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Submitted by Scott Cleland on Sun, 2014-09-14 22:21
Please read my Daily Caller op-ed: “De-competition De-competition De-competition” here.
- De-competition is regulation that undermines competition in order to justify more regulation.
As one can see from the “de-competition” series below, this isn’t the first time the FCC has turned to de-competition policy.
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FCC De-Competition Series
Part 1:Harms of a Potential New FCC De-Competition Policy – Reply Comments to FCC Open Internet NPRM [4-5-10]
Submitted by Scott Cleland on Tue, 2014-09-09 18:25
FCC Open Internet Order Remand Request for Comments (GN Docket No. 14-28) Submitted by: Scott Cleland, Chairman of NetCompetition, September 9, 2014
The case against the FCC regulating broadband as a telephone utility is overwhelming. Please see eight strong arguments against FCC Title II reclassification of broadband below.
The Summary Case against FCC Title II Reclassification of Broadband
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The FCC rejected Title II reclassification in 2010 for many good reasons.
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Broadband info services classification is consistent with law, national policy, and FCC precedent.
Submitted by Scott Cleland on Thu, 2014-08-28 11:53
There are two core reasons the FCC should not try to preempt State muni-broadband laws.
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The Supreme Court has already indicated it would be unconstitutional.
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It would be anti-competitive, the opposite of the FCC’s statutory purpose and legal mandate.
I. Why FCC Preemption of States Rights would be Unconstitutional
First, the Supreme Court already has decided this issue effectively in favor of state rights. In Nixon v. Missouri Municipal League (2004) the Supreme Court rejected federal preemption of state prohibitions on telecom services. It specifically rejected the use of the FCC’s Title II section 253(a) authority to preempt state prohibitions of localities offering telecom services on constitutional federalism grounds.
Submitted by Scott Cleland on Wed, 2014-08-20 14:13
Pro-regulation interests often resort to highly misleading arguments to advance their cause. Fortunately that kind of deception ultimately exposes the weakness of their underlying argument and public policy position.
To promote Netflix’ “strong” version of net neutrality regulation and to oppose the Comcast-TWC acquisition, Consumerist just framed a very deceptive whopper competition argument: “Comcast says mobile data is competitive, but it costs $2k to stream Breaking Bad over LTE.”
Submitted by Scott Cleland on Mon, 2014-08-04 11:18
Google-Android sacrifices users’ security, privacy and data protection to scale Android fastest so that Google can dominate mobile software and advertising.
This charge and analysis is timely and relevant because Reuters is reporting that European Commission competition authorities are “laying the groundwork for a case centered on whether Google abuses the 80 percent market share of its Android mobile operating system to promote services from maps to search.”
The purpose of this particular analysis is to help a user better understand how they are harmed by Google-Android’s disregard for data protection.
Submitted by Scott Cleland on Mon, 2014-07-07 22:41
Please see my latest Daily Caller op-ed: “Top 10 Failures of FCC Title II Utility Regulation.”
The FCC has had a failure-prone, seventy-year track record implementing Title II telephone regulation.
It is important to remember what the FCC did in the past with Title II authority, because those who don’t learn from the past are doomed to repeat it.
It is Part 56 of my FCC Open Internet Series.
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FCC Open Internet Order Series
Part 1: The Many Vulnerabilities of an Open Internet [9-24-09]
Submitted by Scott Cleland on Thu, 2014-06-26 15:38
Some things are way too important to let slip by uncontested.
The FCC has asserted a foundational regulatory premise that warrants rebuttal and disproving, given that the FCC is considering if Internet access, and Internet backbone peering, should be regulated like a utility under Title II telephone common carrier regulation.
In an important speech on Internet interconnection last month to the Progressive Policy Institute, the very able and experienced Ruth Milkman, Chairman Tom Wheeler’s Chief of Staff, asserted that “communications networks are no different” than railroad and electricity networks when it comes to interconnection. “… At bottom… the fact is that a network without connections and interconnections is one that simply doesn’t work. Disconnected networks do not serve the public interest.”
Submitted by Scott Cleland on Tue, 2014-06-17 17:50
Submitted by Scott Cleland on Fri, 2014-06-13 09:47
NetCompetition submitted this proposed communications competition framework in response to House Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Fred Upton’s and Subcommittee Chairman Greg Walden’s call for input on defining competition and competition principles for a potential Communications Act Update next Congress.
Modernizing the Communications Act – Modern is Consumer-Driven Competition
Obsolete presumption of telephone and cable monopolies: The core policy problem with monopoly-premised communications law is that it is hostile to the reality of a vibrantly competitive communications marketplace.
Submitted by Scott Cleland on Thu, 2014-06-05 15:22
If Netflix’ position on net neutrality was justified on the merits, why does Netflix need to say so many deceptive things that are demonstrably untrue, in order to justify its case for its version of net neutrality?
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