09.21.2015 - Amicus Brief Re Open Internet Rules
09.21.2015 - Amicus Brief Re Open Internet Rules
09.21.2015 - Amicus Brief Re Open Internet Rules
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Harold Furchtgott-Roth
Washington Legal Foundation
Consumers Union
Competitive Enterprise Institute
American Library Association
Richard Bennett
Association of College and Research Libraries
Business Roundtable
Association of Research Libraries
Center for Boundless Innovation in Technology
Officers of State Library Agencies
Chamber of Commerce of the United States of America
Open Internet Civil Rights Coalition
Georgetown Center for Business and Public Policy
Electronic Frontier Foundation
International Center for Law and Economics and Affiliated Scholars
American Civil Liberties Union
William J. Kirsch
Computer & Communications Industry Association
Mobile Future
Mozilla
Multicultural Media, Telecom and Internet Council
B.
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Engine Advocacy
National Association of Manufacturers
Phoenix Center for Advanced Legal and Economic Public Policy Studies
Dwolla, Inc.
Telecommunications Industry Association
Our Film Festival, Inc.
Christopher Seung-gil Yoo
Foursquare Labs, Inc.
General Assembly Space, Inc.
Github, Inc.
Imgur, Inc.
Keen Labs, Inc.
Mapbox, Inc.
Shapeways, Inc.
Media Alliance
Broadband Institute of California
Broadband Regulatory Clinic
Tim Wu
Edward J. Markey
Anna Eshoo
Professors of Administrative Law
Sascha Meinrath
Zephyr Teachout
Internet Users
Ruling Under Review
The ruling under review is the FCCs Report and Order on Remand,
Declaratory Ruling and Order, Protecting and Promoting the Open Internet, 30
FCC Rcd 5601 (2015).
C.
Related Cases
This case has been consolidated with Case Nos. 15-1078, 15-1086, 15-1090,
15-1091, 15-1092, 15-1095, 15-1099, 15-1117, 15-1128, 15-1151, and 15-1164.
There are no other related cases.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
PAGE NO.
CERTIFICATE AS TO PARTIES, RULINGS, AND RELATED CASES ..............i
A.
B.
C.
II.
CONCLUSION ........................................................................................................ 15
CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE ....................................................................... 16
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE ................................................................................ 17
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TABLE OF AUTHORITIES
PAGE NO(S).
Cases
Edwards v. District of Columbia,
755 F.3d 996 (D.C. Cir. 2014) ...............................................................................7
Reno v. American Civil Liberties Union,
521 U.S. 844 (1997) .................................................................................. 2, 11, 12
Rumsfeld v. Forum for Academic & Institutional Rights, Inc.,
547 U.S. 47 (2006) ...............................................................................................12
Snyder v. Phelps,
562 U.S. 443 (2011) ...............................................................................................2
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GLOSSARY
FCC
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The term meme was coined to explain the way cultural information
spreads. Casey Chan, Whats In a Meme, Gizmodo (June 8, 2013),
http://gizmodo.com/what-exactly-is-a-meme-512058258. Internet memes are
typically humorous images and videos spread by users through platforms,
including those amici provide. See id.
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INTRODUCTION
Billions of people use the Internet each day to share information and ideas
from around the world. In this country, people pay telecommunications providers
for access to the Internet, and access is exactly what they get. For content, they
turn to their own creative efforts or those of others through platformsincluding
those amici provide. Throughout the history of the Internetat least in this
countryaccess providers have transmitted content that end users request without
interposing their own preferences or priorities. As a result, people have never in
history been this extensively and powerfully directly connected to each other and
the world. That has allowed people to improve their lives and those of countless
others.
All of that is at risk if broadband providers get to block or limit access to
those voices they decide to disfavorand that is exactly what petitioners are
fighting for the right to do. That risk must not be taken lightly. The fact that
broadband providers have fought so persistently to control the speech of others
only confirms that is what they will do if given the power. They should not be
permitted to do so. Mindful of the billions of people who benefit from the
Internets openness, amici respectfully ask this Court to keep the Internet open to
us all. If the Internet does not remain equally open to all connected users,
individuals and the public will lose access to critically important informationand
to each other.
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ARGUMENT
I.
Internet promotes. As the Supreme Court has explained, [t]he First Amendment
reflects a profound national commitment to the principle that debate on public
issues should be uninhibited, robust, and wide-open. Snyder v. Phelps, 562 U.S.
443, 452 (2011) (citations omitted). But for the First Amendment to protect open
and robust debate, there must be space where it can happen. What the agora, town
hall, and city plaza have been, the Internet is today. It is the place where people
come together to share information, discuss important issues, and build
community.
As the Court has recognized, the Internet uniquely enhances the speech of its
users in ways traditional media do not. In Reno v. American Civil Liberties Union,
521 U.S. 844 (1997), the Court explained how the Internet democratizes access to
speech by allowing every user to speak toand be heard byevery other
connected user:
Through the use of chat rooms, any person with a phone line can
become a town crier with a voice that resonates farther than it could
from any soapbox. Through the use of Web pages, mail exploders,
and newsgroups, the same individual can become a pamphleteer.
Id. at 870 (citation omitted). If anything, the speech-enhancing power of the
Internet is even greater today than it was when the Reno opinion issued in 1997.
Since then, user access and platform innovation have only increased through the
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http://i.imgur.com/oz0a7.jpg.
Here is a representative exchange between the President and Internet users:
Question: How are you going help small businesses in 2013 and
2014? and what if any bills are you going to implement for small
businesses, in 2013, and 2014?
Answer: Weve really focused on this since I came into office - 18
tax cuts for small business, easier funding from the SBA. Going
forward, I want to keep taxes low for the 98 percent of small
businesses that have $250,000 or less in income, make it easier for
small business to access financing, and expand their opportunities to
export. And we will be implementing the Jobs Act bill that I signed
that will make it easier for startups to access crowd-funding and
reduce their tax burden at the start-up stage.
...
Question: . . . Is Internet Freedom an issue youd push to add to the
Democratic Partys 2012 platform?
Answer: Internet freedom is something I know you all care
passionately about; I do too. We will fight hard to make sure that the
internet remains the open forum for everybody - from those who are
expressing an idea to those to want to start a business. And although
there will be occasional disagreements on the details of various
legislative proposals, I wont stray from that principle . . . .3
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That is just one example of direct communication between citizens and elected
officials that happens over the open Internet. Twitter is another: by the time of
President Obamas last inauguration, all one hundred U.S. Senators participated in
the Twitter platform.4 So is Mediumthat is where the President made history by
circulating the text of the State of the Union address to the public before its
delivery.5 The platforms amici provide directly serveand strengthenour
democracy because they allow users to communicate and collaborate with each
otherwhether to spread information about political issues, gather signatures for
petitions, or coordinate efforts to get voters to the polls on election day.
The openness of the Internet has also advanced the values of the First
Amendment by providing space for speech that might not otherwise exist at all.
The fact that Internet service providers carry content to all users without
discriminating against or prioritizing certain senders allows amici to empower
people around the world to communicate with each other. The freedom from
platform discrimination in particular has created space for services available to
users at little to no charge, enhancing access for people who could not pay for a
faster or wider lane.
See Amar Toor, All 100 US Senators are now on Twitter, The Verge (Jan.
20, 2013), http://www.theverge.com/2013/1/20/3896648/twitter-usage-amongmembers-of-us-congress.
5
See President Obamas State of the Union Address, Medium (Jan. 21,
2015), https://medium.com/@WhiteHouse/president-obamas-state-of-the-unionaddress-remarks-as-prepared-for-delivery-55f9825449b2.
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share their experiences with local businesses and, through word of mouth, help
local businesses flourish. This Court has specifically recognized the value of
consumer review websites, including Yelp, in [f]urther incentivizing a quality
consumer experience. Edwards v. District of Columbia, 755 F.3d 996, 100607
(D.C. Cir. 2014). Empowering users to share information online also drives
collective efforts to help people in other communities: for example, Redditors
combined forces to buy classroom supplies for needy schools across the country,
toys for a seven year old with late stage Huntingtons Disease, and to build a safety
wall around an orphanage in Kenya.7
The value of connecting people to each other in real time through amicis
communications platforms cannot be understated. When one Twitter user Tweeted
an official in India about his missing sister, the message triggered a political
response that led to his sisters rescue from human traffickers.8 When Yelpers
7
See Jared Keller, Redditors Raise $200,000+ for Charity, The Atlantic
(Sept. 16, 2010), http://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2010/09/redditusers-raise-200-000-for-charity-for-colbert-rally/63080/; Melissa Bell,
Huntingtons Disease kills nine-year old, bullied girl, The Washington Post (Jan.
13, 2012), http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/blogpost/post/huntingtonsdisease-kills-nine-year-old-kathleen-edward-bullied-girlvideo/2012/01/13/gIQAXRg1wP_blog.html; Reddit Donates $80,000 To
Orphanage, The Huffington Post (Jan. 27, 2012),
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/01/27/reddit-donates-kenyaorphanage_n_1237016.html.
8
See Press Trust of India, Brothers tweet to Swaraj saves girl from
traffickers in UAE, Hindustan Times (Aug. 28, 2015),
http://www.hindustantimes.com/india-news/brother-s-tweet-to-swaraj-saves-girlfrom-traffickers-in-uae/article1-1384948.aspx?li_source=base&li_medium=dontmiss.
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complained about meals that made them sick, health departments used that
information to identify places repeatedly associated with foodborne illness.9
Whether users are government employees in Virginia, Tweeting about whether the
snow on the road makes driving unsafe, or community members in Ferguson,
Missouri providing eyewitness accounts of events as they unfold, it is often the
speed of information sharing that generates the collective strength of ordinary
citizens. This effect will become even more pronounced as new platforms evolve,
such as Twitters Periscope platform for live streaming video, further facilitating
the distribution of media-rich content.
But the open Internet has not only benefited people whose governments
protect free speech and association as ours does. Rather, it has allowed people
around the world to bear witness to images and videos that have catalyzed political
movements that make progress in undemocratic regimes possible. Former
National Security Council Advisor Mark Pfeifle has gone so far as to argue for
Twitter to receive the Nobel Peace Prize because of the way it has empowered
people in oppressive regimes to share information about their circumstances within
and beyond their communities.10
See Maria Newman, Yelp Reviews Help Track Food Illnesses, N.Y. Times
(May 22, 2014), http://www.nytimes.com/2014/05/23/dining/reviews-on-yelphelp-track-illness.html?_r=1.
10
See Mark Pfeifle, A Nobel Peace Prize for Twitter, The Christian Science
Monitor (July 6, 2009),
http://www.csmonitor.com/Commentary/Opinion/2009/0706/p09s02-coop.html.
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It was through Twitter that people learned about the murder of a young
woman during a protest against the results of the 2009 Iranian presidential election.
As Advisor Pfeifle writes:
Her name was Neda Agha-Soltan, and without Twitter we might
never have known that she lived in Iran, that she dreamed of a free
Iran, and that she died in a divided Iran for her dreams. Neda became
the voice of a movement; Twitter became the megaphone. Twitter is
a free social-messaging utility. It drove people around the world to
pictures, videos, sound bites, and blogs in a true reality show of life,
dreams, and death. Last months marches for freedom and the violent
crackdowns were not only documented but personalized into a story
of mythic tragedy. When traditional journalists were forced to leave
the country, Twitter became a window for the world to view hope,
heroism, and horror. It became the assignment desk, the reporter, and
the producer. And, because of this, Twitter and its creators are worthy
of being considered for the Nobel Peace Prize.
Id. Mr. Pfeifles elegant words require one clarification: Twitter was not the
assignment desk, the reporter, or the producerit was simply the window.
Twitters users were the ones who took on the tasks traditional journalists could
not. It is hard to imagine a better example of how important it is to preserve the
open speech forum the Internet has consistently beenand the open speech
platforms that have flourished as a result.
II.
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Without the Open Internet Rules, the same could happen here. After all,
broadband providers are among the least popular companies in America.12 Lest
there be any doubt that people use amicis platforms to criticize Internet service
providers in this country, the below text, taken from the WordPress.com blog of
Nashville photographer Stacie Huckeba, confirms they do just that:
I have been a customer of Comcast. . . . I used your Xfinity speed test
off your website and sure enough, I was barely getting 3 Mbps. . . . I
called, spent a half hour on the phone with 3 or 4 representatives and
then got hung up on during a transfer . . . . I called back and this
time spent an hour on the phone going through the same thing. I
actually finally got to a retention specialist who . . . suggested I get a
technician . . . . So back I went on hold and . . . I got hung up on.13
So do Twitter users, who have devoted a hashtag to criticizing Comcast
(#comcastsucks), and Yelpers, who routinely review broadband providers
offerings and facilities. There is no reason to think that broadband providers in this
country would act more altruistically than Telus. Rather, it seems highly likely
that a company like Comcast might block or throttle access to such content if, in
the absence of the Open Internet Rules, it had the ability to do so.
Broadband providers own arguments confirm that they are seeking to
control the speech of others, and will do so if this Court lets them. Otherwise,
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broadband providers would have no reason to complain that the Open Internet
Rules stop them from deciding which speech to transmit, and thus prevent them
from blocking or de-prioritizing political speech with which providers disagree.
Joint Br. Petrs Alamo Broadband & Daniel Berliner 2, July 30, 2015, ECF No.
1565433. Whether motivated by profit, preference, or politics, broadband
providers have ample reason to try to control and diminish what Internet users can
say and hear online. The FCC adopted the Open Internet Rules because the impact
of their doing so will be harmful to the speech interests of so many people,
including many of amicis users.
The importance of preserving public access to the Internet is even clearer
during times of crisis when it is critical to keep each and every user connected to
the same network. At those times, centralized infrastructure and content provision
are especially likely to become unavailable for technical or human reasons.
Consequently, people often depend on point-to-point communication to send and
receive news and location information between remote users of mobile devices.
The importance of ensuring access has been demonstrated during Superstorm
Sandy, the Boston Marathon bombing, the earthquake and tsunami in Japan, and
during the migration from the Middle East to Europe happening right now. To
harness the power of decentralized mobile communication over the Internet,
FEMA, the State Department, and local governments all incorporate Twitter and
other Internet-based platforms.
The capacity of these networks to save lives depends on ensuring the
maximum possible number of users can effectively communicate with each other.
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It is also critical that Internet users also get to choose which platforms to use.
Nobody knows in advance which platforms will be useful and accessible to enough
people to make a difference. Nobody knows which tools or features users will
want until after someone takes the initiative to build them and make them
available. The open Internet facilitates the resourcefulness and creativity of
Internet users by letting them communicate over a network that is reliable and
accessible to every connected userqualities that are invaluable during times of
crisis. Letting broadband providers build walls will impede the flow of
information in ways we can foresee todaybut also in others we cannot yet
imagine.
CONCLUSION
Amici respectfully request that this Court uphold the Open Internet Rules.
DATED: September 21, 2015
Respectfully submitted,
/s/ Joseph C. Gratz
JOSEPH C. GRATZ
ALEXANDRA H. MOSS
DURIE TANGRI LLP
217 Leidesdorff Street
San Francisco, CA 94111
(415) 362-6666
jgratz@durietangri.com
amoss@durietangri.com
Counsel for Amici Curiae
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CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE
I hereby certify that:
This brief complies with the type-volume limitations of Fed. R. App. P.
32(a)(7)(B) because this brief contains 3,997 words, excluding those parts of the
brief exempted by Fed. R. App. P. 32(a)(7)(B)(iii).
This brief complies with the typeface requirements of Fed. R. App. P.
32(a)(5) and the typestyle requirements of Fed. R. App. P. 32(a)(6) because this
brief has been prepared in a proportionally spaced serif typeface using Microsoft
Word 2010 in 14-point Times New Roman font.
DATED: September 21, 2015
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CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
I hereby certify that on this 21st day of September, 2015, I electronically
filed the foregoing Brief of Amici Curiae Automattic Inc., A Medium Corporation,
Reddit, Inc., Squarespace, Inc., Twitter, Inc., and Yelp Inc. in Support of
Respondents Federal Communications Commission and United States of America
with the Clerk of Court for the United States Court of Appeals for the District of
Columbia Circuit by using the CM/ECF system, which served a copy on all
counsel of record in these cases.
DATED: September 21, 2015
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