That article quotes two opinions, one for and one against the repeal of Net Neutrality. Good lord I hate that name. It is traffic shaping, packet filtering etc... it didn't need a new name. Anyway... you raised 5 points.
- Consumers benefit most from competition, not preemptive regulation. Free markets have delivered more value to American consumers than highly regulated ones.
- No regulatory system should indulge arbitrage; regulators should be skeptical of pleas to regulate rivals, dispense favors, or otherwise afford special treatment.
- Particularly given how rapidly the communications sector is changing, the FCC should do everything it can to ensure that its rules reflect the realities of the current marketplace and basic principles of economics.
- As a creature of Congress, the FCC must respect the law as set forth by the legislature.
- The FCC is at its best when it proceeds on the basis of consensus; good communications policy knows no partisan affiliation.
There are, in terms of the issues surrounding "net neutrality", the statements above are generally good, and I would agree with all of them except for a few issues.
Point 1. Free markets have delivered more value to American consumers than highly regulated ones, because competition has been allowed to flourish. In the ISP market while we are dependent on wire and fiber infrastructure, competition of that nature is not viable.
Other point: the net neutrality rules were not preemptive. They were implemented because the market had demonstrated a problem with fair and equitable access to the Internet. That is WHY it became an issue in 2010, and again in 2015.
Point 2. Just my interpretation but I say that by dropping the net neutrality laws, they were dispensing a favor to the industry - the result of hard lobbying on the part of the industry, and not a little fear and intimidation since Verizon did win a law suit in early 2014 against the 2010 attempt at Net neutrality. They were doing what the industry asked for, not what consumers asked for.
Point 3 Totally agree, but I think this the reality of the current marketplace. There is not enough competition in the market given the current level of technology. That is, copper wire and fiber, and the problem is the owners of the copper and fiber see themselves as the owners of it - and don't want to share that ownership.
Point 4: FCC is empowered by and supported by laws in Congress. However the FCC's charter in legislation is as an
independent regulatory body, which is supposed to represent the best interests of ALL of the people of the United States, not the interests of an industry group. Period. I'll make this point again in a moment.
Point 5. Totally agree, which begs the question... WTF!?
By the way. Any argument from an "expert" that says Net Neutrality either stifled or did not stifle development of the technology has no clue what the technology is. Net Neutrality was not about the technology. It was about fair and equitable access to the technology, and the innovation that is stifled because entrepreneurs and small business have issues getting equitable access to the technology.
Here is the biggest point anyone can make. red emphasis mine. (I lifted it from Wikipedia...)
The FCC's mission, specified in Section One of the
Communications Act of 1934 and amended by the
Telecommunications Act of 1996 (amendment to 47 U.S.C. §151) is to "make available so far as possible, to
ALL the people of the United States, without discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion, national origin, or sex,
rapid, efficient, Nationwide, and world-wide wire and radio communication services with adequate facilities at reasonable charges."
And, I know everyone, including me, used the Netflix/Youtube paradigm to explain it, but that's not actually a big problem. I mean we pay what, 5 bucks or so to watch a B rated movie published in 1978 or 1992 on Pay Per view already. We don't complain much about that, but it was just a convenient way to explain the issue.
The real problem stems from the way Entrepreneurs were being treated before Net Neutrality (From 1998-ish to 2011, and 2014-2015 in the US - and again likely now.