tentative conclusion. Is
there any evidence that ISP investment is closely tied to the
regulatory classification of BIAS? Can any declines or increases in
investment following adoption of either the 2015 Open Internet Order or
the RIF Order be directly attributed to the classification of BIAS in
those Orders? What other factors besides the regulatory classification
of broadband impact investment decisions? We invite parties to comment
on the strength of any evidence submitted on these issues.
43. Notwithstanding these tentative conclusions, we seek comment
generally on how, and the extent to which, our proposed classification
of BIAS as a telecommunications service will affect ISPs' investment
incentives today. How will it affect small ISPs? Is it possible to
evaluate ISPs' investment incentives independent of any incentives and
investment activity that may result from the billions of dollars in
federal and state funding that has been and will be provided to ISPs to
support infrastructure deployment and broadband connectivity?
C. Scope of Reclassification
44. Broadband Internet Access Service. We propose to continue using
the definition of ``broadband internet access service'' as a ``mass-
market retail service by wire or radio that provides the capability to
transmit data to and receive data from all or substantially all
internet endpoints, including any capabilities that are incidental to
and enable the operation of the communications service, but excluding
dial-up internet access service,'' as well as ``any service that the
Commission finds to be providing a functional equivalent of the service
described [in the definition] or that is used to evade the protections
set forth'' in part 8 of the Commission's rules. The Commission has
chiefly retained this definition since it first defined broadband
internet access service in the 2010 Open Internet Order (76 FR 60754
(Sept. 30, 2011)). We seek comment on whether there is any reason to
depart from this definition of broadband internet access service.
45. Similarly, we propose to continue to define ``mass market'' as
the Commission did in the 2015 Open Internet Order and RIF Order--``a
service marketed and sold on a standardized basis to residential
customers, small businesses, and other end-user customers such as
school and libraries.'' In addition to including broadband internet
access service purchased with support from the E-Rate, Lifeline, and
Rural Health Care programs, as well as any broadband internet access
service offered using networks supported by the Connect America Fund or
the Rural Digital Opportunity Fund, we propose that such ``mass
market'' services would also include any broadband internet access
service purchased with support from the Affordable Connectivity Program
and the Connected Care Pilot Program. Consistent with the 2015 Open
Internet Order and RIF Order, the proposed definition excludes
enterprise service offerings, which are typically offered to larger
organizations through customized or individually negotiated
arrangements, and special access services. We seek comment on our
proposal. Should we apply the modified definition of broadband internet
access service used for the broadband label requirement in this context
to make clear that enterprise services are excluded even when they are
supported by the Commission's broadband access and affordability
programs?
46. We also propose to remain consistent with the Commission's
conclusions in prior Orders to include in the term ``broadband internet
access service'' those services provided over any technology platform,
including but not limited to wire, terrestrial wireless (including
fixed and mobile wireless services using licensed or unlicensed
spectrum), and satellite. We seek comment on this proposal. We continue
to intend broadband internet access service ``to cover the entire
universe of internet access services at issue in the Commission's prior
broadband classification decisions, as well as all other broadband
internet access services offered over other technology platforms that
were not addressed by prior classification orders.'' As in prior
orders, we propose that ``fixed''
[[Page 76058]]
broadband internet access service refers to a broadband internet access
service that serves end users primarily at fixed endpoints using
stationary equipment, such as the modem that connects an end user's
home router, computer, or other internet access device to the internet,
and encompasses the delivery of fixed broadband service over any
medium, including various forms of wired broadband service (e.g.,
cable, DSL, fiber), fixed wireless broadband service (including fixed
services using unlicensed spectrum), and fixed satellite broadband
service. Likewise, we propose that ``mobile'' broadband internet access
service refers to a broadband internet access service that serves end
users primarily using mobile stations, and includes, among other
things, services that use smartphones or mobile-network-enabled tablets
as the primary endpoints for connection to the internet, as well as
mobile satellite broadband service. Consistent with the existing
definition, we propose to include within the definition of broadband
internet access service any such service, regardless of whether the ISP
leases or owns the facilities used to provide the service. We seek
comment on our proposals.
47. We also propose that to the extent coffee shops, bookstores,
airlines, private end-user networks such as libraries and universities,
and other businesses acquire broadband internet access service from an
ISP to enable patrons to access the internet from their respective
establishments, provision of such service by the premise operator would
not itself be considered BIAS unless it was offered to patrons as a
retail mass-market service. Likewise, when a user employs, for example,
a wireless router or a Wi-Fi hotspot to create a personal Wi-Fi network
that is not intentionally offered for the benefit of others, we believe
he or she is not offering a broadband internet access service under our
proposed definition, because the user is not marketing and selling such
service to residential customers, small businesses, and other end-user
customers. Such proposed findings are consistent with the manner in
which the Commission has historically defined broadband internet access
service, and we seek comment on any changed circumstances that would
justify a different outcome.
48. We seek comment on whether there are other types of services we
should address in defining the scope of broadband internet access
service. For example, with respect to 5G deployments, new network
architectures and uses of the technology are emerging, including some
that offer both private and public 5G connectivity, like 5G Internet of
Things (IoT). We seek comment on how we should view these services for
purposes of defining broadband internet access service--are these types
of services best viewed as enterprise services excluded from the
definition of broadband internet access service or should they be
treated as non-BIAS data services?
49. Non-BIAS Data Services. We also seek comment on whether to
continue excluding non-BIAS data services (formerly ``specialized
services'') from the scope of broadband internet access service. In the
2015 Open Internet Order, the Commission explained that certain
services offered by ISPs that share capacity with broadband internet
access service over ISPs' last-mile facilities were not broadband
internet access service and provided examples and characteristics of
services that, at that time, likely fit within this category of non-
BIAS data services. The Commission defined characteristics of these
services, explaining that they (1) are not used to reach large parts of
the internet; (2) are not a generic platform, but rather a specific
``application level'' service; and (3) use some form of network
management to isolate the capacity used by these services from that
used by broadband internet access service. We seek comment on whether
these characteristics still appropriately describe non-BIAS data
services. Are there any other characteristics of such services on which
we should rely? Are these still appropriate examples of data services
that are outside the scope of broadband internet access service? Have
the distinctions between mass-market retail and non-BIAS data services
changed, particularly from a consumer, technical, or other perspective,
to warrant reconsideration of this exclusion?
50. We also tentatively conclude that we should maintain the 2015
Open Internet Order's approach to continue closely monitoring the
development of non-BIAS data services. In the 2015 Open Internet Order,
the Commission emphasized that non-BIAS data services might still be
subject to enforcement action if the Commission determined that: (1) a
particular service is providing the functional equivalent of BIAS; (2)
an ISP claimed or attempted to claim that a service that is the
equivalent of BIAS is a non-BIAS data service not subject to any rules
that would otherwise apply; or (3) a non-BIAS data service offering is
undermining investment, innovation, competition, and end-user benefits.
We are especially concerned about activities that may undermine
national security and public safety, consumers' use of broadband
internet access service, and the ability of consumers to access
broadband internet access service. We also share the Commission's
concern in the 2015 Open Internet Order ``that over-the-top services
offered over the internet are not impeded in their ability to compete
with other data services.'' We seek comment on our proposed approach.
51. Internet Traffic Exchange. We next tentatively conclude that
broadband internet access service, as we propose to define it, includes
arrangements for the exchange of internet traffic by an edge provider
or an intermediary with the ISP's network, referred to as internet
peering, traffic exchange or interconnection, to the extent they
provide the ``capability to transmit data to and receive data from all
or substantially all internet endpoints . . . [and] enable the
operation of the communications service.'' We seek comment on this
position. As the Commission explained in 2015, ``[t]he representation
to retail customers that they will be able to reach `all or
substantially all internet endpoints' necessarily includes the promise
to make the interconnection arrangements necessary to allow that
access'' and ``the promise to transmit traffic to and from those
internet end points back to the user.'' We tentatively conclude that
the Commission's findings and rationale regarding internet traffic
exchange in the 2015 Open Internet Order--that such ``edge service'' is
derivative of broadband internet access service and constitutes the
same traffic--remain valid, and we seek comment on our tentative
conclusion. We observe that the RIF Order does not appear to dispute
the Commission's previous conclusion that broadband internet access
service includes this ``edge service,'' and instead determined that
internet traffic exchange arrangements were appropriately regulated as
an information service by virtue of its conclusion that broadband
internet access service is an information service. We seek comment on
whether there are circumstances under which ``edge service'' would not
be best characterized as a part of broadband internet access service,
and how commenters would characterize that service, given the Verizon
court's conclusion that, in addition to the retail service provided to
consumers, ``broadband providers furnish a service to edge providers,
thus undoubtedly functioning as edge providers' `carriers.' '' We seek
comment on the Verizon court's characterization of broadband internet
access service in
[[Page 76059]]
relation to service provided to both consumers and edge providers. How,
if at all, has edge service changed in relation to broadband internet
access service? Are there any grounds to depart from the Commission's
prior treatment of edge service and edge providers as a ``derivative''
service of broadband internet access service?
52. We also seek comment on whether we should exclude any
particular services or functions from the definition of broadband
internet access service. For example, should we exclude virtual private
network (VPN) services, web hosting services, and/or data storage
services from the scope of broadband internet access service? For
purposes of this NPRM, ``data storage services'' refers to the
provision of access to data storage platforms. The term is distinct
from ``caching,'' which involves the temporary storage of data for
purposes of delivering content to specific endpoints. While the
Commission has previously excluded content delivery networks (CDNs) and
internet backbone services, including transit arrangements, we seek
comment whether a different approach may be warranted because these
services are integral to transmitting data and delivering
communications to internet endpoints, thus falling within the proposed
definition of ``broadband internet access service.'' We observe that
these services directly or indirectly provide data on behalf of their
clients. For example, while VPN servers reflect one end-point of an
underlying communication stream, they act as a launching pad to forward
traffic to the destination identified by the user. We seek comment on
this proposed analysis. Do these services fall within the scope of
broadband internet access service, as we propose to define it?
D. Classifying Broadband Internet Access Service as a
Telecommunications Service
53. The 1996 Act enacted the ``telecommunications service'' and
``information service'' definitional frameworks, and since that time,
the Commission and courts have grappled with the classification of
internet access services as technology and the communications
marketplace have evolved and the internet has become essential to our
daily lives. Courts have long recognized the Commission's authority to
interpret and implement the Communications Act of 1934. Both the 2015
Open Internet Order and the RIF Order recognized this authority. And on
review of each of those decisions, the D.C. Circuit accepted the
Commission's authority to make classification decisions, even when this
involved a change in course. In addressing a prior Commission decision
classifying BIAS, in Brand X, the Supreme Court confirmed not only that
an administrative agency can change its interpretation of an ambiguous
statute, but that it ``must consider varying interpretations and the
wisdom of its policy on a continuing basis, for example in response to
. . . a change in administrations.'' In light of this precedent, we
believe that we not only have the authority to classify BIAS, but that
we must reevaluate the 2018 information service classification in
consideration of the policy rationales and marketplace developments we
have described above as warranting a return to the telecommunications
service classification. We seek comment on this view.
54. In evaluating the classification of BIAS, three definitional
terms are relevant. First, the Act defines ``telecommunications'' as
``the transmission, between or among points specified by the user, of
information of the user's choosing, without change in the form or
content of the information as sent and received.'' Second, the Act
defines ``telecommunications service'' as ``the offering of
telecommunications for a fee directly to the public, or to such classes
of users as to be effectively available directly to the public,
regardless of the facilities used.'' Finally, the Act defines
``information service'' as ``the offering of a capability for
generating, acquiring, storing, transforming, processing, retrieving,
utilizing, or making available information via telecommunications . . .
, but does not include any use of any such capability for the
management, control, or operation of a telecommunications system or the
management of a telecommunications service.'' When Congress enacted the
definitions of ``telecommunications service'' and ``information
service'' in the 1996 Act, it substantially incorporated the ``basic''
and ``enhanced'' service classifications from the Computer Inquiries
line of decisions. Under the Computer Inquiries, facilities-based
telephone companies were obligated to offer the transmission component
of their enhanced service offerings--including broadband internet
access service offered via DSL--to unaffiliated enhanced service
providers on nondiscriminatory terms and conditions pursuant to tariffs
or contracts governed by Title II. Thus, there is no disputing that
until 2005, Title II applied to the transmission component of DSL
service. Further, because the statutory definitions substantially
incorporated the Commission's terminology under the Computer Inquiries,
Commission decisions regarding the distinction between basic and
enhanced services--in particular, decisions regarding features that are
``adjunct to basic'' services--are relevant to our analysis, as
discussed further below, because the Commission's definition of
``adjunct to basic'' services has been instrumental in determining
which functions fall within the ``telecommunications systems
management'' exception to the ``information service'' definition.
55. We tentatively conclude that both a reasonable and the best
reading of these definitional provisions supports classifying BIAS as a
telecommunications service. As explained in the 2015 Open Internet
Order, ``the critical distinction between a telecommunications and an
information service turns on what the provider is `offering.' '' If the
provider is offering ``telecommunications'' to the public for a fee,
then the service is necessarily a telecommunications service. Thus, in
2015, the Commission interpreted these terms to classify BIAS as a
telecommunications service, finding that BIAS, as then offered, is
sufficiently independent from the information services that ISPs may
also offer. Consistent with the Commission's finding in 2015, we
believe that BIAS is best understood as making available high-speed
access to the internet (that may be bundled with other applications and
functions)--and therefore that it provides telecommunications--and that
ISPs offer BIAS to the public for a fee. Accordingly, we tentatively
conclude the best reading of the Act is that BIAS, as offered to and
understood by consumers today, is a telecommunications service rather
than an information service. We seek comment on this tentative
conclusion.
56. Broadband Internet Access Service Provides Telecommunications.
We tentatively conclude that BIAS provides ``telecommunications'' as it
is defined under the Act, and seek comment on this conclusion. As
discussed above, the Act defines ``telecommunications'' as ``the
transmission, between or among points specified by the user, of
information of the user's choosing, without change in the form or
content of the information as sent and received.'' As discussed above,
we believe that users rely on BIAS to transmit ``information of the
user's choosing,'' ``between or among points specified by the user.''
We further believe, as the Commission has previously found, that the
term ``points
[[Page 76060]]
specified by the user'' is ambiguous, and that ``uncertainty concerning
the geographic location of an endpoint of communication is irrelevant
for the purpose of determining whether a broadband internet access
service is providing `telecommunications.' '' We also contend that
these points are not constrained to be defined in one particular
format. They may be in the form of an IP address or perhaps more
commonly associated with fully qualified domain names resolved by the
DNS, such as www.example.com. This is consistent with the Commission's
prior deduction that while consumers often do not know the precise
physical or virtual location of the edge provider or other user they
want to access, ``there is no question that users specify the end
points of their internet communications'' and ``would be quite upset if
their internet communications did not make it to their intended
recipients or the website addresses they entered into their browser
would take them to unexpected web pages.'' As the Commission explained,
``numerous forms of telephone service qualify as telecommunications
even though the consumer typically does not know the geographic
location of the called party,'' including cell phone service, toll free
800 service, and call bridging service. Likewise, the fact that DNS may
resolve the same domain name to one or more virtual locations (e.g.,
due to load balancing), just as in the toll free arena a single
telephone number may route to multiple locations, ``does not transform
that service to something other than telecommunications.'' In the RIF
Order, the Commission conceded that at least some telecommunications
are used as an input into BIAS and ``an ISP makes use of
telecommunications'' in the provision of BIAS, but found that it ``need
not further address the scope of the `telecommunications' definition in
order to justify [its] classification of broadband internet access
service,'' and did not further address the Commission's interpretation
and application of the ``telecommunications'' definition in the 2015
Open Internet Order. We seek comment on the analysis that BIAS provides
``telecommunications,'' including whether there is any reason to depart
from it.
57. We further tentatively conclude that there is no change or
modification to the form or content of information during transmission,
and seek comment on this analysis. In 2015, the Commission explained
that ``the packet payload (i.e., the content requested or sent by the
user) is not altered by the variety of headers that a provider may use
to route a given packet'' and therefore, the ``form and content of the
information'' is the same when an IP packet is sent by the sender as
when the same packet is received by the recipient. We seek comment on
whether this analysis of packet transmission remains accurate and
relevant today. Have there been any developments or changes in how BIAS
is provisioned that would cause us to reconsider this analysis? How do
ISPs transmit data information from one point on the network to
another? How does it differ from how PSTN calls are transmitted today?
58. Broadband Internet Access Service is a Telecommunications
Service. Here, we propose to build off our tentative conclusion that
BIAS provides telecommunications and our belief that current factual
circumstances show that consumers perceive BIAS as a standalone
offering used to access third-party services and, as such, ISPs
routinely market BIAS widely to the general public. Viewed together,
ISPs would necessarily offer BIAS ``for a fee directly to the public,
or to such classes of users as to be effectively available directly to
the public, regardless of the facilities used,'' and therefore we
tentatively conclude that BIAS is a telecommunications service as
defined in the Act. We seek comment on our tentative conclusion and
assessment. We further propose to find that the implied promise to make
arrangements for exchange of internet traffic as part of the BIAS
offering does not constitute a private carriage arrangement, and that
the rationale adopted in the 2015 Open Internet Order remains
persuasive. We seek comment on this approach. How do internet traffic
arrangements with negotiated terms differ from mass-market services
offered to the public? Have there been any significant developments in
the internet traffic exchange market since 2015 that would cause us to
reconsider these proposals? We observe that in 2015, the Commission
concluded that ``some individualization in pricing or terms is not a
barrier to finding that a service is a telecommunications service,''
and the RIF Order does not appear to disturb this finding. We seek
comment on this analysis.
59. Broadband Internet Access Service Is Not Best Classified an
Information Service. We tentatively conclude that, as offered today,
BIAS is not an information service under the best reading of the Act.
The Act defines an information service as the offering ``of a
capability for generating, acquiring, storing, transforming,
processing, retrieving, utilizing, or making available information via
telecommunications.'' We believe that the Commission's reasoning in the
RIF Order--that because BIAS has the ``capability'' to be used to
engage in the activities within the information service definition, it
is best interpreted as an information service--is flawed. Concluding
that BIAS ``is an information service irrespective of whether it
provides the entirety of any end user functionality or whether it
provides end user functionality in tandem with edge providers,'' as the
Commission did in the RIF Order, fails to recognize the relationship of
BIAS transmission services to other functions, which may be offered by
either the ISP or a third party of the end user's choice. Logically,
under the framework set out in the RIF Order, even traditional switched
telephone service would be classified as an information service, as it
provides customers with the ability to make information available to
others (e.g., public service announcements), retrieve information from
others, and process and utilize stored information from others (e.g.,
by interacting with a call menu). We tentatively conclude that the best
and more reasonable interpretation of the statutory language is that
BIAS is a telecommunications service, while the applications that run
over BIAS either constitute distinct information services or fall
within the exception to the information service definition for
capabilities used ``for the management, control, or operation of a
telecommunications system or the management of a telecommunications
service.'' We seek comment on this proposed analysis.
60. We tentatively conclude that companion services, such as DNS
and caching, when provided with BIAS, fit within the telecommunications
systems management exception to the definition of ``information
service,'' and therefore when these services are provided with BIAS,
they do not convert BIAS into an information service. We seek comment
on this tentative conclusion. The Act's telecommunications systems
management exception excludes from the definition of ``information
service'' ``any use of any such capability for the management, control,
or operation of a telecommunications system or the management of a
telecommunications service.'' In the 2015 Open Internet Order, the
Commission concluded that when DNS and caching are offered with BIAS,
they ``either fall within the telecommunications systems management
exception or are separate offerings that are not inextricably
integrated with broadband internet
[[Page 76061]]
access service, or both.'' In the RIF Order, the Commission took a
contrary view, concluding that ``DNS and caching functionalities . . .
offered by ISPs[ ] are integrated information processing capabilities
offered as part of broadband internet access service to consumers
today.'' On review of the RIF Order, Judge Millet explained in her
concurrence that ``the question is whether the combination of
transmission with DNS and caching alone can justify the information
service classification. If we were writing on a clean slate, that
question would seem to have only one answer given the current state of
technology: No.'' She added that ``new factual developments call[ed]
for serious technological reconsideration and engagement through expert
judgment. Instead, the Commission's exclusive reliance on DNS and
caching blinkered itself off from modern broadband reality, and
untethered the service `offer[ed]' from both the real-world marketplace
and the most ordinary of linguistic conventions.'' We intend to guide
our decisionmaking about the role of DNS and caching based on today's
broadband reality, and we seek information on the present
circumstances.
61. We tentatively conclude that the Commission's 2015 analysis
provides the more reasonable application of the relevant statutory
terms and Commission precedent to DNS functionality with respect to
BIAS, and we seek comment on this tentative conclusion. In the 2015
Open Internet Order, the Commission analogized DNS to adjunct-to-basic
services, such as speed dialing, call forwarding, and computer-provided
directory assistance, and concluded that because it is effectively
equivalent to routing information and does not alter the fundamental
character of the telecommunications service, it falls within the
telecommunications systems management exception to the definition of
``information service.'' ``Adjunct-to-basic'' functions were those
features and services that met the literal definition of ``enhanced
service'' but did not alter the fundamental character of the associated
basic transmission service and thus were treated as basic (i.e.,
telecommunications) services even though they went beyond mere
transmission. The Commission has held that such functions: (1) must be
``incidental'' to an underlying telecommunications service--i.e., ``
`basic' in purpose and use'' in the sense that they facilitate use of
the network; and (2) must ``not alter the fundamental character of [the
telecommunications service].'' The RIF Order rejected the adjunct-to-
basic comparison largely based on its contention that adjunct-to-basic
services and the telecommunications systems management exception must
be viewed narrowly, effectively to only include functions that solely
facilitate transmission. Because it concluded that DNS, as then used,
is a core function of BIAS that provides more than a functionally
integrated address-translation capability, it determined that DNS did
not fall within the exception. We tentatively disagree with the RIF
Order's narrow characterization of adjunct-to-basic services and the
telecommunications systems management exception as not mandated by the
statutory language; however, even under that unnecessarily narrow
characterization, we believe DNS would fall under the
telecommunications management exception, as its fundamental purpose is
to route information--i.e., to facilitate transmission.
62. We further believe that even if DNS did not fall within the
telecommunications systems management exception to the Act's definition
of ``information services,'' it is not so inextricably intertwined so
as to convert the entire BIAS offering into an information service,
consistent with the Commission's finding in 2015. In support of the
2015 Open Internet Order's conclusion, the Commission explained that IP
packet transfer can work without DNS and that DNS lookup is available
through third parties. In the RIF Order, the Commission argued that
even though DNS can also be provided by third parties, the focus should
remain on the capabilities that ISPs offer, which it concluded is a
single, inextricably intertwined information service. However, in her
Mozilla concurrence, Judge Millet noted that ``DNS, much like email, is
now free and widely available to consumers in the internet
marketplace.'' We tentatively conclude that the 2015 Open Internet
Order's showing that DNS is not a necessary component of BIAS, which
the RIF Order did not dispute, provides the better rationale for
evaluating whether DNS transforms the entire BIAS offering into an
information service, and tentatively conclude that it does not. We seek
comment on this tentative conclusion. Does the Commission's 2015
analysis of DNS as it relates to BIAS remain relevant, accurate, and
persuasive? Why or why not? Are there any technical or commercial
developments that should cause us to reconsider this analysis?
63. For the same reasons the Commission found in 2015, we believe
that caching, when provided in connection with BIAS, is ``used to
facilitate the transmission of information so that users can access
other services, in this case by enabling the user to obtain `more rapid
retrieval of information' through the network,'' and thus falls within
the telecommunications systems management exception. We seek comment on
this analysis. The Commission concluded otherwise in the RIF Order,
finding that ``ISP-provided caching does not merely `manage' an ISP's
broadband internet access service and underlying network, it enables
and enhances consumers' access to and use of information online'' and
that because it is ``useful to the consumer,'' caching does not fall
within the telecommunications systems management exception. However, we
do not believe consumers consider caching capabilities when purchasing
BIAS. We seek comment regarding the technical and commercial aspects of
caching, how caching functionality is both provisioned by ISPs and
offered to customers, as well as the relevance (if any) of Commission
precedent as applied to caching today.
64. In particular, given that web pages today change constantly and
are often customized on a per-user basis, we question whether ISPs
cache popular content requested by multiple users to supply the same
web page when requested later, rather than fetching the page anew.
Further, as Judge Millett observed in Mozilla, caching ``does not work
when users employ encryption,'' which as of 2017 constituted a majority
of internet traffic, which suggests ``that caching no longer enjoys the
pride of place ascribed to it'' by the RIF Order. We seek comment on
whether ISPs use this practice and, to the extent that commenters
contend they do, why (given the ever-changing nature and high
customization of contemporary web pages). In addition, should the
Commission distinguish between caching by ISPs and the kind of caching
that third-party content providers use to keep copies of content (such
as videos and images, but possibly also web pages) closer to users? We
preliminarily conclude that caching of this kind is not provided by
ISPs and thus is not a part of BIAS, and as such does not transform
BIAS into an information service.
65. We also seek comment on whether there are other functionalities
provided or offered with BIAS, besides DNS and caching, that might fall
into the telecommunications systems management exception, as well as on
[[Page 76062]]
other add-on information services offered in conjunction with BIAS and
how they might affect our analysis with respect to the classification
of BIAS. The 2015 Open Internet Order identified examples of
processing-related capabilities that fall within the telecommunications
systems management functions, such as security virus protection and
blocking denial of service attacks, as well as add-on information
services such as cloud-based storage services, email, and spam
protection that were often offered in conjunction with BIAS but were
not inextricably intertwined with it. Consistent with the Commission's
finding in 2015, we propose that ``such services are not inextricably
intertwined with [BIAS], but rather are a product of the provider's
marketing decision not to offer the two separately,'' and seek comment
on this proposal. We believe that, to the extent BIAS is offered along
with other capabilities that would otherwise fall into the
``information service'' definition, such an offering does not turn BIAS
into a functionally integrated information service. Are there examples
of other information services or capabilities that are often offered by
ISPs in conjunction with BIAS? How do consumers view and use these
products in relation to their BIAS subscription? How has the market for
third-party information services offered in tandem with BIAS developed
since the RIF Order was adopted? We also seek comment on any devices or
applications, such as Wi-Fi hotspots, wearables, appliances, and other
IoT devices that an ISP may include with its BIAS offering and how they
may function both in conjunction with and apart from the underlying
BIAS. How does a secondary market for such devices and applications
impact our interpretation that they are separable information services?
66. Major Questions Doctrine Applicability. We seek comment on
whether, and if so how, the major questions doctrine--the notion that
Congress is expected to speak clearly when delegating authority in
certain extraordinary cases--should inform the conclusions we reach
based on the text and structure of the Act. In the USTA decision, the
D.C. Circuit reasoned that Brand X conclusively held that the
Commission has the authority to determine the proper statutory
classification of BIAS and that its determinations are entitled to
deference, and so there is no need to consult the major questions
doctrine here. In opinions respecting the denial of rehearing en banc,
several judges debated how (if at all) the major questions doctrine
would otherwise apply to the issue. The RIF Order did not directly
dispute this conclusion, but stated that the doctrine supported its
decision to classify BIAS as an information service in order to steer
clear of any major questions doctrine issues.
67. What factors are relevant to the Commission's consideration of
whether the major questions doctrine applies to the classification of
BIAS, taking account of evolving Supreme Court precedent? Among other
factors, we ask that commenters consider the extent to which this
matter falls within the Commission's recognized expertise and authority
as the federal regulator responsible for ``regulating interstate and
foreign commerce in communications by wire and radio so as to make
available, so far as possible, . . . wire and radio communications
service with adequate communications facilities at reasonable
charges.'' In light of relevant Commission precedent, both before and
shortly after Congress adopted the 1996 Act, classifying analogous
transmission services--including the transmission component of
broadband internet access service offered via digital subscriber line
(DSL)--as common carrier services, what basis is there, if any, for
concluding that the Commission's proposed classification action here is
an exercise of ``newfound power'' not previously recognized? Has
Congress acted or failed to act on proposals to clarify the proper
classification of broadband in subsequent years, and to what extent
does such action or inaction inform the Commission's exercise of its
claimed classification authority or the application of the major
questions doctrine?
68. We also seek comment on how and to what extent each relevant
factor should affect the Commission's analysis of whether the
classification of BIAS implicates the major questions doctrine.
Commenters should consider how the relevant factors apply to the
specific proposals here. For example, should the Commission evaluate
the applicability of the major questions doctrine for BIAS as a whole,
or should it distinguish between or among particular categories of BIAS
offerings? How would the major questions doctrine apply in the case of
particular rules we might adopt if we determine BIAS meets a given
statutory classification?
69. Separately, even assuming arguendo that the major questions
doctrine were applied to our classification of BIAS, we seek comment on
whether Congress has spoken sufficiently clearly in the Act--in
definitional provisions or more generally--to satisfy that standard.
E. Classifying Mobile Broadband Internet Access Service as a Commercial
Mobile Service
70. In addition to our proposed return to the 2015 Open Internet
Order's classification of BIAS as a telecommunications service, we
propose to return to that Order's classification of mobile BIAS as a
commercial mobile service. In the alternative, even if mobile BIAS does
not meet the definition of ``commercial mobile service,'' we propose to
find that it is the functional equivalent of a commercial mobile
service and, therefore, not private mobile service.
71. Section 332(d)(1) of the Act defines ``commercial mobile
service'' as ``any mobile service . . . that is provided for profit and
makes interconnected service available (A) to the public or (B) to such
classes of eligible users as to be effectively available to a
substantial portion of the public, as specified by regulation by the
Commission.'' As an initial matter, we tentatively conclude that mobile
BIAS is a ``mobile service'' because subscribers access the service
through their mobile devices. Next, we tentatively conclude that mobile
BIAS is provided ``for profit'' because ISPs offer it to subscribers
with the intent of receiving compensation. We also tentatively conclude
that mobile BIAS is widely available to the public, without restriction
on who may receive it.
72. We also propose to return to the 2015 Open Internet Order's
determination that mobile BIAS is an interconnected service. Section
332(d)(2) states that the term ``interconnected service'' means
``service that is interconnected with the public switched network (as
such terms are defined by regulation by the Commission). . . .'' In the
2015 Open Internet Order, the Commission reached the conclusion that
mobile BIAS was an interconnected service through the application of an
updated definition of ``public switched network'' that included
networks that use public IP addresses. In doing so, the Commission
highlighted the Commission's longstanding determination from the Second
CMRS Report and Order (59 FR 18493 (Apr. 19, 1994)) that the term
``public switched network'' ``should not be defined in a static way''
as ``the network is continuously growing and changing because of new
technology and increasing demand.'' The Commission reversed course in
the RIF Order, reinstating the prior definition of
[[Page 76063]]
``public switched network.'' We believe the Commission's decision in
the RIF Order fails to align with the technological reality and
widespread use of mobile BIAS. The ubiquity of mobile BIAS that the
Commission recognized in 2015 is even more pronounced today, as mobile
broadband networks have continued to develop and grow in the
intervening years, with more users and increased mobile data traffic.
In 2022, there was more than 73 trillion megabytes of mobile data
traffic exchanged in the United States, representing a 38 percent
increase from the previous year. Continued growth of mobile BIAS is
expected, with one forecast predicting that there will be 410 million
5G mobile subscriptions in North America by 2028. In light of these
factors, we propose to return to the 2015 Open Internet Order's
modernized definition of ``public switched network'' in Sec. 20.3 of
the Commission's rules, specifically defining the term to mean ``the
network that includes any common carrier switched network, whether by
wire or radio, including local exchange carriers, interexchange
carriers, and mobile service providers, that use[s] the North American
Numbering Plan, or public IP addresses, in connection with the
provision of switched services.'' We believe this definition, which
includes IP addresses, embodies the current technological landscape and
the widespread use of mobile broadband networks, and is therefore more
consistent with the Commission's recognition that the public switched
network will grow and change over time. We seek comment on this
analysis and our proposed approach.
73. We further propose to reach the same conclusion the Commission
did in the 2015 Open Internet Order that mobile BIAS is interconnected
with the ``public switched network,'' as we propose to define it today.
The 2015 Open Internet Order found that mobile BIAS should be
considered interconnected because it was a broadly available mobile
service that provided users with the ability to send and receive
communications to all other users of the internet. Given the
``universal access'' and expected future growth of mobile BIAS, the
2015 Open Internet Order determined that finding mobile BIAS to be
interconnected and a commercial mobile service was consistent with
Congress' objective in section 332 of the Act in creating a symmetrical
regulatory framework among similar mobile services that were available
to the public. Mobile BIAS remains a broadly available mobile service
that provides its users with the ability to send and receive
communications and is an essential component of today's technology
landscape. As discussed above, there has been a marked increase in the
amount of mobile data traffic in recent years, and continued growth is
predicted. Given the continued widespread use and availability of
mobile BIAS, we propose to find that mobile BIAS is an interconnected
service, and propose to support this finding by applying the
Commission's analysis from the 2015 Open Internet Order to today's
marketplace. We seek comment on our proposed approach.
74. We also propose to rely on the Commission's analysis from the
2015 Open Internet Order that mobile BIAS is an interconnected service
for the additional reason that it provides users with the capability to
communicate with other users of the internet and with people using
telephone numbers through VoIP applications. The 2015 Open Internet
Order found that ``users on mobile networks can communicate with users
on traditional copper based networks and IP based networks, making more
and more networks using different technologies interconnected.'' It
further identified mobile VoIP, as well as over-the-top mobile
messaging, as ``among the increasing number of ways in which users
communicate indiscriminately between [North American Numbering Plan
(NANP)] and IP endpoints on the public switched network.'' Since 2015,
mobile BIAS users continue to communicate using these tools, with 85
percent of Americans owning a smartphone that offers access to VoIP and
over-the-top communications apps. We seek comment on whether there have
been any material changes in technology, the marketplace, or other
facts that would warrant refinement or revision of the analysis
regarding the interconnected nature of mobile BIAS from the 2015 Open
Internet Order.
75. In connection with this approach, we seek comment on whether we
should readopt the 2015 Open Internet Order's revised definition of
``interconnected service'' in Sec. 20.3 of the Commission's rules.
That Order defined ``interconnected service'' to mean a service that
gives subscribers the ability to ``communicate to or receive
communications from other users of the public switched network,''
removing the requirement that such service provide the ability to
communicate with all other users of the public switched network. It did
so to ensure that services that provide the capability to access all
other users, including through the use of OTT services, but limit that
access in certain limited ways, are not excluded from the definition of
``interconnected service.'' The RIF Order reverted to the prior
definition, concluding that ``the best reading of `interconnected
service' is one that enables communication between its users and all
other users of the public switched network'' and that the service
``must itself provide interconnection to the public switched network
using the NANP.'' We seek comment on whether it is necessary to return
to the definition of ``interconnected service'' in the 2015 Open
Internet Order to ensure that all appropriate services are covered by
the definition.
76. Because we also propose to reclassify mobile BIAS as a
telecommunications service, we believe that classifying it as a
commercial mobile service would avoid the inconsistency that would
result if the service were both a telecommunications service and a
private service. The Commission explained this reasoning in the 2015
Open Internet Order, and we propose to adopt a consistent rationale
here. The Commission stated that, because it determined mobile BIAS to
be a telecommunications service, ``designating it also as commercial
mobile service subject to Title II is most consistent with
Congressional intent to apply common carrier treatment to
telecommunications services.'' The Commission found that classifying
mobile BIAS as a commercial mobile service was necessary ``to avoid a
statutory contradiction that would result if the Commission were to
conclude both that mobile broadband internet access was a
telecommunications service and also that it was not a commercial mobile
service. A statutory contradiction would result from such a finding
because, while the Act requires that providers of telecommunications
services be treated as common carriers, it prohibits common carrier
treatment of mobile services that do not meet the definition of
commercial mobile service. Finding mobile broadband internet access
service to be commercial mobile service avoids this statutory
contradiction and is most consistent with the Act's intent to apply
common carrier treatment to providers of telecommunication services.''
We seek comment on this proposal.
77. In the alternative, to the extent that mobile BIAS falls
outside the definition of ``commercial mobile service,'' we propose to
find that it is the functional equivalent of a commercial mobile
service and, thus, not private mobile service. The Commission found
that mobile BIAS service was functionally equivalent to
[[Page 76064]]
commercial mobile service because, ``like commercial mobile service, it
is a widely available, for profit mobile service that offers mobile
subscribers the capability to send and receive communications on their
mobile device to and from the public. Although the services use
different addressing identifiers, from an end user's perspective, both
are commercial services that allow users to communicate with the vast
majority of the public.'' The RIF Order found that the 2015 Open
Internet Order's focus on the public's ``ubiquitous access'' to mobile
BIAS alone was ``insufficient'' to establish functional equivalency and
that the test established in the Second CMRS Report and Order provided
a more thorough consideration of factors of whether a service is
closely substitutable for a commercial mobile service. We seek comment
on both of these analyses. As the RIF Order acknowledged, however, the
Commission has discretion to determine whether services are
functionally equivalent. Congress expressly delegated authority to the
Commission to determine whether a particular mobile service may be the
functional equivalent of a commercial mobile service, defining
``private mobile service'' as ``any mobile service . . . that is not a
commercial mobile service or the functional equivalent of a commercial
mobile service, as specified by regulation by the Commission.'' For the
reasons outlined in the 2015 Open Internet Order and in light of the
continued increased use and distribution of mobile broadband services
and devices, we propose to find that mobile BIAS is the functional
equivalent of commercial mobile service. We seek comment on this
proposal and on any other or different definition of ``functional
equivalent'' that the Commission should adopt.
78. We anticipate that returning mobile BIAS to its classification
as a commercial mobile service and reinstating openness requirements on
a larger set of mobile ISPs will allow mobile providers that would
become subject to such rules to continue to be able to compete
successfully in the marketplace and continue to have incentives to
develop new products and services. For example, the Commission has
applied open access rules to upper 700 MHz C Block licensees, including
Verizon Wireless, for more than a decade, and the mobile operators
subject to these requirements have continued to compete successfully in
the marketplace. We seek comment on this view and on any policy
consequences that commenters believe may result from the proposed
reclassification of mobile BIAS.
F. Preemption of State and Local Regulation of Broadband Service
79. We seek comment on how best to exercise our preemption
authority to ensure that BIAS is governed primarily by a national
framework, including a uniform floor of ISP conduct rules. The RIF
Order adopted an expansive preemption decision, but the D.C. Circuit in
Mozilla concluded that the RIF Order ``fail[ed] to ground its sweeping
Preemption Directive . . . in a lawful source of statutory authority,''
and vacated that preemption action. The D.C. Circuit concluded that
``in any area where the Commission lacks the authority to regulate, it
equally lacks the power to preempt state law.'' A number of states
quickly stepped in to fill that void, adopting their own unique
regulatory approaches for BIAS, including their own versions of open
internet requirements, and even measures like regulation of retail
rates that the 2015 Open Internet Order found unnecessary. We
anticipate that our proposed regulatory approach to BIAS will remedy
the infirmities the D.C. Circuit identified in the RIF Order's
approach, and we seek comment on the best way to use our preemption
authority.
80. We seek comment on the best sources of preemption authority for
us, if needed. For one, we anticipate that the regulatory approach
proposed here would give us authority to oversee BIAS under Title II
with forbearance, under Title III in the case of mobile ISPs, as well
as under section 706 of the 1996 Act. These sources of authority could
enable us to adopt regulations that preempt contrary state
requirements. We also expect that our proposed regulatory approach
could make it more straightforward to rely on various express
preemption provisions in the Act, such as the preemption that
accompanies forbearance under section 10(e), the preemption that arises
when state requirements hinder provision of services covered under
sections 253 or 332(c)(7) of the Act, the preemption of state
requirements contrary to federal universal service policies under
section 254(f), and other possible preemption provisions. We expect
that Commission decisions finding BIAS to be interstate for regulatory
purposes largely resolve possible arguments premised on the limitation
on FCC authority over state communications services under section 2(b)
of the Act that otherwise could arise here. We seek comment on these
views and on any additional sources of statutory authority for
preemption, if needed.
81. We seek comment on how far to go in this proceeding in
exercising our preemption authority to ensure that BIAS principally is
governed by a federal framework. Should we adopt a broad preemption
decision like the Commission attempted to do in the RIF Order? Or
should the Commission proceed more incrementally, such as by only
addressing in this proceeding those state or local legal requirements
squarely raised in the record, and otherwise deferring to future case-
by-case adjudications of preemption? Under an incremental approach,
should we identify in this proceeding issues where the Commission will
decline to preempt state requirements and thereby share regulatory
responsibility with the states, such as state privacy and consumer
protection laws? For what issues, if any, is the Commission required to
share regulatory responsibility with the states? What are the benefits
and drawbacks of permitting state regulation in specific issue areas?
What issues may benefit most from shared regulatory responsibility with
states?
82. We also seek comment on how best to define the scope of
preemption to ensure that BIAS is principally governed by a federal
framework. For example, should open internet conduct rules of the sort
proposed below be seen not only as an appropriate nationwide floor
providing those protections to everyone, but also as an appropriate
ceiling to reflect the balancing of relevant policy considerations? The
2015 Open Internet Order stated that ``should a state elect to restrict
entry into the broadband market through certification requirements or
regulate the rates of BIAS through tariffs or otherwise, we expect that
we would preempt such state regulations as in conflict with our
regulations.'' Should the Commission affirmatively preempt in those
scenarios here rather than leaving those scenarios for future case-by-
case evaluation as it did in 2015? In addition, how should the
Commission define what state or local actions are within the scope of
any affirmative preemption it might adopt here? To what extent should
these decisions be informed by traditional preemption frameworks, such
as express preemption, field preemption, or conflict preemption?
II. Proposed Forbearance
83. We propose to forbear from applying some Title II provisions to
BIAS in the event that we reclassify the service, and we seek comment
on what
[[Page 76065]]
the parameters of such forbearance should be, taking into account as a
primary matter that we believe we must enable the Commission to fulfill
its responsibility under the Act to protect national security and
public safety when executing its other statutory obligations. In the
2015 Open Internet Order, the Commission accompanied Title II
classification with ``substantial'' forbearance for BIAS in a way that
was designed to ``strike the right balance at this time of minimizing
the burdens on ISPs while still adequately protecting the public,
particularly given the objectives of section 706 of the 1996 Act.'' We
propose to return to largely the same forbearance that was adopted in
the 2015 Open Internet Order, tailored as appropriate in light of any
updated conclusions the Commission reaches in this proceeding regarding
the need for particular rules, requirements, or sources of authority
covering BIAS. Notably, we propose to forbear from Title II provisions
insofar as they would support the adoption of ex ante rate regulations
for broadband internet access service.
84. However, subsequent developments have highlighted the
importance of retaining statutory authority to enable the Commission to
address national security and public safety concerns that could arise
with respect to BIAS. Those considerations provide a leading basis for
revisiting the statutory classification of BIAS, and therefore we
propose to depart from the forbearance approach reflected in the 2015
Open Internet Order by declining to forbear from applying section 214
of the Act, and expressly clarifying that our proposed forbearance
would not encompass Title III licensing and authorization authorities,
given that those statutory provisions could provide important
additional tools to advance the Act's national security and public
safety objectives. We seek comment on that proposal and on any issues
related to forbearance with respect to BIAS if classified as a Title II
service, including the best understanding of the current status of the
forbearance granted in the 2015 Open Internet Order, the appropriate
analytical approach to evaluating forbearance, and the substantive
scope of forbearance that should be granted. We also seek comment on
the impact of our proposed forbearance approach on ISPs, particularly
small ISPs.
A. Forbearance Framework
85. As a threshold matter, we seek comment on the best way to
interpret the effect of the RIF Order on the forbearance previously
granted in the 2015 Open Internet Order. The RIF Order stated that, due
to the reclassification decision there, ``the forbearance granted in
the [2015 Open Internet Order] is now moot,'' and that ``carriers are
no longer permitted to use the [2015 Open Internet Order] forbearance
framework (i.e., no carrier will be permitted to maintain, or newly
elect, the [2015 Open Internet Order] forbearance framework).'' We seek
comment on how to interpret those statements in the RIF Order.
86. Next, we seek comment on the appropriate analytical approach to
use when evaluating the statutory forbearance criteria. In the 2015
Open Internet Order, the Commission stated that ``[b]ecause the
Commission is not responding to a petition under section 10(c), we
conduct our forbearance analysis under the general reasoned decision
making requirements of the Administrative Procedure Act [(APA)],
without the burden of proof requirements that section 10(c) petitioners
face.'' The Commission explained how its approach to forbearance in the
2015 Open Internet Order satisfied the statutory forbearance criteria,
other relevant statutory objectives such as section 706 of the 1996
Act, and applicable procedural requirements under the Act and the APA,
and the D.C. Circuit rejected challenges to that forbearance approach
in its USTA decision. We propose to follow the same analytical approach
here and seek comment on that proposal. We also seek comment on
alternative analytical approaches or other ways to effectuate the
forbearance analysis.
87. We seek comment on the interplay between our approach to
forbearance and the argument in the RIF Order that the scope of
forbearance granted in the 2015 Open Internet Order suggests that
classification of BIAS as a Title II service is contrary to the
statutory scheme. In particular, does such an argument fail to account
for important aspects of the approach to forbearance in the 2015 Open
Internet Order? For example, we note that in many cases the 2015 Open
Internet Order evaluated forbearance assuming arguendo that particular
provisions of the Act or Commission rules apply to BIAS, rather than
``first exhaustively determining provision-by-provision and regulation-
by-regulation whether and how particular provisions and rules apply to
this service.'' Do objections to Title II classification premised on
the scope of forbearance adequately account for that fact, or do they
draw unduly broad conclusions based on simple counts of rules or
statutory provisions subject to the forbearance decision?
88. Separately, we propose to leave ISPs' broadband transmission
services--as distinguished from BIAS that relies on that transmission
as an input--subject by default to the framework of the Wireline
Broadband Classification Order (70 FR 60222 (Oct. 17, 2005)) as the
Commission has done previously. The RIF Order observed that such
services ``have never been subject to the [2015 Open Internet Order]
forbearance framework,'' and stated that ``carriers that choose to
offer transmission service on a common carriage basis are, as under the
Wireline Broadband Classification Order, subject to the full set of
Title II obligations, to the extent they applied before the'' 2015 Open
Internet Order. The 2015 Open Internet Order did, however, allow a
provider previously offering broadband transmission on a common carrier
basis ``to change to offer internet access services pursuant to the
construct adopted in'' that Order subject to filing with and review by
the Wireline Competition Bureau of the provider's proposal for the
steps it would take to convert to such an approach. We propose to
follow the same approach here, and seek comment on that proposal.
B. Proposed Forbearance
89. We seek comment on the particular statutory provisions and
rules that should or should not be subject to forbearance. In this
regard, we propose to use the forbearance granted in the 2015 Open
Internet Order as the starting point for our consideration of the
appropriate scope of forbearance. There, although the Commission
granted broad forbearance, the Commission did not forbear from a number
of specific protections or authorities:
The open internet rules and section 706 of the 1996 Act;
``[S]ections 201, 202, and 208, along with key enforcement
authority under the Act, both as a basis of authority for adopting open
internet rules as well as for the additional protections those
provisions directly provide'';
Section 222 of the Act, ``which establishes core customer
privacy protections'';
Section 224 of the Act and the Commission's implementing
rules, ``which grant certain benefits that will foster network
deployment by providing telecommunications carriers with regulated
access to poles, ducts, conduits, and rights-of-way'';
Sections 225, 255, and 251(a)(2) of the Act and the
Commission's implementing rules, ``which collectively
[[Page 76066]]
advance access for persons with disabilities; except that the
Commission forbears from the requirement that providers of broadband
internet access service contribute to the Telecommunications Relay
Service (TRS) Fund at this time'';
Section 254 of the Act and ``the interrelated requirements
of section 214(e), and the Commission's implementing regulations to
strengthen the Commission's ability to support broadband, supporting
the Commission's ongoing efforts to support broadband deployment and
adoption''; and
Requirements governing the wireless licensing process in
section 309(b) and (d)(1) of the Act and Sec. Sec. 1.931, 1.933,
1.939, 22.1110, and 27.10 of the Commission's rules.
90. We propose to forbear from all provisions of Title II that
would permit Commission regulation of BIAS rates. We believe that
Commission rate regulation is unnecessary because the tailored approach
we adopt here will enable the Commission to promote broadband
deployment and competition, and because we will be able to rely on
sections 201 and 202 to address non-rate related issues. Therefore,
while we do not propose to forbear from sections 201 and 202 of the Act
as a general matter, we ``do not and cannot envision adopting new ex
ante rate regulation'' or ex post rate regulation of BIAS, and we
therefore propose to forbear from applying sections 201 and 202 to BIAS
insofar as they would support adoption of rate regulations for BIAS. We
seek comment on this proposal. With respect to section 254, we propose
to forbear in part from the first sentence in section 254(d) and our
associated rules ``insofar as they would immediately require new
universal service contributions associated with'' BIAS, as the
Commission did in 2015, and seek comment on this proposal.
91. In addition to declining to forbear from applying those
specifically enumerated provisions of the Act and Commission rules, the
Commission also more generally limited its forbearance to the scope of
its section 10 forbearance authority, and thus did not forbear from
applying statutory provisions or rules that ``are not applied to
telecommunications carriers or telecommunications services.'' The
Commission also did not forbear from applying provisions of the Act or
Commission rules that already applied to BIAS irrespective of the Title
II classification of that service. The Commission cited illustrative
examples falling within one or both of those categories, including
provisions imposing obligations on the Commission, like section 257 of
the Act, provisions that simply reserve state authority, and the CALEA
requirements in section 229. In addition, the Commission did not
forbear from provisions that would benefit ISPs. This would include,
for example, preemption provisions such as those in sections 253 and
332(c) of the Act, as well as liability limitation provisions in
sections 223, 230, and 231 of the Act. To the extent that forbearance
was considered and rejected in the 2015 Open Internet Order for
particular statutory provisions, we propose to once again decline to
grant forbearance here, and we seek comment on that proposal. As part
of that analysis, we seek updated information and analyses regarding
the application of the statutory forbearance criteria regarding these
provisions and rules that were not subject to forbearance in the 2015
Open Internet Order. We also seek comment on any relevant analyses or
conclusions in the RIF Order.
92. Other than in the specific areas described above, the 2015 Open
Internet Order broadly granted forbearance from applying provisions of
the Act and Commission rules that newly applied by virtue of the Title
II classification of BIAS. We generally propose to again adopt broad
forbearance consistent with that outcome, with the exception of
statutory authorities that could enable the Commission to advance the
Act's goals of national security and public safety. For example,
section 1 of the Act makes clear that the Commission was established,
among other reasons, ``for the purpose of the national defense, [and]
for the purpose of promoting safety of life and property through the
use of wire and radio communications.'' Section 4(n) of the Act directs
the Commission to takes steps to promote the ``maximum effectiveness
from the use of radio and wire communications in connection with safety
of life and property.'' In addition, the D.C. Circuit in Mozilla
emphasized the need to consider the potential benefits of Title II
classification of BIAS for the Commission's authority to protect public
safety. Although public safety considerations were an important element
of the Commission's overall decision in the 2015 Open Internet Order,
preserving the Commission's public safety authority above and beyond
that granted in sections 201 and 202 of the Act was not as explicit a
focus in much of the Commission's tailoring of forbearance there. We
thus seek comment on what specific provisions should be excluded from
the scope of forbearance here in light of those national security and
public safety interests, as discussed in greater detail above.
93. Given the role section 214 of the Act has played in the
Commission's efforts to address national security and law enforcement
concerns related to U.S. telecommunications networks, we tentatively
conclude that we should exclude that provision from any forbearance
granted here. How should the Commission apply its existing procedures
for international section 214 authorizations, which include
coordination of applications that have reportable foreign ownership
with the relevant Executive Branch agencies, to BIAS providers? We seek
comment on any implementation issues arising from our tentative
conclusion and how we could best address them. For example, would
implementation challenges arise if the Commission immediately applied
to BIAS providers its existing procedures for international section 214
authorizations, which include coordination of applications that have
reportable foreign ownership with the relevant Executive Branch
agencies? We note that the 2015 Open Internet Order recognized that
certain implementation issues could arise from the application of
section 222 and the Commission's implementing rules to BIAS, and sought
to mitigate those effects pending a rulemaking specifically focused on
implementing section 222 for BIAS. Should we proceed in a similar
manner with respect to some or all aspects of international section 214
authorizations, whether by adopting temporary forbearance, temporary
grants of blanket international section 214 authority, or in some other
manner? We also seek comment on any implementation issues concerning
our domestic section 214 requirements.
94. We also make clear that our proposed forbearance would not
encompass Title III licensing authorities, including sections 301-303,
307-309, 312, and 316 of the Act, which we believe likewise grant us
important authority that can be used to advance national security and
public safety with respect to the services and equipment subject to
licensing. We also seek comment on whether we should exclude from the
scope of our forbearance provisions sections 218 and 220 of the Act,
which authorize the Commission to obtain information from common
carriers, which could provide important tools to investigate public
safety and security-related issues that arise. We seek comment on those
proposals and on any other provisions of the Act or Commission rules
that
[[Page 76067]]
likewise should be expressly excluded from the scope of forbearance
based on national security and/or public safety considerations,
including, for example, sections 305, 310, and 332 of the Act.
95. The D.C. Circuit's Mozilla decision also highlighted the
potential benefits of Title II classification of BIAS for the
Commission's authority to encourage deployment through regulation of
pole attachments and to provide universal service support for low
income households. In consideration of those interests, the Commission
previously excluded sections 224 and 254 of the Act from the scope of
its forbearance in the 2015 Open Internet Order. We seek comment on
whether there are additional or different ways those interests should
be reflected in the tailoring of forbearance here.
96. We believe that the RIF Remand Order was too quick to dismiss
concerns regarding public safety, pole attachments, and low income
universal service support as speculative or unproven, and we seek
comment on that view. Do commenters agree that the RIF Remand Order
gave insufficient weight to the potential additional benefits that
could be achieved through additional authority retained by virtue of
Title II classification of BIAS?
97. We also seek comment on any additional or different ways that
forbearance could be tailored here. For example, the 2015 Open Internet
Order adopted conditional forbearance from common carrier roaming
regulations, subject to mobile ISPs complying with the data roaming
requirements. Conditioned in that manner, the Commission was able to
find the statutory forbearance criteria satisfied. We propose to follow
the same approach with respect to our roaming rules here, and also seek
comment on whether there are other provisions of the Act or Commission
rules where conditional forbearance would satisfy the statutory
forbearance criteria, even if unconditional forbearance would not. More
generally, we also seek comment on alternative frameworks we might draw
upon in deciding on how to tailor forbearance here. For example, in the
2015 Open Internet Order, the Commission elected to grant broader
forbearance despite some calls to limit forbearance just to the scope
of relief previously granted to CMRS providers. We seek renewed comment
on that approach, as well as any alternative options for tailoring
forbearance here based on the regulatory experience in other contexts.
98. We also seek comment on whether forbearance should be
differently tailored in the specific context of the internet traffic
exchange portion of BIAS. In the 2015 Open Internet Order, the
Commission's ``definition for broadband internet access service
include[d] the exchange of internet traffic by an edge provider or an
intermediary with the broadband provider's network.'' Consequently,
under the 2015 Open Internet Order, internet traffic exchange was
subject to the same forbearance as BIAS more generally. We propose to
continue that uniform approach here, but also seek comment on whether
and to what extent the internet traffic exchange component of BIAS
should be subject to different tailoring of forbearance.
99. Finally, we also seek comment on any relevant new rules or
statutory requirements enacted subsequent to the forbearance analysis
in the 2015 Open Internet Order.
III. Proposed Open Internet Rules
100. Today we propose to return to the basic framework the
Commission adopted in 2015 to protect the openness of the internet. In
2015, consistent with its longstanding policy approach to protect
internet openness through basic conduct ``rules of the road,'' the
Commission adopted a set of carefully tailored conduct rules to prevent
specific practices harmful to an open internet--blocking, throttling,
and paid prioritization--as well as a strong standard of conduct
designed to prevent deployment of new practices that would harm
internet openness, and enhancements to the existing transparency rule.
In the RIF Order, the Commission broke with this longstanding approach
by altogether eliminating the open internet conduct rules, which we
believe left consumers exposed to behavior that can hinder their
ability to access the open internet. Below, we propose to reinstate
straightforward, clear rules that are designed to prevent ISPs from
engaging in practices harmful to consumers, competition, and public
safety, and that would provide the basis for a national regulatory
approach toward BIAS.
101. We first propose to reinstate the rules adopted in the 2015
Open Internet Order that prohibit ISPs from blocking, throttling, or
engaging in paid or affiliated prioritization arrangements. We
similarly propose to reinstate the general conduct standard adopted in
the 2015 Open Internet Order, which would prohibit practices that cause
unreasonable interference or unreasonable disadvantage to consumers or
edge providers. Finally, with regard to transparency, we propose to
retain the current disclosures, and we seek comment on the means of
disclosure, the interplay between the transparency rule and the
broadband label requirements, and any additional enhancements or
changes we should consider. The rules we propose today are consistent
with numerous other steps the Commission has taken to ensure that this
country has access to affordable, competitive, secure, and reliable
broadband. The proposed rules would establish clear standards for ISPs
to maintain internet openness and would give the Commission a solid
basis on which to take enforcement action against conduct that prevents
people from fully accessing all of the critical services available
through the internet.
A. Need for Rules
102. We believe that the rules we propose today will establish a
baseline that the Commission can use to prevent and address conduct
that harms consumers and competition when it occurs. Above, we express
our belief that consumers perceive and use BIAS as an essential
service, critical to accessing healthcare, education, work, commerce,
and civic engagement. Because of its importance, we further believe it
is paramount that consumers be able to use their BIAS connections
without degradation due to blocking, throttling, paid prioritization,
or other harmful conduct. The rules we propose today are designed to
ensure these protections. Below, we seek comment on particular issues
that inspire the need for these rules, including protecting public
safety, ISPs' incentives and abilities to harm internet openness, the
effects of harmful conduct on consumer demand and edge innovation,
reliance on the Commission's communications sector expertise to address
harmful conduct, and how the RIF Order's oversight framework addresses
harmful conduct. We invite commenters to submit economic analyses that
weigh the costs and benefits of the Commission potentially adopting
open internet rules.
1. Promoting Innovation and Free Expression
103. In the 2015 Open Internet Order, the Commission found that
internet openness helps promote innovation, investment, and free
expression, among other goals. Among other things, the Commission found
that the record there ``overwhelmingly support[ed] the proposition that
the internet's openness is critical to its ability to serve as a
platform for speech and civic engagement,'' facilitate ``the
development of diverse content,
[[Page 76068]]
applications, and services,'' and enable ``a virtuous cycle of
innovation.'' We continue to place high importance on innovation,
investment, and free expression, and we believe that conduct rules
designed to ensure internet openness will better advance those goals,
consistent with the reasoning in the 2015 Open Internet Order. We seek
comment on that view.
104. We are skeptical of the RIF Order's rejection of free
expression as a likely benefit of internet conduct rules designed to
advance internet openness. The RIF Order theorized that competition
``will protect values such as free expression, to the extent that
consumers value free expression as a service attribute and are aware of
how their ISPs' actions affect free expression.'' We question, however,
whether the RIF Order was correct to place such confidence in the
marketplace as sufficient to advance free expression on the internet.
Do consumers and the public have information about how ISP actions
affect free expression on a sufficiently granular and detailed basis to
act on that information? Separately, the RIF Order acknowledged that
``[t]he competitive process and antitrust would not protect free
expression in cases where consumers have decided that they are willing
to tolerate some blocking or throttling in order to obtain other things
of value.'' We doubt that consumers are likely to act uniformly as a
single, undifferentiated group, particularly where issues like free
expression are concerned. We thus question how well the RIF Order's
analysis accounts for the interests of consumers who place different
values on free expression. More generally, we seek updated information
and analysis about the anticipated effects of internet conduct rules on
free expression.
2. Protecting Public Safety
105. We believe that blocking, throttling, paid prioritization, and
other potential conduct have the potential to impair public safety
communications in a variety of circumstances and therefore harm the
public. As discussed above, one of the Commission's fundamental
obligations under the Act is to advance public safety. The Mozilla
court highlighted this charge and recognized the significance of it,
emphasizing that ``whenever public safety is involved, lives are at
stake.'' It went on to note that ``[a]ny blocking or throttling of
[safety officials'] internet communications during a public safety
crisis could have dire, irreversible results.'' Similarly, in the 2015
Open Internet Order, the Commission recognized that paid prioritization
and peering disagreements can negatively affect public safety
communications traveling over the same networks. Above, we detail and
seek comment on the wide range of public safety communications and
applications that rely on broadband networks and on the related
national security concerns implicating broadband service providers. We
now seek comment on our belief that maintaining the RIF Order's ex post
enforcement framework will provide insufficient protection against
conduct harms, which includes harms to public safety or national
security. We note that the Mozilla court expressed specific skepticism
about the Commission's contention in the RIF Order that post-activity
enforcement is a suitable method to address harmful conduct in the
public safety context, emphasizing that ``even if discriminatory
practices might later be addressed on a post-hoc basis by entities like
the Federal Trade Commission, the harm to the public cannot be
undone.'' We believe that the conduct rules we propose are necessary to
prevent and mitigate harms to those public safety uses that would
result from blocking, throttling, and other conduct, and we seek
comment on our tentative conclusion. Our proposed conduct rules may
also support consumer use of telehealth service and remote healthcare
monitoring, such as through connected devices, by ensuring consumers
can continue to access these services without the threat of blocking,
throttling, or other degradation. We seek comment on consumer
experiences where they have been harmed.
106. We further believe our proposed conduct rules would have
particular benefits for the safety of individuals with disabilities.
Above, we highlighted that these individuals increasingly rely on
internet-based communications, and that ``[t]hese applications often
require significant bandwidth, making their use particularly sensitive
to data caps and network management practices.'' We believe the use of
broadband to facilitate internet-based communications by persons with
disabilities for public safety purposes, such as to contact emergency
service providers, has a higher likelihood of being degraded by
prioritization of latency-sensitive applications on the same facilities
than less data-intensive uses, such as email, software updates, or
cached video. We accordingly believe that our proposed rules would
prevent such degradation and seek comment on this proposed analysis.
107. We seek comment on any other public safety harms or
unaddressed concerns that the proposed rules would help to alleviate.
For example, would the proposed rules help to improve public safety
officials' ability to communicate via alerting systems to help improve
emergency preparedness? Would they help to provide additional necessary
bandwidth for IP-based communications to Public Safety Answering Points
via 9-1-1? Would such rules help the authorities responding to such
calls to have better or more complete information about an emergency to
ensure a more comprehensive or timely response? Would such rules help
public safety and law enforcement authorities to better communicate
with one another during their responses to emergencies? What public
safety issues have arisen since the Commission's prior 2015 and 2018
orders that the proposed rules would help to address?
3. ISPs' Incentive and Ability To Harm Internet Openness
108. In both the 2010 Open Internet Order and 2015 Open Internet
Order, the Commission concluded that open internet rules were needed
because ISPs have the incentive and ability to engage in practices that
pose a threat to internet openness. In particular, the Commission found
that because ISP networks serve as platforms for internet ecosystem
participants to communicate, ISPs ``are in a position to act as a
`gatekeeper' between end users' access to edge providers' applications,
services, and devices and reciprocally for edge providers' access to
end users.'' The 2015 Open Internet Order highlighted several economic
incentives ISPs have to exploit this gatekeeper role, ``such as
preferring their own or affiliated content, demanding fees from edge
providers, or placing technical barriers to reaching end users.'' This
behavior, the Commission found, ``has the potential to cause a variety
of other negative externalities that hurt the open nature of the
internet,'' which ISPs do not internalize. The Commission also
concluded that ISPs ``have the technical ability to act on incentives
to harm the open internet.''
109. The RIF Order offered several reasons for rejecting the prior
rationales, including ISPs' economic incentives and supposed material
competitive restraints. We believe these conclusions presumed that
there were other ISPs to which consumers can switch if they were
suffering open internet harms, and that the switching costs would not
deter such switching. In addition, we tentatively agree with the
Mozilla court, which found that, ``[t]aken together, the Commission
fail[ed] to provide a fully
[[Page 76069]]
satisfying analysis of the competitive constraints faced by broadband
providers.'' The Commission also claimed that ``from the perspective of
many edge providers, end users do not single home, but subscribe to
more than one platform (e.g., one fixed and one mobile) capable of
granting the end user effective access to the edge provider's content
(i.e., they multi-home),'' and ``to the extent multihoming occurs in
the use of an application, there is no terminating monopoly.'' However,
consumers may lack access to both fixed and mobile connections, and
even when they do have access to both, the Commission did not show that
these connections allow consumers to access all edge provider services
unhindered, and therefore are truly competitive alternatives. Indeed,
the Commission has since concluded that ``fixed broadband and mobile
wireless broadband are not substitutes in all cases,'' finding that
each type of service ``enables different situational uses.'' We seek
comment on this analysis.
110. The RIF Order also found the Commission's action in the 2015
Open Internet Order was unjustified because it lacked evidence of harms
to internet openness. Setting aside the several examples of harmful
conduct discussed in the 2015 Open Internet Order and detailed in the
record for the RIF Order, we believe the RIF Order's conclusion gave
inadequate consideration to the effects of the Commission's consistent
efforts to apply and enforce the open internet standards since early
2005, which we believe deterred harmful ISP conduct. Thus, to the
extent there is limited evidence of harmful conduct prior to the 2015
Open Internet Order, we believe that demonstrates the Commission's
consistent efforts to apply and enforce open internet standards since
2005 were effective and are needed, not that the 2015 Open Internet
Order and the protections it adopted were unjustified. We seek comment
on this analysis.
111. We tentatively conclude that ISPs continue to have the
incentive and ability to engage in practices that pose a threat to
internet openness, and seek comment on this tentative conclusion and
the above analysis. We also seek to update the record underlying the
conclusions in the 2010 Open Internet Order and 2015 Open Internet
Order. How have changes in the marketplace or technology since 2015
affected ISPs', including smaller ISPs, incentives and ability to
engage in such practices? To what extent do ISPs have economic
incentives and mechanisms to block or disadvantage a particular edge
provider or class of edge providers? To what extent do vertically
integrated providers have particularized incentives to discriminate--on
price, quality, or other bases--in favor of affiliated products? For
instance, we believe that many major ISPs are affiliated with OTT
services or continue to offer competitive vertically integrated OTT
services, and frequently provide consumers with promotional offers that
bundle OTT services with BIAS. Do these affiliate relationships and
vertically integrated offerings create additional incentive for ISPs to
favor those services over others? To what extent should the Commission
evaluate the ability and incentives of other intermediaries involved in
the exchange of internet traffic, such as middle mile and backbone
providers, to engage in conduct harmful to internet openness,
particularly with respect to their relationships with ISPs? We seek
comment on this analysis.
112. We also seek comment on whether ISPs are incentivized to
increase revenues by charging edge providers for access or prioritized
access to the ISPs' end users. Are there justifications for charging
fees to edge providers that were not present in 2015? We seek comment
on these and other economic incentives and abilities that ISPs may have
to limit openness.
113. We seek comment on the state of competition in the BIAS
market. We note that the Commission's 2022 Communications Marketplace
Report found that, as of 2021, approximately 36 percent of households
lack a competitive option for fixed broadband at speeds of 100/20 Mbps
and that 70 percent of households in rural areas lack such an option.
Preliminary FCC staff calculations using December 2022 Broadband
Deployment Collection data yield similar results. While competition in
the mobile BIAS market is somewhat more significant, fixed and mobile
services have not proven to be substitutable. To what extent does the
state of competition affect ISPs' incentives to limit openness? Are
there different incentives for small ISPs? Similarly, to what extent
does the state of competition affect ISPs' incentives to innovate and
invest in their networks? We seek insight into whether consumers in all
areas of the country have adequate choices in the fixed and mobile
broadband service market. Also, to what extent do broadband services
with substantially different technical characteristics serve as
competitive substitutes? How, if at all, do commercial practices differ
in places where consumers have only one or two choices, particularly
when those choices use different technologies? Although the Commission
previously found that its authority is not predicated on a finding of
market power, and this finding has twice been upheld, is there a reason
we should engage in a market power analysis now with respect to ISPs
and, if so, how? We further seek comment on whether there are other
economic theories that we should consider to better understand and
assess ISP incentives to engage in practices that affect the internet's
openness. We also seek comment on the extent to which the state of
competition in the BIAS market should play a role in our decision as to
whether or not to reclassify BIAS as a Title II service.
114. We further seek information on ISP conduct since the RIF Order
was adopted. Are there examples of conduct that has harmed internet
openness? We note that one 2019 study suggested that ISPs regularly
throttle video content. Aside from specific examples of harm, could
other factors have deterred ISPs from engaging in any behavior that
might have violated open internet principles? For instance, while the
RIF Order was published in the Federal Register in February of 2018, it
was not until the Mozilla case concluded in October of 2019 that it was
clear open internet rules would no longer be in effect. To what degree
might long-term contracts, and the general difficulty of implementing
new business models, also have played a role in making it difficult for
ISPs to exploit opportunities the RIF Order created? Could the threat
of regulation have led ISPs to make voluntary commitments to maintain
service consistent with certain conduct rules established in the 2015
Open Internet Order, as they did, and if so, would this threat have
dimmed with time? Because broadband connections were so essential
during the pandemic, we believe ISPs have been under increased scrutiny
by the Commission, the media, and the public since March 2020, and
therefore have had a strong incentive to follow their voluntary
commitments. Further, following the RIF Order, ISPs have been subject
to state laws and executive orders addressing internet conduct. How
have state regulations addressing ISP conduct affected ISP conduct
nationwide? We also observe that unprecedented consumer demand for BIAS
and edge innovation that occurred during the pandemic also led to
unprecedented growth for ISPs. How did this growth impact providers'
incentives either to comply with open internet principles or to engage
in behavior that might increase their revenues at the expense of
internet openness? Are smaller ISPs' incentives or ability to engage in
[[Page 76070]]
conduct that might harm internet openness different from those facing
larger ISPs? What are the costs and advantages of waiting to act only
after ISPs begin to take actions that might harm internet openness?
Would such conduct be immediately identifiable? How quickly could ISPs
comply with new rules and what harms would occur in the meantime? Going
forward, is there reason to believe that ISPs will engage in conduct
that harms the open internet, particularly if the Commission chooses
not to adopt open internet rules?
4. Consumer Demand and Edge Innovation
115. We believe that an important byproduct of an open internet is
the edge innovation and consumer demand that promotes ISP investment,
and seek comment on this position. In the 2015 Open Internet Order, the
Commission recognized that ``innovations at the edges of the network
enhance consumer demand, leading to expanded investments in broadband
infrastructure that, in turn, spark new innovations at the edge.'' The
Commission referred to this as the ``virtuous cycle,'' and it was the
foundation for the action the Commission took in both the 2010 Open
Internet Order and 2015 Open Internet Order. The validity of the
virtuous cycle was upheld by both the Verizon court and the USTA court.
The RIF Order, however, discounted the 2015 Open Internet Order's
reliance on the virtuous cycle, contending there was a two-sided market
in which ISPs acted as platforms and benefited from facilitating
interactions between both sides of the market--edge providers and end
users--and profits from inducing both sides of the market to use its
platform.
116. We tentatively conclude that the RIF Order's explanation of
how two-sided markets work does not address a central problem open
internet rules are intended to address. When an ISP's actions harm
content creators and edge providers, the impact is distributed across
all ISPs, not just the ISP undertaking the action. Yet, each ISP only
accounts for the impact on its own operations. Consequently, a profit-
making decision from the perspective of the individual ISP creates
repercussions across all ISPs that harm the industry and the economy at
large. When an ISP makes the profit-maximizing decisions the RIF Order
describes, it only accounts for the impacts of its decision on its own
company. It does not account for the impact of those actions on ISPs
that lie outside its geographic market. These constitute the bulk of
ISPs. Thus, an ISP, for example, that does not face fully effective
competition, might expect to see higher profits if it sets prices for
edge providers that recover in expectation a little more than its long-
term costs. However, consistent with the reasoning of the RIF Order, it
will not set prices for edge providers that are so high that the impact
on the quality of edge provider service would cause the ISP to lose
more because it would be forced to lower prices to its own consumers.
We believe that the difficulty with the RIF Order analysis is that in
setting its profit-maximizing prices for edge providers, the ISP lowers
service quality for all ISPs, but that harm does not feature in the
ISP's profit-maximizing calculation. While the impact on content
quality of a single ISP setting prices for edge providers somewhat
above the competitive level will be small and spread out over all ISPs,
all similarly situated ISPs face similar incentives. Thus, since ISPs
have no means of coordinating their behavior, and doing so could be
illegal, each will behave in this way with material negative cumulative
effects. The result is a breaking of the virtuous cycle described in
the 2010 Open Internet Order: not only will ISPs collectively be worse
off, but so will the broader economy. We seek comment on this analysis
and other bases for validating or questioning the RIF Order's analysis.
117. We believe it is necessary to secure the open internet to
preserve the virtuous cycle wherein market signals on both sides of
ISPs' platforms encourage consumer demand, content creation, and
innovation, with each respectively increasing the other, providing ISPs
incentives to invest in their networks. We further believe that if
innovative edge services are subject to blocking, throttling, paid
prioritization, or other conduct by ISPs that harms internet openness,
that conduct will reduce edge innovation. This will, in turn, reduce
the quality and quantity of edge services available to consumers, and,
specifically with blocking and throttling, directly inhibit consumers
from accessing the edge services they desire. The impacts on edge
services and consumers will reduce demand for broadband connections and
ultimately suppress the need for ISPs to invest in upgrades to their
networks or new deployments to meet that demand. Stalled ISP network
improvements ultimately will undermine new edge innovation and consumer
demand. We seek comment on this proposed analysis.
118. We believe the conduct rules we propose will protect edge
innovation and the ability of consumers to access those new and
developing services, thereby promoting both edge and ISP investment. We
seek comment on this view. In particular, what is the role of the
internet's openness in facilitating consumer demand and edge innovation
that encourages edge and ISP investment? We are also interested in
understanding the role the open internet may play in the promotion of
edge competition or in the reduction or elimination of barriers to edge
entry and investment.
5. The Commission's Ability To Address Conduct That Undermines an Open
Internet
119. We believe that, as the expert agency on communications, the
Commission is best positioned to safeguard internet openness. The RIF
Order removed the Commission's authority to enforce open internet
requirements and left to the FTC the responsibility to address harmful
ISP conduct. The current Chair of the FTC agrees that the Federal
Communications Commission ``has the clearest legal authority and
expertise to fully oversee internet service providers,'' noting
specifically that she supports efforts by the Commission ``to reassert
that authority and once again put in place the nondiscrimination rules,
privacy protections, and other basic requirements needed to create a
healthier market.'' We seek comment on whether the Commission's
longstanding oversight of the communications industry gives it unique
technical, economic, and public interest aptitude in evaluating ISP
conduct. To what extent does the Commission's enforcement apparatus
provide it with sufficient authority and capabilities to address
harmful conduct by ISPs, including by securing administrative relief?
What efficiencies would be achieved as a result of the Commission
having authority over BIAS along with other communications services
(e.g., voice and cable) that providers offer to customers as part of
bundled offerings?
6. The RIF Order's Framework
120. When the Commission repealed the open internet rules in the
RIF Order, it broke from the Commission's persistent efforts to
preserve an open internet. The RIF Order did not address the
longstanding bipartisan agreement that the Commission should prohibit
ISPs from engaging in blocking, throttling, and other conduct that
undermines an open internet and--importantly--that it should have the
authority to enforce those restrictions. This was echoed by the Mozilla
court, which was ``troubled by the
[[Page 76071]]
Commission's failure to grapple with the fact that, for much of the
past two decades, ISPs were subject to some degree of open Internet
restrictions.'' The Mozilla court explained, that ``[w]hile outside
observers may associate `light touch' with a distinct era in regulation
and `open Internet' with another era, the successive Commission
majorities have consistently vowed fealty to both.'' We believe the RIF
Order failed to ensure the most basic protections for the open
internet--prohibitions on blocking and throttling--let alone other
threats to the open internet identified in the 2015 Open Internet
Order. We seek comment on this analysis.
121. We believe that the 2015 Open Internet Order was consistent
with Commission precedent by applying a light-touch regulatory
framework to preserve an open internet. When the Verizon court struck
down the 2010 Open Internet Order, the Commission sought to implement a
solution to preserve longstanding open internet standards that
supported the unprecedented growth in fixed and mobile subscribership,
edge innovation, and network investment that occurred up to that point.
The Commission determined that classifying BIAS as a Title II service
was not only more consistent with a modern assessment of how the
definition of ``telecommunications service'' applies to current BIAS
offerings, but would also enable it to apply and enforce open internet
rules. Thus, in establishing open internet rules using a light-touch
application of Title II, we believe the 2015 Open Internet Order
ensured maintenance of the status quo that had existed for more than
ten years prior to that Order. As such, we tentatively conclude that
the action we propose today restores the status quo that had existed up
until the Commission adopted the RIF Order, in which clear rules of the
road ensure that edge innovation and investment flourish and consumers
can access all lawful content they see fit. We seek comment on our
proposed assessment.
122. Transparency. The Commission's transparency rule requires ISPs
to publicly disclose the network practices, performance
characteristics, and commercial terms of the BIAS they offer, including
disclosure of any blocking, throttling, and affiliated or paid
prioritization practices. We recognize that transparency is a valuable
tool to protect the open internet, but that it is only one element of a
comprehensive framework that prevents consumers from experiencing harms
that inhibit their access to an open internet. While the transparency
requirements currently in place provide consumers and edge providers
the ability to make informed decisions, we believe their effectiveness
is limited because they do not restrict ISPs from engaging in
activities that have long enjoyed bipartisan opposition--blocking,
throttling, and discrimination--let alone other conduct that has the
potential to cause harm, such as paid prioritization. Indeed, the RIF
Order only requires that companies disclose their blocking, throttling,
and paid or affiliated prioritization in their transparency
disclosures; it does not prohibit companies from engaging in these
practices. We tentatively conclude that these are the types of conduct
that require ex ante intervention to ensure they do not happen in the
first instance, and therefore tentatively conclude that the
comprehensive set of conduct rules that we propose today are needed to
protect consumers from this conduct. We seek comment on this tentative
conclusion.
123. Consumer Protection and Antitrust Law. We seek comment on
whether, in practice, consumer protection and antitrust laws provide
sufficient protections against blocking, throttling, paid
prioritization, and other conduct that harms the open internet, as the
RIF Order asserted. The Mozilla court explained that the RIF Order
``theorized why antitrust and consumer protection law is preferred to
ex ante regulations but failed to provide any meaningful analysis of
whether these laws would, in practice, prevent blocking and
throttling.'' The RIF Order also seems to concede that blocking,
throttling, and discrimination may be permitted under its chosen
oversight and enforcement framework, and that paid prioritization may
be found to be permissible in many instances.
124. We seek comment on the application of consumer protection laws
by the FTC. Notably, a 2021 Supreme Court ruling restricted the FTC's
ability to seek monetary relief on behalf of consumers, thereby
reducing the deterrent effect of the FTC's actions. Congress has also
created other exceptions to the FTC's consumer protection authority and
assigned consumer protection responsibilities to other agencies that
have expertise in both consumer protection and the relevant industry.
Finally, we also observe that while the FTC has generally proceeded
through ex post enforcement actions and public guidance,
reclassification would allow the Commission to proceed by establishing
ex ante, commonly applicable rules. We seek comment on the benefits and
burdens of such an approach.
125. We also seek comment on whether the FTC's and Department of
Justice's (DOJ) antitrust enforcement authority is limited in its
ability to protect against open internet harms. The RIF Order claims
that antitrust would be effective because harmful conduct would be
evaluated under the ``rule of reason,'' which it claims amounts to a
``consumer welfare test.'' However, the ``rule of reason'' analysis
includes a subjective determination about whether alleged economic
benefits outweigh recognized consumer harms. Because the analysis
focuses on economic factors, does it provide sufficient weight to
important non-economic factors, which courts have recognized are
appropriate to consider under the public interest standard of the Act?
Even if strict application of antitrust law does not reveal a violation
of section 1 or section 2 of the Sherman Act, could there still be
market distortions and power asymmetries, both between ISPs and other
market players and between ISPs and consumers, that require ex ante
intervention in the public interest, at least in instances where the
Commission may find that conduct is unjust, unreasonable, or
unreasonably discriminatory? For example, would regulatory intervention
be necessary in instances when there is a high likelihood of harm to
consumers and the likelihood or availability of effective remedies for
consumers is speculative?
126. Consumer Relief. Even if the RIF Order's oversight and
enforcement framework were to provide some protection, we seek comment
on whether it gives consumers a meaningful opportunity to secure
relief. The RIF Order concluded that its framework ``ensures that
consumers have means to take remedial action if an ISP engages in
behavior inconsistent with an open Internet.'' It appears that
consumers' primary means for seeking recourse under that framework is
to submit complaints to the FTC with the goal of spurring the agency to
direct its resources to investigate and address the alleged harms. With
antitrust, in particular, it appears that to pursue relief, consumers
must submit complaints that describe conduct that inhibits their access
to the internet, attempt to tie that conduct to anticompetitive
behavior that harms other entities, and otherwise rely on the FTC or
other entities to bring suits alleging anticompetitive conduct that
also harms the open internet. We seek comment on whether consumers can
effectively use these mechanisms to obtain relief, and do so in a
timely
[[Page 76072]]
manner, and we seek comment generally regarding consumers' experiences
obtaining relief following the RIF Order.
127. Aside from the remedies offered by law, we seek comment on the
adequacy of other methods the RIF Order offers that consumers can use
to secure relief. First, the RIF Order suggests that consumers may be
able to seek service from another ISP if they are experiencing harmful
conduct, but as discussed above, it is not clear there is adequate
local competition in many areas, especially rural areas, to give
consumers a meaningful choice among providers, and we seek comment on
this assessment. For instance, 36 percent of households lack a
competitive option for broadband at speeds of 100/20 Mbps and 70
percent of households in rural areas lack such an option. At higher
speeds, the level of competition becomes non-existent in most areas
with approximately 96 percent of households lacking a competitive
option for gigabit broadband service. Even when consumers have access
to another provider not engaging in behavior that is inconsistent with
an open Internet, to what extent is their choice between providers
often negated because the alternatives charge significantly higher
prices or provide lower performance and quality of service? Second, the
RIF Order states that if ISPs engage in conduct that harms the open
internet, public attention from consumer backlash would police their
behavior, but it seems to assume that the harmful conduct by ISPs would
be obvious or widespread--rather than surreptitious or sporadic--such
that a sufficient number of consumers would be aware of the conduct and
vocal in their objections to have the necessary force to influence ISP
conduct. Third, even if ISP conduct was sufficiently egregious to
result in a consumer backlash, how would that backlash police ISP
behavior? We seek comment on the foregoing.
128. Further, to the extent the RIF Order's oversight and
enforcement framework can address harmful conduct when it occurs, we
seek comment on whether the framework will still result in fewer
instances where ISPs will be subject to enforcement action for conduct
that is clearly harmful to an open internet. If the RIF Order's
framework becomes the settled approach, will consumers suffer a greater
amount of harmful conduct than would exist under the open internet
rules we propose, and receive fewer remedies when that harm occurs?
Even when remedies are achieved, will they provide sufficient redress
to harms resulting from ISPs' conduct? Does the RIF Order's regulatory
framework adequately serve the public interest, given how essential
broadband is to full participation in today's society and economy?
129. Edge Provider Protections. We believe the RIF Order's reliance
on antitrust protections undermines the virtuous cycle by failing to
protect the small edge services that comprise an important part of the
internet. While antitrust protections would apply where, for example,
an ISP favored its own edge provider, or sought to harm a competing
edge provider, antitrust protections do not forbid the unjust or
unreasonable exercise of market powers. But it is exactly those
practices that could unravel the virtuous cycle. As part of its
justification for reliance on antitrust law, the RIF Order expresses
particular concern about the effect of regulations on small ISPs. But
we believe that there are far more edge services that are small--
typically many times smaller than the smallest ISPs--which the RIF
Order does not acknowledge or evaluate. We seek comment on this belief
and on the extent to which providers of these edge services would have
any leverage in negotiations with ISPs of any size, let alone large,
vertically integrated ISPs. Should large, or even small, ISPs begin
seeking paid prioritization arrangements, for example, would this
disproportionately harm small edge providers, for example, because
larger edge providers could use their own countervailing power to
better manage the situation? Would this increase entry barriers,
harming edge provider competition and innovation, for example, by
discouraging new entry against larger established edge providers? In
all of these cases, what legal case would a harmed edge provider be
able to bring under antitrust law and what would the likelihood of
success be? The RIF Order argues that ISPs have incentives to support
nascent competition as more edge provider competition will reduce the
countervailing power of large, entrenched ISPs. We seek comment on
whether this is accurate, and in particular whether any efforts or
investments by an ISP to help nascent edge providers would produce
diffuse benefits to all ISPs, and thus whether any single ISP would
have appropriate incentives to help develop edge provider competition.
130. Research in innovation economics suggests that edge innovation
is heterogeneous. Some types of edge innovation will thrive under
general purpose open networks. Such innovations could have significant
positive spillover effects that benefit the broader internet ecosystem.
However, other types of edge innovation, especially during the early
phases of the innovation process, may be facilitated by quality of
service differentiation of the network. This suggests that a forward-
looking open internet policy will be most supportive of innovation if
it protects the openness of the access platforms for innovations with
high spillover effects while at the same time allowing non-
discriminatory forms of network differentiation to support edge
innovations that are facilitated by such support. We seek comment on
this proposed analysis.
131. Costs of Oversight Regime. We seek comment generally on the
costs to ISPs resulting from the RIF Order's chosen oversight regime.
The RIF Order claims that its approach would lower compliance costs for
ISPs. We reiterate, however, that because the RIF Order's preemption
directive was vacated by the D.C. Circuit in Mozilla, ISPs are now
subject to a patchwork of state requirements for BIAS, rather than a
national regulatory framework. We seek comment on the costs of this
patchwork approach.
132. We also seek comment on the costs of the RIF Order's consumer
protection and antitrust oversight framework. We observe that whether
an act is unfair or deceptive under consumer protection law each
depends on its own three-prong subjective test, which can result in
unforeseen outcomes, and the antitrust rule of reason relies on a case-
by-case evaluation. In light of these factors, we seek comment on
whether the RIF Order's removal of bright-line, ex ante rules can
result in significant compliance cost for ISPs. Relatedly, what are the
costs to ISPs for having to evaluate the risks of their planned conduct
under this consumer protection and antitrust oversight framework?
B. Conduct Rules
133. We propose to adopt rules to prohibit ISPs from blocking,
throttling, or engaging in paid or affiliated prioritization
arrangements, and also seek comment on the adoption of a proposed
general conduct standard for ISPs. The last several years have
demonstrated not only broadband's essential value, but also the
consequences to consumers of its absence or degradation, and we
therefore believe it important to establish clear, bright-line rules.
We seek comment on the proposals and analyses herein.
[[Page 76073]]
134. The conduct rules we propose track the language of the rules
the Commission adopted in the 2015 Open internet Order. In 2015, the
Commission found that blocking, throttling, and paid prioritization
arrangements were three practices that ``in particular demonstrably
harm the open internet.'' The Commission adopted rules to ban these
three practices, finding that they are ``inherently unjust and
unreasonable, in violation of section 201(b) of the Act, and that these
practices threaten the virtuous cycle of innovation and investment that
the Commission intends to protect under its obligation and authority to
take steps to promote broadband deployment under section 706 of the
1996 Act.'' Even while eliminating these protections in 2018, the RIF
Order still recognized the harms of blocking and throttling practices
and required disclosure of such practices under its revised
transparency rule. Below, we seek comment on how experience since the
RIF Order would help inform the scope and language of prohibitions on
blocking, throttling, and paid prioritization arrangements. At the
outset, however, we seek comment at a broader level on whether these
three practices are still the key threats to internet openness.
135. We do not anticipate that the open Internet rules we propose
today will have a harmful effect on investment. ISP investment was not
inhibited from 2005 through 2016, when the Commission consistently
sought to impose and enforce open internet standards. We also believe
that many ISP investment decisions over the next several years will be
significantly influenced by the influx of federal and state funding
allocated to ISPs to support infrastructure deployment and broadband
connectivity. In light of these facts, we do not expect that adopting
open internet rules will change ISP investment decisions. Do commenters
agree? Furthermore, we believe that ``[w]ithout an open Internet, there
would be less broadband investment and deployment'' because of the
expected harm to the virtuous cycle. As the Commission concluded in the
2015 Open Internet Order, ``to the extent that our decision might in
some cases reduce providers' investment incentives, we believe any such
effects are far outweighed by positive effects on innovation and
investment in other areas of the ecosystem that our core broadband
policies will promote.'' We seek comment on these views.
1. Preventing Blocking of Lawful Content, Applications, Services, and
Non-Harmful Devices
136. We propose to adopt a bright-line rule prohibiting ISPs from
blocking lawful content, applications, services, or non-harmful
devices. In 2015, the Commission found that ISPs function as
gatekeepers for both their end-user customers who access the internet,
and for various transit providers, CDNs, and edge providers attempting
to reach the broadband provider's end-user subscribers. The Commission
concluded that ISPs have the economic incentives and technical ability
to engage in practices that pose a threat to internet openness by
harming other network providers, edge providers, and end users.
Reversing course in 2018, the Commission determined, in contrast, that
``ISPs have strong incentives to preserve internet openness, and these
interests typically outweigh any countervailing incentives an ISP might
have.'' As discussed above, we tentatively conclude that ISPs continue
to have the incentive and ability to engage in practices that threaten
internet openness, and as such, we believe rules are needed to protect
a consumer's right to access lawful content, applications, and
services, and to use non-harmful devices. We seek comment on this
proposed analysis.
137. As the Commission found in the 2010 Open Internet Order and
the 2015 Open Internet Order, we believe that ``the freedom to send and
receive lawful content and to use and provide applications and services
without fear of blocking is essential to the Internet's openness.'' To
that end, we propose to adopt the following no-blocking rule applicable
to both fixed and mobile providers of BIAS, which tracks the language
of the prohibition adopted by the 2015 Open Internet Order:
A person engaged in the provision of broadband Internet access
service, insofar as such person is so engaged, shall not block
lawful content, applications, services, or non-harmful devices,
subject to reasonable network management.
We seek comment on this proposed rule and whether this remains the
best formulation of a no-blocking principle for ISPs. As in 2015, we
intend that the phrase ``content, applications, and services'' refers
to all traffic transmitted to or from end users of a broadband internet
access service, including traffic that may not fit clearly into any of
these categories. Is this language expansive enough to encompass all
types of internet traffic, or are there additional categories that we
should include? We also propose to make clear that the no-blocking rule
would prohibit ISPs from charging edge providers a fee to avoid having
the edge providers' content, service, or application blocked from
reaching the broadband provider's end-user customers. As in 2015, we
also propose that this prohibition will apply to transmission of lawful
content only and does not prevent or restrict an ISP from refusing to
transmit unlawful material. We seek comment on these proposals. What
other consequences of a no-blocking rule should we consider?
138. As far back as the Commission's Internet Policy Statement in
2005, major ISPs have broadly accepted a no-blocking principle. Even
after the repeal of the no-blocking rule, many ISPs continue to
advertise a commitment to open internet principles on their websites,
which include commitments not to block traffic except in certain
circumstances. Rather than reflect a lack of potential harm to
consumers and the open internet, we believe that these continued
commitments to no-blocking principles emphasize their importance to the
internet as we know it. We believe that codifying this principle in the
Commission's rules is necessary to protect consumers and internet
openness against any ISP's decision in the future to move away from
this widely accepted principle. Furthermore, because this principle is
so widely accepted, including by ISPs, we anticipate compliance costs
will be minimal. We seek comment on this analysis. We seek comment on
whether the predictive reasoning underlying the Commission's repeal of
the no-blocking rule in 2018 proved accurate. We also seek specific
comment regarding any instances of an ISP blocking lawful content,
applications, services or non-harmful devices in the years since the
Commission repealed the no-blocking rule. Finally, we seek comment on
the costs and benefits of a no-blocking rule.
2. Preventing Throttling of Lawful Content, Applications, Services, and
Non-Harmful Devices
139. Next, we propose to adopt a rule to prevent ISPs from
throttling lawful content, applications, services, and non-harmful
devices. As part of the no-blocking rule that the Commission adopted in
the 2010 Open Internet Order, the Commission prohibited ISPs from
``impairing or degrading particular content, applications, services, or
non-harmful devices so as to render them effectively unusable (subject
to reasonable network management),'' because such conduct ``can have
the same effects as outright blocking.'' In 2015, the Commission
concluded that a standalone prohibition was required to
[[Page 76074]]
prevent ISPs from impairing or degrading lawful internet traffic. The
Commission used the term ``throttling'' to refer to such conduct that
is not outright blocking, but that inhibited the delivery of particular
content, applications, or services, or particular classes of content,
applications, or services.
140. We propose to adopt the following no-throttling rule
applicable to both fixed and mobile providers of BIAS, which tracks the
language of the Commission's 2015 Open Internet Order, and seek comment
on our proposal:
A person engaged in the provision of broadband internet access
service, insofar as such person is so engaged, shall not impair or
degrade lawful internet traffic on the basis of internet content,
application, or service, or use of a non-harmful device, subject to
reasonable network management.
As in 2015, we intend this rule to prohibit conduct that impairs or
degrades lawful traffic to a non-harmful device or class of devices,
which includes any conduct by an ISP to impair, degrade, slow down, or
render effectively unusable particular content, services, applications,
or devices, that is not reasonable network management. We also propose
to give the same meaning to ``content, applications, and services'' as
we propose in the context of the no-blocking rule, and we seek comment
on this proposal. Have there been any technological changes or
advancements in network management since 2015 that we should reflect in
the proposed rule? As written, does the proposed rule provide clear
guidance to ISPs and customers on what is considered prohibited
conduct? As in 2015, we propose that transfers of unlawful content or
unlawful transfers of content would not be protected by the no-
throttling rule. Further, as with our proposed no-blocking rule, we
propose to prohibit ISPs from imposing a fee on edge providers to avoid
having the edge providers' content, service, or application throttled.
We seek comment on these proposals. What other aspects and consequences
of a no-throttling rule should we consider?
141. As in 2015, we propose that while a no-throttling rule would
address instances in which an ISP targets particular content,
applications, services, or non-harmful devices, it would not address
the practice of slowing down an end user's connection to the internet
based on a choice clearly made by the end user. For example, an ISP may
offer a data plan in which a subscriber receives a set amount of data
at one speed tier and any remaining data at a lower tier. We seek
comment on our proposal to maintain this distinction. We do not intend
to leave such data plans without oversight, however, and therefore
propose to allow the Commission to review the particulars of a certain
data plan, as required by sections 201 and 202 of the Act, which
prohibit unjust and unreasonable charges and practices, or our proposed
general conduct standard, discussed below.
142. As discussed above, because BIAS connections were so essential
during the pandemic, we believe ISPs have been under increased scrutiny
by the Commission, the media, and the public since March 2020, and
therefore have had a strong incentive to follow their voluntary
commitments to maintain service consistent with certain conduct rules
established in the 2015 Open Internet Order. We believe that this,
coupled with unprecedented consumer demand for BIAS during the pandemic
and state regulations addressing ISP conduct, helped to constrain ISPs
from engaging in conduct that could harm internet openness. These
constraints, however, are neither permanent nor uniform, and we believe
that incentives for ISPs to degrade competitors' content, applications,
or devices remain; as such, we propose that rules are needed to protect
consumers' right to access lawful internet traffic of their choice
without impairment or degradation. We seek comment on this proposed
analysis, and invite comment on ISPs' incentives to engage in
throttling conduct harmful to internet openness. As the Commission
recognized in the RIF Order, ``[t]he potential consequences of blocking
and throttling lawful content on the internet ecosystem are well-
documented in the record and in Commission precedent.'' Even after the
repeal of the no-throttling rule, ISPs continue to advertise on their
websites that they do not throttle traffic except in limited
circumstances. As a result, we anticipate that prohibiting throttling
of lawful internet traffic will impose a minimal compliance burden on
ISPs. Do commenters agree? We seek comment on specific costs or
technical concerns that our proposed rule would impose on ISPs,
including small providers. We also seek comment on the reasoning
underlying the Commission's repeal of the no-throttling rule in 2018.
We seek specific comment regarding any instances of an ISP throttling
lawful content, applications, services, or non-harmful devices in the
years since the no-throttling rule was repealed.
3. No Paid or Affiliated Prioritization
143. We next propose to ban arrangements in which an ISP accepts
consideration (monetary or otherwise) from a third party to manage its
network in a manner that benefits particular content, applications,
services, or devices. Under this proposal, we would also prohibit
arrangements in which a provider manages its network in a manner that
favors the content, applications, services, or devices of an affiliated
entity. The Act defines ``affiliate'' as ``a person that (directly or
indirectly) owns or controls, is owned or controlled by, or is under
common ownership or control with, another person. For purposes of this
paragraph, the term `own' means to own an equity interest (or the
equivalent thereof) of more than 10 percent.'' In 2015, the Commission
adopted a rule banning these type of paid or affiliated prioritization
agreements, finding that such practices ``harm consumers, competition,
and innovation, as well as create disincentives to promote broadband
deployment.'' We tentatively conclude that this reasoning remains
applicable today. We seek comment on this proposal and the underlying
analysis.
144. Tracking the language of the Commission's 2015 Open Internet
Order, we propose to adopt the following definition of ``paid
prioritization'' and rule banning such arrangements:
A person engaged in the provision of broadband internet access
service, insofar as such person is so engaged, shall not engage in
paid prioritization. ``Paid prioritization'' refers to the
management of a broadband provider's network to directly or
indirectly favor some traffic over other traffic, including through
use of techniques such as traffic shaping, prioritization, resource
reservation, or other forms of preferential traffic management,
either (a) in exchange for consideration (monetary or otherwise)
from a third party, or (b) to benefit an affiliated entity.
In adopting a ban on paid prioritization in 2015, the Commission
sought to prevent the bifurcation of the internet into a ``fast'' lane
for those with the means and will to pay and a ``slow'' lane for
everyone else. This development, the Commission reasoned, would
introduce artificial barriers to entry, distort the market, harm
competition, harm consumers, discourage innovation, undermine public
safety and universal service, and harm free expression. The Commission
was concerned that preferential treatment arrangements would create a
chilling effect, disrupting the internet's virtuous cycle of
innovation, consumer demand, and investment, and that the widespread
use of paid prioritization practices would cause damage to
[[Page 76075]]
internet openness that would be difficult to reverse and challenging to
track. We tentatively conclude that these concerns remain valid today,
and we seek comment on this conclusion. What are some examples of harms
or categories of harms that paid prioritization arrangements might
cause to the open internet and to consumers? Does the language of the
proposed rule make clear the scope of this proposed prohibition? What
other aspects or consequences of a ban on paid prioritization practices
should we consider?
145. Previously, the Commission has found it well-established that
ISPs have both the incentive and the ability to engage in paid
prioritization. In its Verizon opinion, the D.C. Circuit noted the
powerful incentives ISPs have to accept fees from edge providers in
return for excluding their competitors or for granting prioritized
access to end users. Some ISPs continue to advertise that they do not
engage in paid or affiliated prioritization practices. Even with
similar promises from ISPs in 2015, the Commission concluded that the
potential harm to the open internet was too significant to rely on mere
promises from ISPs because ``the future openness of the internet should
not turn on the decision of a particular company.'' We tentatively
conclude that this reasoning remains valid today, and we seek comment
on this tentative conclusion, and any alternatives we should consider.
146. In choosing to repeal the ban on paid prioritization in 2018,
the Commission found that the costs of a ban outweighed the benefits,
and that the transparency rule and the enforcement of existing
antitrust and consumer protection laws would sufficiently address many
of the concerns regarding the dangers of paid prioritization
arrangements. We seek comment on that assessment from 2018. In weighing
the costs and benefits, the Commission did not identify specific
compliance costs, but rather identified the costs in the form of
forgone benefits. While we do not dispute that some potential benefits
may result from paid prioritization arrangements, we tentatively
conclude that the potential harms to consumers and the open internet
outweigh any speculative benefits. Do commenters agree? Why or why not?
What compliance costs might ISPs incur as a result of such a ban,
including small providers? The Commission also found in 2018 that paid
prioritization could be a tool in helping to close the digital divide
by reducing BIAS subscription prices for consumers. Do commenters agree
with this assessment? We tentatively conclude that the Commission's
2018 finding that existing antitrust and consumer protection laws, in
conjunction with some form of a transparency rule, offer enough
protection against the potential harms caused by paid prioritization
arrangements was erroneous. We seek comment on this tentative
conclusion.
147. As part of a rule prohibiting paid prioritization
arrangements, we also propose to adopt a rule concerning waiver of such
a ban that establishes a balancing test. Under our waiver rules, the
Commission may waive any rule in whole or in part, ``for good cause
shown.'' A general waiver of the Commission's rules is only appropriate
if special circumstances warrant a deviation from the general rule and
such a deviation will service the public interest. In 2015, the
Commission found that it was appropriate to adopt specific rules
concerning the factors that it will use to examine a waiver request of
the paid prioritization ban. We tentatively conclude that it remains
appropriate to accompany a rule prohibiting paid prioritization
arrangements with specific guidance on how the Commission would
evaluate subsequent waiver requests. We seek comment on this
conclusion. Tracking the language of the 2015 Open Internet Order, we
propose to adopt the following rule, and seek comment on this proposal:
The Commission may waive the ban on paid prioritization only if
the petitioner demonstrates that the practice would provide some
significant public interest benefit and would not harm the open
nature of the internet.
148. Following the framework the Commission established in 2015, we
propose to require an applicant seeking a waiver of our proposed rule
to prohibit paid prioritization arrangements to make two related
showings. First, the applicant would need to demonstrate that the
practice will have some significant public interest benefit. The
applicant could make such a showing by providing evidence that the
practice furthers competition, innovation, consumer demand, or
investment. Second, the applicant would need to demonstrate that the
practice does not harm the nature of the open internet. This second
showing would include, but is not limited to, providing evidence that
the practice: (i) does not materially degrade or threaten to materially
degrade the BIAS of the general public; (ii) does not hinder consumer
choice; (iii) does not impair competition, innovation, consumer demand,
or investment; and (iv) does not impede any forms of expression, types
of service, or points of view. We seek comment on the continued
relevance of these four examples. Should the Commission consider other
factors when considering a request to waive our proposed ban on paid
prioritization arrangements? Do commenters agree that this language
creates a ``high bar'' for potential applicants to meet, ensuring that
the Commission would only grant waiver relief in exceptional cases?
4. General Conduct Rule
149. We propose to adopt a general conduct standard, which would
prohibit practices that unreasonably interfere with or disadvantage
consumers or edge providers. In 2015, the Commission adopted a standard
to prohibit, on a case-by-case basis, practices that unreasonably
interfere with or unreasonably disadvantage the ability of consumers to
reach the internet content, services, and applications of their
choosing or of edge providers to access consumers using the internet.
The Commission reasoned that while the bright-line rules against
blocking, throttling, and paid prioritization arrangements would act as
``critical cornerstone[s] in protecting and promoting the open
internet,'' it also needed a mechanism to respond to ``other current or
future practices that cause the type of harms our rules are intended to
address.'' The general conduct standard was necessary, in other words,
to ensure that ISPs did not find a technical or economic means to evade
these bright line bans to wield their gatekeeper power in a way that
would compromise the open internet. We agree with the Commission's
conclusion in 2015 that it is ``critical that access to a robust, open
internet remains a core feature of the communications landscape, but
also that there remains leeway for experimentation with innovative
offerings.'' We believe that this reasoning continues to support the
adoption of a general conduct standard to operate as the catch-all
backstop to the three bright-line prohibitions, and we seek comment on
this analysis.
150. We propose to adopt a general conduct standard that tracks the
language of the 2015 Open Internet Order, and we seek comment on this
proposal:
Any person engaged in the provision of broadband internet access
service, insofar as such person is so engaged, shall not
unreasonably interfere with or unreasonably disadvantage (i) end
users' ability to select, access, and use broadband internet access
service or the lawful internet content,
[[Page 76076]]
applications, services, or devices of their choice, or (ii) edge
providers' ability to make lawful content, applications, services,
or devices available to end users. Reasonable network management
shall not be considered a violation of this rule.
In 2015, the Commission found that careful application of this
standard would act to not only balance the benefits of innovation
against the harms to end users and edge providers, but also act to
protect free expression. If adopted, we anticipate that this general
conduct standard would accomplish these same goals going forward, and
we seek comment on this prediction. Does the proposed language capture
the scope of behaviors that the Commission might need to address? Have
there been any technical or market developments that should affect our
approach? Is there an alternative standard we should adopt to establish
a general conduct rule?
151. Consistent with the Commission's 2015 approach, we propose to
enforce this standard with a framework and in a manner that would
provide certainty and flexibility to the industry and encourage
innovation, while best protecting the open internet. First, we propose
to follow a case-by-case approach that would consider the totality of
the circumstances when analyzing whether conduct satisfies the
standard. Second, we propose a non-exhaustive list of factors that we
would consider to aid in our analysis. These factors would include: (i)
whether a practice allows end-user control and enables consumer choice;
(ii) whether a practice has anti-competitive effects in the market for
applications, services, content, or devices; (iii) whether a practice
affects consumers' ability to select, access, or use lawful broadband
services, applications, or content; (iv) the effect a practice has on
innovation, investment, or broadband deployment; (v) whether a practice
threatens free expression; (vi) whether a practice is application
agnostic; and (v) whether a practice conforms to best practices and
technical standards adopted by open, broadly representative, and
independent internet engineering, governance initiatives, or standards-
setting organizations. Do all of these factors remain relevant in
today's internet ecosystem? If not, why not? Are there other factors we
should consider including in this non-exhaustive list that would aid
with industry compliance or Commission enforcement?
152. We believe that the general conduct standard we propose today,
mirroring that adopted in the 2015 Open Internet Order, provides
sufficient guidance to ISPs for purpose of compliance, a conclusion
affirmed by the D.C. Circuit. Nonetheless, in 2018, the Commission
repealed the general conduct standard because it found that it was
``vague and ha[d] created regulatory uncertainty in the marketplace
hindering investment and innovation.'' We seek comment on whether there
are additional steps we should take to ensure that ISPs understand the
types of conduct and practices that might be prohibited under our
proposal. Are there any specific practices that would or would not
violate this proposed rule, and if so, should we provide examples of
those practices? For example, are there any zero rating or sponsored
data practices that raise particular concerns under the proposed
general conduct standard? What would the compliance costs be for ISPs,
particularly small providers? How would our proposed general conduct
standard affect current and future ISP business practices? What other
aspects or consequences of imposing a general conduct standard should
we consider? We seek comment on whether the Commission's prediction in
2018 that eliminating the internet conduct standard will ``benefit
consumers, increase competition, and eliminate regulatory uncertainty
that has a `corresponding chilling effect on broadband investment and
innovation' '' has been borne out. Is it reasonable to attribute any
growth and development in broadband markets and services to elimination
of the general conduct rule, or is such a potential connection too
attenuated? The RIF Order also found that ``the benefits of the
internet conduct standard provides approximately zero additional
benefits'' when compared to the antitrust and consumer protection
enforcement in place through the FTC, while imposing negative benefits
in the form of delayed or never-brought-to-market innovations. We seek
comment on whether elimination of the general conduct rule has resulted
in new innovations which would not have been permissible under the
general conduct rule.
153. In the alternative, we seek comment on whether we should
instead rely on the ``just and reasonable'' standards in sections 201
and 202 of the Act. In 2015, the Commission explained that the general
conduct rule was its interpretation of sections 201 and 202 in the
broadband context. We seek comment on whether it remains necessary to
enunciate a specific rule, like the proposed general conduct standard
described above, by interpreting sections 201 and 202 in the context of
broadband, or whether it would be sufficient to rely on sections 201
and 202 alone to address potential harmful practices and behaviors.
Would the latter alternative approach provide sufficient certainty and
clarity to ISPs regarding what practices would violate the Act's
standard? If we choose not to adopt a general conduct rule, are there
other ways for us to aid our enforcement efforts related to sections
201 and 202 in the broadband context?
C. Transparency Rule
154. Policymakers have consistently recognized the importance of
transparency regarding the terms and service characteristics of
broadband offerings, even as certain details of the Commission's
transparency requirements have changed over time. This includes not
only transparency requirements that have been in place since they
originally were adopted in the 2010 Open Internet Order, but also the
broadband label the Commission adopted in 2022, which gives consumers a
convenient tool to research and compare broadband offerings. We propose
to build upon the foundation of our existing transparency rule,
informed by our recent experience in adopting broadband label
requirements, and we seek comment on possible modifications or
additions to update the transparency rule to ensure that end users,
edge providers, the broader internet community, and the Commission have
the information they need to assess ISPs' terms and conditions for BIAS
in a timely and effective manner.
1. Policy Benefits of Transparency Requirements
155. We anticipate transparency requirements are likely to continue
playing a key role in the broadband marketplace. In the 2010 Open
Internet Order, the Commission adopted its original BIAS transparency
rule, explaining that ``[e]ffective disclosure of broadband providers'
network management practices and the performance and commercial terms
of their services promotes competition--as well as innovation,
investment, end-user choice, and broadband adoption.'' The Commission
echoed this policy judgment in the 2015 Open Internet Order, going on
to adopt additional clarifications and enhancements to the transparency
rule--along with a broadband label safe harbor--to ``better enable end-
user consumers to make informed choices about broadband services by
providing them with timely information tailored more specifically to
their needs,'' and to ``provide edge providers with the information
necessary to develop new content,
[[Page 76077]]
applications, services, and devices that promote the virtuous cycle of
investment and innovation.'' In discussing transparency in the RIF
Order, the Commission noted that ``[d]isclosure supports innovation,
investment, and competition by ensuring that entrepreneurs and other
small businesses have the technical information necessary to create and
maintain online content, applications, services, and devices, and to
assess the risks and benefits of embarking on new projects.'' In that
Order, however, the Commission elected to ``return, with minor
adjustments, to the transparency rule adopted in the 2010 Open Internet
Order,'' under the theory that such an approach would ``provide[ ]
consumers and the Commission with essential information while
minimizing the burdens imposed on ISPs.'' We seek comment on how the
Commission can ensure that its transparency rule most effectively
advances these longstanding policy goals.
156. In 2021, Congress enacted and the President signed the
Infrastructure Act, which, in relevant part, directs the Commission
``to promulgate regulations to require the display of broadband
consumer labels,'' using as an initial point of reference the broadband
label established in connection with the enhanced transparency rule
adopted in the 2015 Open Internet Order. The Infrastructure Act
recognizes the benefits of a label ``to disclose to consumers
information regarding broadband internet access service plans,''
further observing that consumers need the ability to ``evaluate
broadband internet access service plans'' through information that is
``available, effective, and sufficient'' to meet that need. In November
2022, the Commission adopted the broadband consumer label rules and
sought further comment in the accompanying Broadband Label Further
Notice. These broadband label requirements promote ``consumer access to
clear, easy-to-understand, and accurate information about the cost for
broadband services and will empower consumers to choose services that
best meet their needs and match their budgets and ensures that they are
not surprised by unexpected charges or service quality that falls short
of their expectations.'' We seek comment on the interplay between the
broadband label requirements adopted in the Broadband Label Order, the
possible amendments raised in the Broadband Label Further Notice, and
any modifications to the transparency rule that we might adopt here.
For example, to the extent that the content of the required disclosures
under the two requirements diverge, how can we avoid any undue
duplication of effort in making each required disclosure, particularly
for small providers? Should the broadband label requirements and the
transparency rule as it might be modified here be legally distinct, or
legally interrelated, requirements?
2. Content of Required Disclosures
157. We seek comment on what, if any, additional disclosures should
be required under the transparency rule. As a starting point, we
believe that the disclosures required under the current transparency
rule are an appropriate baseline, and we propose to retain them in the
transparency rule going forward. We seek comment on this proposal. As
the Commission recently explained when adopting broadband label
requirements, ``the transparency rule seeks to enable a deeper dive
into details of broadband internet service offerings, which could be
relevant not only for consumers as a whole, but also for consumers with
particularized interests or needs, as well as a broader range of
participants in the internet community--notably including the
Commission itself.'' Are the current requirements of the transparency
rule sufficient to enable that deeper dive into details of broadband
internet service offerings?
158. We seek comment on whether enhancements to the content of
disclosures required by the transparency rule under the 2015 Open
Internet Order should be incorporated in a revised transparency rule
here. With respect to required disclosure of commercial terms, the 2015
Open Internet Order provided additional specifications regarding ISPs'
disclosures about price and related terms and their relationship with
disclosures regarding privacy and redress options. Regarding the
disclosure of performance characteristics, the 2015 Open Internet Order
provided additional specifications regarding the disclosure of network
performance and network practices. The RIF Order eliminated those
enhancements under the theory that their burdens to ISPs exceeded their
benefits. The Broadband Label Order, on the other hand, required ISPs
to disclose in the broadband labels their typical upload and download
speeds and typical latency metrics associated with their broadband
services, noting that speed in particular ``remains the network
performance metric of greatest interest to the consumer.'' The
Commission similarly found that low delay or latency is important to
any application involving users interacting with each other, a device,
or an application. We seek comment on these assessments, including
updated evidence regarding the relative costs and benefits of the
transparency enhancements based on experience following the RIF Order.
To the extent that the transparency requirements were intended to
provide needed information not only to consumers but also edge
providers, the broader internet community, and the Commission, how
should that affect our assessment of the overall benefits of the
enhanced transparency requirements? Would the enhancements to the
transparency rule adopted in the 2015 Open Internet Order, or other
modifications to the current transparency rule, assist the Commission
in monitoring and enforcing compliance with the conduct rules proposed
here? Are there any metrics that are particularly important to some
subset of consumers that we should consider including despite those
metrics not being of significant value to the average consumer?
159. In addition, we seek comment on other considerations relevant
to possible changes to the content ISPs may be required to disclose
under the transparency rule. For one, we seek comment on whether we
should revise the transparency rule to incorporate the Commission's
clarifications and guidance regarding prior versions of the
transparency rule. For example, a 2011 Public Notice (2011 Advisory
Guidance) provided ``examples of approaches to disclosure that would
satisfy the transparency rule,'' discussing point-of-sale disclosures,
service descriptions, the extent of required disclosures, disclosures
for the benefit of edge providers, and disclosures regarding security
measures. A 2014 Public Notice (2014 Advisory Guidance) summarized the
applicability and requirements of the transparency rule and the
potential enforcement consequences if it were violated, and emphasized
the importance of consistency between ISPs' disclosures under the
transparency rule and their advertising claims or other public
statements. And a 2016 Public Notice (2016 Advisory Guidance) provided
guidance regarding acceptable methodologies for disclosure of network
performance information and point-of-sale disclosures consistent with
the 2015 Open Internet Order. The RIF Order subsequently eliminated the
enhancements adopted in 2015, and the clarifications in the 2016
Advisory Guidance along with it. The RIF Order endorsed the
clarifications in the 2011 Advisory Guidance, but neither endorsed nor
disclaimed the
[[Page 76078]]
clarifications in the 2014 Advisory Guidance. We seek comment on
whether and to what extent the Commission should reaffirm, reject, or
elaborate on any of that prior guidance in connection with any
modification of the transparency rule here. Are there other areas where
additional clarification or guidance would be beneficial either under
the existing transparency rule or a revised transparency rule?
160. We also seek comment on the availability of information that
ISPs can or should use to comply with the content of disclosures
required under the current or modified transparency rule. For example,
the RIF Order allowed fixed ISPs participating ``in the Measuring
Broadband America (MBA) program [to] disclose their results as a
sufficient representation of the actual performance their customers can
expect to experience.'' Should we continue that approach here, or make
use of the MBA program in some other way? To what extent can or should
we allow ISPs to use other specific information sources or measurement
approaches to provide transparency disclosures? Should we clarify that
certain sources of information are permissible to rely on in making the
required disclosures? Or should we go further in particular cases and
require the use of certain data sources for reasons of uniformity,
reliability, or otherwise? Should the Commission require ISPs to
include additional information in transparency disclosures regarding
their measurement methodologies and practices?
161. Finally, we seek comment on any other considerations relevant
to our evaluation of the appropriate content of required disclosures
under the transparency rule. Is there additional content that we should
require? For example, the 2015 Open Internet Order considered, but
ultimately did not adopt, additional disclosure requirements regarding
``the source, location, timing, or duration of network congestion,''
packet corruption and jitter, and ``disclosures that permit end users
to identify application-specific usage or to distinguish which user or
device contributed to which part of the total data usage.'' In light of
subsequent experience, should we revisit the decisions not to require
such disclosures? Should the Commission consider requiring more
detailed disclosures regarding the requirements, restrictions, or
standards for enforcement of data caps, and if so, how? We also seek
comment on whether different content disclosures should be required for
mobile ISPs than for fixed ISPs.
3. Means of Disclosure
162. We seek comment on how best to ensure that the content of the
required disclosures is made available in a timely and effective manner
without undue burdens on ISPs, both as a general matter and in the
specific respects discussed below. In the RIF Order, the Commission
allowed providers to make the required disclosures either ``on a
publicly available, easily accessible website,'' or by ``transmit[ting]
their disclosures to the Commission,'' which would then make them
``available on a publicly available, easily accessible website.'' We
seek comment on practical experiences with that approach, and whether
that approach should be retained in its current form, modified, or
eliminated in favor of disclosures required specifically on provider
websites--as had been the case under prior versions of the transparency
rule. When the Commission recently adopted broadband label rules, it
required ISPs to display labels on their websites, as well as at other
points of sale. While it ``aim[ed] to give providers flexibility in how
they display labels,'' the Commission also sought ``to ensure that the
labels are prominently displayed on any device on which the consumer
accesses and views the labels, including mobile devices'' and in a
uniform format that will best assist consumers in comparing pricing,
fees, performance characteristics, and data allowances across different
providers. Are there lessons from the Commission's recent experience
crafting broadband label requirements that should inform our approach
to the manner of making disclosures under the transparency rule?
163. We also seek comment on whether any additional requirements
are warranted regarding ISPs' website disclosures under the
transparency rule. For ISPs electing to make the required disclosures
on a ``publicly available, easily accessible website,'' the RIF Order
``reaffirm[ed] the means of disclosure requirement from the [2010] Open
Internet Order and the clarification found in the 2011 Advisory
Guidance.'' Should the approach reflected in the current transparency
rule, as informed by the 2010 Open Internet Order and 2011 Advisory
Guidance, be retained or modified? Should we require the disclosures to
be in machine-readable format, akin to the Commission's recently-
adopted approach for broadband consumer labels?
164. We also seek comment on whether disclosures under the
transparency rule should be required in additional locations. For
instance, are there places on an ISP's website besides a point of sale
where disclosures should be made?
165. Ensuring that disclosures under the transparency rule are
accessible to individuals with disabilities is a priority. The RIF
Order explained that ISPs making website disclosures under the
transparency rule must make them ``in a manner accessible by people
with disabilities.'' Has this direction been adequate, or are
additional requirements warranted to ensure that disclosures under the
transparency rule are accessible to individuals with disabilities? For
example, should we encourage or require that website disclosures under
the transparency rule follow guidance developed by the Web
Accessibility Initiative? Most recently, the Commission required ISPs
to post broadband label information on their websites in an accessible
format, and strongly encouraged them to use the most current version of
the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG). In the Broadband Label
Further Notice, it sought comment on whether to adopt specific
criteria, based on the WCAG standard. Are there other industry
guidelines that providers should be encouraged or required to follow?
To the extent that we ultimately require transparency disclosures in
locations other than websites and in alternative formats besides
websites, is there additional guidance or requirements we should adopt
to ensure accessibility to individuals with disabilities?
166. Further, we seek comment on possible ``direct notification''
requirements, including the costs and benefits of such requirements.
The 2015 Open Internet Order had imposed such an obligation, but the
RIF Order eliminated that requirement. The Commission also recently
declined to adopt a direct notification requirement in the context of
its broadband label rules, finding that the broadband labels are
specifically intended to inform consumers at the time of purchase. We
note, however, the broader purpose of the transparency rule compared to
the broadband labels. We therefore seek further comment and updated
information on the benefits and burdens of such a requirement in the
specific context of the transparency rule, in light of this more recent
experience.
167. Finally, we seek comment on any other changes to our
transparency rule regarding the means of disclosure. Are there
additional requirements regarding the means of disclosure under the
transparency rule that the Commission should adopt to ensure that
information is available in a timely and effective
[[Page 76079]]
manner? Conversely, are there existing requirements regarding the means
of disclosure that commenters believe impose burdens that outweigh
their benefits, and thus should be eliminated?
4. Implementation and Other Issues
168. We seek comment on any implementation issues associated with
potential modifications to the transparency rule, and whether we should
consider additional time for compliance by small providers.
169. We also seek comment on whether the Commission should adopt
new safe harbors for compliance with the transparency rule. Are there
particular data sources or methodologies for complying with particular
elements of the transparency rule, whether in its current form or as it
may be modified, that the Commission should treat as a safe harbor or
otherwise presumptively reasonable? Are there safe harbors the
Commission should adopt for compliance with the transparency rule as a
whole, akin to the broadband label safe harbor adopted in the 2015 Open
Internet Order?
170. Further, we seek comment on whether we should adopt
recordkeeping requirements governing the types of information or
records ISPs rely upon to support the content of their disclosures made
under the transparency rule. Would such a requirement be helpful to our
enforcement of the transparency rule by enabling us to evaluate the
reasonableness of ISPs' claims? Would such requirements help inform our
evaluation of the effectiveness of the rule and the need for changes
over time? This requirement could, for example, help to identify and
account for particular data sources or methodologies that prove to be
especially reliable or unreliable. In the Broadband Label Order, the
Commission required ISPs to maintain an archive of all labels no longer
posted on their websites and at alternate sales channels, along with
evidence sufficient to support the accuracy of the labels' content.
Given that ISPs must have a basis for the claims made in their
disclosures under the transparency rule, are there particular ways of
retaining that information that could minimize the burden on ISPs? If
we elect to adopt recordkeeping requirements, what period of time would
best balance the benefits to the Commission from having the information
available against the compliance burden for ISPs?
171. In addition, we seek comment on the overall cost effectiveness
of modifications we might adopt to the transparency rule. What are the
most cost-effective ways of ensuring that consumers and edge providers
receive the information they need in a timely and effective manner? How
can we minimize implementation and compliance burdens for ISPs,
consistent with those goals?
D. Scope of Open Internet Rules
172. Internet Traffic Exchange. We propose to decline to apply any
open internet rules to internet traffic exchange. We tentatively
conclude, consistent with the 2015 Open Internet Order and as discussed
further below, that case-by-case review under sections 201 and 202 is
``an appropriate vehicle for enforcement where disputes are primarily
over commercial terms and that involve some very large corporations,
including companies like transit providers and CDNs, that act on behalf
of smaller edge providers.'' We believe that the best approach with
respect to internet traffic exchange is to ``watch, learn, and act as
required'' but to not intervene with prescriptive rules. We seek
comment on our proposed approach.
173. Reasonable Network Management. We also propose that reasonable
network management would not be considered a violation of prohibitions
on blocking and throttling, or the general conduct rule, and seek
comment on our proposal. In 2015, the Commission concluded that a
reasonable network management exception to the conduct rules was
necessary for ISPs to optimize overall network performance and maintain
a consistent quality experience for consumers while carrying a variety
of traffic over their networks. We tentatively conclude this analysis
remains equally applicable today and seek comment on this tentative
conclusion. Is excluding reasonable network management practices still
both necessary and advisable? In the RIF Order, the Commission defined
``reasonable network management'' to mean ``a practice `appropriate and
tailored to achieving a legitimate network management purpose, taking
into account the particular network architecture and technology of the
broadband internet access service,' '' returning to the definition the
Commission adopted in the 2010 Open Internet Order. In 2015, the
Commission had slightly modified that definition, adding that ``a
network management practice is a practice that has a primarily
technical network management justification, but does not include other
business practices.'' We seek comment on how we should define
``reasonable network management'' for the purposes of our proposed open
internet rules, and invite commenters to provide examples of how this
term is best interpreted with regard to management of today's broadband
networks. Is it necessary for the Commission to provide further
guidance on the reasonable network management exception to provide
certainty for ISPs? How can we ensure that the reasonable network
management exception is not used to circumvent the proposed rules,
while also providing regulatory certainty to ISPs and enabling them to
appropriately manage their networks?
E. Enforcement of Open Internet Rules
174. We seek comment on the best framework for enforcing any
potential open internet rules. Our aims are to enable effective and
timely conflict resolution and to provide clear guidance on allowed and
prohibited practices. We seek comment on what enforcement regime will
be most efficient and least burdensome for customers, edge providers,
and ISPs, including small entities.
175. In 2010, the Commission adopted a multipart framework to
ensure prompt and effective enforcement of the open internet rules and
encouraged informal and private resolution of matters. The first
component involved informal complaints filed under Sec. 1.41 of the
Commission's rules. The Commission noted that this vehicle was
``already available'' and that ``no filing fee is required.''
``Although individual informal complaints will not typically result in
written Commission orders,'' the Commission explained that the
Enforcement Bureau ``will examine trends or patterns in [informal]
complaints to identify potential targets for investigation and
enforcement action.'' Should informal or other means fail to resolve a
dispute, the Commission adopted new procedures for filing formal
complaints that would ``permit anyone--including individual end users
and edge providers--to file a claim alleging that another party has
violated a statute or rule, and asking the Commission to rule on the
dispute.'' The Commission opted to base the formal complaint rules on
the Part 76 cable access complaint rules, finding that those rules are
``more streamlined and thus preferable.'' Citing sections 403 and
503(b) of the Act, the Commission further observed that it has the
authority to initiate enforcement actions on its own motion, including
the issuance of forfeitures.
176. Advisory Opinions and Enforcement Advisories. In 2015, the
Commission concluded that the use of advisory opinions, similar to
those issued by DOJ's Antitrust Division,
[[Page 76080]]
would be in the public interest and had the potential to provide
clarity, guidance, and predictability concerning the Commission's open
internet rules. The RIF Order eliminated the advisory opinion process
established in the 2015 Open Internet Order, reasoning that without
conduct rules, advisory opinions were no longer necessary, and
concluding that the advisory opinion process did not diminish
regulatory uncertainty, particularly for small providers, but rather
added costs, caused uncertain timelines, and inhibited innovations. The
elimination of the advisory opinion process was based on predictive
comments in the record because no ISP had yet requested an advisory
opinion through the Commission's process. When the D.C. Circuit in USTA
rejected the challenge to the 2015 Open Internet Order's general
conduct standard as being unconstitutionally vague, the Court relied in
part on the advisory opinion process the Commission had created in that
Order. The D.C. Circuit found that the opportunity for parties to
obtain prospective guidance through the advisory opinion process
``provide[d] regulated entities with relief from [remaining]
uncertainty.''
177. In light of the D.C. Circuit's reasoning in USTA, and to
advance our goal of legal certainty in the enforcement of any potential
open internet rules, we propose to adopt an advisory opinion process if
we adopt a general conduct standard. We seek comment on this proposal.
In practice, we believe that advisory opinions have the potential to
lower costs for providers by creating certainty up front, rather than
risking potentially costly formal complaint litigation, remediation, or
fines after the fact. Do commenters agree? Are there examples of other
federal or state advisory opinion processes from which the Commission
could learn? Are there specific barriers that would prevent smaller
ISPs from engaging with the advisory opinion process, and if so, how
could we address them? We seek comment on whether we should adopt the
mechanisms delineated in the 2015 Open Internet Order for the issuance
of advisory opinions and enforcement advisories. What changes, if any,
should we make to the process the Commission established in the 2015
Open Internet Order? As an alternative to adopting an advisory opinion
process, would a detailed explanation of the factors the Commission
would use when analyzing potential violations of the general conduct
standard be sufficient under the D.C. Circuit's reasoning to provide
fair warning to regulated entities of what the standard requires?
F. Investigations and Complaints
178. We next seek comment on whether it would be beneficial to re-
establish a formal complaint process for complaints arising under our
open internet rules, as the Commission did in 2015. In 2015, the
Commission preserved the three avenues for enforcement of its open
internet rules that the Commission had created in the 2010 Open
Internet Order: (i) parties could file informal complaints under Sec.
1.41 of the Commission's existing rules; (ii) parties could file formal
complaints under a new process that the Commission had created for this
purpose; or (iii) the Commission could initiate enforcement actions on
its own motion. While the informal complaint process under Sec. 1.41
of the Commission's rules would remain available to parties with
respect to any concerns arising out of any open internet rules that may
be ultimately adopted, we seek comment on whether we should also adopt
a formal complaint process. Is there value in providing parties with
both of these options? Is our formal complaint process established
pursuant to section 208 of the Act sufficient for this purpose, or is
it necessary to establish a standalone formal complaint process? The
Commission eliminated the open internet-specific formal complaint
process in 2018. If we were to adopt a formal complaint process, should
we implement one that returns to the rules the Commission adopted in
the 2010 Open Internet Order and preserved in the 2015 Open Internet
Order? If not, what alternatives do commenters recommend? The section
208 formal complaint rules were modified in 2018 and consolidated with
the Commission's pole attachment rules. Should we use these existing
rules for open internet disputes? We also seek comment on whether the
Commission's informal complaint mechanism would be sufficient to
resolve disputes under our proposed open internet rules.
G. Legal Authority
179. We seek comment on our authority to adopt open internet rules,
including both the proposed conduct rules and any revised transparency
rules. With respect to our proposed conduct rules, we propose to rely
on the same sources of authority that the Commission relied upon when
it adopted rules in the 2015 Open Internet Order. As discussed below,
we propose to return to our prior interpretation, upheld by the D.C.
Circuit, that sections 706(a) and (b) of the 1996 Act are grants of
regulatory authority and rely on that as a basis for our open internet
rules. We also propose to rely on our authority under Title II of the
Act with forbearance where appropriate under section 10 of the Act,
insofar as we reclassify BIAS as a Title II service. And we propose to
once again rely on our broad spectrum management authority under Title
III of the Act as additional authority specifically in the case of
mobile providers. With respect to any modifications to the transparency
rule, we propose to rely on those same sources of authority along with
section 257 (and associated authority now in section 13) of the Act,
consistent with the reasoning of the 2010 Open Internet Order and the
RIF Order. We seek comment on those proposals, and any additional
sources of authority for our proposed open internet rules, both as a
general matter and in the specific respects discussed below. We also
seek comment on how policy goals enumerated in the Act or other federal
statutes should inform our exercise of regulatory authority here.
1. Section 706 of the 1996 Act
180. We seek comment on returning to an interpretation of section
706 of the 1996 Act as granting the Commission regulatory authority
and, in turn, relying on that authority as a basis for open internet
rules. In particular, although the RIF Order departed from the
Commission's prior interpretation of section 706 and instead concluded
that the provision was merely hortatory, we propose to return to the
Commission's prior view and interpret sections 706(a) and (b) of the
1996 Act as grants of regulatory authority. We propose to do so in
light of the considerations that persuaded the Commission to adopt such
interpretations in the past, and that persuaded courts to affirm those
interpretations. Consistent with that prior approach, we propose to
rely on section 706(a) as part of our authority for open internet
rules. We also propose to rely on section 706(b), in the event that the
Commission were to conclude under section 706(a) that advanced
telecommunications capability is not being deployed to all Americans in
a reasonable and timely fashion. We seek comment on those proposals
generally.
181. First, we seek comment on the grounds for returning to the
prior judicially affirmed interpretations of sections 706(a) and (b) of
the 1996 Act as granting the Commission regulatory authority. The RIF
Order principally grounded its rationale for changing the
interpretation of section 706 on its view that section 706 was better
interpreted
[[Page 76081]]
as hortatory, rather than as a grant of regulatory authority. To the
extent that we instead believe that interpreting sections 706(a) and
(b) as grants of regulatory authority represent the better reading of
the statute, we believe that likewise should provide a basis for us to
change our interpretation. We seek comment on this view. In addition,
we seek comment on any other arguments bearing on whether and to what
extent we should return to the prior interpretation of sections 706(a)
and (b) as grants of regulatory authority.
182. Second, we seek comment on specific rationales for
interpreting sections 706(a) and (b) of the 1996 Act as grants of
regulatory authority. In the 2010 Open Internet Order, the Commission
explained why sections 706(a) and (b) each represent a grant of
regulatory authority to the Commission after considering the statutory
text, regulatory and judicial precedent, and legislative history, and
rejecting objections to that interpretation. In addition, in the 2015
Open Internet Order, the Commission built on the foundation of its
explanations in the 2010 Open Internet Order, rejecting various
objections to the interpretation of sections 706(a) and (b) as grants
of regulatory authority and elaborating on the Commission's authority
to adopt rules implementing that provision, and to enforce those rules.
We seek comment on that reasoning and conclusions regarding the
interpretation and implementation of section 706, and on the extent to
which we should rely on that today. We also seek comment on whether and
to what extent we also should draw upon the reasoning of court
decisions affirming the Commission's interpretation of section 706 of
the 1996 Act as granting regulatory authority--in particular, the D.C.
Circuit's 2014 decision in Verizon and its 2016 decision in USTA, as
well as the Tenth Circuit's 2014 decision in In re FCC 11-161.
183. Third, to the extent that we interpret sections 706(a) and (b)
of the 1996 Act as grants of regulatory authority, we propose to use
that authority to adopt open internet rules here. The Commission
previously concluded in the 2015 Open Internet Order and 2010 Open
Internet Order that open internet rules were a reasonable way to
implement Commission authority under sections 706(a) and (b), and the
nexus between open internet rules and the directives in sections 706(a)
and (b) was affirmed by the D.C. Circuit in Verizon. For those same
reasons, we believe the open internet rules we seek comment on here
would be a reasonable exercise of section 706(a) authority. We likewise
believe that, in the event that the Commission concludes that advanced
telecommunications capability is not being deployed to all Americans in
a reasonable and timely fashion under section 706(b), the open internet
rules we seek comment on here would be a reasonable exercise of
authority under that provision as well.
184. Finally, we seek comment on any other issues bearing on our
interpretation and implementation of section 706 of the 1996 Act here,
including possible objections to the interpretation of sections 706(a)
and (b) as grants of regulatory authority. For example, when the D.C.
Circuit concluded that the RIF Order permissibly reinterpreted section
706 as hortatory, rather than as a grant of regulatory authority, the
court focused on the recognized ambiguity of the statutory language and
the Commission's justification ``that Section 706 lacks details
`identify[ing] the providers or entities whose conduct could be
regulated,' whereas other provisions of the Act that unambiguously
grant regulatory authority do specify such details.'' We seek comment
on that rationale. How is section 706 of the 1996 Act distinct in this
regard from other provisions understood as grants of authority in the
Telecommunications Act of 1996, the Communications Act of 1934, or
other federal statutes? The RIF Order itself recognized that, in
relying on section 257 of the Act as authority for the transparency
rule, it was interpreting that provision as a grant of authority
notwithstanding its lack of any identified universe of entities from
which information could be obtained, explaining that ``other aspects of
section 257 persuade us that our interpretation of that provision as a
grant of authority.'' To what extent do other aspects of section 706
bear on the reasonableness of interpreting sections 706(a) and (b) as
grants of authority?
185. We also seek comment on other theories discussed in the RIF
Order as a basis for why section 706 of the 1996 Act not just
permissibly could, but affirmatively should, be interpreted as merely
hortatory, rather than a grant of regulatory authority to the
Commission. For example, the RIF Order contended that interpreting
sections 706(a) and (b) as grants of regulatory authority would allow
the Commission ``to impose duties or adopt regulations equivalent to
those directly addressed by the provisions of the Communications Act
focused on promoting competition and/or deployment that go beyond the
entities, contexts, and circumstances that bounded the Communications
Act provisions.'' The RIF Order also argued that if sections 706(a) and
(b) were interpreted as grants of regulatory authority that would
enable the internet and information services to be heavily regulated in
a manner inconsistent with policy goals reflected in the Act. We seek
comment on those theories. The RIF Order acknowledged that the
Commission's prior interpretation of section 706 was, by its own terms,
constrained to be consistent with the Act, but claimed that such
constraints did not adequately address the Order's statutory concerns.
In the view of the RIF Order, seemingly the only outcomes of
interpreting section 706 as granting regulatory authority would be
extreme results where those constraints had little meaning and left the
Commission with essentially unbounded authority or were such severe
limitations as to render section 706 of little possible use. We
tentatively conclude that this view is unfounded and invite more robust
analysis of these issues in the record here, along with any related
arguments.
186. The RIF Order also cited concerns about the Commission's
ability to enforce rules implementing section 706 of the 1996 Act as
further grounds for interpreting it as merely hortatory. The Order did
not reject the theory that section 706 could be read to include
implicit enforcement authority, but contended that such implicit
authority ``might enable actions like declaratory rulings or cease-and-
desist orders, but would not appear to encompass authority to impose
penalties given the absence of statutory language clearly granting that
authority.'' We seek comment on this understanding of the scope of
potential enforcement authority that could be implicit in section 706.
Even assuming arguendo that scope of enforcement authority were
accurate, why should we conclude that the resulting scope of our
enforcement authority is so insignificant as to counsel against
interpreting sections 706(a) and (b) as grants of regulatory authority?
Further, the RIF Order rejected the view that the use of section 4(i)
of the Act to adopt rules implementing section 706 of the 1996 Act
would be sufficient to bring those rules within the purview of the
Commission's enforcement authority under section 503 of the Act. The
RIF Order reasoned that enforcement authority under section 503 is
limited to rules based on substantive regulatory authority under the
Act itself, rather than the rulemaking authority in section 4(i). We
seek comment on the merits of this interpretation.
[[Page 76082]]
2. Title II of the Act With Forbearance
187. As in the 2015 Open Internet Order, we propose again to rely
on sections 201, 202, and 208 of the Act, along with the related
enforcement authorities of sections 206, 207, 209, 216, and 217, as
additional legal authority for the proposed open internet rules. And
consistent with the 2010 Open Internet Order and the RIF Order, and as
affirmed by the D.C. Circuit in Mozilla, we propose also to rely on
section 257 of the Act (now in conjunction with section 13 of the Act)
as additional legal authority for the transparency rule, as we may
modify it. We seek comment on these proposals.
188. We also seek comment on any additional sources of authority
under Title II of the Act that could serve as authority for open
internet rules. For example, the RIF Order cataloged arguments about
other possible sources of Title II authority for open internet rules in
sections 251(a), 256, and 275 of the Act identified in the record
there. The Commission at the time ultimately declined to rely on those
sources of authority due to perceived shortcomings in the record
regarding the justification for their use, and also took the view that
they would not, even in the aggregate, provide authority for the
Commission to adopt open internet rules addressing the full array of
ISPs. We seek comment on those possible sources of authority, including
both more-developed explanations for how and when they could serve as
regulatory authority for open internet rules and whether there would be
grounds for exercising that authority under the regulatory approach we
propose here.
3. Title III of the Act for Mobile Providers
189. As in the 2015 Open Internet Order, we propose to rely on our
broad legal authority under Title III of the Act to protect the public
interest through spectrum licensing and regulations--including sections
303 and 316 of the Act--as additional legal authority for the proposed
open internet rules in the case of mobile BIAS. The RIF Order conceded
the viability of Title III authority in this regard, but declined to
exercise that authority because it would be limited to rules for mobile
ISPs, rather than providing authority for rules governing all ISPs. We
do not believe that concern of the RIF Order is likely to arise under
our proposed regulatory approach here, and we seek comment on that
understanding. We recognize that the D.C. Circuit's Mozilla decision
includes a brief statement as part of its review of the RIF Order's
preemption decision stating that BIAS is not ``radio transmission,'' so
Title III does not apply. But the RIF Order did not attempt to apply
(or justify applying) Title III, and the Mozilla decision did not
develop any reasoning in support of that assertion. Particularly given
that backdrop, we do not believe the court's statement should be read
to call into question the Commission's prior recognition that mobile
BIAS falls within the scope of Title III. We seek comment on these
views and on any additional provisions in Title III of the Act that
could serve as authority for open internet rules in the case of mobile
BIAS or otherwise.
4. Other Possible Sources of Legal Authority
190. We seek comment on any other possible sources of legal
authority for open internet rules. For example, the 2010 Open Internet
Order relied on additional sources of authority apart from section 706
of the 1996 Act and Titles II and III of the Act--in particular,
sources under Title VI of the Act. The RIF Order expressly declined to
rely on those sources of authority given what that Order identified as
limitations regarding the justification for the use of those
authorities, as well as the RIF Order's view that they would not, even
in the aggregate, provide authority for the Commission to adopt open
internet rules addressing the full array of ISPs. We seek more
developed comment on that possible Title VI authority and on any other
possible sources of authority under the Act.
191. In addition, we seek comment on additional sources of
authority outside the Act. For example, the recent bipartisan
Infrastructure Act built upon the foundation of the transparency rule
and broadband label requirements from the 2015 Open Internet Order to
require the Commission to adopt new broadband label rules. Does that
law provide additional authority for rules here, particularly as it
relates to possible modifications of the transparency rule?
192. We also seek comment on whether the Commission should rely on
ancillary authority in conjunction with other primary sources of legal
authority in adopting open internet rules in any respects. To the
extent that commenters advocate such an approach, they should explain
how the prerequisites for ancillary authority would be met,
particularly by explaining why the action would help effectuate
regulatory authority granted to the Commission under other statutory
provisions. To exercise ancillary authority ``two conditions [must be]
satisfied: (1) the Commission's general jurisdictional grant under
Title I [of the Communications Act] covers the regulated subject and
(2) the regulations are reasonably ancillary to the Commission's
effective performance of its statutorily mandated responsibilities.''
H. Other Laws and Considerations
193. The 2015 Open Internet Order discussed the relationship
between the open internet rules adopted there and ISPs' rights or
obligations with respect to other laws, safety and security
considerations, or the ability of ISPs to make reasonable efforts to
address transfers of unlawful content and unlawful transfers of
content. We propose continuing that approach in the case of the rules
upon which we seek comment here, and seek comment on that proposal,
along with specific language for open internet rules intended to
achieve the objectives discussed below, and any additional ways in
which we should account for similar interests in the codified rules.
194. Consistent with the 2015 Open Internet Order, we propose that
the open internet rules upon which we seek comment here would not
expand or contract ISPs' rights or obligations with respect to other
laws or preclude them from responding to safety and security
considerations--including the needs of emergency communications and law
enforcement, public safety, and national security authorities. The 2015
Open Internet Order specifically highlighted examples of other laws
imposing requirements in these respects, such as the Communications
Assistance for Law Enforcement Act, the Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Act, and the Electronic Communications Privacy Act, and we
again seek comment as to those specific laws along with any others that
should inform our analysis. We propose to adopt the same rule language
in this regard as was adopted in the 2015 Open Internet Order:
Nothing in this part supersedes any obligation or authorization
a provider of broadband internet access service may have to address
the needs of emergency communications or law enforcement, public
safety, or national security authorities, consistent with or as
permitted by applicable law, or limits the provider's ability to do
so.
We seek comment on this approach and on alternative approaches to
protecting these interests, including whether the rule should capture
other possible emergency communications and safety and security
scenarios. For example, the 2015 Open Internet Order elected not to
expand the application of its rule in this regard to public utilities
and other critical infrastructure
[[Page 76083]]
operators, reasoning that those interests otherwise were protected
under the approach it adopted. Is that same approach appropriate here,
or should we address safety and security interests related to public
utilities and other critical infrastructure operators in some other way
in any rules we may adopt here? Should our rules go further to
affirmatively require ISPs to take certain steps to address the needs
of emergency communications or law enforcement, public safety, or
national security authorities? For example, should the rules go further
in addressing the categories of concerns raised before the Commission
on remand of the RIF Order, such as the needs of public safety
personnel; concerns about particular harms to public safety that could
result from blocking, throttling, or paid prioritization; concerns
about public safety needs for individuals with disabilities; or
concerns related to critical infrastructure?
195. Also consistent with the 2015 Open Internet Order, we propose
that the open internet rules upon which we seek comment here would
protect only lawful content, and would not be intended to inhibit
efforts by ISPs to address unlawful transfers of content or transfers
of unlawful content. We propose to adopt the same rule language in this
regard as was adopted in the 2015 Open Internet Order:
Nothing in this part prohibits reasonable efforts by a provider
of broadband internet access service to address copyright
infringement or other unlawful activity.
We seek comment on that approach and on alternative approaches to
protecting these interests, including whether the rule should capture
other possible scenarios where ISPs might seek to address unlawful
transfers of content or transfers of unlawful content.
196. We also seek comment on whether there are other categories of
otherwise-applicable laws or legal requirements that should be
addressed through comparable rules as those we propose to address
emergency communications and safety and security scenarios and efforts
by ISPs to address unlawful transfers of content or transfers of
unlawful content. For example, the RIF Remand Order noted comments
expressing concern about the possible interplay between ISPs' practices
and laws protecting individuals with disabilities. Given that the
regulatory approach proposed here differs significantly from the one at
issue in the RIF Remand Order, would such concerns still be relevant
here? If so, would it be appropriate to address them through a rule
specifically focused on those categories of laws? Are there additional
otherwise-existing legal requirements imposed on ISPs that we should
expressly accommodate in any rules we adopt?
IV. Constitutional Considerations
197. Consistent with the constitutional considerations the
Commission has evaluated in connection with its regulatory approach to
BIAS in the past, we seek comment on First Amendment speech issues and
Fifth Amendment takings issues. In addition, we also seek comment on
any other constitutional considerations that should inform our
evaluation of the issues raised in this proceeding.
A. First Amendment
198. We seek comment on any First Amendment implications of the
issues raised in this proceeding, both as a general matter and in the
specific respects discussed below. Consistent with prior Commission
analyses, we believe our open internet conduct rule proposals and any
modifications to the transparency rule are permissible exercises of
authority under the First Amendment.
1. Free Speech Rights
199. We anticipate that our proposals would withstand any review
under the First Amendment for the same reasons explained by the
Commission in the 2015 Open Internet Order. In particular, as explained
in that Order, and ultimately affirmed by the D.C. Circuit in USTA,
under traditional First Amendment doctrine there are no First Amendment
concerns raised by the conduct regulation of common carriers. We think
the same reasoning is likely to apply here, and seek comment on that
view.
200. Even if a court departed from the traditional common carrier
First Amendment precedent, we believe that our proposed conduct rules
are likely to satisfy First Amendment scrutiny for the same reasons
further identified in the 2015 Open Internet Order. Consistent with the
explanation there, we believe the conduct rules are likely to be seen
as content-neutral and thus subject to intermediate First Amendment
scrutiny in this scenario. We also find it likely that the proposed
rules readily could survive that level of scrutiny--advancing an
important or substantial government interest unrelated to limiting
speech without burdening more speech than necessary--based on the same
governmental interests and nexus to the conduct rules identified by the
Commission in the 2015 Open Internet Order. We seek comment on that
view and on any additional evidence and arguments bearing on the
potential application of the First Amendment in the case of the conduct
rules proposed here.
201. Because the 2015 Open Internet Order was limited to offers of
``mass-market'' broadband access to ``all or substantially all internet
endpoints,'' it would not have applied to offerings that were clearly
as advertised as providing only ``filtered'' internet access catering
to a particular audience or as providing access only to curated
content. We propose to adopt the same approach here and we seek comment
on this proposal. We also seek comment on whether or to what extent
ISPs engage in content moderation, curation, or otherwise limit or
exercise control over what third-party content their users are able to
access on the internet. We are aware that some social media platforms
and other edge providers purport to engage in various forms of content
moderation or editorial control over content they host or transmit, and
typically announce that they engage in such practices in their terms of
service of user agreements; is there any record of ISPs announcing and
engaging in comparable activity?
202. We also seek comment on the competing First Amendment views
expressed by judges in separate opinions accompanying the D.C.
Circuit's denial of requests to rehear the USTA case en banc. On one
hand, then-Judge Kavanaugh's dissent expressed First Amendment concerns
with the 2015 Open Internet Order on the theory that ``the First
Amendment bars the Government from restricting the editorial discretion
of internet service providers, absent a showing that an internet
service provider possesses market power in a relevant geographic
market''--a showing that the Commission had not made there. On the
other hand, Judges Srinivasan and Tatel, concurring in the denial of
rehearing en banc, responded to the dissent by arguing that ``no
Supreme Court decision supports the counterintuitive notion that the
First Amendment entitles an ISP to engage in the kind of conduct barred
by the net neutrality rule--i.e., to hold itself out to potential
customers as offering them an unfiltered pathway to any web content of
their own choosing, but then, once they have subscribed, to turn around
and limit their access to certain web content based on the ISP's own
commercial preferences.'' We seek comment on those views.
203. Referencing statements in the First Amendment analysis in
Judges Srinivasan's and Tatel's concurrence,
[[Page 76084]]
the RIF Order contended that the 2015 Open Internet Order ``allows ISPs
to offer curated services, which would allow ISPs to escape the reach
of the [2015 Open Internet Order] and to filter content on viewpoint
grounds.'' We seek comment on the accuracy of that characterization and
how it should inform our analysis and approach here.
2. Compelled Disclosure
204. We also believe that any modifications to the transparency
rule are likely to satisfy the First Amendment for the same reasons
relied on by the Commission in its justification of the transparency
rules at issue in the 2015 Open Internet Order and the RIF Order. As a
threshold matter, as explained in the RIF Order, we believe the speech
addressed by our transparency rule is likely to be limited to
commercial speech. We seek comment on that view.
205. We also believe that our transparency rule, as we may modify
it, is likely to be understood by a court as limited to compelling the
disclosure of factual, noncontroversial information under circumstances
that fall within the Zauderer First Amendment framework, consistent
with the Commission's analysis in the 2015 Open Internet Order. Also
consistent with the analysis in the 2015 Open Internet Order, we
believe any modifications to the transparency rule are likely to be a
reasonable way of advancing government interests in preventing consumer
deception, among other things, and thus would satisfy the Zauderer
standard. We believe any modifications to the disclosures in our
transparency rule would be the sort of ``purely factual and
uncontroversial information about the terms under which . . . services
will be available'' to which Zauderer applies. We seek comment on the
continued applicability of that analysis from the 2015 Open Internet
Order.
206. Alternatively, to the extent that a court evaluated any
modifications to the transparency rule under the Central Hudson
framework, which applies generally to commercial speech, we believe it
also likely would satisfy First Amendment scrutiny under that standard
for the same reasons given in that regard in the RIF Order. We believe
any modifications to the transparency rule are likely to directly
advance substantial government interests and be no more extensive than
necessary, for reasons such as those identified in the RIF Order. We
seek comment on these views and any other First Amendment
considerations.
B. Fifth Amendment Takings
207. Consistent with the conclusions in the 2015 Open Internet
Order, we do not believe the proposals in this Notice--either the
proposed classification decisions or the proposed rules--are likely to
result in per se takings because we do not anticipate that they would
grant third parties a right to physical occupation of the ISPs'
property. And as the 2015 Open Internet Order recognized, where private
parties voluntarily open their networks to end users and edge
providers, reasonable regulation of the use of their property poses no
takings issue. We seek comment on the continued applicability of those
analyses here and any other considerations relevant to possible per se
takings arguments.
208. Also consistent with the conclusions in the 2015 Open Internet
Order, we do not believe the proposals in this Notice--either the
proposed classification decisions or the proposed rules--are likely to
result in regulatory takings. Outside of per se takings cases, courts
analyze putative government takings through ``essentially ad hoc,
factual inquiries'' into a variety of unweighted factors such as the
``economic impact of the regulation,'' the degree of interference with
``investment-backed expectations,'' and ``the character of the
government action.'' The 2015 Open Internet Order weighed these factors
and concluded that the actions taken there did not constitute
regulatory takings, and we believe the same is likely to be true of our
proposals here. We seek comment on these views.
V. Procedural Matters
209. Ex Parte Rules. This proceeding shall be treated as a
``permit-but-disclose'' proceeding in accordance with the Commission's
ex parte rules. Persons making ex parte presentations must file a copy
of any written presentation or a memorandum summarizing any oral
presentation within two business days after the presentation (unless a
different deadline applicable to the Sunshine period applies). Persons
making oral ex parte presentations are reminded that memoranda
summarizing the presentation must (1) list all persons attending or
otherwise participating in the meeting at which the ex parte
presentation was made, and (2) summarize all data presented and
arguments made during the presentation. If the presentation consisted
in whole or in part of the presentation of data or arguments already
reflected in the presenter's written comments, memoranda, or other
filings in the proceeding, the presenter may provide citations to such
data or arguments in his or her prior comments, memoranda, or other
filings (specifying the relevant page and/or paragraph numbers where
such data or arguments can be found) in lieu of summarizing them in the
memorandum. Documents shown or given to Commission staff during ex
parte meetings are deemed to be written ex parte presentations and must
be filed consistent with Rule 1.1206(b). In proceedings governed by
Rule 1.49(f) or for which the Commission has made available a method of
electronic filing, written ex parte presentations and memoranda
summarizing oral ex parte presentations, and all attachments thereto,
must be filed through the electronic comment filing system available
for that proceeding, and must be filed in their native format (e.g.,
.doc, .xml, .ppt, searchable .pdf). Participants in this proceeding
should familiarize themselves with the Commission's ex parte rules.
210. Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis. Pursuant to the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA), the Commission has prepared an
Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) of the possible
significant economic impact on small entities of the policies and
actions considered in this NPRM. Written public comments are requested
on this IRFA. Comments must be identified as responses to the IRFA and
must be filed by the deadlines for comments on the NPRM. The
Commission's Office of the Secretary, Reference Information Center,
will send a copy of the NPRM, including the IRFA, to the Chief Counsel
for Advocacy of the Small Business Administration.
211. Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 Analysis. This document
contains proposed new or modified information collection requirements.
The Commission, as part of its continuing effort to reduce paperwork
burdens, invites the general public and the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) to comment on the information collection requirements
contained in this document, as required by the Paperwork Reduction Act
of 1995, Public Law 104-13. In addition, pursuant to the Small Business
Paperwork Relief Act of 2002, Public Law 107-198, we seek specific
comment on how we might further reduce the information collection
burden for small business concerns with fewer than 25 employees.
[[Page 76085]]
VI. Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
212. As required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980, as
amended (RFA), the Commission has prepared this Initial Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) of the possible significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small entities from the policies and rules
proposed in the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (Notice). Written public
comments are requested on this IRFA. Comments must be identified as
responses to the IRFA and must be filed by the deadlines for comments
provided on the first page of the Notice. The Commission will send a
copy of the Notice, including this IRFA, to the Chief Counsel for
Advocacy of the Small Business Administration (SBA). In addition, the
Notice and IRFA (or summaries thereof) will be published in the Federal
Register.
A. Need for, and Objectives of, the Proposed Rules
213. In the Notice, we propose to reestablish the Commission's
authority over broadband internet access service (BIAS) by classifying
BIAS as a telecommunications service under Title II of the
Communications Act of 1934, as amended (Act). We further propose to
reclassify mobile BIAS as a commercial mobile service. The COVID-19
pandemic showed how essential BIAS connections are for consumers'
participation in today's society and economy, for work, health,
education, community, and everyday life. In light of this reality, we
believe that looking anew at the classification of BIAS is necessary
and timely given the critical importance of ensuring the Commission's
authority to fulfill policy objectives and responsibilities to protect
this vital service. Notable among these is enabling the Commission to
safeguard the fair and open internet though a national regulatory
approach. The Commission also has an important statutory mandate to
protect ``life and property'' by supporting national security and
public safety.
214. Restoring Title II authority will allow the Commission to
safeguard and secure the open internet in three significant ways.
First, this authority will allow the Commission to protect consumers,
including by issuing straightforward, clear rules to prevent internet
service providers from engaging in practices harmful to consumers,
competition, and public safety, and by establishing a national
regulatory approach rather than disparate requirements that vary state-
by-state. Second, reclassification will strengthen the Commission's
ability to secure communications networks and critical infrastructure
against national security threats. Third, the reclassification will
enable the Commission to protect public safety during natural disasters
and other emergencies. We also anticipate that the proper
classification of BIAS as a telecommunications service will enhance the
Commission's ability to advance other important interests, including
protection of consumers' privacy and data security interests and
consumers' ability to access BIAS. Beyond these areas, we believe that
classification of BIAS as a telecommunications service represents the
best reading of the text of the Act in light of the marketplace reality
of how the service is offered and perceived today.
215. To protect the openness of the internet, we propose to return
to the basic framework the Commission adopted in 2015 by reinstating
straightforward, clear rules that are designed to prevent internet
service providers (ISPs) from engaging in practices harmful to
consumers, competition, and public safety, and that would provide the
basis for a national regulatory approach toward BIAS, consistent with
the Commission's longstanding policy approach to protect internet
openness prior to the RIF Order. We first propose to reinstate the
rules adopted in the 2015 Open Internet Order that prohibit ISPs from
blocking, throttling, or engaging in paid or affiliated prioritization
arrangements. We similarly propose to reinstate the general conduct
standard adopted in the 2015 Open Internet Order, which would prohibit
practices that cause unreasonable interference or unreasonable
disadvantage to consumers or edge providers. Finally, with regard to
transparency, we propose to retain the current disclosures, and we seek
comment on the means of disclosure, the interplay between the
transparency rule and the broadband label requirements, and any
additional enhancements or changes we should consider. We believe that
the rules we propose today will establish a baseline that the
Commission can use to prevent and address conduct that harms consumers
and competition when it occurs.
B. Legal Basis
216. The proposed action is authorized pursuant to sections 1, 2,
4(i)-(j), 13, 201, 202, 208, 257, 303, and 316, of the Communications
Act of 1934, as amended, and section 706 of the Telecommunications Act
of 1996, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 151, 152, 154(i)-(j), 163, 201, 202,
208, 257, 303, 316, and 1302.
C. Description and Estimate of the Number of Small Entities to Which
the Proposed Rules Would Apply
217. The RFA directs agencies to provide a description of, and
where feasible, an estimate of the number of small entities that may be
affected by the proposed rules, if adopted. The RFA generally defines
the term ``small entity'' as having the same meaning as the terms
``small business,'' ``small organization,'' and ``small governmental
jurisdiction.'' In addition, the term ``small business'' has the same
meaning as the term ``small-business concern'' under the Small Business
Act. A ``small-business concern'' is one which: (1) is independently
owned and operated; (2) is not dominant in its field of operation; and
(3) satisfies any additional criteria established by the Small Business
Administration (SBA).
1. Total Small Entities
218. Small Businesses, Small Organizations, Small Governmental
Jurisdictions. Our actions, over time, may affect small entities that
are not easily categorized at present. We therefore describe, at the
outset, three broad groups of small entities that could be directly
affected herein. First, while there are industry specific size
standards for small businesses that are used in the regulatory
flexibility analysis, according to data from the SBA's Office of
Advocacy, in general a small business is an independent business having
fewer than 500 employees. These types of small businesses represent
99.9% of all businesses in the United States, which translates to 33.2
million businesses.
219. Next, the type of small entity described as a ``small
organization'' is generally ``any not-for-profit enterprise which is
independently owned and operated and is not dominant in its field.''
The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) uses a revenue benchmark of $50,000
or less to delineate its annual electronic filing requirements for
small exempt organizations. Nationwide, for tax year 2020, there were
approximately 447,689 small exempt organizations in the U.S. reporting
revenues of $50,000 or less according to the registration and tax data
for exempt organizations available from the IRS.
220. Finally, the small entity described as a ``small governmental
jurisdiction'' is defined generally as ``governments of cities,
counties, towns, townships, villages, school districts, or special
districts, with a population of less than fifty thousand.'' U.S. Census
[[Page 76086]]
Bureau data from the 2017 Census of Governments indicate there were
90,075 local governmental jurisdictions consisting of general purpose
governments and special purpose governments in the United States. Of
this number, there were 36,931 general purpose governments (county,
municipal, and town or township) with populations of less than 50,000
and 12,040 special purpose governments--independent school districts
with enrollment populations of less than 50,000. Accordingly, based on
the 2017 U.S. Census of Governments data, we estimate that at least
48,971 entities fall into the category of ``small governmental
jurisdictions.''
2. Wired Broadband Internet Access Service Providers
221. Wired Broadband Internet Access Service Providers (Wired
ISPs). Providers of wired broadband internet access service include
various types of providers except dial-up internet access providers.
Wireline service that terminates at an end user location or mobile
device and enables the end user to receive information from and/or send
information to the internet at information transfer rates exceeding 200
kilobits per second (kbps) in at least one direction is classified as a
broadband connection under the Commission's rules. Wired broadband
internet services fall in the Wired Telecommunications Carriers
industry. The SBA small business size standard for this industry
classifies firms having 1,500 or fewer employees as small. U.S. Census
Bureau data for 2017 show that there were 3,054 firms that operated in
this industry for the entire year. Of this number, 2,964 firms operated
with fewer than 250 employees.
222. Additionally, according to Commission data on internet access
services as of June 30, 2019, nationwide there were approximately 2,747
providers of connections over 200 kbps in at least one direction using
various wireline technologies. The Commission does not collect data on
the number of employees for providers of these services, therefore, at
this time we are not able to estimate the number of providers that
would qualify as small under the SBA's small business size standard.
However, in light of the general data on fixed technology service
providers in the Commission's 2022 Communications Marketplace Report,
we believe that the majority of wireline internet access service
providers can be considered small entities.
3. Wireline Providers
223. Wired Telecommunications Carriers. The U.S. Census Bureau
defines this industry as establishments primarily engaged in operating
and/or providing access to transmission facilities and infrastructure
that they own and/or lease for the transmission of voice, data, text,
sound, and video using wired communications networks. Transmission
facilities may be based on a single technology or a combination of
technologies. Establishments in this industry use the wired
telecommunications network facilities that they operate to provide a
variety of services, such as wired telephony services, including Voice-
over Internet Protocol (VoIP) services, wired (cable) audio and video
programming distribution, and wired broadband internet services. By
exception, establishments providing satellite television distribution
services using facilities and infrastructure that they operate are
included in this industry. Wired Telecommunications Carriers are also
referred to as wireline carriers or fixed local service providers.
224. The SBA small business size standard for Wired
Telecommunications Carriers classifies firms having 1,500 or fewer
employees as small. U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017 show that there
were 3,054 firms that operated in this industry for the entire year. Of
this number, 2,964 firms operated with fewer than 250 employees.
Additionally, based on Commission data in the 2022 Universal Service
Monitoring Report, as of December 31, 2021, there were 4,590 providers
that reported they were engaged in the provision of fixed local
services. Of these providers, the Commission estimates that 4,146
providers have 1,500 or fewer employees. Consequently, using the SBA's
small business size standard, most of these providers can be considered
small entities.
225. Incumbent Local Exchange Carriers (Incumbent LECs). Neither
the Commission nor the SBA have developed a small business size
standard specifically for incumbent local exchange carriers. Wired
Telecommunications Carriers is the closest industry with an SBA small
business size standard. The SBA small business size standard for Wired
Telecommunications Carriers classifies firms having 1,500 or fewer
employees as small. U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017 show that there
were 3,054 firms in this industry that operated for the entire year. Of
this number, 2,964 firms operated with fewer than 250 employees.
Additionally, based on Commission data in the 2022 Universal Service
Monitoring Report, as of December 31, 2021, there were 1,212 providers
that reported they were incumbent local exchange service providers. Of
these providers, the Commission estimates that 916 providers have 1,500
or fewer employees. Consequently, using the SBA's small business size
standard, the Commission estimates that the majority of incumbent local
exchange carriers can be considered small entities.
226. Competitive Local Exchange Carriers (Competitive LECs).
Neither the Commission nor the SBA has developed a size standard for
small businesses specifically applicable to local exchange services.
Providers of these services include several types of competitive local
exchange service providers. Wired Telecommunications Carriers is the
closest industry with an SBA small business size standard. The SBA
small business size standard for Wired Telecommunications Carriers
classifies firms having 1,500 or fewer employees as small. U.S. Census
Bureau data for 2017 show that there were 3,054 firms that operated in
this industry for the entire year. Of this number, 2,964 firms operated
with fewer than 250 employees. Additionally, based on Commission data
in the 2022 Universal Service Monitoring Report, as of December 31,
2021, there were 3,378 providers that reported they were competitive
local exchange service providers. Of these providers, the Commission
estimates that 3,230 providers have 1,500 or fewer employees.
Consequently, using the SBA's small business size standard, most of
these providers can be considered small entities.
227. Interexchange Carriers (IXCs). Neither the Commission nor the
SBA have developed a small business size standard specifically for
Interexchange Carriers. Wired Telecommunications Carriers is the
closest industry with an SBA small business size standard. The SBA
small business size standard for Wired Telecommunications Carriers
classifies firms having 1,500 or fewer employees as small. U.S. Census
Bureau data for 2017 show that there were 3,054 firms that operated in
this industry for the entire year. Of this number, 2,964 firms operated
with fewer than 250 employees. Additionally, based on Commission data
in the 2022 Universal Service Monitoring Report, as of December 31,
2021, there were 127 providers that reported they were engaged in the
provision of interexchange services. Of these providers, the Commission
estimates
[[Page 76087]]
that 109 providers have 1,500 or fewer employees. Consequently, using
the SBA's small business size standard, the Commission estimates that
the majority of providers in this industry can be considered small
entities.
228. Operator Service Providers (OSPs). Neither the Commission nor
the SBA has developed a small business size standard specifically for
operator service providers. The closest applicable industry with an SBA
small business size standard is Wired Telecommunications Carriers. The
SBA small business size standard classifies a business as small if it
has 1,500 or fewer employees. U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017 show
that there were 3,054 firms in this industry that operated for the
entire year. Of this number, 2,964 firms operated with fewer than 250
employees. Additionally, based on Commission data in the 2022 Universal
Service Monitoring Report, as of December 31, 2021, there were 20
providers that reported they were engaged in the provision of operator
services. Of these providers, the Commission estimates that all 20
providers have 1,500 or fewer employees. Consequently, using the SBA's
small business size standard, all of these providers can be considered
small entities.
229. Other Toll Carriers. Neither the Commission nor the SBA has
developed a definition for small businesses specifically applicable to
Other Toll Carriers. This category includes toll carriers that do not
fall within the categories of interexchange carriers, operator service
providers, prepaid calling card providers, satellite service carriers,
or toll resellers. Wired Telecommunications Carriers is the closest
industry with an SBA small business size standard. The SBA small
business size standard for Wired Telecommunications Carriers classifies
firms having 1,500 or fewer employees as small. U.S. Census Bureau data
for 2017 show that there were 3,054 firms in this industry that
operated for the entire year. Of this number, 2,964 firms operated with
fewer than 250 employees. Additionally, based on Commission data in the
2022 Universal Service Monitoring Report, as of December 31, 2021,
there were 90 providers that reported they were engaged in the
provision of other toll services. Of these providers, the Commission
estimates that 87 providers have 1,500 or fewer employees.
Consequently, using the SBA's small business size standard, most of
these providers can be considered small entities.
4. Wireless Providers--Fixed and Mobile
230. The broadband internet access service provider category
covered by this Notice may cover multiple wireless firms and categories
of regulated wireless services. Thus, to the extent the wireless
services listed below are used by wireless firms for broadband internet
access services, the proposed actions may have an impact on those small
businesses as set forth above and further below. In addition, for those
services subject to auctions, we note that, as a general matter, the
number of winning bidders that claim to qualify as small businesses at
the close of an auction does not necessarily represent the number of
small businesses currently in service. Also, the Commission does not
generally track subsequent business size unless, in the context of
assignments and transfers or reportable eligibility events, unjust
enrichment issues are implicated.
231. Wireless Broadband internet Access Service Providers (Wireless
ISPs or WISPs). Providers of wireless broadband internet access service
include fixed and mobile wireless providers. The Commission defines a
WISP as ``[a] company that provides end-users with wireless access to
the internet[.]'' Wireless service that terminates at an end user
location or mobile device and enables the end user to receive
information from and/or send information to the internet at information
transfer rates exceeding 200 kilobits per second (kbps) in at least one
direction is classified as a broadband connection under the
Commission's rules. Neither the SBA nor the Commission have developed a
size standard specifically applicable to Wireless Broadband internet
Access Service Providers. The closest applicable industry with an SBA
small business size standard is Wireless Telecommunications Carriers
(except Satellite). The SBA size standard for this industry classifies
a business as small if it has 1,500 or fewer employees. U.S. Census
Bureau data for 2017 show that there were 2,893 firms in this industry
that operated for the entire year. Of that number, 2,837 firms employed
fewer than 250 employees.
232. Additionally, according to Commission data on internet access
services as of June 30, 2019, nationwide there were approximately 1,237
fixed wireless and 70 mobile wireless providers of connections over 200
kbps in at least one direction. The Commission does not collect data on
the number of employees for providers of these services, therefore, at
this time we are not able to estimate the number of providers that
would qualify as small under the SBA's small business size standard.
However, based on data in the Commission's 2022 Communications
Marketplace Report on the small number of large mobile wireless
nationwide and regional facilities-based providers, the dozens of small
regional facilities-based providers and the number of wireless mobile
virtual network providers in general, as well as on terrestrial fixed
wireless broadband providers in general, we believe that the majority
of wireless internet access service providers can be considered small
entities.
233. Wireless Telecommunications Carriers (except Satellite). This
industry comprises establishments engaged in operating and maintaining
switching and transmission facilities to provide communications via the
airwaves. Establishments in this industry have spectrum licenses and
provide services using that spectrum, such as cellular services, paging
services, wireless internet access, and wireless video services. The
SBA size standard for this industry classifies a business as small if
it has 1,500 or fewer employees. U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017 show
that there were 2,893 firms in this industry that operated for the
entire year. Of that number, 2,837 firms employed fewer than 250
employees. Additionally, based on Commission data in the 2022 Universal
Service Monitoring Report, as of December 31, 2021, there were 594
providers that reported they were engaged in the provision of wireless
services. Of these providers, the Commission estimates that 511
providers have 1,500 or fewer employees. Consequently, using the SBA's
small business size standard, most of these providers can be considered
small entities.
234. Wireless Communications Services. Wireless Communications
Services (WCS) can be used for a variety of fixed, mobile,
radiolocation, and digital audio broadcasting satellite services.
Wireless spectrum is made available and licensed for the provision of
wireless communications services in several frequency bands subject to
part 27 of the Commission's rules. Wireless Telecommunications Carriers
(except Satellite) is the closest industry with an SBA small business
size standard applicable to these services. The SBA small business size
standard for this industry classifies a business as small if it has
1,500 or fewer employees. U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017 show that
there were 2,893 firms that operated in this industry for the entire
year. Of this number, 2,837 firms employed fewer
[[Page 76088]]
than 250 employees. Thus under the SBA size standard, the Commission
estimates that a majority of licensees in this industry can be
considered small.
235. The Commission's small business size standards with respect to
WCS involve eligibility for bidding credits and installment payments in
the auction of licenses for the various frequency bands included in
WCS. When bidding credits are adopted for the auction of licenses in
WCS frequency bands, such credits may be available to several types of
small businesses based on average gross revenues (small, very small,
and entrepreneur) pursuant to the competitive bidding rules adopted in
conjunction with the requirements for the auction and/or as identified
in the designated entities section in part 27 of the Commission's rules
for the specific WCS frequency bands.
236. In frequency bands where licenses were subject to auction, the
Commission notes that as a general matter, the number of winning
bidders that qualify as small businesses at the close of an auction
does not necessarily represent the number of small businesses currently
in service. Further, the Commission does not generally track subsequent
business size unless, in the context of assignments or transfers,
unjust enrichment issues are implicated. Additionally, since the
Commission does not collect data on the number of employees for
licensees providing these services, at this time we are not able to
estimate the number of licensees with active licenses that would
qualify as small under the SBA's small business size standard.
237. Wireless Resellers. Neither the Commission nor the SBA have
developed a small business size standard specifically for Wireless
Resellers. The closest industry with an SBA small business size
standard is Telecommunications Resellers. The Telecommunications
Resellers industry comprises establishments engaged in purchasing
access and network capacity from owners and operators of
telecommunications networks and reselling wired and wireless
telecommunications services (except satellite) to businesses and
households. Establishments in this industry resell telecommunications
and they do not operate transmission facilities and infrastructure.
Mobile virtual network operators (MVNOs) are included in this industry.
Under the SBA size standard for this industry, a business is small if
it has 1,500 or fewer employees. U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017 show
that 1,386 firms in this industry provided resale services during that
year. Of that number, 1,375 firms operated with fewer than 250
employees. Thus, for this industry under the SBA small business size
standard, the majority of providers can be considered small entities.
238. 1670-1675 MHz Services. These wireless communications services
can be used for fixed and mobile uses, except aeronautical mobile.
Wireless Telecommunications Carriers (except Satellite) is the closest
industry with an SBA small business size standard applicable to these
services. The SBA size standard for this industry classifies a business
as small if it has 1,500 or fewer employees. U.S. Census Bureau data
for 2017 show that there were 2,893 firms that operated in this
industry for the entire year. Of this number, 2,837 firms employed
fewer than 250 employees. Thus under the SBA size standard, the
Commission estimates that a majority of licensees in this industry can
be considered small.
239. According to Commission data as of November 2021, there were
three active licenses in this service. The Commission's small business
size standards with respect to 1670-1675 MHz Services involve
eligibility for bidding credits and installment payments in the auction
of licenses for these services. For licenses in the 1670-1675 MHz
service band, a ``small business'' is defined as an entity that,
together with its affiliates and controlling interests, has average
gross revenues not exceeding $40 million for the preceding three years,
and a ``very small business'' is defined as an entity that, together
with its affiliates and controlling interests, has had average annual
gross revenues not exceeding $15 million for the preceding three years.
The 1670-1675 MHz service band auction's winning bidder did not claim
small business status.
240. In frequency bands where licenses were subject to auction, the
Commission notes that as a general matter, the number of winning
bidders that qualify as small businesses at the close of an auction
does not necessarily represent the number of small businesses currently
in service. Further, the Commission does not generally track subsequent
business size unless, in the context of assignments or transfers,
unjust enrichment issues are implicated. Additionally, since the
Commission does not collect data on the number of employees for
licensees providing these services, at this time we are not able to
estimate the number of licensees with active licenses that would
qualify as small under the SBA's small business size standard.
241. Wireless Telephony. Wireless telephony includes cellular,
personal communications services, and specialized mobile radio
telephony carriers. The closest applicable industry with an SBA small
business size standard is Wireless Telecommunications Carriers (except
Satellite). The size standard for this industry under SBA rules is that
a business is small if it has 1,500 or fewer employees. For this
industry, U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017 show that there were 2,893
firms that operated for the entire year. Of this number, 2,837 firms
employed fewer than 250 employees. Additionally, based on Commission
data in the 2022 Universal Service Monitoring Report, as of December
31, 2021, there were 331 providers that reported they were engaged in
the provision of cellular, personal communications services, and
specialized mobile radio services. Of these providers, the Commission
estimates that 255 providers have 1,500 or fewer employees.
Consequently, using the SBA's small business size standard, most of
these providers can be considered small entities.
242. Broadband Personal Communications Service. The broadband
personal communications services (PCS) spectrum encompasses services in
the 1850-1910 and 1930-1990 MHz bands. The closest industry with an SBA
small business size standard applicable to these services is Wireless
Telecommunications Carriers (except Satellite). The SBA small business
size standard for this industry classifies a business as small if it
has 1,500 or fewer employees. U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017 show
that there were 2,893 firms that operated in this industry for the
entire year. Of this number, 2,837 firms employed fewer than 250
employees. Thus under the SBA size standard, the Commission estimates
that a majority of licensees in this industry can be considered small.
243. Based on Commission data as of November 2021, there were
approximately 5,060 active licenses in the Broadband PCS service. The
Commission's small business size standards with respect to Broadband
PCS involve eligibility for bidding credits and installment payments in
the auction of licenses for these services. In auctions for these
licenses, the Commission defined ``small business'' as an entity that,
together with its affiliates and controlling interests, has average
gross revenues not exceeding $40 million for the preceding three years,
and a ``very small business'' as an entity that, together with its
affiliates and controlling interests, has had
[[Page 76089]]
average annual gross revenues not exceeding $15 million for the
preceding three years. Winning bidders claiming small business credits
won Broadband PCS licenses in C, D, E, and F Blocks.
244. In frequency bands where licenses were subject to auction, the
Commission notes that as a general matter, the number of winning
bidders that qualify as small businesses at the close of an auction
does not necessarily represent the number of small businesses currently
in service. Further, the Commission does not generally track subsequent
business size unless, in the context of assignments or transfers,
unjust enrichment issues are implicated. Additionally, since the
Commission does not collect data on the number of employees for
licensees providing these, at this time we are not able to estimate the
number of licensees with active licenses that would qualify as small
under the SBA's small business size standard.
245. Specialized Mobile Radio Licenses. Special Mobile Radio (SMR)
licenses allow licensees to provide land mobile communications services
(other than radiolocation services) in the 800 MHz and 900 MHz spectrum
bands on a commercial basis including but not limited to services used
for voice and data communications, paging, and facsimile services, to
individuals, Federal Government entities, and other entities licensed
under Part 90 of the Commission's rules. Wireless Telecommunications
Carriers (except Satellite) is the closest industry with an SBA small
business size standard applicable to these services. The SBA size
standard for this industry classifies a business as small if it has
1,500 or fewer employees. For this industry, U.S. Census Bureau data
for 2017 show that there were 2,893 firms in this industry that
operated for the entire year. Of this number, 2,837 firms employed
fewer than 250 employees. Additionally, based on Commission data in the
2022 Universal Service Monitoring Report, as of December 31, 2021,
there were 95 providers that reported they were of SMR (dispatch)
providers. Of this number, the Commission estimates that all 95
providers have 1,500 or fewer employees. Consequently, using the SBA's
small business size standard, these 119 SMR licensees can be considered
small entities.
246. Based on Commission data as of December 2021, there were 3,924
active SMR licenses. However, since the Commission does not collect
data on the number of employees for licensees providing SMR services,
at this time we are not able to estimate the number of licensees with
active licenses that would qualify as small under the SBA's small
business size standard. Nevertheless, for purposes of this analysis the
Commission estimates that the majority of SMR licensees can be
considered small entities using the SBA's small business size standard.
247. Lower 700 MHz Band Licenses. The lower 700 MHz band
encompasses spectrum in the 698-746 MHz frequency bands. Permissible
operations in these bands include flexible fixed, mobile, and broadcast
uses, including mobile and other digital new broadcast operation; fixed
and mobile wireless commercial services (including FDD- and TDD-based
services); as well as fixed and mobile wireless uses for private,
internal radio needs, two-way interactive, cellular, and mobile
television broadcasting services. Wireless Telecommunications Carriers
(except Satellite) is the closest industry with an SBA small business
size standard applicable to licenses providing services in these bands.
The SBA small business size standard for this industry classifies a
business as small if it has 1,500 or fewer employees. U.S. Census
Bureau data for 2017 show that there were 2,893 firms that operated in
this industry for the entire year. Of this number, 2,837 firms employed
fewer than 250 employees. Thus under the SBA size standard, the
Commission estimates that a majority of licensees in this industry can
be considered small.
248. According to Commission data as of December 2021, there were
approximately 2,824 active Lower 700 MHz Band licenses. The
Commission's small business size standards with respect to Lower 700
MHz Band licensees involve eligibility for bidding credits and
installment payments in the auction of licenses. For auctions of Lower
700 MHz Band licenses the Commission adopted criteria for three groups
of small businesses. A very small business was defined as an entity
that, together with its affiliates and controlling interests, has
average annual gross revenues not exceeding $15 million for the
preceding three years, a small business was defined as an entity that,
together with its affiliates and controlling interests, has average
gross revenues not exceeding $40 million for the preceding three years,
and an entrepreneur was defined as an entity that, together with its
affiliates and controlling interests, has average gross revenues not
exceeding $3 million for the preceding three years. In auctions for
Lower 700 MHz Band licenses seventy-two winning bidders claiming a
small business classification won 329 licenses, twenty-six winning
bidders claiming a small business classification won 214 licenses, and
three winning bidders claiming a small business classification won all
five auctioned licenses.
249. In frequency bands where licenses were subject to auction, the
Commission notes that as a general matter, the number of winning
bidders that qualify as small businesses at the close of an auction
does not necessarily represent the number of small businesses currently
in service. Further, the Commission does not generally track subsequent
business size unless, in the context of assignments or transfers,
unjust enrichment issues are implicated. Additionally, since the
Commission does not collect data on the number of employees for
licensees providing these services, at this time we are not able to
estimate the number of licensees with active licenses that would
qualify as small under the SBA's small business size standard.
250. Upper 700 MHz Band Licenses. The upper 700 MHz band
encompasses spectrum in the 746-806 MHz bands. Upper 700 MHz D Block
licenses are nationwide licenses associated with the 758-763 MHz and
788-793 MHz bands. Permissible operations in these bands include
flexible fixed, mobile, and broadcast uses, including mobile and other
digital new broadcast operation; fixed and mobile wireless commercial
services (including FDD- and TDD-based services); as well as fixed and
mobile wireless uses for private, internal radio needs, two-way
interactive, cellular, and mobile television broadcasting services.
Wireless Telecommunications Carriers (except Satellite) is the closest
industry with an SBA small business size standard applicable to
licenses providing services in these bands. The SBA small business size
standard for this industry classifies a business as small if it has
1,500 or fewer employees. U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017 show that
there were 2,893 firms that operated in this industry for the entire
year. Of that number, 2,837 firms employed fewer than 250 employees.
Thus, under the SBA size standard, the Commission estimates that a
majority of licensees in this industry can be considered small.
251. According to Commission data as of December 2021, there were
approximately 152 active Upper 700 MHz Band licenses. The Commission's
small business size standards with respect to Upper 700 MHz Band
licensees involve eligibility for bidding credits and installment
payments in the auction of licenses. For the auction of these licenses,
the Commission defined a ``small business'' as an entity that, together
with its affiliates and
[[Page 76090]]
controlling principals, has average gross revenues not exceeding $40
million for the preceding three years, and a ``very small business'' as
an entity that, together with its affiliates and controlling
principals, has average gross revenues that are not more than $15
million for the preceding three years. Pursuant to these definitions,
three winning bidders claiming very small business status won five of
the twelve available licenses.
252. In frequency bands where licenses were subject to auction, the
Commission notes that as a general matter, the number of winning
bidders that qualify as small businesses at the close of an auction
does not necessarily represent the number of small businesses currently
in service. Further, the Commission does not generally track subsequent
business size unless, in the context of assignments or transfers,
unjust enrichment issues are implicated. Additionally, since the
Commission does not collect data on the number of employees for
licensees providing these services, at this time we are not able to
estimate the number of licensees with active licenses that would
qualify as small under the SBA's small business size standard.
253. 700 MHz Guard Band Licensees. The 700 MHz Guard Band
encompasses spectrum in 746-747/776-777 MHz and 762-764/792-794 MHz
frequency bands. Wireless Telecommunications Carriers (except
Satellite) is the closest industry with an SBA small business size
standard applicable to licenses providing services in these bands. The
SBA small business size standard for this industry classifies a
business as small if it has 1,500 or fewer employees. U.S. Census
Bureau data for 2017 show that there were 2,893 firms that operated in
this industry for the entire year. Of this number, 2,837 firms employed
fewer than 250 employees. Thus under the SBA size standard, the
Commission estimates that a majority of licensees in this industry can
be considered small.
254. According to Commission data as of December 2021, there were
approximately 224 active 700 MHz Guard Band licenses. The Commission's
small business size standards with respect to 700 MHz Guard Band
licensees involve eligibility for bidding credits and installment
payments in the auction of licenses. For the auction of these licenses,
the Commission defined a ``small business'' as an entity that, together
with its affiliates and controlling principals, has average gross
revenues not exceeding $40 million for the preceding three years, and a
``very small business'' as an entity that, together with its affiliates
and controlling principals, has average gross revenues that are not
more than $15 million for the preceding three years. Pursuant to these
definitions, five winning bidders claiming one of the small business
status classifications won 26 licenses, and one winning bidder claiming
small business won two licenses. None of the winning bidders claiming a
small business status classification in these 700 MHz Guard Band
license auctions had an active license as of December 2021.
255. In frequency bands where licenses were subject to auction, the
Commission notes that as a general matter, the number of winning
bidders that qualify as small businesses at the close of an auction
does not necessarily represent the number of small businesses currently
in service. Further, the Commission does not generally track subsequent
business size unless, in the context of assignments or transfers,
unjust enrichment issues are implicated. Additionally, since the
Commission does not collect data on the number of employees for
licensees providing these services, at this time we are not able to
estimate the number of licensees with active licenses that would
qualify as small under the SBA's small business size standard.
256. Air-Ground Radiotelephone Service. Air-Ground Radiotelephone
Service is a wireless service in which licensees are authorized to
offer and provide radio telecommunications service for hire to
subscribers in aircraft. A licensee may provide any type of air-ground
service (i.e., voice telephony, broadband internet, data, etc.) to
aircraft of any type, and serve any or all aviation markets
(commercial, government, and general). A licensee must provide service
to aircraft and may not provide ancillary land mobile or fixed services
in the 800 MHz air-ground spectrum.
257. The closest industry with an SBA small business size standard
applicable to these services is Wireless Telecommunications Carriers
(except Satellite). The SBA small business size standard for this
industry classifies a business as small if it has 1,500 or fewer
employees. U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017 show that there were 2,893
firms that operated in this industry for the entire year. Of this
number, 2,837 firms employed fewer than 250 employees. Thus under the
SBA size standard, the Commission estimates that a majority of
licensees in this industry can be considered small.
258. Based on Commission data as of December 2021, there were
approximately four licensees with 110 active licenses in the Air-Ground
Radiotelephone Service. The Commission's small business size standards
with respect to Air-Ground Radiotelephone Service involve eligibility
for bidding credits and installment payments in the auction of
licenses. For purposes of auctions, the Commission defined ``small
business'' as an entity that, together with its affiliates and
controlling interests, has average gross revenues not exceeding $40
million for the preceding three years, and a ``very small business'' as
an entity that, together with its affiliates and controlling interests,
has had average annual gross revenues not exceeding $15 million for the
preceding three years. In the auction of Air-Ground Radiotelephone
Service licenses in the 800 MHz band, neither of the two winning
bidders claimed small business status.
259. In frequency bands where licenses were subject to auction, the
Commission notes that as a general matter, the number of winning
bidders that qualify as small businesses at the close of an auction
does not necessarily represent the number of small businesses currently
in service. Further, the Commission does not generally track subsequent
business size unless, in the context of assignments or transfers,
unjust enrichment issues are implicated. Additionally, the Commission
does not collect data on the number of employees for licensees
providing these services therefore, at this time we are not able to
estimate the number of licensees with active licenses that would
qualify as small under the SBA's small business size standard.
260. Advanced Wireless Services (AWS)--(1710-1755 MHz and 2110-2155
MHz bands (AWS-1); 1915-1920 MHz, 1995-2000 MHz, 2020-2025 MHz and
2175-2180 MHz bands (AWS-2); 2155-2175 MHz band (AWS-3); 2000-2020 MHz
and 2180-2200 MHz (AWS-4). Spectrum is made available and licensed in
these bands for the provision of various wireless communications
services. Wireless Telecommunications Carriers (except Satellite) is
the closest industry with an SBA small business size standard
applicable to these services. The SBA small business size standard for
this industry classifies a business as small if it has 1,500 or fewer
employees. U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017 show that there were 2,893
firms that operated in this industry for the entire year. Of this
number, 2,837 firms employed fewer than 250 employees. Thus, under the
SBA size standard, the Commission estimates that a majority of
licensees in this industry can be considered small.
261. According to Commission data as December 2021, there were
[[Page 76091]]
approximately 4,472 active AWS licenses. The Commission's small
business size standards with respect to AWS involve eligibility for
bidding credits and installment payments in the auction of licenses for
these services. For the auction of AWS licenses, the Commission defined
a ``small business'' as an entity with average annual gross revenues
for the preceding three years not exceeding $40 million, and a ``very
small business'' as an entity with average annual gross revenues for
the preceding three years not exceeding $15 million. Pursuant to these
definitions, 57 winning bidders claiming status as small or very small
businesses won 215 of 1,087 licenses. In the most recent auction of AWS
licenses 15 of 37 bidders qualifying for status as small or very small
businesses won licenses.
262. In frequency bands where licenses were subject to auction, the
Commission notes that as a general matter, the number of winning
bidders that qualify as small businesses at the close of an auction
does not necessarily represent the number of small businesses currently
in service. Further, the Commission does not generally track subsequent
business size unless, in the context of assignments or transfers,
unjust enrichment issues are implicated. Additionally, since the
Commission does not collect data on the number of employees for
licensees providing these services, at this time we are not able to
estimate the number of licensees with active licenses that would
qualify as small under the SBA's small business size standard.
263. 3650-3700 MHz band. Wireless broadband service licensing in
the 3650-3700 MHz band provides for nationwide, non-exclusive licensing
of terrestrial operations, utilizing contention-based technologies, in
the 3650 MHz band (i.e., 3650-3700 MHz). Licensees are permitted to
provide services on a non-common carrier and/or on a common carrier
basis. Wireless broadband services in the 3650-3700 MHz band fall in
the Wireless Telecommunications Carriers (except Satellite) industry
with an SBA small business size standard that classifies a business as
small if it has 1,500 or fewer employees. U.S. Census Bureau data for
2017 show that there were 2,893 firms that operated in this industry
for the entire year. Of this number, 2,837 firms employed fewer than
250 employees. Thus under the SBA size standard, the Commission
estimates that a majority of licensees in this industry can be
considered small.
264. The Commission has not developed a small business size
standard applicable to 3650-3700 MHz band licensees. Based on the
licenses that have been granted, however, we estimate that the majority
of licensees in this service are small internet access service
providers. As of November 2021, Commission data shows that there were
902 active licenses in the 3650-3700 MHz band. However, since the
Commission does not collect data on the number of employees for
licensees providing these services, at this time we are not able to
estimate the number of licensees with active licenses that would
qualify as small under the SBA's small business size standard.
265. Fixed Microwave Services. Fixed microwave services include
common carrier, private-operational fixed, and broadcast auxiliary
radio services. They also include the Upper Microwave Flexible Use
Service (UMFUS), Millimeter Wave Service (70/80/90 GHz), Local
Multipoint Distribution Service (LMDS), the Digital Electronic Message
Service (DEMS), 24 GHz Service, Multiple Address Systems (MAS), and
Multichannel Video Distribution and Data Service (MVDDS), where in some
bands licensees can choose between common carrier and non-common
carrier status. Wireless Telecommunications Carriers (except Satellite)
is the closest industry with an SBA small business size standard
applicable to these services. The SBA small size standard for this
industry classifies a business as small if it has 1,500 or fewer
employees. U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017 show that there were 2,893
firms that operated in this industry for the entire year. Of this
number, 2,837 firms employed fewer than 250 employees. Thus under the
SBA size standard, the Commission estimates that a majority of fixed
microwave service licensees can be considered small.
266. The Commission's small business size standards with respect to
fixed microwave services involve eligibility for bidding credits and
installment payments in the auction of licenses for the various
frequency bands included in fixed microwave services. When bidding
credits are adopted for the auction of licenses in fixed microwave
services frequency bands, such credits may be available to several
types of small businesses based on average gross revenues (small, very
small, and entrepreneur) pursuant to the competitive bidding rules
adopted in conjunction with the requirements for the auction and/or as
identified in Part 101 of the Commission's rules for the specific fixed
microwave services frequency bands.
267. In frequency bands where licenses were subject to auction, the
Commission notes that as a general matter, the number of winning
bidders that qualify as small businesses at the close of an auction
does not necessarily represent the number of small businesses currently
in service. Further, the Commission does not generally track subsequent
business size unless, in the context of assignments or transfers,
unjust enrichment issues are implicated. Additionally, since the
Commission does not collect data on the number of employees for
licensees providing these services, at this time we are not able to
estimate the number of licensees with active licenses that would
qualify as small under the SBA's small business size standard.
268. Broadband Radio Service and Educational Broadband Service.
Broadband Radio Service systems, previously referred to as Multipoint
Distribution Service (MDS) and Multichannel Multipoint Distribution
Service (MMDS) systems, and ``wireless cable,'' transmit video
programming to subscribers and provide two-way high speed data
operations using the microwave frequencies of the Broadband Radio
Service (BRS) and Educational Broadband Service (EBS) (previously
referred to as the Instructional Television Fixed Service (ITFS)).
Wireless cable operators that use spectrum in the BRS often
supplemented with leased channels from the EBS, provide a competitive
alternative to wired cable and other multichannel video programming
distributors. Wireless cable programming to subscribers resembles cable
television, but instead of coaxial cable, wireless cable uses microwave
channels.
269. In light of the use of wireless frequencies by BRS and EBS
services, the closest industry with an SBA small business size standard
applicable to these services is Wireless Telecommunications Carriers
(except Satellite). The SBA small business size standard for this
industry classifies a business as small if it has 1,500 or fewer
employees. U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017 show that there were 2,893
firms that operated in this industry for the entire year. Of this
number, 2,837 firms employed fewer than 250 employees. Thus under the
SBA size standard, the Commission estimates that a majority of
licensees in this industry can be considered small.
270. According to Commission data as December 2021, there were
approximately 5,869 active BRS and EBS licenses. The Commission's small
business size standards with respect to BRS involves eligibility for
bidding credits and installment payments in the
[[Page 76092]]
auction of licenses for these services. For the auction of BRS
licenses, the Commission adopted criteria for three groups of small
businesses. A very small business is an entity that, together with its
affiliates and controlling interests, has average annual gross revenues
that exceed $3 million and did not exceed $15 million for the preceding
three years, a small business is an entity that, together with its
affiliates and controlling interests, has average gross revenues that
exceed $15 million and did not exceed $40 million for the preceding
three years, and an entrepreneur is an entity that, together with its
affiliates and controlling interests, has average gross revenues not
exceeding $3 million for the preceding three years. Of the ten winning
bidders for BRS licenses, two bidders claiming the small business
status won four licenses, one bidder claiming the very small business
status won three licenses, and two bidders claiming entrepreneur status
won six licenses. One of the winning bidders claiming a small business
status classification in the BRS license auction has an active license
as of December 2021.
271. The Commission's small business size standards for EBS define
a small business as an entity that, together with its affiliates, its
controlling interests, and the affiliates of its controlling interests,
has average gross revenues that are not more than $55 million for the
preceding five (5) years, and a very small business is an entity that,
together with its affiliates, its controlling interests, and the
affiliates of its controlling interests, has average gross revenues
that are not more than $20 million for the preceding five (5) years. In
frequency bands where licenses were subject to auction, the Commission
notes that as a general matter, the number of winning bidders that
qualify as small businesses at the close of an auction does not
necessarily represent the number of small businesses currently in
service. Further, the Commission does not generally track subsequent
business size unless, in the context of assignments or transfers,
unjust enrichment issues are implicated. Additionally, since the
Commission does not collect data on the number of employees for
licensees providing these services, at this time we are not able to
estimate the number of licensees with active licenses that would
qualify as small under the SBA's small business size standard.
5. Satellite Service Providers
272. Satellite Telecommunications. This industry comprises firms
``primarily engaged in providing telecommunications services to other
establishments in the telecommunications and broadcasting industries by
forwarding and receiving communications signals via a system of
satellites or reselling satellite telecommunications.'' Satellite
telecommunications service providers include satellite and earth
station operators. The SBA small business size standard for this
industry classifies a business with $38.5 million or less in annual
receipts as small. U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017 show that 275 firms
in this industry operated for the entire year. Of this number, 242
firms had revenue of less than $25 million. Additionally, based on
Commission data in the 2022 Universal Service Monitoring Report, as of
December 31, 2021, there were 65 providers that reported they were
engaged in the provision of satellite telecommunications services. Of
these providers, the Commission estimates that approximately 42
providers have 1,500 or fewer employees. Consequently, using the SBA's
small business size standard, a little more than half of these
providers can be considered small entities.
273. All Other Telecommunications. This industry is comprised of
establishments primarily engaged in providing specialized
telecommunications services, such as satellite tracking, communications
telemetry, and radar station operation. This industry also includes
establishments primarily engaged in providing satellite terminal
stations and associated facilities connected with one or more
terrestrial systems and capable of transmitting telecommunications to,
and receiving telecommunications from, satellite systems. Providers of
internet services (e.g. dial-up ISPs) or VoIP services, via client-
supplied telecommunications connections are also included in this
industry. The SBA small business size standard for this industry
classifies firms with annual receipts of $35 million or less as small.
U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017 show that there were 1,079 firms in
this industry that operated for the entire year. Of those firms, 1,039
had revenue of less than $25 million. Based on this data, the
Commission estimates that the majority of ``All Other
Telecommunications'' firms can be considered small.
6. Cable Service Providers
274. Cable and Other Subscription Programming. The U.S. Census
Bureau defines this industry as establishments primarily engaged in
operating studios and facilities for the broadcasting of programs on a
subscription or fee basis. The broadcast programming is typically
narrowcast in nature (e.g., limited format, such as news, sports,
education, or youth-oriented). These establishments produce programming
in their own facilities or acquire programming from external sources.
The programming material is usually delivered to a third party, such as
cable systems or direct-to-home satellite systems, for transmission to
viewers. The SBA small business size standard for this industry
classifies firms with annual receipts less than $41.5 million as small.
Based on U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017, 378 firms operated in this
industry during that year. Of that number, 149 firms operated with
revenue of less than $25 million a year and 44 firms operated with
revenue of $25 million or more. Based on this data, the Commission
estimates that a majority of firms in this industry are small.
275. Cable Companies and Systems (Rate Regulation). The Commission
has developed its own small business size standard for the purpose of
cable rate regulation. Under the Commission's rules, a ``small cable
company'' is one serving 400,000 or fewer subscribers nationwide. Based
on industry data, there are about 420 cable companies in the U.S. Of
these, only seven have more than 400,000 subscribers. In addition,
under the Commission's rules, a ``small system'' is a cable system
serving 15,000 or fewer subscribers. Based on industry data, there are
about 4,139 cable systems (headends) in the U.S. Of these, about 639
have more than 15,000 subscribers. Accordingly, the Commission
estimates that the majority of cable companies and cable systems are
small.
276. Cable System Operators (Telecom Act Standard). The
Communications Act of 1934, as amended, contains a size standard for a
``small cable operator,'' which is ``a cable operator that, directly or
through an affiliate, serves in the aggregate fewer than one percent of
all subscribers in the United States and is not affiliated with any
entity or entities whose gross annual revenues in the aggregate exceed
$250,000,000.'' For purposes of the Telecom Act Standard, the
Commission determined that a cable system operator that serves fewer
than 677,000 subscribers, either directly or through affiliates, will
meet the definition of a small cable operator based on the cable
subscriber count established in a 2001 Public Notice. Based on industry
data, only six cable system operators have more than 677,000
subscribers. Accordingly, the Commission estimates that the majority of
cable system
[[Page 76093]]
operators are small under this size standard. We note however, that the
Commission neither requests nor collects information on whether cable
system operators are affiliated with entities whose gross annual
revenues exceed $250 million. Therefore, we are unable at this time to
estimate with greater precision the number of cable system operators
that would qualify as small cable operators under the definition in the
Communications Act.
7. Other
277. Electric Power Generators, Transmitters, and Distributors. The
U.S. Census Bureau defines the utilities sector industry as comprised
of ``establishments, primarily engaged in generating, transmitting,
and/or distributing electric power. Establishments in this industry
group may perform one or more of the following activities: (1) operate
generation facilities that produce electric energy; (2) operate
transmission systems that convey the electricity from the generation
facility to the distribution system; and (3) operate distribution
systems that convey electric power received from the generation
facility or the transmission system to the final consumer.'' This
industry group is categorized based on fuel source and includes
Hydroelectric Power Generation, Fossil Fuel Electric Power Generation,
Nuclear Electric Power Generation, Solar Electric Power Generation,
Wind Electric Power Generation, Geothermal Electric Power Generation,
Biomass Electric Power Generation, Other Electric Power Generation,
Electric Bulk Power Transmission and Control, and Electric Power
Distribution.
278. The SBA has established a small business size standard for
each of these groups based on the number of employees which ranges from
having fewer than 250 employees to having fewer than 1,000 employees.
U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017 indicate that for the Electric Power
Generation, Transmission and Distribution industry there were 1,693
firms that operated in this industry for the entire year. Of this
number, 1,552 firms had less than 250 employees. Based on this data and
the associated SBA size standards, the majority of firms in this
industry can be considered small entities.
279. All Other Information Services. This industry comprises
establishments primarily engaged in providing other information
services (except news syndicates, libraries, archives, internet
publishing and broadcasting, and Web search portals). The SBA small
business size standard for this industry classifies firms with annual
receipts of $30 million or less as small. U.S. Census Bureau data for
2017 show that there were 704 firms in this industry that operated for
the entire year. Of those firms, 556 had revenue of less than $25
million. Consequently, we estimate that the majority of firms in this
industry are small entities.
280. internet Service Providers (Non-Broadband). internet access
service providers using client-supplied telecommunications connections
(e.g., dial-up ISPs) as well as VoIP service providers using client-
supplied telecommunications connections fall in the industry
classification of All Other Telecommunications. The SBA small business
size standard for this industry classifies firms with annual receipts
of $35 million or less as small. For this industry, U.S. Census Bureau
data for 2017 show that there were 1,079 firms in this industry that
operated for the entire year. Of those firms, 1,039 had revenue of less
than $25 million. Consequently, under the SBA size standard a majority
of firms in this industry can be considered small.
D. Description of Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Other
Compliance Requirements for Small Entities
281. In the Notice, we largely seek to reestablish the framework
the Commission previously adopted in the 2015 Open Internet Order. We
first propose to reclassify BIAS as a telecommunications service under
Title II of the Act and to reclassify mobile BIAS as a commercial
mobile service. We also propose to reestablish rules to prevent ISPs
from engaging in practices harmful to consumers, competition, and
public safety and that provide the foundation for a national regulatory
approach toward BIAS. Specifically, we propose to adopt rules to
prohibit ISPs from blocking, throttling, or engaging in paid or
affiliated prioritization arrangements. We further propose to reinstate
the general conduct standard adopted in the 2015 Open Internet Order,
which would prohibit practices that cause unreasonable interference or
unreasonable disadvantage to consumers or edge providers. Additionally,
we propose to retain current disclosure obligations for ISPs, and seek
comment on the means of disclosure, the interplay between the
transparency rule and current broadband label requirements, as well as
any additional enhancements or changes the Commission should consider.
While we expect the proposals in the Notice will impose new or
additional reporting, recordkeeping and/or other compliance obligations
on small and other entities, we also anticipate that the burden for
small and other entities to comply with the reclassification and rules
will be minimal, as they will be entering a regulatory framework with
which they are already and recently familiar. At this time however, the
Commission is not in a position to determine whether, if adopted, our
proposals and the matters upon which we seek comment will require small
entities to hire professionals to comply with the proposed rules in the
Notice, and cannot quantify the cost of compliance with the potential
rule changes discussed herein. We seek comment from small entities that
have concerns about potential hardships or other matters related to our
proposed rules, and with compliance, should they be adopted.
282. Certain compliance obligations regarding the content of
transparency disclosures that we discuss in the Notice and seek comment
on are beyond those that currently exists. For instance, we seek
comment on additional disclosure specifications that were established
in the 2015 Open Internet Order and repealed by the RIF Order,
including commercial terms about price and related terms and their
relationship with disclosures regarding privacy and redress options,
and about performance characteristics related to network performance
and network practices. We also seek comment on whether ISPs should
disclose additional information regarding their performance measurement
methodologies and practices. We discuss additional disclosure
requirements that were not adopted in the 2015 Open Internet Order,
such as those regarding the source, location, timing, or duration of
network congestion, packet corruption and jitter, or disclosures that
permit end users to identify application-specific usage or to
distinguish which user or device contributed to which part of the total
data usage. We also ask if ISPs should be required to make more
detailed disclosures regarding the requirements, restrictions, or
standards for enforcement of data caps. Further, we seek comment on
whether to incorporate into the transparency rule the Commission's
clarifications and guidance regarding prior versions of the
transparency rule, such as point-of-sale disclosures, service
descriptions, disclosures for the benefit of edge providers,
disclosures regarding security measures, and consistency between ISPs'
disclosures under the transparency rule and their advertising claims or
other public statements. We also discuss how providers would make the
required
[[Page 76094]]
disclosures, such as via a publicly available website, by transmitting
disclosures directly to the Commission, and by additional locations or
means. Additionally, we seek comment on whether such disclosures should
be in a machine-readable format and regarding the accessibility of such
disclosures to individuals with disabilities. Lastly, we explore what,
if any, recordkeeping requirements we should implement as a means for
ISPs to provide the types of information or records needed to support
the content of their disclosures.
283. The Commission seeks comment on all of the above proposals to
evaluate whether compliance with these requirements would cause an
undue burden on small or other entities, if adopted. We therefore
expect the information we receive in comments, including cost and
benefit data, to help the Commission further identify and evaluate
relevant matters for small entities, such as compliance costs, and
other burdens that may result from the proposals and inquiries we make
in the Notice.
E. Steps Taken To Minimize the Significant Economic Impact on Small
Entities, and Significant Alternatives Considered
284. The RFA requires an agency to describe any significant
alternatives that it has considered in reaching its proposed approach,
which may include (among others) the following four alternatives: (1)
the establishment of differing compliance or reporting requirements or
timetables that take into account the resources available to small
entities; (2) the clarification, consolidation, or simplification of
compliance or reporting requirements under the rule for such small
entities; (3) the use of performance, rather than design, standards;
and (4) an exemption from coverage of the rule, or any part thereof,
for such small entities.
285. At the outset of the reclassification discussion, we request
information on the benefits and burdens of the proposed
reclassification, and specifically request feedback on the impact on
small businesses and small ISPs. We also request feedback on the
proposed conduct rules prohibiting ISPs from blocking or throttling the
information transmitted over their networks, or engaging in paid or
affiliated prioritization arrangements, and the general conduct rule,
all of which, as we discuss in the Notice, track the specific language
from the 2015 Open Internet Order. We believe our proposal to
reestablish the framework from the Commission's 2015 decision could
minimize the economic impact for small entities that already have
experience operating under, and complying with, the 2015 Open Internet
Order.
286. We also believe and tentatively conclude that the proposed
reclassification of BIAS as a telecommunications service will enhance
the Commission's ability to continue to advance national security and
preserve public safety by protecting the nation's communications
networks from potential entities, equipment, and services that pose
threats to national security and law enforcement. However, in the
alternative to reclassification, we consider, inquire, and seek comment
on whether there is other authority that can be used by the Commission
that would allow it to protect the nation's communications networks
against ISPs that pose threats national security and law enforcement.
To the extent there is such an alternative available to the Commission,
in the Notice, we request that commenters specify the statutory
authority, and how this authority can be used by the Commission to
address national security and law enforcement concerns. We believe
reclassification also will protect the information of small and other
telecommunications carriers, equipment manufacturers, and other
entities that interact with ISPs that are potential national security
threats, or are owned or controlled by, or subject to the jurisdiction
or direction of foreign adversaries. Accordingly, we seek comment on
how reclassification of BIAS will affect ISPs as well as
telecommunications carriers and equipment manufacturers, and other
entities that interact with ISPs, if adopted.
287. In the Notice, we indicate that as part of our proposal to
reinstate the reclassification of BIAS as a telecommunications service,
we will continue to define BIAS as defined in part 8 of the
Commission's rules and ``mass market'' as defined in the 2015 Open
Internet Order and RIF Order. We consider whether there are reasons for
the Commission to modify these definitions. Similarly, we consider
whether there is any reason to depart from our tentative conclusion
that BIAS is a telecommunications service and our supporting analysis.
Further, while we propose to reinstate the classification of mobile
BIAS as a commercial mobile service as adopted in the 2015 Open
Internet Order, alternatively, we propose to find that mobile BIAS is
the functional equivalent of a commercial mobile service and,
therefore, not private mobile service, even if mobile BIAS does not
meet the definition of ``commercial mobile service.'' The Notice seeks
comment on these matters.
288. The specific conduct rules we propose in the Notice would
prohibit ISPs from blocking, throttling, or engaging in paid or
affiliated prioritization arrangements. In the alternative, we consider
whether the need to prohibit any of these practices has been eliminated
by any new technical advancements or market developments. We also
consider whether our proposed no-blocking rule which tracks the
language of the rule we adopted 2015 Open Internet Order, and would
apply to both fixed and mobile ISPs, continues to be the best no-
blocking principle for ISPs. The no-blocking rule is a broadly accepted
principle in the industry, including by ISPs, and many ISPs continue to
advertise a commitment to open internet principles on their websites,
which includes commitments not to block traffic except in certain
circumstances, notwithstanding the 2017 repeal of the no-blocking rule.
Similarly, after the repeal of the no-throttling rule, ISPs continue to
advertise on their websites that they do not throttle traffic except in
limited circumstances. As a result, we believe the economic impact on,
and costs to comply with the proposed no-blocking rule, and the no
throttling of lawful internet traffic rule, will be minimal for small
ISPs. We however seek information on specific costs and burdens these
rules would impose for small ISPs.
289. Regarding our proposed ban on paid prioritization practices,
we take steps to minimize the economic impact for small ISPs by
requesting information on the compliance costs small ISPs would incur
as a result of such a ban, and by exploring whether there are
alternatives we can take to protect consumers, and the open internet
from the harms of paid prioritization practices that should be
considered as an alternative to a flat ban. Similarly, we consider
whether there is another standard we should adopt to establish a
general conduct rule, as an alternative to the general conduct standard
for ISPs we propose in the Notice that tracks the 2015 Open Internet
Order. We specifically inquire whether we should instead rely on the
``just and reasonable'' and ``unreasonable discrimination'' standards
in sections 201 and 202 of the Act. The Notice seeks comment on these
matters.
290. We further propose to build upon the foundation of our
existing transparency requirement adopted in the 2010 Open Internet
Order, and the new broadband label requirements the Commission put in
place to give
[[Page 76095]]
consumers a convenient tool to research and compare broadband
offerings. We propose possible modifications or additions to the
requirements pertaining to the content of required disclosure and the
means of disclosure to update the transparency rule, to ensure that
sufficient information is made available to end users, edge providers,
the broader internet community, and the Commission, which allows for
the timely and effective assessment of ISPs' terms and conditions for
BIAS. Specific disclosure modification alternatives we consider, and
seek comment on include whether to: (1) require disclosures regarding
the source, location, timing, or duration of network congestion, packet
corruption and jitter, or disclosures that permit end users to identify
application-specific usage or to distinguish which user or device
contributed to which part of the total data usage, (2) require more
detailed disclosures regarding the requirements, restrictions, or
standards for enforcement of data caps; (3) require specific content of
particular relevance to edge providers, the broader internet community,
or the Commission, and (4) require different disclosures tailored to
different audiences, and specifically, whether different content
disclosures should be required for mobile ISPs than for fixed ISPs.
Further, as an alternative to modifications that only add disclosure
requirements, we inquire, and seek comment on whether under the current
transparency rule there is certain content that is required to be
disclosed that should no longer be required after weighing the relevant
policy considerations at stake.
291. As we discuss in the Notice, our objectives for proposing
modifications to the means of disclosure requirements for ISPs is to
ensure that we are taking the appropriate steps to facilitate the
availability of the content of the required disclosures in a timely and
effective manner, without undue burdens on ISPs. Thus, while we
consider and seek comment on alternatives to modify the means of
disclosure requirements for ISPs such as, (1) whether any additional
requirements are warranted regarding ISPs' website disclosures under
the transparency rule, (2) whether disclosures under the transparency
rule should be required in additional locations, and (3) possible
direct notification requirements, we also consider whether there are
existing means of disclosure requirements that should be eliminated
because the burdens imposed by these requirements outweigh their
benefits. We believe that to the extent that there are content and/or
means of disclosure requirements that can be removed, removal of these
requirements could reduce the impact for small entities of any
additional requirements that may be adopted.
292. Our assessment of how to implement any rules we may adopt
relating to the transparency rule seeks to identify any implementation
issues for small and other ISPs that may be associated with potential
modifications. We specifically seek to understand the impacts for small
ISPs, such as whether smaller ISPs need extra time to implement any
modifications to the transparency rule.
293. More generally we consider implementation alternatives that
include, (1) whether the Commission should adopt new safe harbors for
compliance with the transparency rule, (2) whether there are safe
harbors the Commission should adopt for compliance with the
transparency rule as a whole, similar to the broadband label safe
harbor adopted in the 2015 Open Internet Order, and (3) whether the
Commission should adopt recordkeeping requirements governing the types
of information or records ISPs rely upon to support the content of
their disclosures made under the transparency rule. With regard to any
recordkeeping requirements, we seek information on specific ways
information could be retained that could minimize the burden on small
and other ISPs, and what recordkeeping timeframe would best balance the
benefits to the Commission of having the required information available
against the compliance burden for small and other ISPs. Overall, the
Commission's objective is to determine the most cost-effective ways of
ensuring that consumers, and edge providers receive the information
they need in a timely and effective manner, while minimizing the
implementation and compliance burdens for small and other ISPs,
consistent with these goals.
294. In the Notice and summarized above, we discuss the potential
effects our rule proposals and alternatives could have on small
entities, and seek comment on these matters. We also discuss that the
Commission envisions the proposed BIAS reclassification as a means to
provide the basis for a national regulatory approach rather than a
patchwork of state requirements, which could help streamline and
minimize regulatory requirements for small entities. Further, we
propose broad forbearance from statutory requirements and Commission
regulations for ISPs, and note that the proposed forbearance could
substantially lessen the economic impact of the proposed actions on
small entities. Accordingly, before reaching final conclusions, and
taking action in this proceeding, the Commission expects to further
consider the economic impact on small entities, and additional
alternatives that are consistent with its goal of safeguarding and
securing the open internet, while also imposing minimal burdens on
small entities, based on comments filed in response to the Notice and
this IRFA.
F. Federal Rules That May Duplicate, Overlap, or Conflict With the
Proposed Rules
295. None.
VII. Ordering Clauses
296. Accordingly, it is ordered, pursuant to the authority
contained in sections 1, 2, 3, 4(i)-(j), 10, 13, 201, 202, 208, 218,
230, 251, 254, 256, 257, 301, 303, 304, 307, 309, 316, 332, 403, 501,
503, 522, 536, and 548 of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended,
and section 706 of the Telecommunications Act of 1996, as amended, 47
U.S.C. 151, 152, 153, 154(i)-(j), 160, 163, 201, 202, 208, 218, 230,
251, 254, 256, 257, 301, 303, 304, 307, 309, 316, 332, 403, 501, 503,
522, 536, 548, and 1302, that this Notice of Proposed Rulemaking is
adopted.
297. It is further ordered that, pursuant to applicable procedures
set forth in Sec. Sec. 1.415 and 1.419 of the Commission's rules, 47
CFR 1.415 and 1.419, interested parties may file comments on the Notice
of Proposed Rulemaking on or before December 14, 2023, and reply
comments on or before January 17, 2024.
298. It is further ordered that the Office of the Secretary,
Reference Information Center shall send a copy of this Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking, including the Initial Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis, to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business
Administration.
List of Subjects in 47 CFR Parts 8 and 20
Communications, Common carriers, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Telecommunications, Telephone.
Federal Communications Commission.
Marlene Dortch,
Secretary.
Proposed Rules
For the reasons discussed in the preamble, the Federal
Communications Commission proposes to amend 47 CFR parts 8 and 20 as
follows:
[[Page 76096]]
PART 8--[AMENDED]
0
1. The authority citation for part 8 is revised to read as follows:
Authority: 47 U.S.C. 151, 152, 153, 154, 160, 163, 201, 202,
208, 218, 230, 251, 254, 256, 257, 301, 303, 304, 307, 309, 316,
332, 403, 501, 503, 522, 536, 548, 1302, 1753.
0
2. Amend part 8 by revising the part heading to read as follows:
PART 8--SAFEGUARDING AND SECURING THE OPEN INTERNET
0
3. Add Sec. 8.2 to read as follows:
Sec. 8.2 Conduct-based rules.
(a) Definitions. For purposes of this section:
(1) Broadband internet access service means a mass-market retail
service by wire or radio that provides the capability to transmit data
to and receive data from all or substantially all internet endpoints,
including any capabilities that are incidental to and enable the
operation of the communications service, but excluding dial-up internet
access service. This term also encompasses any service that the
Commission finds to be providing a functional equivalent of the service
described in the previous sentence or that is used to evade the
protections set forth in this part.
(2) Edge provider means any individual or entity that provides any
content, application, or service over the internet, and any individual
or entity that provides a device used for accessing any content,
application, or service over the internet.
(3) End user means any individual or entity that uses a broadband
internet access service.
(4) Reasonable network management means a network management
practice that has a primarily technical network management
justification, but does not include other business practices. A network
management practice is reasonable if it is primarily used for and
tailored to achieving a legitimate network management purpose, taking
into account the particular network architecture and technology of the
broadband internet access service.
(b) No blocking. A person engaged in the provision of broadband
internet access service, insofar as such person is so engaged, shall
not block lawful content, applications, services, or non-harmful
devices, subject to reasonable network management.
(c) No throttling. A person engaged in the provision of broadband
internet access service, insofar as such person is so engaged, shall
not impair or degrade lawful internet traffic on the basis of internet
content, application, or service, or use of a non-harmful device,
subject to reasonable network management.
(d) No paid prioritization. (1) A person engaged in the provision
of broadband internet access service, insofar as such person is so
engaged, shall not engage in paid prioritization. ``Paid
prioritization'' refers to the management of a broadband provider's
network to directly or indirectly favor some traffic over other
traffic, including through use of techniques such as traffic shaping,
prioritization, resource reservation, or other forms of preferential
traffic management, either:
(i) In exchange for consideration (monetary or otherwise) from a
third party, or
(ii) To benefit an affiliated entity.
(2) The Commission may waive the ban on paid prioritization only if
the petitioner demonstrates that the practice would provide some
significant public interest benefit and would not harm the open nature
of the internet.
(e) General conduct standard. (1) Any person engaged in the
provision of broadband internet access service, insofar as such person
is so engaged, shall not unreasonably interfere with or unreasonably
disadvantage:
(i) End users' ability to select, access, and use broadband
internet access service or the lawful internet content, applications,
services, or devices of their choice, or
(ii) Edge providers' ability to make lawful content, applications,
services, or devices available to end users.
(2) Reasonable network management shall not be considered a
violation of this rule.
(f) Effect on other obligations or authorizations. Nothing in this
part supersedes any obligation or authorization a provider of broadband
internet access service may have to address the needs of emergency
communications or law enforcement, public safety, or national security
authorities, consistent with or as permitted by applicable law, or
limits the provider's ability to do so. Nothing in this part prohibits
reasonable efforts by a provider of broadband internet access service
to address copyright infringement or other unlawful activity.
PART 20--COMMERCIAL MOBILE SERVICES
0
4. The authority citation for part 20 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 47 U.S.C. 151, 152(a), 154(i), 155, 157, 160, 201,
214, 222, 251(e), 301, 302, 303, 303(b), 303(r), 307, 307(a), 309,
309(j)(3), 316, 316(a), 332, 610, 615, 615a, 615b, and 615c, unless
otherwise noted.
0
5. In Sec. 20.3 amend paragraph (b) by revising the definitions of
``Commercial mobile radio service'' and ``Public Switched Network'' to
read as follows:
Sec. 20.3 Definitions.
* * * * *
Commercial mobile radio service. A mobile service that is:
(1)(i) Provided for profit, i.e., with the intent of receiving
compensation or monetary gain;
(ii) An interconnected service; and
(iii) Available to the public, or to such classes of eligible users
as to be effectively available to a substantial portion of the public;
or
(2) The functional equivalent of such a mobile service described in
paragraph (1) of this definition, including a mobile broadband internet
access service as defined in Sec. 8.2 of this chapter.
(3) A variety of factors may be evaluated to make a determination
whether the mobile service in question is the functional equivalent of
a commercial mobile radio service, including: Consumer demand for the
service to determine whether the service is closely substitutable for a
commercial mobile radio service; whether changes in price for the
service under examination, or for the comparable commercial mobile
radio service, would prompt customers to change from one service to the
other; and market research information identifying the targeted market
for the service under review.
(4) Unlicensed radio frequency devices under part 15 of this
chapter are excluded from this definition of Commercial mobile radio
service.
* * * * *
Public Switched Network. The network that includes any common
carrier switched network, whether by wire or radio, including local
exchange carriers, interexchange carriers, and mobile service
providers, that uses the North American Numbering Plan, or public IP
addresses, in connection with the provision of switched services.
* * * * *
[FR Doc. 2023-23630 Filed 11-2-23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712-01-P