Company: ZM
Filing Date: 2025-08-22
Form Type: 10-Q
Source: 0001585521-25-000141
Chunk: 338

Company: Zoom Communications, Inc.
Filing Date: 2025-08-22
Form: 10-Q
Item: Part I, Item 8
Chunk 338
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, while the FCC conducts that review. On October 27, 2020, the FCC adopted an order concluding that the three issues remanded by the court did not provide a basis to alter its conclusions in the 2018 order. On October 19, 2023, the FCC adopted a notice of proposed rulemaking proposing to reinstate the 2015 rules, and on April 24, 2024, adopted an order that substantially reinstated those rules. On January 2, 2025, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit issued a decision overturning the FCC order. A petition for rehearing of the decision filed by proponents of network neutrality was denied on March 11, 2025. On August 8, 2025, the proponents of network neutrality announced that they would not seek Supreme Court review of the Sixth Circuit decision. We cannot predict the impact of the Sixth Circuit decision and the reinstatement of the prior rules on our operations or business.

In addition, a number of states have adopted or are adopting or considering legislation or executive actions that would regulate the conduct of broadband providers, including legislation to impose state-level network requirements in New York. After a federal court judge denied a request for a preliminary injunction against California’s state-specific network neutrality law, California began enforcing that law on March 25, 2021. Several other states have adopted or are adopting or considering legislation or executive actions that would regulate the conduct of broadband providers. A similar law in Vermont is subject to a pending challenge, but went into effect on April 20, 2022 and the challenge has been suspended until an appeal in another case addressing state powers to adopt internet regulation is resolved. The FCC’s April 24 order, which, as described above, was overturned by the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals, permits it to preempt any state-level network neutrality requirements that go beyond the requirements adopted in that order, but specifically held that the California law would not be preempted. We cannot predict whether the FCC order or other state initiatives will be enforced, modified, overturned, or vacated by legal action of the court, federal legislation, or the FCC.  Under the FCC’s 2018 rules, which currently remain in effect, broadband internet access providers may be able to charge web-based services such as ours for priority access or favor services offered by our competitors or by the internet access providers themselves, which could result in increased costs and a loss of existing customers, impair our ability to attract new customers, and harm our