The Trump administration will kill off any attempt to introduce net neutrality by executive order, signed by President Joe Biden in 2021.
A federal appeals court on Thursday overturned a Biden administration rule establishing so-called net neutrality for internet providers.
In a blow to the free and open internet, a federal appeals court ruled that the FCC does not have the authority to impose net neutrality rules.
A federal appeals court in Ohio ruled that the Federal Communications Commission lacked authority to reinstate open internet rules.
The three-judge panel cited the Supreme Court’s Chevron deference decision that scaled back the powers of federal agencies.
Donald Trump's Republican-led FCC overturned the rules in 2017, but with President Joe Biden's encouragement, a Democrat-majority FCC voted to reinstate net neutrality last April. The Supreme Court's ruling last June that federal agencies no longer get deference in interpreting regulations "means we can end the FCC's vacillations,
Biden's Push for Net Neutrality Falters as U.S. Appeals Court Blocks FCC from Restoring Rules, On Thursday, an appeals court in the United States found that
A U.S. appeals court ruled on Thursday the Federal Communications Commission did not have legal authority to reinstate landmark net neutrality rules.
The FCC cannot block providers like Comcast from creating internet fast lanes based on how much customers pay, the court rules The post Appeals Court Strikes Down FCC Net Neutrality Rules appeared first on TheWrap.
A federal appeals court on Thursday ruled that US regulators overstepped their authority by reinstating "net neutrality" rules governing internet service providers, dealing a blow to the Biden administration.
A federal court invalidates FCC's net neutrality rules, citing limits on agency authority and the impact of the Loper Bright case.
Recent Supreme Court rulings protecting Americans from bureaucratic excesses are now bearing fruit. Last week, a federal appeals court put an end to the stale “net neutrality” debate by ruling that the FCC exceeded its power by attempting to regulate internet providers as utilities under a law dating back to the Depression.