Stanford CIS

T-Mobile's Binge On Violates Key Net Neutrality Principles

By Barbara van Schewick on

In November 2015, T-Mobile, the nation’s third largest provider of mobile Internet access, launched a new service called Binge On that offers “unlimited” video streaming. T-Mobile customers on qualifying plans can stream video from the 42 providers currently in the program – Netflix, Hulu, HBO, Amazon Video, and others – without using their data plans, a practice known as zero-rating.

In recent weeks, Binge On has come under scrutiny for limiting all online video to a lower speed. Slowing down online video from all providers, regardless of whether the provider is part of Binge On, seems to violate the no-throttling rule adopted by the Federal Communication Commission (FCC) last year.

But T-Mobile's rate limiting is not the only cause for concern.

This morning, I filed a report at the FCC entitled "Binge On Violates Key Net Neutrality Principles" that offers the first comprehensive analysis of the zero-rating aspects of the program. The key findings: Binge On is harming competition, innovation, user choice, and free speech on the Internet. As such, the program is likely to violate the FCC's general conduct rule and transparency rule.

The report is tailored to help the FCC engage in its case-by-case evaluation of zero-rating as described in the 2015 Open Internet Order. There, the FCC decided not to take a position on zero-rating and instead to evaluate specific instances of the practice under the general conduct rule. The general conduct rule prohibits practices by Internet service providers (ISPs) "that harm Internet openness" by, for example, harming consumer choice, competition, innovation, or free speech online.

Binge On is one of several new zero-rating programs introduced by ISPs in the last few months. Comcast exempts Stream TV, its own Internet TV application, from customers’ data caps; all other online video applications continue to count against the caps. AT&T’s “sponsored data” program allows any provider to pay to have its content zero-rated. Verizon just announced a similar program.

Comcast’s, AT&T’s, and Verizon’s zero-rating programs raise clear net neutrality concerns. Comcast’s zero-rating favors its own online video service over all competing online video services – a textbook example of an ISP using its position as a gatekeeper to pick winners and losers online. AT&T’s and Verizon’s plans allow app providers to buy a competitive advantage, causing the same harms to Internet openness as charging companies to be in a “fast lane.”

The net neutrality implications of T-Mobile’s Binge On program are less obvious but nonetheless significant. Unlike Comcast, T-Mobile welcomes all video streaming providers to join its program. And unlike AT&T and Verizon, T-Mobile allows providers to join its program without paying a fee. As a result, Binge On seems on its face less harmful than these other zero-rated offerings.

But as my report shows, Binge On violates key net neutrality principles necessary to preserve Internet openness. It limits user choice, harms innovation, distorts competition, and stifles free speech online. Therefore, based on what we know about the program, Binge On is likely to violate the FCC’s Open Internet rules.

In sum, Binge On is aptly named – it feels good in the short-term but harms consumers in the long run.

You can find the full report and executive summary here or read some of the highlights below.

Note: The report has been updated to reflect the addition of four providers that joined Binge On yesterday.

Report Highlights: