1 00:00:00,120 --> 00:00:05,320 Speaker 1: Federal Communication Communications Chairman A Pie yesterday announced plans to 2 00:00:05,440 --> 00:00:08,960 Speaker 1: loosen the regulations that apply to Internet service providers. The 3 00:00:08,960 --> 00:00:11,680 Speaker 1: two year old rules have become known as net neutrality, 4 00:00:11,760 --> 00:00:15,040 Speaker 1: and among other things, they bar broadband companies from giving 5 00:00:15,040 --> 00:00:19,040 Speaker 1: preferential access to favored content providers. With us today to 6 00:00:19,120 --> 00:00:23,560 Speaker 1: talk about this announcement yesterday is Robert McDowell. He's a 7 00:00:23,600 --> 00:00:27,280 Speaker 1: former FEC commissioner now a partner at the law firm Cooley. 8 00:00:27,360 --> 00:00:30,319 Speaker 1: Thanks for joining us, Rob, thanks so much for having me. Um. So, 9 00:00:30,480 --> 00:00:33,800 Speaker 1: I'm guessing you, when you're on the SEC, you you 10 00:00:33,880 --> 00:00:37,160 Speaker 1: oppose at least an earlier version of the net neutrality rules. 11 00:00:37,200 --> 00:00:39,720 Speaker 1: I'm guessing you think that what the Chairman did yesterday 12 00:00:40,120 --> 00:00:42,520 Speaker 1: is a good thing. Tell tell us why. Well. First, 13 00:00:42,520 --> 00:00:45,720 Speaker 1: net neutrality has no legal term of our no legal definition. 14 00:00:45,840 --> 00:00:48,720 Speaker 1: So UM, it's important to understand what we're talking about. 15 00:00:48,720 --> 00:00:51,640 Speaker 1: I think we're talking about a free and open Internet 16 00:00:52,159 --> 00:00:56,040 Speaker 1: where consumers can free roam and use UH and download 17 00:00:56,040 --> 00:00:58,360 Speaker 1: the content and apps of their choice, provided their lawful 18 00:00:58,600 --> 00:01:00,000 Speaker 1: and things of that nature. And that's what we've had 19 00:01:00,160 --> 00:01:02,840 Speaker 1: since the Internet was privatized in the mid nineteen nineties. 20 00:01:03,400 --> 00:01:06,120 Speaker 1: UH with other laws under other law, and for the 21 00:01:06,120 --> 00:01:09,520 Speaker 1: first six years of the Obama administration it was other law. 22 00:01:09,800 --> 00:01:11,880 Speaker 1: What the FEC did over two years ago, though, was 23 00:01:11,959 --> 00:01:15,560 Speaker 1: to use the nineteen thirty four law to classify Internet 24 00:01:15,760 --> 00:01:20,600 Speaker 1: access services broadband services as a telecommunications service, something called 25 00:01:20,720 --> 00:01:23,280 Speaker 1: in the shorthands Title two's Title two of the Communications 26 00:01:23,280 --> 00:01:26,360 Speaker 1: Acts of four to get technical and that brings with 27 00:01:26,400 --> 00:01:29,040 Speaker 1: it about a thousand different legal requirements and a lot 28 00:01:29,120 --> 00:01:31,840 Speaker 1: of questions as a result. So what a jeep Pie, 29 00:01:32,000 --> 00:01:34,120 Speaker 1: my friend and former colleague we served together on the 30 00:01:34,120 --> 00:01:36,800 Speaker 1: FECs is doing is proposing we think we haven't seen 31 00:01:36,840 --> 00:01:39,560 Speaker 1: the proposal just yet, but what he outlined yesterday um 32 00:01:39,600 --> 00:01:41,640 Speaker 1: is to try to figure out a different legal path 33 00:01:41,880 --> 00:01:43,760 Speaker 1: to do that so that all parts of the Internet 34 00:01:43,800 --> 00:01:48,080 Speaker 1: ecosystem can thrive without these uncertainties. Rob, how high are 35 00:01:48,160 --> 00:01:51,680 Speaker 1: the stakes here? You know the stakes are high. But 36 00:01:52,000 --> 00:01:54,080 Speaker 1: the good news is is that you know, prior to 37 00:01:55,120 --> 00:01:59,520 Speaker 1: or ten, when the FEC tried another time to impose 38 00:01:59,560 --> 00:02:02,720 Speaker 1: new rule, uh, the Internet marketplace was thriving both. You know, 39 00:02:02,720 --> 00:02:05,480 Speaker 1: if you look at the the edge providers content and 40 00:02:05,560 --> 00:02:08,760 Speaker 1: apps and services of one form or another. Uh, we're 41 00:02:08,760 --> 00:02:12,639 Speaker 1: all thriving as we're network operators. It was the wireless companies, 42 00:02:12,720 --> 00:02:16,000 Speaker 1: the cable companies, the phone companies that actually connect consumers 43 00:02:16,000 --> 00:02:18,360 Speaker 1: to the Internet. And so the trick here is to 44 00:02:18,360 --> 00:02:20,560 Speaker 1: try to find that sweet spot, that balance, which I'm 45 00:02:20,600 --> 00:02:23,080 Speaker 1: optimistic can be found. Maybe it has to be found 46 00:02:23,080 --> 00:02:25,640 Speaker 1: through Congress as well. That's a whole another topic we 47 00:02:25,639 --> 00:02:28,200 Speaker 1: can talk about. But the stakes are high because it 48 00:02:28,600 --> 00:02:30,399 Speaker 1: is the future of the Internet. But the good news 49 00:02:30,560 --> 00:02:34,560 Speaker 1: is is that everything has been thriving thus far even 50 00:02:34,560 --> 00:02:36,680 Speaker 1: without these Title two rules that went into effect two 51 00:02:36,760 --> 00:02:39,639 Speaker 1: years ago. So one thing you touched on. One thing 52 00:02:39,720 --> 00:02:42,919 Speaker 1: Chairman Pie talked about yesterday was was the notion that 53 00:02:42,919 --> 00:02:46,640 Speaker 1: that companies are doing have done very well, uh with 54 00:02:46,639 --> 00:02:49,280 Speaker 1: with what he called light touch regulation. And he talked 55 00:02:49,320 --> 00:02:53,799 Speaker 1: about the great success stories companies like Google and and Facebook, UM. 56 00:02:53,919 --> 00:02:57,480 Speaker 1: And there's a trade group called the Internet Association that 57 00:02:57,480 --> 00:03:00,880 Speaker 1: that that supports the existing rules in a posed what 58 00:03:00,880 --> 00:03:03,120 Speaker 1: what the Chairman did yesterday, and that group includes some 59 00:03:03,200 --> 00:03:06,600 Speaker 1: of these very h companies that are success stories, the Google's, 60 00:03:06,639 --> 00:03:10,920 Speaker 1: the Ebays, Microsoft, Netflix, um, which we make of their 61 00:03:10,960 --> 00:03:14,080 Speaker 1: their opposition, Well, they've also opened the door. Michael Beckerman, 62 00:03:14,120 --> 00:03:16,760 Speaker 1: their CEO, who I know very well, uh, they've left 63 00:03:16,760 --> 00:03:19,120 Speaker 1: the door open to having a dialogue, whether it's with 64 00:03:19,160 --> 00:03:22,639 Speaker 1: the SEC or with Congress. UM. Some of those edge 65 00:03:22,639 --> 00:03:26,440 Speaker 1: providers historically were very worried about Title two and coordinating 66 00:03:26,480 --> 00:03:29,560 Speaker 1: it off to just apply to network operators again, broadband 67 00:03:29,560 --> 00:03:33,239 Speaker 1: companies UM rather than other parts of the Internet ecosystems 68 00:03:33,240 --> 00:03:37,840 Speaker 1: such as themselves, UM and the FCC in put in 69 00:03:37,880 --> 00:03:40,320 Speaker 1: place this general conduct standard to kind of say we're 70 00:03:40,360 --> 00:03:41,880 Speaker 1: gonna do X, y and Z, but also we're going 71 00:03:41,920 --> 00:03:44,920 Speaker 1: to have authority over the general conduct of anything in 72 00:03:44,960 --> 00:03:47,960 Speaker 1: the Internet ecosphere. And I think that concerned a lot 73 00:03:48,000 --> 00:03:50,680 Speaker 1: of tech companies of all stripes UM. And if you 74 00:03:50,720 --> 00:03:54,800 Speaker 1: think about some of these companies, they have their own networks, right, 75 00:03:54,880 --> 00:03:57,480 Speaker 1: thousands of miles of fiber connecting routers and servers all 76 00:03:57,480 --> 00:04:01,120 Speaker 1: over the country, all over the world to pervade content 77 00:04:01,240 --> 00:04:03,800 Speaker 1: and apps and all the rest. So they themselves have 78 00:04:03,960 --> 00:04:07,800 Speaker 1: content and networks just the way a Comcast or a 79 00:04:07,840 --> 00:04:10,320 Speaker 1: T and T does at this point. So you know, 80 00:04:10,400 --> 00:04:14,000 Speaker 1: the markets, the consumers are demanding convergence, and the markets 81 00:04:14,000 --> 00:04:16,240 Speaker 1: are responding. Companies are responding, so they're all starting to 82 00:04:16,279 --> 00:04:18,360 Speaker 1: blur together to kind of look like the same animal. 83 00:04:18,400 --> 00:04:20,680 Speaker 1: In some cases, so you have to ask yourself, as 84 00:04:20,720 --> 00:04:23,520 Speaker 1: an eighty three year old law that was designed to 85 00:04:23,600 --> 00:04:26,960 Speaker 1: regulate telephones that were held in two hands, uh the 86 00:04:27,120 --> 00:04:29,440 Speaker 1: right mechanism or or should we find something that's more 87 00:04:29,480 --> 00:04:33,159 Speaker 1: modern and more flexible that can really protect consumers in 88 00:04:33,240 --> 00:04:38,359 Speaker 1: this very dynamic, sometimes ephemeral marketplace we're talking about. The 89 00:04:38,440 --> 00:04:42,000 Speaker 1: fccs plans to roll back its rules governing net neutrality. 90 00:04:42,480 --> 00:04:45,320 Speaker 1: Supporters said the rules prevented the creation of Internet fast 91 00:04:45,400 --> 00:04:48,400 Speaker 1: lanes available only to companies that could afford to pay 92 00:04:48,480 --> 00:04:52,160 Speaker 1: the price. Here's what then Chairman Tom Wheeler said when 93 00:04:52,160 --> 00:04:56,080 Speaker 1: the FCC approved its rules in Today is a red 94 00:04:56,200 --> 00:05:00,560 Speaker 1: letter day for Internet freedom for consumer words who want 95 00:05:00,560 --> 00:05:04,160 Speaker 1: to use the Internet on their terms, for innovators who 96 00:05:04,240 --> 00:05:08,839 Speaker 1: want to reach consumers without the control of gatekeepers, for 97 00:05:08,960 --> 00:05:12,920 Speaker 1: a future in which there are rules to protect the 98 00:05:12,960 --> 00:05:17,880 Speaker 1: Internet and its users. But yesterday, current chairman A Pie 99 00:05:17,960 --> 00:05:21,560 Speaker 1: said the rules were stifling investment and innovation. I think 100 00:05:21,560 --> 00:05:24,520 Speaker 1: what the SEC doesn't need is heavy handed regulations that 101 00:05:24,800 --> 00:05:28,640 Speaker 1: settled businesses with a lot of rules that simply disincentivize 102 00:05:28,640 --> 00:05:30,880 Speaker 1: them from building those networks. And that's going to be 103 00:05:30,960 --> 00:05:34,760 Speaker 1: the course we are charting henceforth, Our guest is former 104 00:05:34,800 --> 00:05:39,040 Speaker 1: SEC Commissioner Robert McDowell. He was a Republican appointed member 105 00:05:39,120 --> 00:05:44,359 Speaker 1: Republican member of the Commission, and he supports what Chairman 106 00:05:44,400 --> 00:05:50,600 Speaker 1: pie uh said yesterday. Rob you know, one one argument 107 00:05:50,640 --> 00:05:53,200 Speaker 1: that you've heard a little bit from Tom Wheeler and 108 00:05:53,240 --> 00:05:55,720 Speaker 1: hearing from other opponents of this move is that essentially 109 00:05:55,760 --> 00:05:58,880 Speaker 1: the Internet is being left to police itself and it's 110 00:05:58,880 --> 00:06:00,240 Speaker 1: a bit of a going to be a bit of 111 00:06:00,240 --> 00:06:02,400 Speaker 1: a wild West out there. And what you could have 112 00:06:02,640 --> 00:06:06,440 Speaker 1: is companies that favor either you know, uh, you know, 113 00:06:06,480 --> 00:06:10,480 Speaker 1: an entity they own or somebody who pays them money, uh, 114 00:06:10,560 --> 00:06:14,640 Speaker 1: in order to get faster internet service, using that you 115 00:06:14,680 --> 00:06:16,680 Speaker 1: know on the website or using that app or whatever. 116 00:06:16,839 --> 00:06:19,320 Speaker 1: What what's the argument, what's the counter to that? Well, 117 00:06:19,360 --> 00:06:22,120 Speaker 1: first of all, that's been said for about fifteen years, uh, 118 00:06:22,120 --> 00:06:24,840 Speaker 1: and it has never happened. There's there's little to no 119 00:06:24,960 --> 00:06:28,080 Speaker 1: evidence that that happened. And if there were evidence, if 120 00:06:28,080 --> 00:06:30,359 Speaker 1: it were happening, there were other laws on the books 121 00:06:30,360 --> 00:06:33,479 Speaker 1: that already existed that would have either prevented that or 122 00:06:33,640 --> 00:06:35,599 Speaker 1: punished the bad actors if they tried to do something 123 00:06:35,640 --> 00:06:38,600 Speaker 1: like that. Um. So you have a section to the 124 00:06:38,720 --> 00:06:40,279 Speaker 1: of the Clayton Act. You have Section five of the 125 00:06:40,279 --> 00:06:43,039 Speaker 1: Federal Trade Commission Act. And this is important because what 126 00:06:43,120 --> 00:06:47,760 Speaker 1: the FEC did in when it classified internet access as 127 00:06:48,040 --> 00:06:51,920 Speaker 1: a telecommunication service under the Communications Act four it took 128 00:06:51,920 --> 00:06:55,840 Speaker 1: away jurisdiction from the Federal Trade Commission, which polices every 129 00:06:55,839 --> 00:06:58,960 Speaker 1: other corner practically of the economy, including very complex high 130 00:06:59,000 --> 00:07:03,240 Speaker 1: tech corners of the economy, to prevent or punish anti 131 00:07:03,240 --> 00:07:07,200 Speaker 1: competitive conduct by market players. Um so you took a 132 00:07:07,240 --> 00:07:10,280 Speaker 1: cop off the beat actually with the title to classification, 133 00:07:10,680 --> 00:07:15,160 Speaker 1: and you brought in about a thousand requirements um of 134 00:07:15,520 --> 00:07:18,800 Speaker 1: Title two of that Act, which created all these questions 135 00:07:18,800 --> 00:07:21,480 Speaker 1: and all this uncertainty that Chairman Pie is speaking about 136 00:07:21,560 --> 00:07:25,080 Speaker 1: right there. So the notion that somehow companies are going 137 00:07:25,120 --> 00:07:27,600 Speaker 1: to be able to broadband companies are gonna be able 138 00:07:27,640 --> 00:07:31,320 Speaker 1: to discriminate in an anti competitive way against other market 139 00:07:31,360 --> 00:07:34,240 Speaker 1: players or harm consumers isn't true because there are other 140 00:07:34,320 --> 00:07:37,160 Speaker 1: laws that would exist but for this title too. But 141 00:07:37,320 --> 00:07:39,119 Speaker 1: isn't it the case that, I mean, any trust laws 142 00:07:39,200 --> 00:07:42,000 Speaker 1: tend to look backwards at conduct that are already happened. 143 00:07:42,120 --> 00:07:45,080 Speaker 1: Isn't it better to have rules that look forward, especially 144 00:07:45,080 --> 00:07:47,720 Speaker 1: given how quickly the tech industry works. You know, by 145 00:07:47,760 --> 00:07:51,040 Speaker 1: the time you know the antitrust case is brought against Microsoft, 146 00:07:51,160 --> 00:07:56,000 Speaker 1: the industry has has changed dramatically before you get to 147 00:07:56,000 --> 00:07:58,440 Speaker 1: a final judgment. In a case like that, it wouldn't 148 00:07:58,440 --> 00:08:00,440 Speaker 1: be better to have rules that we know, know what's 149 00:08:00,560 --> 00:08:03,400 Speaker 1: what is? Uh, you know that they sort of govern 150 00:08:03,600 --> 00:08:06,600 Speaker 1: what companies do before they do it. Well, Actually, when 151 00:08:06,600 --> 00:08:10,400 Speaker 1: you have a fast paced, quickly changing marketplace, UM, it 152 00:08:10,560 --> 00:08:12,880 Speaker 1: is that enforcement that seems to work better rather than 153 00:08:12,920 --> 00:08:15,800 Speaker 1: regulators trying to guess where the market is headed. And 154 00:08:15,840 --> 00:08:19,480 Speaker 1: in part that's what was happening here. Uh. Chairman Pie 155 00:08:19,480 --> 00:08:23,760 Speaker 1: would argue, UM and others. So, uh, you have the 156 00:08:23,840 --> 00:08:26,840 Speaker 1: Department Justice, any trust division and the Federal Trade Commission 157 00:08:27,120 --> 00:08:30,400 Speaker 1: able to police those high tech areas in a lot 158 00:08:30,440 --> 00:08:33,280 Speaker 1: of complex areas, whether it's privacy or any trust or 159 00:08:33,320 --> 00:08:36,240 Speaker 1: consumer protection, etcetera. UM. And if you look actually the 160 00:08:36,240 --> 00:08:40,280 Speaker 1: speeches and the writings of Acting Federal Trade Commission Chairman 161 00:08:40,640 --> 00:08:43,679 Speaker 1: Marine Olhausen, she talks extensively about the issue you just 162 00:08:43,840 --> 00:08:47,079 Speaker 1: raised to say, Look, what you need are flexible rules 163 00:08:47,120 --> 00:08:49,640 Speaker 1: that punish market actors and create dist incentives. And really 164 00:08:49,720 --> 00:08:52,480 Speaker 1: this can be proven out by looking at market behavior 165 00:08:53,160 --> 00:08:56,240 Speaker 1: leading up to the vote on that neutrality that was 166 00:08:56,280 --> 00:09:00,640 Speaker 1: largely struck down by a court uh and order. Um, 167 00:09:00,679 --> 00:09:02,920 Speaker 1: you know, let's look at the marketplace. Until then, it 168 00:09:03,000 --> 00:09:05,760 Speaker 1: was doing wonderfully, beautifully well, and it still is by 169 00:09:05,760 --> 00:09:09,160 Speaker 1: the way overall. But what Pie is trying to do 170 00:09:09,200 --> 00:09:11,400 Speaker 1: is to remove the uncertainty and try to find something 171 00:09:11,679 --> 00:09:14,800 Speaker 1: that's more modern and more flexible so that every aspect 172 00:09:14,800 --> 00:09:16,920 Speaker 1: of the inner ecosphere can thrive, and not just certain 173 00:09:16,920 --> 00:09:20,400 Speaker 1: parts of it. Rob Is it true that only Congress 174 00:09:20,480 --> 00:09:24,520 Speaker 1: can ensure that net neutrality doesn't swing like a pendulum 175 00:09:24,880 --> 00:09:29,560 Speaker 1: with each administration? Yeah, you know what, And that's speaking personally. 176 00:09:29,559 --> 00:09:33,000 Speaker 1: I think that's ultimately what should happen. Of course, it's 177 00:09:33,080 --> 00:09:35,440 Speaker 1: very hard to get anything through Congress right now, but 178 00:09:35,679 --> 00:09:38,120 Speaker 1: you're right, every four to eight years we could have 179 00:09:38,960 --> 00:09:41,959 Speaker 1: a new regulatory regime depending on who's elected president, who 180 00:09:42,000 --> 00:09:44,720 Speaker 1: the new chair is uh. And that creates more uncertainty 181 00:09:44,720 --> 00:09:47,679 Speaker 1: and more harm. And that's why I'm optimistic and hopeful. 182 00:09:47,800 --> 00:09:50,480 Speaker 1: Maybe I'm more hopeful that I am optimistic that all 183 00:09:50,480 --> 00:09:54,200 Speaker 1: the parties could come together once they see where Chairman 184 00:09:54,200 --> 00:09:57,240 Speaker 1: Pie is going, and come to the table in Congress 185 00:09:57,400 --> 00:09:59,920 Speaker 1: to try to get something done. This was actually close 186 00:10:00,080 --> 00:10:04,160 Speaker 1: to happening in you had Chairman John Thune of the 187 00:10:04,200 --> 00:10:07,400 Speaker 1: Centem Commerce Committee and the ranking member Bill Nelson very 188 00:10:07,400 --> 00:10:10,960 Speaker 1: close to agreeing on some principles for legislation until it 189 00:10:10,960 --> 00:10:12,720 Speaker 1: looked like the FEC was just going to go ahead. 190 00:10:12,760 --> 00:10:14,640 Speaker 1: And there are a lot of pressure groups who are 191 00:10:14,720 --> 00:10:18,600 Speaker 1: pressured Center Nelson and some others to back off of legislation. 192 00:10:18,679 --> 00:10:21,239 Speaker 1: But you're absolutely right. I mean, I think all aspects 193 00:10:21,320 --> 00:10:24,720 Speaker 1: of the Internet eco sphere could could benefit from sitting 194 00:10:24,720 --> 00:10:27,360 Speaker 1: down with members of Congress and just saying, hey, this 195 00:10:27,440 --> 00:10:30,200 Speaker 1: is something that historically has been bipartisan. Keep in mind here, 196 00:10:30,240 --> 00:10:32,760 Speaker 1: I was the senior Republican sometimes the only Republican on 197 00:10:32,800 --> 00:10:38,520 Speaker 1: the FCC ardently defending Clinton Gored administration policy regarding the Internet. 198 00:10:38,559 --> 00:10:41,680 Speaker 1: The Clinton gord administration was very much opposed to Title two, 199 00:10:42,160 --> 00:10:44,160 Speaker 1: and that was the case through the first six years 200 00:10:44,160 --> 00:10:47,240 Speaker 1: of the Oban administration as well. Uh, and something change. 201 00:10:47,440 --> 00:10:49,920 Speaker 1: So so here we are, what if you give me 202 00:10:49,960 --> 00:10:52,360 Speaker 1: the fifteen second version of what you would like to 203 00:10:52,360 --> 00:10:56,680 Speaker 1: see replace the rules that are being scrapped. Well, you 204 00:10:56,679 --> 00:10:58,960 Speaker 1: want to make sure that there's not an opportunity for 205 00:10:59,080 --> 00:11:03,080 Speaker 1: blocking or the throttling of of internet access. Uh, the 206 00:11:03,120 --> 00:11:07,079 Speaker 1: anti competitive conduct that would favor some content over others. Um, 207 00:11:07,160 --> 00:11:08,960 Speaker 1: you want to make sure that it's free and open 208 00:11:09,320 --> 00:11:12,760 Speaker 1: and that consumer demand is not frustrated, that consumers continue 209 00:11:12,800 --> 00:11:15,680 Speaker 1: to gain happy. Okay, thank you so much to Rob McDowell, 210 00:11:15,679 --> 00:11:19,360 Speaker 1: former FEC commissioner or guests talking about the FCCS changes 211 00:11:19,400 --> 00:11:23,120 Speaker 1: on Internet broadband regulation. Coming up on Bloomberg Law, We're 212 00:11:23,120 --> 00:11:25,160 Speaker 1: going to talk about that two year prison sentence for 213 00:11:25,240 --> 00:11:27,960 Speaker 1: Jesse Litvack. He was convicted of lying to a customer 214 00:11:28,320 --> 00:11:32,080 Speaker 1: about bond prices. That's the case that has certainly gained 215 00:11:32,120 --> 00:11:33,960 Speaker 1: notice on Wall Street. That's coming up