Ten years ago, Nobel Prize-winning economist Milton Friedman
lamented the "Business
Community's Suicidal Impulse:" the persistent propensity to persecute one's
competitors through regulation or the threat thereof. Friedman asked: "Is it
really in the self-interest of Silicon Valley to set the government on
Microsoft?"[1] After yesterday's FCC
vote's to open a formal "Net Neutrality" rule-making, we must ask whether
the high-tech industry—or consumers—will benefit from inviting government
regulation of the Internet under the mantra of "neutrality."
The hatred directed at Microsoft in the 1990s has more
recently been focused on the industry that has brought broadband to Americans'
homes (Internet Service Providers) and the company that has done more than any
other to make the web useful (Google). Both have been attacked for exercising
supposed "gatekeeper" control over the Internet in one fashion or another. They
are now turning their guns on each other—the first strikes in what threatens to
become an all-out, thermonuclear war in the tech industry over increasingly
broad neutrality mandates. Unless we find a way to achieve "Digital Détente,"
the consequences of this increasing regulatory brinkmanship will be "mutually
assured destruction" (MAD) for industry and consumers.
New Fronts in the Neutrality Wars
The FCC's proposed
rules would apply to all broadband providers, including wireless, but not
to Google or many other players operating in other layers of the Net who favor
such broadband-specific rules.[2] With this rulemaking looming, AT&T came after Google with letters to the
FCC in
late September and then another
last week accusing the company of violating neutrality principles in their
business practices and arguing that any neutrality rules that apply to ISPs
should apply equally to Google's panoply of popular services. In particular,
AT&T accused Google of "search engine bias," suggesting that only
government-enforced neutrality mandates could protect consumers from Google's
supposed "monopolist" control.
The promise made yesterday by the FCC—to only apply neutrality
principles to the infrastructure layer of the Net—is hollow and will ultimately
prove unenforceable. The reality is that regulation always spreads.
The march of regulation can sometimes be glacial, but it is, sadly, almost
inevitable: Regulatory regimes grow but almost never contract. Indeed, in some
ways, the prediction
we made just three weeks ago is already coming true: The basic premise of
neutrality regulation is already being proposed for other layers of the
Internet—and not just by AT&T in retaliation. One need not agree with all
of AT&T's accusations to recognize that, whatever the FCC might say today, any
large online intermediary with a popular platform potentially faces the threat
of "network neutrality" mandates—because every platform is essentially a "network,"
too. We're not just talking about "search neutrality" (Google as well as
Microsoft) but also about "device neutrality" (mobile handsets), "app
neutrality" (Apple's iTunes store, Facebook's developers and Google's Android
mobile OS) and so on for social networking, email, instant messaging, online
advertising, etc.
An open
letter sent to FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski this week by 28 founders and
CEOs of leading application providers—including Amazon, Google, Facebook, Netflix, Craigslist, Sony and Twitter—speaks
generally about the need for the FCC to enforce a "guarantee of neutral,
nondiscriminatory access by users." While many of these signatories may have
in mind ISPs as the network "gatekeepers" that need to be reined in by the FCC,
the more successful among them are likely to find this letter used against them
in the future—perhaps even by co-signatories—to advance a broad conception of
what the government must do to ensure "openness" and "access" for platforms at all layers of the Internet.
Dumb Networks, Dumb Devices
The intellectual foundations for this regulatory creep have
already been laid by groups like Free
Press and Public
Knowledge and law professors like Columbia's Tim Wu, Harvard's Jonathan
Zittrain and Seton Hall's Frank
Pasquale. As originally
conceived by Tim Wu in 2003, "network neutrality" is not unique to broadband networks: "the basic economic problem found in the network neutrality debate (a
form of ‘platform exclusion' or ‘vertical foreclosure') can be found in many
other markets." Indeed, Wu's popular Net Neutrality FAQ declares:
The promotion of network neutrality is no different than the
challenge of promoting fair evolutionary competition in any privately owned
environment, whether a telephone network, operating system, or even a retail
store. Government regulation in such contexts invariably tries to help ensure
that the short-term interests of the owner do not prevent the best products or
applications becoming available to end-users.[3]
Zittrain picked up where Wu left off in The
Future of the Internet and How to Stop It—attacking, as the enemies of
innovation, not ISPs but the supposedly "closed" platforms of Apple, TiVo and
Microsoft's Xbox. Zittrain warns that:
If there is a present worldwide threat to neutrality in the
movement of bits, it comes not from restrictions on traditional Internet access
that can be evaded using generative PCs, but from enhancements to traditional
and emerging appliancized services that are not open to third-party tinkering.[4]
Zittrain's general solution is "API [Applications
Programming Interface] neutrality:" If you create a platform (whether hardware
or software) and begin allowing third-party contributions ("generativity"), you
will lose all control over devices or applications that can run on that
platform.
Those who offer open APIs on the Net in an attempt to harness the
generative cycle ought to remain application-neutral after their efforts have
succeeded, so all those who built on top of their interface can continue to do
so on equal terms…. [N]etwork neutrality ought to be applied to the new
platforms of Web services that, in turn, depend on Internet connectivity to
function.[5]
Clearly, if Zittrain and his allies have their way, the sort
of neutrality mandates envisioned by the FCC or some Congressmen for ISPs will eventually cover companies such as Apple, Google, Facebook,
Myspace, Twitter and Amazon—all singled out by Zittrain in a New York
Times op-ed in July:
If the market settles into a handful of gated cloud communities
whose proprietors control the availability of new code, the time may come to
ensure that their platforms do not discriminate. Such a demand could take many
forms, from an outright regulatory requirement to a more subtle set of
incentives — tax breaks or liability relief — that nudge companies to maintain
the kind of openness that earlier allowed them a level playing field on which
they could lure users from competing, mighty incumbents.[6]
Frank Pasquale agrees on the need to restrain all "the
dominant players at all layers of online life," but focuses on his demand for a Federal
Search Commission to control supposedly "biased" search results.[7] While the FCC wrings its hands over "managed services" offered by ISPs, search
engines are increasingly offering their own value-added services by "blending"
algorithmically-derived results with special features like maps, videos, books
or music depending on what the search term suggests the user is interested in. "Artificially"
ensuring that these features appear on the first page of search results is
clearly non-neutral, and necessarily involves search engines making "managed"
decisions as to whose features to include. Yet such features also clearly
benefit users—dramatically improving the usefulness of search engines and helping
to sustain struggling business models like music retailing.
But one need not resort to the works of "ivory tower"
academics to see the slippery slope we're already tumbling down with the
infinitely elastic principle of "neutrality." The prospect of the FCC
gradually transforming into a "Federal
Information Commission" becomes more apparent when one reads the Wireless
Innovation and Investment Notice of Inquiry recently released by the
FCC:
As other approaches, such as cloud computing, evolve, will
established standards or de facto standards become more important to the
applications development process? For example, can a dominant cloud computing
position raise the same competitive issues that are now being discussed in the
context of network neutrality? Will it be necessary to modify the existing
balance between regulatory and market forces to promote further innovation in
the development and deployment of new applications and services?[8]
One can imagine how some might use such language to accuse
Google of being in "a dominant cloud computing position" such that "the context
of network neutrality" will be applied to cloud service (like Google Voice) to
"modify the existing balance between regulatory and market forces" through
regulation. Indeed, that's precisely what
AT&T has suggested in recent letters (September
25th and October
14th) to the FCC.
AT&T's partner Apple has already been the subject of
such attacks for its decision to block the Google Voice app earlier this summer.
The incident marked the beginning of open warfare between Google and
AT&T/Apple. The FCC quickly jumped into the mix, first questioning how Apple manages its iTunes apps store for the iPhone, then questioning how Google runs its free Voice application. What legal authority the FCC has
over either service is far
from clear, but Apple seems to have gotten the message: It recently
approved the Spotify music streaming app for the iPhone, which could be a
serious competitive threat to the iTunes music store. This small incident
highlights how easily regulators can impose their will through informal
mechanisms like open-ended investigations even without clear authority to issue
rules or bring enforcement actions. Yet none dare call it what it is: regulatory
blackmail.
The Inevitability of Regulatory Capture
No doubt, other industry players will cheer on such
regulatory harassment of the titans of tech—and maybe even demand more of it. Regulatory
creep is driven by more than the self-interests of every bureaucracy to expand
its own mission, budget and staff. As the Electronic Frontier Foundation has noted,
"Experience shows that the FCC is particularly vulnerable to regulatory capture."
While lobbyists play an important role in defending business from government,
all too many businesses naively look at government as a beast that can be
tamed, trained, and turned to one's own advantage, and often try to use the
expanding regulatory apparatus to their own advantage or simply throw their
competitors under the bus to save themselves. The result is a Hobbesian
regulatory "war of all against all" within industry.
As Professor
Alfred E. Kahn explained in his 2-volume opus, The
Economics of Regulation, all regulation—however high-minded—is
inevitably captured by special interests because:
When a commission is responsible for the performance of an
industry, it is under never completely escapable pressure to protect the health
of the companies it regulates, to assure a desirable performance by relying on
those monopolistic chosen instruments and its own controls rather than on the
unplanned and unplannable forces of competition. [...] Responsible for the
continued provision and improvement of service, [the regulatory commission]
comes increasingly and understandably to identify the interest of the public
with that of the existing companies on whom it must rely to deliver goods.[9]
If Internet regulation follows the same course as other
industries, the FCC and/or lawmakers will eventually indulge calls by all sides
to bring more providers and technologies "into the regulatory fold." Clearly,
this process has already begun. Even before rules are on the books, the
companies that have made America the leader in the Digital Revolution are
turning on each other in a dangerous game of brinksmanship, escalating demands
for regulation and playing right into the hands of those who want to bring the
entire high-tech sector under the thumb of government—under an Orwellian
conception of "Internet Freedom" that makes corporations the real Big Brother,
and government, our savior.
Toward a Less MAD World: Digital Détente
Sincere defenders of real Internet Freedom—that is, freedom from government techno-meddling—recognize
that there will always be disputes over how companies deal with each other
online across all layers of the Internet. The question is not whether we need
a technical coordinating mechanism for handling such disputes. Someone should mediate conflicts over alleged deviations from abstract neutrality principles. But
should that arbitrator be an inherently political body like FCC? Or should we
instead look to truly independent, apolitical arbitrators like the Internet Engineering Task Force or
collaborative efforts like the Network
Neutrality Squad? Such alternative dispute resolution mechanisms and fora
need not have the power of law to be effective: The weight of their expert
opinion, based on careful investigation of the facts, would likely resolve most
disputes, because companies have strong reputational incentives to comply with
reasoned rulings by truly neutral experts. And the white hot spotlight
of public attention has a way of disciplining marketplace behavior as
well.
Government would still have a role to play, of course, in
enforcing antitrust laws where anticompetitive harm to consumers can be proven,
and in enforcing the promises companies make to consumers. Ultimately,
however, certain business models and technologies require non-neutral
treatment, and the best remedy for concerns about non-neutrality is competition
itself: In the high-tech sector more than any other, disruptive innovation
makes it difficult for even the most successful companies to stay on top
forever. Competitive entry—or even the threat of new entry—provides a powerful
check on the power of so-called "gatekeepers," but even more important is the
prospect that today's leaders will be tomorrow's laggards: There's little
reason to think Google (search and advertising), Apple (smart phones and music)
and Facebook (social networking) won't someday find themselves playing
catch-up, just as IBM (computers), Microsoft (desktop software and search),
Friendster and MySpace (social networking), and Yahoo! and AOL (web portals)
have had to do.
"Digital Détente" would require that all parties concede something
and work constructively toward a more "peaceful" (i.e., less regulatory)
resolution. And yet, no Internet company wants to disarm unilaterally,
foreswearing politics as a continuation of competition by other means. Only
through multilateral disarmament could they break out of the current cycle of
regulatory one-upmanship: If the companies in the Internet ecosystem could
form a united front against increased government regulation and in favor of
removing existing regulatory obstacles to competition, they could all return to
their core competencies of creativity and innovation.
The alternative is a regulatory "nuclear winter": high-tech
titans turning their political fire on each other, catching innocent third
parties in the cross-fire and bringing a dark cloud of government regulation
over the entire Internet. Such increased regulation would stifle investment
and innovation throughout the Internet ecosystem. Thus, it is consumers who will
ultimately suffer most from the tech industry's suicidal impulse, as their
choices and digital lives are impoverished. For their sake, we hope all industry
players will step back from the brink to avoid such high-tech mutually assured
destruction.