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ISPs can do what they want as long as they disclose it, under new FCC/FTC agreement

June 04, 2025

The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is set to dismantle existing net neutrality rules this Thursday, the culmination of discussions frommuch of this yearandyears previous. Ahead of this, the FCC has produced adraft“memorandum of understanding,” or “MOU,” which outlines some ways in which it may attempt to “protect” consumers following the repeal.

The agreement was produced by the FCC and Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and it’s said to ensure that “internet service providers live up to the promises they make to consumers,” following the adoption of theRestoring Internet Freedom Order.

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Under these rules, internet service providers (ISPs) would be allowed to choose their own net neutrality standards to follow, allowing them to regulate themselves with regards to throttling, paid prioritization and website blocking. ISPswouldneed to publicly disclose where they take such action with respect to the aforementioned practices, and the FCC has vowed to investigate ISPs disclosures to verify they are being adhered to.

However, as long as ISPs inform customers of what they are doing it, they will have free reign to do it.

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In a statement toArs Technica, FCC Commissioner Mignon Clyburn, described the FCC and FTC’s plan as a “lackluster, reactionary afterthought,” adding that it was “a smoke-and-mirrors PR stunt.”

I mean, it certainly seems like bad news — it’s not really the disclosure of practices that everybody has been fighting for, here…

You can view the FCC and FTCannouncement here(you’ll have to view the cached version since thelive link isn’t loadingfor some reason — a grim reminder of what’s to come) and don’t miss our coverage onthe FCC’s data “cherry picking” here.

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