In a move that promises to recast the digital landscape, the US has decided to repeal landmark 2015 rules that prohibited internet service providers from impeding consumer access to web content.
US Federal Communications Commission (FCC) chief Ajit Pai, a Republican appointed by President Donald Trump in January, said the commission will vote at a 14 December meeting on his plan to rescind the so-called net neutrality rules championed by Democratic former President Barack Obama that treated internet service providers like public utilities.
The rules barred broadband providers from blocking or slowing down access to content or charging consumers more for certain content. They were intended to ensure a free and open internet, give consumers equal access to web content and prevent broadband service providers from favouring their own content.
The action marks a victory for big internet service providers such as AT&T, Comcast Corp and Verizon Communications that opposed the rules and gives them sweeping powers to decide what web content consumers can get and at what price.
It represents a setback for Google parent Alphabet and Facebook, which had urged Mr Pai not to rescind the rules. Netflix said Tuesday it opposed the measure to "roll back these core protections."
With three Republican and two Democratic commissioners, the move is all but certain to be approved. Mr Trump, a Republican, expressed his opposition to net neutrality in 2014 before the regulations were even implemented, calling it a "power grab" by Mr Obama. The White House did not immediately comment Tuesday.
Mr Pai said his proposal would prevent state and local governments from creating their own net neutrality rules because internet service is "inherently an interstate service." The pre-emption is most likely to handcuff Democratic-governed states and localities that could have considered their own plans to protect consumers' equal access to internet content.
"The FCC will no longer be in the business of micromanaging business models and pre-emptively prohibiting services and applications and products that could be pro-competitive," Mr Pai said in an interview, adding that the Obama administration had sought to pick winners and losers and exercised "heavy-handed" regulation of the internet.
"We should simply set rules of the road that let companies of all kinds in every sector compete and let consumers decide who wins and loses," Mr Pai added.
Tom Wheeler, who headed the FCC under Obama and advocated for the net neutrality rules, called the planned repeal "a shameful sham and sell-out. Even for this FCC and its leadership, this proposal raises hypocrisy to new heights."
AT&T, Comcast and Verizon have said that repealing the rules could lead to billions of dollars in additional broadband investment and eliminate the possibility that a future presidential administration could regulate internet pricing.
Comcast said no matter what the FCC decided it would "not block, throttle, or discriminate against lawful content."
'Heavy costs'
Verizon said it believed the FCC "will reinstate a framework that protects consumers' access to the open internet, without forcing them to bear the heavy costs from unnecessary regulation."
The Internet Association, representing major technology firms including Alphabet and Facebook, said Pai's proposal "represents the end of net neutrality as we know it and defies the will of millions of Americans."
"This proposal undoes nearly two decades of bipartisan agreement on baseline net neutrality principles that protect Americans' ability to access the entire internet," it said.
Mr Pai's proposal would require internet service providers to disclose whether they allow blocking or slowing down of consumer web access or permit so-called internet fast lanes to facilitate a practice called paid prioritization of charging for certain content. Such disclosure will make it easier for another agency, the Federal Trade Commission, to act against internet service providers that fail to disclose such conduct to consumers, Mr Pai said.
The FTC could seek to bar practices that it deemed "anticompetitive" or violated antitrust rules.
The FCC received more than 22 million comments. New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman disclosed Tuesday he has been investigating for more than six months in a bid to learn who was behind the filing of false comments.
A US appeals court last year upheld the legality of the net neutrality regulations, which were challenged in a lawsuit led by telecommunications industry trade association US Telecom.
The group praised Mr Pai's decision to remove "antiquated, restrictive regulations" to "pave the way for broadband network investment, expansion and upgrades".
The FCC's repeal is certain to draw a legal challenge from advocates of net neutrality.
Nancy Pelosi, the top US House of Representatives Democrat, said the FCC move would hurt consumers and chill competition, saying the agency "has launched an all-out assault on the entrepreneurship, innovation and competition at the heart of the internet."
- Reuters