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State Trying Again for Net Neutrality Bill

State Sen. Scott Wiener has introduced legislation that looks to maintain net neutrality rules recently scuttled by the Federal Communications Commission, setting up a likely showdown with influential Internet companies and, if his bill passes, with the Trump administration in court.

State Sen. Scott Wiener has introduced legislation that looks to maintain net neutrality rules recently scuttled by the Federal Communications Commission, setting up a likely showdown with influential Internet companies and, if his bill passes, with the Trump administration in court.

Wiener released the details Tuesday of a plan that he characterizes as aiming to maintain a level playing field on the Internet. His bill would prohibit Internet providers from blocking or slowing data based on its content or from favoring websites or video streams from companies that pay extra.

"No one wants broadband providers to decide what websites we're allowed to access," said Wiener, a San Francisco Democrat. "We all want to make that decision for ourselves."

The FCC specifically barred states from enacting their own net neutrality rules, but Wiener says that the federal agency lacks that authority and that the state has the legal right to protect the interests of consumers in California.

The FCC in December repealed rules enacted during the Obama administration meant to prevent Comcast, AT&T and other broadband companies from exercising more control over what people watch and see over the Internet.

Some fear that, absent the rules, Internet providers could create "fast lanes" and "slow lanes" on the Internet to favor their own sites and apps or make it harder for consumers to see content from their competitors. That could limit consumer choice or shut out upstart companies that can't afford to buy access to the fast lane, critics say.

Wiener's bill would require online data to be treated the same. It also would make it illegal to specify favored content that would not count against a monthly data cap.

Internet companies, which argue that net neutrality rules discourage investment in broadband networks, are likely to mount an aggressive fight against Wiener's bill.

"Broadband providers support an open Internet with bright line net neutrality rules, but we simply cannot have 50 different state regulations governing our Internet — consumers expect and demand a single, consistent, common-sense approach," said Sally Aman, a spokeswoman for USTelecom, an industry group.

Congress should enact bipartisan legislation that spells out the rules for the Internet, Aman said.

California would likely face a lawsuit if Wiener's bill passes the Legislature and is signed into law. 

Governors in Hawaii, New Jersey, New York, Montana and Vermont have signed executive orders related to net neutrality issues, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.