Last week
was a momentous one for Internet law – first on Wednesday the District
of Columbia Court of Appeals overturned much of the Federal Communications
Commission network neutrality
regulations, then on Friday the President of the United States decided to
tighten the rules governing secret surveillance of electronic communications.
The latter decision is highly contentious, with many advocates for privacy claiming
it does very little to restrict government surveillance of US citizens and
nothing for foreigners – such as we Europeans. That sets a precedent for the
British government to make even
more minor procedural changes, and for the respective agencies in US and UK
to continue to swap the metadata that each has gathered on each other’s
citizens. That is government control of the Internet secured by gathering
private companies’ records of our metadata, whereas the net neutrality ruling
in the US sets a precedent for the private censorship by the same Internet
access providers –itself authorized or at least not prevented by the same
governments. The government actively has tried to shelter
Vodafone, Verizon, British Telecom and other IAPs from the ‘reputational damage’
caused by their spying on users’ surfing.
There are
three lessons from the net neutrality defeat for the FCC, and therefore Obama.
The first is that it is extremely difficult to separate out individual items in
communications policy: the National Security Agency and other security
services need the legal and extra-legal cooperation of the IAPs, and the
IAPs need regulatory backing for their decisions to speed up and slow down
traffic on the Internet for their own commercial benefit – breaching net
neutrality. In both cases, users’ rights to privacy in their browsing are
trampled underfoot – most egregiously when British Telecom and behavioural
advertising company PHORM intercepted traffic of 30,000 users without any
attempt to secure their consent. The government had connived in their
deployment of the technology (as I detailed in pp77-79
of my book on Net Neutrality) and was later dragged to the steps of the
European Court of Justice before amending their privacy laws to stop such an event
happening again.
The second
is that electoral promises are hard to keep when Congress does not support
legislation. Just as Obama failed to close the Guantanamo Bay detainee camp
which he had explicitly promised in 2007/8 in his first Presidential campaign,
so the failure on net
neutrality breaks his main technology policy promise from 2007. In fact, it
was the developed policy of his friend Lawrence Lessig (his junior professorial
colleague at Chicago when they both taught constitutional law in the early
1990s) and Lessig’s brilliant protege Tim Wu, the originator of
the term net neutrality and its main academic proponent. Lessig warned
in 2010 that Obama was cooling on net neutrality because of political
opposition from telecoms lobbyists and their sponsored Congressmen. The FCC
took over two years to issue and print its net neutrality Order (just before
Christmas 2010), which has then been litigated for over three years. That is
not five years wasted, however, as legislation and regulatory proceedings may take
many years, but various net neutrality requirements had in the meantime been
inserted into the telecoms companies’ mergers. That remains the case today:
Comcast, the largest cable company, is subject to net neutrality requirements
until 2017 as a result of its merger with NBC-Universal, the media company, in
2011, as Ellen
Goodman points out. However, the big telephone companies can act freely as
their net
neutrality merger requirements imposed in 2006 expired years ago – and AT&T
last week started that process in earnest.
The third is
that technological progress is very difficult to regulate in the public
interest when private market forces are pushing so hard for censorship for
profit. British Telecom wants to charge content companies to carry video, as
does Vodafone, claiming that they will roll out fixed and mobile high speed
Internet more quickly if they are granted this ability to put a toll lane on
the Internet. The technologies they use are dual-use: they can be used for
censoring content in the public interest, for instance spam or child pornography,
but also to control content to charge users or content companies more for it,
as when access to BBC iPlayer fails in the evening ‘congested’ period on the
Internet. Technologies are always difficult to regulate, private profit in a
constant struggle with user rights to freedom of expression, and privacy (Dr Ian
Brown and I explain this in detail in our recent ‘Regulating
Code’).
All these
forces face European leaders too. The UK minister for the Internet (Ed Vaizey)
has declared himself in favour of net neutrality but also in favour of higher
speed toll lanes, which is contradictory. The European Commissioner began her
term by drawing
a big ‘heart sign’ on her notes and explaining that she loved net
neutrality – but has failed to enforce until now. But Europe is not the United
States, and the litigation and Congressional deadlock there does not apply
here. A pan-European proposal for enforcing net neutrality was provoked by
national legislation in Netherlands and Slovenia. This new Regulation is called
‘ConnectedContinent’
and may become law in 2014, though a new Commission and Parliament may
delay or even derail the process.
The United
States has failed to properly enforce net neutrality due to its attempt to
deregulate carriers with an a la carte approach – keeping net neutrality but
removing the requirement for monopolies to open access to competitors. In
Europe, monopolies still have strict regulation to allow competitors, and there
is no obvious reason why net neutrality would be successfully challenged by the
courts as exceeding European legal powers. Just as extra-legal Internet
snooping is disapproved in mainland Europe, so private censorship by the same
Internet companies is unpopular, and telecoms lobbying may not prevent the
imposition of a real net neutrality law. That would then lead to 28 countries trying
to implement it. Ed Vaizey may soon have the chance to correct his
contradiction.
No comments:
Post a Comment