The European Parliament is scheduled to vote on net neutrality rules on Tuesday, and at first glance the proposed regulations appear very similar to ones already in place in the United States.
Both the European proposal and the US rules prevent Internet service providers from blocking or throttling traffic, and they impose a ban on “paid prioritization.”
In both the EU and US, the blocking and throttling rules have exceptions for reasonable network management, and the paid prioritization ban has an exception for what are known as “specialized services.” Both the EU and US also allow zero-rating, a practice that exempts certain online services from counting against data caps.
Yet the US rules were widely acclaimed by net neutrality advocates, while the EU proposal is being heavily criticized by advocates, tech companies such as reddit and BitTorrent, and World Wide Web inventor Sir Tim Berners-Lee. Why is that?
Let’s examine the four major parts of the EU proposal that net neutrality advocates are trying to change and compare these to the US rules. To help illuminate the differences, Ars spoke to Barbara van Schewick, a law professor who directs Stanford’s Center for Internet and Society. Van Schewick also wrote an article criticizing the EU proposal last week.
“Fast lanes” and specialized services
The EU proposal (full text download) outlaws paid prioritization, or “fast lanes,” which would let online service providers pay for greater-than-normal access to consumers.
But there’s an exception for “specialized services,” defined by the EU as “electronic communication services other than Internet access services, for which specific levels of quality, that are not assured by Internet access services, are necessary.” Examples given in the EU’s description of its rules include IPTV, high-definition videoconferencing, and health care services such as telesurgery.


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