Allen Grunes Quoted in Washington Internet Daily: Increased FTC Net Neutrality Role Seen Unlikely, Following D.C. Circuit Decision

The FTC is unlikely to play a greater role in overseeing net neutrality after last month’s U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit decision against the FCC’s rules (WID Jan 15 p1), said lawyers, a former FCC official, a former Department of Justice official and consumer advocates in interviews last week. Nor should they, most agreed. Three FTC commissioners have said it would be able to handle net neutrality issues under both the commission’s antitrust and consumer protection jurisdictions. Open Internet advocate Electronic Frontier Foundation and Richard Bennett, a visiting fellow at the American Enterprise Institute’s Center for Internet, Communications and Technology Policy, said the FTC’s narrow, issues-based focus and general jurisdiction might even be better suited to overseeing net neutrality. Several people expressed sympathy for that argument, but said it’s improbable — or even impossible after the D.C. Circuit reaffirmed some FCC authority in the area — that the FTC will play a larger net neutrality role in the near future.

“It’s basically the end of that, I would hope,” said former DOJ attorney Allen Grunes, an antitrust lawyer at GeyerGorey. Former FCC Wireless Bureau Chief Fred Campbell, now executive director of free-market advocate Center for Boundless Innovation in Technology, agreed. “I don’t think it’s highly likely,” he said.

Only Congress could change things for the FTC and net neutrality, Bennett said. And he said he hopes lawmakers do that, restructuring the FCC and FTC in the process: “Congress needs to clarify the role of the FCC vis-a-vis consumer protection and competition, and the way to clarify that is to make it clear the FTC is responsible for that.” Lawmakers have said they plan to hold hearings and issue white papers in 2014 to reassess the 1996 Telecom Act, aiming for new legislation in 2015 (WID Dec 4 p3), and comments from AEI and others were received by the House Commerce Committee Friday. (See separate report below in this issue). Many interviewed predict — while some hope — the rewrite will reaffirm and clarify the FCC’s jurisdiction over net neutrality and ISPs. “I’m skeptical that the Congress is going to ultimately take away the FCC’s authority over broadband providers and hand it to the FTC,” said Free State Foundation President Randolph May.

The FTC and FCC “have concurrent jurisdiction over net neutrality issues,” FTC Commissioner Julie Brill told us. Because it’s a law enforcement agency, the FTC works in conjunction with the FCC’s regulatory authority in the area, said the Democrat. The FTC’s two Republican commissioners, Maureen Ohlhausen and Joshua Wright, have said net neutrality touches on both consumer protection and antitrust issues, making the FTC capable of overseeing it (WID July 19 p9). Wright has said the FTC’s antitrust and consumer harm expertise could make it more capable than the FCC of handling net neutrality (WID Aug 20 p1). Ohlhausen has said the FTC would be ready to assert this authority if the FCC net neutrality rules were struck down.

So when the D.C. Circuit struck down FCC authority to impose net neutrality rules on broadband ISPs, it ostensibly opened a door for the FTC. But the decision left intact the FCC’s “general authority to regulate in this area,” just not to regulate broadband providers since the FCC hadn’t classified them as common carriers and so they were protected from certain regulations under the Communications Act. “Basically, what they said was, ‘Listen, you guys have all sorts of authority to regulate broadband,’” said Consumer Watchdog Privacy Project Director John Simpson. “The court said the FCC has jurisdiction,” Campbell said. The court affirmed this jurisdiction by upholding the FCC’s interpretation that Telecom Act Section 706 gives the FCC authority over the Internet space. “The court’s opinion regarding section 706 seemingly grants the FCC what might be construed as pretty broad authority,” said May. By reclassifying broadband Internet as a telecom service under Title II, the FCC could claim statutory authority over ISPs and institute net neutrality rules, citing Section 706. Verizon, which brought the case against the FCC, “picks this fight and they win the battle but in the process seem like they’ve lost the war,” said Grunes.

To some, the decision renders irrelevant the question of whether the FTC will increase its net neutrality role. “In the absence of clear jurisdiction, I think it would be odd for [the FTC] to try to insert jurisdiction at this point,” Campbell said. There was nothing in the decision that would make the FCC “have a sudden revelation” and decide “well, since we can’t impose common carrier-like obligations on the ISPs, we’re going to throw up our hands and just leave all of this to the FTC,” May said. “It puts it back pretty squarely in the FCC’s camp,” Grunes said.

‘Appeal’ of FTC Overseeing Net Neutrality

The court’s decision to uphold the FCC’s transparency requirement — which requires ISPs to disclose their network management practices — potentially “opens the door” for the FTC to file more complaints under Section 5 of the FTC Act against companies the FTC believes are deceptive with their disclosures, Simpson said. “That seems to me to be not as effective as simply having the regulatory agency [FCC] coming out with a clear set of rules about what you can and can’t do,” he said. “I’d much rather have the FCC take the action and just reclassify broadband as a telecom service.”

Free Press has organized a coalition of almost 100 organizations pushing the FCC to do that. “Right now there is no one protecting Internet users from ISPs that block or discriminate against online content,” the coalition wrote in an open letter sent Thursday to the FCC and signed by organizations including the Center for Democracy & Technology and Public Knowledge (PK). “Reclassification as a Title II is the best choice for consumers,” said a PK spokesman by email. “It’s great that the FCC will maintain authority in creating regulation for the Internet, however there has to be a balance of power. We think Title II creates that balance.”

May and others understand the “appeal,” as he put it, behind the desire to put net neutrality under the FTC’s watch. It would eliminate the longstanding special exemptions granted the communications industry, he said. May said there is an argument to be made — and “I’m not unsympathetic to it — that all of the FCC’s current regulatory authority over broadband should be transferred over to the FTC in this day and age, so that broadband regulation could be treated just generally as any other industry’s segment or marketplace are under the FTC’s general jurisdiction.” If ISPs are reclassified as common carriers, “that would indicate [the FTC has] some jurisdiction there potentially,” Campbell said. But if the FCC reclassifies and then create rules for ISPs, it “arguably means the FTC doesn’t have jurisdiction, or as a matter of comity shouldn’t exercise it,” he said.

There’s a “basic problem” in the current separation, AEI’s Bennett said. “The premise in the Communications Act is each one of these communications industries is a monopoly and because it’s a monopoly it needs to be regulated in a different way,” he said. “That was the case in 1934, but it’s no longer the case today.”

The broadband industry is best served by “the lightest touch possible” and the FCC’s touch outweighs that of the FTC, said EFF Intellectual Property Director Corynne McSherry. “No one should be in the position to issue broad regulations,” she said. “Our experience with the FTC is it’s a little less likely to take that approach.” Regulating the Internet is complex, she said, and “any government action needs to be specifically focused on a specific problem.” The FTC is “dedicated to alleviating specific consumer problems … as opposed to the FCC approach, which was to claim it has broad authority to regulate the Internet,” she said. McSherry cautioned it “really makes us nervous” to allow any government agency “to be the boss of the Internet.”

FTC Lacks Net Neutrality Expertise

The FTC has neither the size nor expertise to take on net neutrality, several experts agreed. “They’re fighting the good fight, but they’re understaffed and underfinanced,” Simpson said, which makes him “very skeptical” it should oversee net neutrality issues. The FCC and DOJ have longstanding expertise in broadband antitrust issues, said Grunes. “Learning on the job in doing antitrust investigations does not bode well,” he said. “These are difficult issues and they require, in my mind, an institutional capability and depth of industry knowledge that DOJ has, that the FCC has — the FTC not really nearly as much.” Splitting jurisdictions rarely benefits industry or government, Campbell said. “It’s generally not a good idea for multiple agencies to have concurrent jurisdiction.”

Congress could solve these problems, Bennett said. A Communications Act rewrite could definitively give net neutrality jurisdiction to the FTC, while reorganizing the two agencies to bring the FCC’s expertise to the FTC, he said. “Some of the people who work for the FCC today would go to work for the FTC.” Bennett sees this as a three- to five-year process. “It’s necessary,” he said. “If the status quo continues, we’ve essentially saddled the communications industry with uncertainty.” Each time a broadband company offers a new service, or is looking to merge with another company, it has “to get independent permission” from two agencies — either DOJ or FTC, and the FCC, he said. “There’s too much uncertainty and the costs of obtaining all those permissions are really too high.”

Campbell agreed: “It’s most appropriate for the FCC and the FTC to defer to Congress on these issues.” But he doesn’t envision the FCC losing its net neutrality authority, although it may wait until Congress acts to make its next move, he said. “It makes the most sense for them to look to Congress before enacting another round of prophylactic rules,” Campbell said. The agency’s Section 706 authority is still relatively vague, and “it would be odd for an agency to write us a whole set of rules based on relatively vague statutory authority,” he said.

“The reality is that after the decision, the FCC is going to continue to play an important role in overseeing the practices of Internet broadband providers,” May said. “But that doesn’t mean that there’s not also a role that the FTC should play,” he said, referring to the agencies’ overlapping jurisdictions. While Campbell may see the FTC increasing that role only in a “worst-case scenario” where no other agency has any net neutrality authority, and Simpson sees the FTC as a “last resort” on net neutrality, Brill maintains the commission is ready should it be needed. “Of course, the D.C. Circuit’s opinion is complex, and the FCC is understandably considering its options,” Brill said. “The FTC should stand ready to play our appropriate role on law enforcement and policy issues relating to net neutrality.” — Cory Bennett ([email protected])

 

Reprinted with permission of Warren Communications News Inc. —

800-771-9202 or www.warren-news.com

Do not further redistribute without further permission.

Allen P. Grunes: “Another Look at Privacy,” 20 Geo. Mason L. Rev. (Summer 2013)

Allen Grunes took a moment to discuss his latest law review article on the intersection of privacy and Antitrust Law and suggests its implications for the future: 

Another Look at Privacy, 20 Geo. Mason L. Rev. (Summer 2013)

“Antitrust law does not often take privacy issues into account, even when construing ‘privacy’ in its broadest sense to include privacy policies, the collection and subsequent use or sale of personal information, and privacy regulation. Issues involving privacy and its flip side, “big data,” occasionally do surface in antitrust matters, but by and large they remain on the margin. There have been a handful of attempts to move privacy more toward the center of the antitrust universe, but they have not been very successful.

In this Article, I first discuss some of the challenges consumer privacy poses and why antitrust has had a difficult time with privacy considerations. Next, I discuss several arguments that a few brave souls have made urging that privacy should be more central to antitrust—especially when consumer data is at the center of a merger, as it was in Google/DoubleClick. I then look at some of the ways that, on the periphery, antitrust law does incorporate privacy issues. Finally, I offer what is hopefully a more nuanced and productive way of thinking about the issue based on several characteristics of online markets, and suggest a few interesting implications for the future.”