California law pushes AT&T to end zero-rating

AT&T announced plans to pull the plug on a zero-rating programme, blaming the move on net neutrality regulations recently introduced in the state of California.

In a blog, AT&T explained zero-rating was banned under the Californian law and, because the internet spans all US states, so hampered its attempts to serve customers in other parts of the country.

An operator representative told Mobile World Live the change will happen on 25 March and will impact AT&T mobile customers on metered tariffs who stream one of its DirecTV, AT&T TV or U-verse TV video services.

Mobile customers on unlimited plans will not be affected.

Regulator the Federal Communications Commission dropped national net neutrality rules [1] in 2017, though an appeals court later ruled individual states could implement their own directives [2].

Separate attempts by the US Department of Justice [3] and telecom industry groups to prevent California enacting the legislation failed.

AT&T branded the state-by-state approach as “unworkable” in its blog, arguing a patchwork of disparate regulations would create “roadblocks to creative and pro-consumer solutions”.

It called for government intervention to determine “clear, consistent and permanent net neutrality rules for everyone to follow”.

[1] https://www.mobileworldlive.com/featured-content/home-banner/fcc-repeals-net-neutrality
[2] https://www.mobileworldlive.com/featured-content/top-three/court-upholds-repeal-of-us-net-neutrality-rules
[3] https://www.mobileworldlive.com/featured-content/top-three/us-drops-california-net-neutrality-lawsuit

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