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Trump Names Two Opponents of Net Neutrality To Oversee FCC Transition Team (gizmodo.com)

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Gizmodo: President-elect Donald Trump has appointed two new advisers to his transition team that will oversee his FCC and telecommunications policy agenda. Both of the new advisers are staunch opponents of net neutrality regulations. Jeff Eisenach, one of the two newly appointed advisers, is an economist who has previously worked as a consultant for Verizon and its trade association. In September 2014, Eisenach testified before a Senate Judiciary Committee and said, "Net neutrality would not improve consumer welfare or protect the public interest." He has also worked for the conservative think-tank American Enterprise Institute (AEI) and in a blog post wrote, "Net neutrality is crony capitalism pure and simple." Mark Jamison, the other newly appointed adviser, also has a long history of battling against net neutrality oversight. Jamison formerly worked on Sprint's lobbying team and now leads the University of Florida's Public Utility Research Center. Both Eisenach and Jamison are considered leading adversaries of net neutrality who worked hard to prevent the rules from being passed last year. For the uninitiated, the rules passed last year prevent companies internet providers from discriminating against any online content or services. For example, without net neutrality rules, internet providers like Comcast and Verizon could charge internet subscribers more for using sites like Netflix. The FCC's net neutrality rules would protect consumers from paying exorbitant fees for internet use.

7 of 395 comments (clear)

  1. Why are we even arguing about it? by Anon-Admin · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This is simple. They are ether common carriers or they are not.

    If they are common carriers then they can not inspect the content they carry and as such are not liable for that content.

    If they are NOT common carriers then they can inspect the content and charge what they like. However, they are liable for the content they carry. Thus if they choose to not be common carriers and someone is transmitting Child porn, threats, selling drugs, pirated music and movies,etc. Then they are liable for the transport of that data and we should prosecute them for it.

    Do it just a few times and all the ISP's will be on board with becoming common carriers.

  2. I feel sorry for you guys. No joke. by Qbertino · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I have to say it, folks. Looking across the pond and seeing what's going on in the US right now is so patently absurd, words fail me. I'm seriously worried. You're having a Type A autocrat in charge soon and clear and present dangers encroaching on basic foundational structures, social contracts and rights in the US.

    I acutally have a serious question regarding the most recent developments:
    What are you doing about this? Personally, I mean. What are you thinking about doing?
    Anybody of you guys going all-out prepper, stocking up on water-filters, assault-rifles, ammo, gear, tools and checking to buy some land in the flyovers?
    Anybody else considering migrating to Canada, South America, Europe or something?

    Please reply in this thread.

    --
    We suffer more in our imagination than in reality. - Seneca
    1. Re:I feel sorry for you guys. No joke. by Dutch+Gun · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Rational adults don't pack up and move to Canada when an election doesn't go their way, nor do they build a bunker, collecting guns and freeze-dried food in preparation for some sort of Armageddon. Donald Trump may be an arrogant bastard who thinks of attractive women as trophies to fondle, but he's not Anti-Christ-Hitler-Stalin-Pol-Pot. The fringe right also said a lot of idiotic things when Obama was elected, only the mainstream press was having a collective liberalgasm over electing our first black President, and so probably didn't care as much about reporting it.

      Any law passed can also be repealed, and the President can be ousted every four years if he gets to be too unpopular. In truth, very little can be done to significantly change things without Congress' approval (you know, that "balance of powers" thing), and the Republicans have a *very* slim majority in the Senate.

      A year from now, when the country hasn't actually imploded, all this angst is going to look a bit silly in retrospect.

      --
      Irony: Agile development has too much intertia to be abandoned now.
    2. Re: I feel sorry for you guys. No joke. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I'm a liberal and I own many guns. Specifically because of the alt right criminal types I have encountered before.

      But I am more than happy letting them believe I am afraid of guns and don't own any. Let them come unprepared for what i have in store for them.

  3. Hello Trump apologists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Please tell us how higher costs, lower speeds, less competition, and blocked/gated content will make america great again.

    I for one am looking forward to paying extra for a Google and Wikipedia subscription on my cable bill. I can't quite afford the all access bundle but, hey, who needs every port. Netflix is overrated anyway.

    Yes tell us how fair internet access is actually slavery and crooked government and that Veriozon(tm) Internet(tm) pure capitalist freedom.

    Additionally, could you also tell me how I'm a CTR shill and that as a Liberal, that I'm actually the real racist.

  4. Looking in the mirror are you? by SuperKendall · · Score: 3, Interesting

    America is doing just fine thanks. Trump just released a video saying what he will be doing, so you don't have to wonder or believe what a bunch of media guys who detest him CLAIM he will do.

    Among them:

    TPP cancelled. Enjoy whatever country you are in joining that!

    More shale production - vast reduction in CO2. We are doing our part, how about your nation?

    Two regulations have to be removed for every new one created - while you strangle as regulations pile up.

    Ethics reform - five year ban on administration officials becoming lobbyists, can never lobby for foreign nations. I wonder how cozy corporations are to YOUR government...

    Investigation of visa program abuses (read: companies bringing in lots of foreign programmers and then severely underpaying them as they hold the green card over them).

    Energy grid to be hardened against attacks. As your countries power grid fails over the coming decade you can think back on this as you are sitting in the cold with a flashlight...

    The funny thing is many of these items (like TPP being cancelled, or visa abuse) were once darlings of the Slashdot liberals. But now that Trump supports them... well I guess they decided fascism is better than Trump? Oh well.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  5. Re:I still want short distance & long distance by Solandri · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Thing is, there are two ways to skin this cat.
    • Allow AT&T, Verizon, Comcast, et al to maintain local monopolies over the last mile. Implement net neutrality to keep Internet access a level playing field.
    • Or drop net neutrality because it's government meddling in the marketplace. But also prohibit the local monopolies granted to AT&T, Verizon, Comcast, et al because that's also government meddling in the marketplace. If you have competition for the last mile, then you don't need net neutrality. The customers will vote with their dollars - any ISP who intentionally tries to degrade Netflix service as a strategy to promote their own VOD service will simply be handing all their customers who use Netflix to a competitor.

    So killing net neutrality is not necessarily a bad thing if it's coupled with forcing local governments to allow competition in the last mile.