Congress is set to grill the FCC's chairman for falsely claiming his agency was hit with a cyberattack — here's how it could affect the war over net neutrality
Federal Communications Commission Chairman Ajit Pai speaks during the National Association of Broadcasters' show at the Las Vegas Convention Center on April 10, 2018 in Las Vegas, Nevada.
Federal Communications Commission Chairman Ajit Pai speaks during the National Association of Broadcasters' show at the Las Vegas Convention Center on April 10, 2018 in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Ethan Miller/Getty Images

  • Federal Communications Commission Chairman Ajit Pai should expect some tough questions at a Senate hearing this week.

  • Last week, the agency's inspector general released a report into an incident last year in which the FCC's servers became unavailable during the comment period over Pai's repeal of the agency's net-neutrality rules.

  • At the time of the outage, Pai and the FCC told Congress and the public that it had been caused by a cyberattack.

  • The report found no evidence to back that assertion. In fact, investigators believed agency officials made false statements to Congress, and referred the case to federal prosecutors.

  • The incident could play into a court case filed by activists seeking to overturn Pai's repeal.



Ajit Pai is going to be in the hot seat this week — as well he should be.

The chairman of the Federal Communications Commission is set to testify Thursday in front of a Senate oversight committee. He's certain to have to respond to questions while there about false statements he and some of his subordinates made to lawmakers about an incident last year in which the agency's computer systems got overwhelmed during the comment period for its then-ongoing net-neutrality proceeding.

Pai has tried to distance himself from those false statements, blaming them on the agency's former chief information officer, David Bray. But lawmakers are sure to want to know when Pai knew the statements were false and why he didn't retract them earlier.

Perhaps more importantly, lawmakers may well try to delve into the role the incident played in Pai's effort to overturn the FCC's net-neutrality rules. And the incident and Pai's answers about it could factor into ongoing court battle over his repeal of those rules.

Pai's expected grilling comes as a result of his and his agency's response to the FCC's server outage last year. At the time, the FCC was soliciting public comments for Pai's proposal to repeal the agency's net-neutrality rules.

Net neutrality is at the heart of the current controversy

As you probably know by now, net neutrality is the principle that all data on the internet should be treated the same. The FCC's rules barred internet service providers from blocking, slowing, or speeding access to particular sites and services.

john oliver net neutrality hbo final
john oliver net neutrality hbo final

HBOWhile widely popular with the public, the rules were vehemently opposed by the big telecommunications companies and by some anti-regulatory Republicans — most notably Pai, who vowed to repeal them even before becoming the chairman of the FCC. He launched that effort soon after taking over as head of the agency under President Donald Trump.