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Net Neutrality Rollback Faces New Criticism From US Congress -- And 16 Million Comments (techcrunch.com)

An anonymous reader quotes TechCrunch's newest update on the FCC's attempt to gut net neutrality protections: 10 Representatives who helped craft the law governing the FCC itself have submitted an official comment on the proposal ruthlessly dismantling it... The FCC is well within its rights to interpret the law, and it doesn't have to listen to contrary comments from the likes of you and me. It does, however, have to listen to Congress -- "congressional intent" is a huge factor in determining whether an interpretation of the law is reasonable. And in the comment they've just filed, Representatives Pallon, Doyle et al. make it very clear that their intent was and remains very different from how the FCC has chosen to represent it.

"The law directs the FCC to look at ISP services as distinct from those services that ride over the networks. The FCC's proposal contravenes our intent... While some may argue that this distinction should be abandoned because of changes in today's market, that choice is not the FCC's to make. The decision remains squarely with those of us in Congress -- and we have repeatedly chosen to leave the law as it is."

In another letter Thursday, 15 Congressmen asked FCC Chairman Ajit Pai to extend the time period for comments. They note the proposed changes have received more than 16 million comments, more than four times the number of comments on any previous FCC item. The Hill reports that the previous record was 4 million comments -- during the FCC's last net neutrality proceeding in 2014 -- and "the lawmakers also noted that the comment period for approving net neutrality in 2014 was 60 days. Pai has only allowed a 30-day comment period for his plan to rollback the rules."

14 of 147 comments (clear)

  1. Am I wrong? by Marc_Hawke · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It seems that Ajit Pai is the most openly corrupt government official that I've seen in United States politics. Am I missing something?

    Keep in mind, I'm not saying he's the most 'corrupt,' but rather the most open about it. And when I say 'corrupt' I just mean pandering to special interest groups.

    The instant he was appointed he basically said, "We're going to hand the Internet over to big corporations, and smile while we do it." Then just laughed whenever anybody said that it's contrary to what everyone wants. For example, the comments thing, "We nominally have a comment period, but we've decided to just ignore them."

    I just don't get it. I'd expect speeches trying to justify what he's been doing, or trying to convince people to come around to his way of thinking...but really it seems like he just doesn't care. On one hand, that's kind of refreshing in a 'no bullshit' kind of way, but on the other hand, I don't agree at all with how he's handling the situation.

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    1. Re:Am I wrong? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      He's taking a gamble that, in the Trump administration, the way to catch the boss's eye and get ahead is to model your behavior on his.

      He's imitating Trump himself. Sincerest form of flattery, and all that. If Trump holds on to the White House for, all gods forbid, eight years, you can expect pretty much every senior civil servant to act like this by then.

      Fig leaves are for statues. Real men do their graft loud and proud, in the open. Heck, they even put their names to (ghostwritten) bestselling books about it.

    2. Re:Am I wrong? by slashrio · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Yes, you're wrong.
      The worst case of FCC corruption was when the brother of Colin Powell, as head of the FCC, allowed the concentration of news outlets into a few corporate hands, which now control nearly all the news published in the US. So no, there is no more free press in the US except for the 'alternative' news sites which are now despised by the main stream media for allegedly being 'fake news', where in fact the traditional media are the fake news producers now.

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    3. Re:Am I wrong? by thegarbz · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Fake and alternate is something that did not exist before 2016. It previously was split into mainstream, non-mainstream, and utter bullshit.

      Labeling all of traditional media as fake is incredibly ignorant.

    4. Re:Am I wrong? by drinkypoo · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The worst case of FCC corruption was when the brother of Colin Powell, as head of the FCC, allowed the concentration of news outlets into a few corporate hands,

      Bill Clinton is not Colin Powell's Brother, nor was he head of the FCC.

      --
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    5. Re:Am I wrong? by currently_awake · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The Democrat party might be more electable by having a party platform that differs from the Republican party, and I mean more than just the "Window Dressing" stuff that neither party does anything about like abortion (that the Republicans could ban right now because "own 3 houses", but aren't even trying). Both parties do exactly the same stuff in office, everything else is just PR.

    6. Re:Am I wrong? by TimSchutte · · Score: 3, Interesting

      No, Donald Trump is the most openly corrupt government official in the the federal government. Mr. Pai is only following in Trump's footsteps.

    7. Re:Am I wrong? by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 3, Interesting

      It's hard to win elections when the incumbents gerrymander the shit out of everything.

      Senate and governor elections are statewide, and gerrymandering has no effect on them. Yet Democrats still lose.

  2. about lawfulness.. by gl4ss · · Score: 3, Interesting

    ...it just seems pretty strange that FCC is repealing a law it has no authority to repeal.

    FCC doesn't make the law, it is not up to them to decide if they want to follow it or not, which is exactly the congress guys point?

    why bother with congress making any laws if fcc doesn't follow them anyways?

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  3. He's not even close by rsilvergun · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I mean, you've got Dick Cheney for raw, open corruption. And the stuff that gets done on the local level would make even him blush. I remember reading a story of a land owner that wanted some land that had some endangered goats. Couldn't have the land because of the goats. So he bought some nearby land, but up some broken, rickety fences and stuck sheep with syphilis on the land. The goats jumped the fence and the sheep, died of syphilis and blammo, he got the land. City turned a complete blind eye to the entire scheme.

    There's still a small chance Pai's drinking his own Kool-aid. Those city reps and the goats? No chance whatsoever.

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  4. Fake news by Dr.+Evil · · Score: 3, Interesting

    "Fake news" referred to something which happened during the election. There were sites which generated names similar to the legitimate new sites, had short-lived domains which looked vaguely respectable. They would fabricate headlines, with clear political motives, and their links would be shared through political echo-chambers like Facebook endlessly.

    The term was quickly co-opted by certain political groups to dilute the meaning and de-legitimize criticism by the mainstream media. It's not the "fake news" people were talking about.

    As for alternative news, beware the sites which produces news with shock DJ-like banter, expanding fabrications into sensational rants which go on for hours. Their headlines are engineered to echo the worst fears of their supporters and drive them into a tizzy of rage (and ad impressions, subscription increases). The fake news sites were modeled to pander to these bases and draw their immediate attention.

    1. Re:Fake news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Interesting

      Fake News was a term thought up by CNN to discredit online news.
      They were pissed when people pointed out all the lies and constant stream of retractions CNN puts out and started calling them Fake News.

  5. Re:congressional intent? by gtall · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Yer wrong. Just about every law can be gamed. Human, and lawyer, ingenuity will find holes you couldn't possibly have predicted.

    You and your fellows believe you have written the perfect law, covered all the loopholes. Except that it must now reside in the tessellation structure of the rest of the laws, and there are a lot of those. Now the interaction between your perfect law and the rest opens wounds you never expected.

    A more concrete example of this is systems and security. You write the perfect module, it has been proven secure. However, now you plunk it down in the rest of the system and the interactions with other parts show your perfect module opens up unwelcome interactions.

  6. Re:WTF? by PopeRatzo · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Hell, even Fox which gets accused of supporting Trump has 52% negative coverage

    Let's think about this. Is there any other possible reason that the coverage of Trump is overwhelmingly negative? Can you possibly imagine that it might not all have to do with "media bias"? Is there a scenario where negative coverage of Trump doesn't have to do only with bias?

    Use your imagination.

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