California can finally apply its historic network neutrality law, judges the judge

Network neutrality died a horrible death in 2017, but things have just changed: California’s network neutrality law – created in 2018, but immediately blocked by lawsuits from the Trump Department of Justice and the telecommunications industry – can finally be applied.

That is the verdict of Judge John Mendez today, who refused to grant the telecommunications industry the requested injunction. The case may not be closed, but the law may go into effect – and the judge does not believe that the telecommunications industry is likely to win.

According MLEx journalist Mike Swift and The Hollywood ReporterEriq Gardner, each of whom was following the decision live, Judge Mendez believes that it should be up to Congress to say whether net neutrality should exist:

The DOJ dropped its own lawsuit by questioning California law earlier this month, so the possible telecoms injunction was the last thing to stop it – for now.

This is the opinion of the FCC President-in-Office on the matter:

California state senator Scott Weiner, author of the bill, is celebrating:

And me too, as a California resident who knows it’s past time to fix the internet.

This is the full text of the California Internet Consumer Protection and Network Neutrality Act 2018, also known as SB-822. It contains a list of things that ISPs will not be able to do, including paid prioritization, favorable “zero rating” content so it doesn’t count towards your data limit (think of these bundled streaming services!) And failures to tell you that what fast service really is and how your network management practices and speeds really work.

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