The Federal Communications Commission's press release on opening its notice of inquiry on Title II common carrier classification of broadband access services will leave many service providers a bit queasy. For starters, the rules almost certainly will apply to cable companies, which never have been regulated, in any way, as "common carriers."
Secondly, even if the FCC promises some lighter-touch "third way," once Title II rules are established as the framework, there is no formal barrier to later changes in rules that would apply more than a "small number" of Title II rules. Nobody familiar with government logic and practice will feel safe that the promised forbearance will hold over the long term.
Taxes and rules get instituted in modest ways, for specific purposes, and then never "sunset." Over time, in the case of taxes, amounts keep creeping up. Over time, in the case of administrative or legal requirements, old rules continue to drift out of date with changed circumstances.
Nor will the actual language provide much comfort. The FCC says it wants to fundamentally alter broadband access regulation, but will "forbear," at its own discretion, from applying all the common carrier rules, "other than the small number that are needed to implement fundamental universal service, competition and market entry, and consumer protection policies."
Not many observers think, over the long term, that the number of rules will remain "small." Where else in federal government action have you seen rules become less numerous over time?
Once Title II is the new framework, any number of steps, including price regulation, entry regulation and other rules are possible. In a nutshell, what was best about the old, highly-regulated monopoly system was service quality and universal access. What was worst was high prices and low rates of innovation.
Under competitive conditions the effect of common carrier regulation is mixed. We are likely to see both low prices and low innovation, plus less investment.
Verizon already earns 70 percent of its cash from operations, not wireline, and the balance continually is shifting to wireless. With lower likely return from wired operations, rational operators will simply starve the wired networks and invest more heavily in wireless.
The problem is that wireline service as a whole is becoming less profitable, and providing less revenue. You don't help matters by making it less profitable, and creating less revenue. You only accelerate its decline.