Internet service providers will have their business practices scrutinized for “digital discrimination” based on income or race under a regulation that was adopted Wednesday by the Federal Communications Commission, raising legal risks for some of America’s most powerful companies.
The Wll Street Journal reports the new rule lays the groundwork for the FCC to hold providers such as AT&T or Comcast liable if their actions “differentially impact consumers’ access to broadband”—intentionally or not. That will include decisions about network upgrades, pricing, marketing, maintenance and more.
Jessica Rosenworcel |
“Many of the communities that lack adequate access to broadband today are the same areas that suffer from long-standing patterns of residential segregation and economic disadvantage,” said FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel, a Democrat, after the agency approved the rule in a 3-2 party-line vote.
She described the rules as “fair and reasonable,” noting that the agency will “accept genuine reasons of technical and economic feasibility as valid reasons” for a company’s decisions.
Internet providers, and their Republican allies in Congress, oppose the measure, arguing it would chill investment—thus running counter to the Biden administration’s goal of expanding access—and go beyond antidiscrimination authority granted to the FCC in the 2021 Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act.
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