Thursday, February 25, 2010 - The Progress & Freedom Foundation Blog

The 5-Part Case against Net Neutrality Regulation (Debate vs. Ben Scott of Free Press)

Yesterday I engaged in a lively luncheon debate about Net neutrality regulation with Ben Scott of Free Press at a Catholic University Law School event on "Implementing the National Broadband Plan." To open the debate, I made a very quick 5-Part Case against Net Neutrality Regulation. I argued that the the objections to a Net neutrality regulatory regime can be grouped into 5 major categories: (1) Legal; (2) Economic; (3) Engineering; (4) Practical; and (5) Philosophical / Principled. Down below you will find my working notes to see how I then elaborated on each objection in a bit more detail. And then Ben and I engaged in some spirited banter for the next 45 minutes.

Unfortunately, it doesn't appear that the video of our debate is online just yet, but once it is I will post it here. However, the folks from NextGenWeb asked me to shoot a short 2 1/2 min video clip after the debate summarizing my remarks. If you can stand the sight of my big fat head in your browser for that long, here ya go:


The 5-Part Case against Net Neutrality Regulation


The objections to a Net neutrality regulatory regime can be grouped into 5 major categories: (1) Legal; (2) Economic; (3) Engineering; (4) Practical; and (5) Philosophical / Principled. Each objection will be briefly summarized below:

(1) The Legal Case

(2) The Economic Case

(3) The Engineering Case

(4) The Practical Case

(a) Local Competition Order (1996): 737 pages, 3,283 footnotes (b) UNE Remand Order (1999): 262 pages, 1,040 footnotes (c) UNE Triennial Review (2003): 576 pages; 2,447 footnotes. That's 1,575 pages and 6,770 footnotes worth of regulation in just three orders! And this was all implemented following the passage of a bill (The Telecom Act) that was supposed to be deregulatory in character! And this doesn't even begin to cover the tens of thousands of pages of legal filings, economic studies, consultant reports and other filings submitted to the FCC and state agencies by groups and individuals looking to have a say in the matter. That's an enormous deadweight loss.

(5) The Philosophical/Principled Case

posted by Adam Thierer @ 6:10 PM | Net Neutrality