The Biggest Hole in the FCC's New Internet Rules

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The new framework described by Federal Communications Commission Chairman Tom Wheeler, if enacted, would ban throttling, blocking, and paid prioritization by Internet service providers, reclassify broadband as a telecommunications utility, and bring mobile networks into the same rules. The proposed rules would take away every opportunity for Internet providers to play favorites -- except one.

Chairman Wheeler’s rules don’t explicitly block a practice known as zero-rating, in which Internet providers exempt certain types of traffic from counting against data caps. Senior officials at the FCC said that they aren't convinced zero-rating is a bad thing and see less urgency to act on an issue that largely happens overseas. The FCC agrees that zero-rating has the potential for abuse but hasn’t set a line for what practices are acceptable.


The Biggest Hole in the FCC's New Internet Rules Will The FCC Zero-out Zero-ratings in Net Neutrality Decision? (Andrew Jay Schwartzman)