FCC Ancillary Authority in Comcast/BitTorrent

By Harold Feld
Wet Machine

Cable gets a lot of mileage out of repeating things over and over until folks believe it's true. Today on Telecom Mythbusters [1] I'd like to focus on the question of “ancillary” authority and regulating broadband. The cable guys generally circulate two myths about this.

1) Ancillary jurisdiction by the FCC is an exceedingly rare, wacky, way out thing and the fact that net neutrality advocates even want to rely on it shows how way out there and kooky it is.

2) The D.C. Circuit has been busy trimming back ancillary jurisdiction so that it really doesn't exist anymore. Specifically, the D.C. Cir. 2005 decision in American Library Association v. FCC [2], 406 F.3d 689 (D.C. Cir. 2005) (and, to a lesser degree, MPAA v. FCC, 309 F.3d 796 (D.C. Cir. 2002) worked some kind of mojo against the expansive grant of power by the Supreme Court in United States v. Southwest Cable, 392 U.S. 157 (1968) and the Supreme Court's explicit statement in Brand X so that the FCC cannot regulate broadband access and prohibit Comcast from targeting specific applications such as BiTtorrent under ancillary jurisdiction. A sub-myth of this is “Title I cannot be the source of authority on its own.”

Marvin Ammori, General Counsel of Free Press, has written a stunning tour de force [3] rebutting these arguments. The 100+ page filing masterfully traces the FCC's authority under Title I and in this particular proceeding. But for those who don't want to read through the whole thing, I will give my own take below.

I must once again warn readers that this will be a breathtakingly dull review of applicable case law, along with an examination of FCC precedents and does not go to the juicier merits of policy (not that I expct this to stop the Brett-bot from his inevitable comments). If you do not find legal minutia fascinating beyond words, if you do not thrill at the discussion of the subtle differences between a “Telecommunications Service Provider” and a “Common Carrier,” then for God's sake, turn back now! Lest your brain dissolve into tapioca pudding from the awesome power of legal analysis unleashed.

(and for Brett: Blah blah blah evil blah blah Free Press blah blah MAP blah blah Ginger [4])

Otherwise, to see both myths BUSTED, read more below....

Marvin begins by running through the relevant Supreme Court precedent on Title I authority and demonstrates that, contrary to what folks would like to claim, Title I is actually an independent source of authority to carry out any of the Commission's responsibilities under the act. Marvin then lists numerous statutory provisions that would be frustrated if the Commission lacked authority to prohibit Comcast's “network management” practices at issue in CCIA v. FCC, 693 F.2d 198 (D.C. Cir 1982) [5]. In affirming the FCC's Title I authority to regulate the “enhanced services” and sale of customer premise equipment (CPE) previously regulated under Title II and reclassified under Title I, the D.C. Cir. said:

The Commission's exercise of ancillary jurisdiction to impose the separation requirement on AT & T is an integral part of the Computer II regulatory scheme. Several parties attack the validity of this assertion of ancillary jurisdiction by the Commission. In United States v. Southwestern Cable Co., 392 U.S. 157, 88 S.Ct. 1994, 20 L.Ed.2d 1001 (1968), it was settled beyond peradventure that the Commission may assert jurisdiction under section 152(a) of the Act over activities that are not within the reach of Title II.78 In that case, however, the Supreme Court limited the Commission's jurisdiction to that which is “reasonably ancillary to the effective performance of the Commission's various responsibilities.” One of those responsibilities is to assure a nationwide system of wire communications services at reasonable prices.....

In designing the Communications Act, Congress sought “to endow the Commission with sufficiently elastic powers such that it could readily accommodate dynamic new developments in the field of communications.” Congress thus hoped “to avoid the necessity of repetitive legislation.” In Computer II the Commission took full advantage of its broad powers to serve the public interest by accommodating a new development in the communications industry, the confluence of communications and data processing. Because the Commission's judgment on “how the public interest is best served is entitled to substantial judicial deference,” the Commission's choice of regulatory tools in Computer II must be upheld unless arbitrary or capricious. Our review of the Commission's decision convinces us that the Commission acted reasonably in defining its jurisdiction over enhanced services and CPE. We therefore uphold the Computer II scheme.


Since this here proceeding is the direct descendant of the Computer II regime upheld in CCIA v. FCC, it strikes me as rather difficult to find that this reasoning does not apply here and convey upon the Commission equal discretion to regulate under Title I.

Indeed, rather than “trimming back” ancillary authority, both American Library Association and MPAA are at considerable pains to distinguish the facts of those cases from CCIA and the regulation of information services under Title I. In MPAA, where the FCC tried to require mandatory video description, the D.C. Cir. found that requiring video description mandated creation of specific content — and the Communications Act bars the FCC from dictating content to broadcasters. In American Library Association, the court invalidated the FCC's broadcast flag regulations because broadcast flag regulated use of the content after a transmission — and thus fell outside the FCC's ancillary jurisdiction which regulates “transmissions by wire or radio.”

So....on the myth that the FCC can't regulate broadband under Title I, this myth is definitely -- BUSTED!!!!!


Source URL:
http://www.freepress.net/node/41653

Publisher URL:
http://www.wetmachine.com/totsf/item/1199