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ISP Disclosures About Data Caps and Fees Eliminated By Net Neutrality Repeal (arstechnica.com)

In 2015, the Federal Communications Commission forced ISPs to be more transparent with customers about hidden fees and the consequences of exceeding data caps. Since the requirements were part of the net neutrality rules, they will be eliminated when the FCC votes to repeal the rules next week. Ars Technica reports: While FCC Chairman Ajit Pai is proposing to keep some of the commission's existing disclosure rules and to impose some new disclosure requirements, ISPs won't have to tell consumers exactly what everything will cost when they sign up for service. There have been two major versions of the FCC's transparency requirements: one created in 2010 with the first net neutrality rules, and an expanded version created in 2015. Both sets of transparency rules survived court challenges from the broadband industry. The 2010 requirement had ISPs disclose pricing, including "monthly prices, usage-based fees, and fees for early termination or additional network services." That somewhat vague requirement will survive Pai's net neutrality repeal. But Pai is proposing to eliminate the enhanced disclosure requirements that have been in place since 2015. Here are the disclosures that ISPs currently have to make -- but won't have to after the repeal:

-Price: the full monthly service charge. Any promotional rates should be clearly noted as such, specify the duration of the promotional period and the full monthly service charge the consumer will incur after the expiration of the promotional period.
-Other Fees: all additional one time and/or recurring fees and/or surcharges the consumer may incur either to initiate, maintain, or discontinue service, including the name, definition, and cost of each additional fee. These may include modem rental fees, installation fees, service charges, and early termination fees, among others.
-Data Caps and Allowances: any data caps or allowances that are a part of the plan the consumer is purchasing, as well as the consequences of exceeding the cap or allowance (e.g., additional charges, loss of service for the remainder of the billing cycle).

Pai's proposed net neutrality repeal says those requirements and others adopted in 2015 are too onerous for ISPs.

27 of 281 comments (clear)

  1. Here it comes... by Mindragon · · Score: 5, Insightful

    $0.99 / month internet!

    (gets bill)

    $0.99 Monthly Internet
    $9.99 Facebook access fee
    $9.99 Google access fee
    $19.99 Slashdot access fee
    $29.99 Porn access fee
    $45.00 $1.00 per gigabyte fee. 45gb used
    $9.99 Convenience fee
    $5.00 Bill print fee
    $5.00 Electronic payment fee
    --------
    135.94 due now or we cut you off.

    --
    Just add {In Space!} to anything.
    1. Re:Here it comes... by jordanjay29 · · Score: 3, Funny

      What kind of high-quality porn are you watching in 30 minutes?

    2. Re:Here it comes... by Frosty+Piss · · Score: 4, Insightful

      What kind of high-quality porn are you watching in 30 minutes?

      This is Slashdot. Obviously it's Japanese tentacle porn.

      --
      If you want news from today, you have to come back tomorrow.
    3. Re:Here it comes... by ArmoredDragon · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Centurylink did something similar to this to me when I was on their gigabit fiber service:

      Advertised price is $79.99
      Modem rental fee $15 (there is no modem, just an ethernet drop into my apartment)
      Internet Cost Recovery Fee $15 (uhhh....?)
      Taxes and government fees $20 (Complete bullshit because the government legally cannot charge any taxes here; the other ISP, Cox, doesn't charge you any taxes unless you get cable TV, this is literally just a number they pulled out of their ass.)

      Whats worse is if I didn't complain to the FCC at the time, it would have been much higher because for my apartment, they were charging $50 higher than the advertised price. Anyways, after I got my first bill I just canceled it and went back to the base 40/10 package, which was free with my rent. I complained about how they didn't even provide gig service for the first half of the month either (it took them a while to adjust it) and they just ended up not charging anything.

      I think that fat fuck Ajit Pai just misses the good ol' telecom monopoly days. Fuck him.

    4. Re:Here it comes... by mark-t · · Score: 3, Interesting
      You can't exactly tunnel through VPN if your ISP won't let you route anything to IP addresses that are not expressly whitelisted and your VPN's IP is not on that whitelist.

      I highly doubt that ISP's that are going to go along with this are going to care that it breaks the internet for almost everybody that doesn't just use whatever the most popular internet flavors happen to be be.

  2. Ajit Pai... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    is really a blow-up doll for ISPs.

  3. Re:Good. by jordanjay29 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yes, I'm sure the ISPs will refuse to squander their newly-increased profits and lower customer prices as a result. This is because we live in Fairy Tale land and not Reality.

  4. Why do we stand it by squiggleslash · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What the fuck is this? It's too onerous on ISPs to tell people the price of the product they're buying? HOW THE FUCK ARE THEY SUPPOSED TO CHARGE PEOPLE IF THEY DON'T KNOW THE FUCKING PRICE? And it's too onerous for ISPs to tell people about data limits? REALLY? REALLY?

    Here's an idea: when the Democrats inevitably win, for once maybe instead of merely slightly going in the right direction, they actually go further and implement regulations that aren't just fair, but punish ISPs for lobbying for this bullshit.

    I mean: ISPs will be:

    1. Required to do free peering.
    2. Must provide, among other services, a basic FCC specified service at a set price with a fixed installation fee. Initially 1Mbps up/down for $10 a month with a $50 installation fee.
    3. Legally obliged to provide service within two weeks of any request in their designated service area, or face fines.
    3.1 Local governments specifically allowed by FCC to provide service to customers not any active ISP's service area. 4. Must tier service only by bandwidth and nothing else.
    4.1. No data caps or overages. Throttling only allowed to temporarily deal with network congestion and must not lead to worse service than the basic FCC mandated plan.
    5. Must not filter any traffic except for security purposes, and those filters should be under the control of the customer.
    6. Must allow customer to provide their own equipment, without additional charges.

    Yes, they'll howl. Yes, they'll probably donate millions to the GOP. But the Democrats wouldn't just implement this, they'd warn the ISPs that if they lobby the GOP to alleviate them, the vice will be tightened even further when the Democrats get back into power.

    The current FCC, thanks to lobbying, is telling ISPs they can hide the truth, hide things they know about. That's not acceptable. We need to go further than simply rolling that back, we need to punish those who ask for it.

    --
    You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    1. Re:Why do we stand it by WolfgangVL · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Sounds great, feels good.

      But maybe 4 years later, maybe a decade... maybe more, the tables will again turn. Vengeance will swing the other way again.

      How about a real law instead? Like, the way it's supposed to be done. The reason we are in this mess in the first place is because the net neutrality rules had been put in place the wrong way. Screwing around with punishments and/or creating more "regulations" leads to the same place.

      Needs to be real law, worded strongly, enforceable, and done right. Not another stack of papers at the whim of whatever agency takes the torch.

      Anything less is just another stupid band-aid waiting for the next telecom lawyer.

      --
      You are being ripped off every second of every day, so that advertisers can help rip you off even more tomorrow.
    2. Re:Why do we stand it by Jason+Levine · · Score: 5, Insightful

      What the fuck is this? It's too onerous on ISPs to tell people the price of the product they're buying? HOW THE FUCK ARE THEY SUPPOSED TO CHARGE PEOPLE IF THEY DON'T KNOW THE FUCKING PRICE? And it's too onerous for ISPs to tell people about data limits? REALLY? REALLY?

      Much of Pai's reasoning seems to be "the market will take care of it", but the problem is that there is no real market pressure on ISPs. Most people have one, maybe two high speed, wired ISPs in their area. (A lot of people don't have any, but that's a slightly different problem.) Where I live, I have Charter. Verizon never expanded FIOS to my house so that's not an option and no other high speed, wired options exist. So if Charter decided to cap me at 5GB (a plan pre-merger Time Warner Cable floated not that many years ago), I wouldn't be able to do anything but continue to pay them or go without Internet. (The latter isn't really an option for a web developer.)

      Maybe if everyone had 10 different, competing ISPs to choose from, I could see removing many of the government regulations and ideally that's what I'd like to move towards. Until we get there, though, there's no reason why ISPs should be allowed to hide how much we'll really pay or when we'll be charged extra because we hit some invisible cap that they don't disclose.

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    3. Re:Why do we stand it by Darinbob · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You don't understand. "Free market" means free for the businesses to do what they want. Any business to business disputes will be handled via the courts, and any business to consumer disputes will be handled with the phrase "screw you, peasant".

      It's naive to think that the free market evangelists actually believe in a real free market.

    4. Re:Why do we stand it by TimothyHollins · · Score: 5, Interesting

      In Stockholm, Sweden, most apartments have somewhere 10-20 ISPs to choose from, with several different fiber nets available or within reach. Companies are not allowed to lock out the competition.
      The standard price for an up/down line of 100Mbit/100Mbit is (with VAT) around $18 per month ($15 without VAT) , no installation fee. That's with no caps or overages.

      While I don't know if the Swedish market can be directly translated into the American market, it does seem that opening up and lowering the barriers to entry would help with prices. That means regulating the crap out of the big corporations.

  5. God forbid by sjames · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That ISPs should have to meet the onerous requirement of stating price up front, just like every country store, gas station, and kid's lemonade stand has managed since forever.

  6. too onerous? by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Pai's proposed net neutrality repeal says those requirements and others adopted in 2015 are too onerous for ISPs.

    Too onerous to tell people exactly what they're paying for? If the ISPs can charge you for it, they can list it on the bill. Perhaps consumers should consider it "too onerous" to pay for things that aren't listed.

    --
    It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
  7. Re: Good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think you overlooked the fact that many Americans have only one choice of ISP. Even if they have two choices, it just becomes a game of ping-pong because they know you have to pick one of them.

  8. Re:GOP appears to claim that by Jason+Levine · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It goes along nicely with their claim that cutting taxed on rich people and big corporations will result in more income and jobs for middle-class/poor even though many CEOs have come out and said they won't be using the tax cuts to open new jobs. The GOP has taken a flying leap away from reality.

    (This isn't to say that the Democrats are perfect. Right now, they are the saner party - which isn't saying much. I'd love for the GOP to be a good alternative to the Democrats, but they seem determined to take the party into more pro-big-business and anti-science areas.)

    --
    My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
  9. Re: Good. by jordanjay29 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Plus, they barely compete on prices. Most of them try to gain customers with speeds and promotional pricing that doesn't reflect reality, when speeds are variable for a great many reasons and promotional pricing ends after 6-12 months, leaving customers with bait and switch policies as the norm.

  10. The burden of honesty, is dismissed. by geekmux · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Pai's proposed net neutrality repeal says those requirements and others adopted in 2015 are too onerous for ISPs."

    Disclosing the full monthly price is too much of a burden?

    Explaining the penalty for exceeding data limits is bothersome?

    Fuck you Pai. You're nothing but a corporate shill whore. We should be dismissing you instead of you dismissing common sense.

  11. Re:Holy fuck ... by Z80a · · Score: 4, Insightful

    She would be exactly the same thing plus TPP.
    The last chance was on the primaries.

  12. Actually they EXPECTED corruption. by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Well, ideally, we'd expect Congress to do their job and remove them. Or the President to ask them to resign. But our Founding Fathers expected elected officials to act in good faith, not be corrupt, and yet here we are.

    Actually, our Founding Fathers expected the central power to tend to attract the corrupt and corrupt any who arrived not yet corrupt.

    That's why they split the government into three parts (with any two in combination able to override the third), complicated the procedures, and put lots of roadblocks in the way of doing things: So it would take a bunch of corrupt officials to get away with anything (and others would have some chance of stopping them).

    Jefferson thought we'd have to mash a (violent) revolutionary reset button every couple decades, anyhow. But they wrought better than they knew, and their tell-me-three-times redundant system has tended to self correct. It still had a lot of problems, and hurt a lot of people. But (except for the Civil War) it didn't start seriously and persistently going off the rails until about WW I - 14 decades rather than two.

    Want to know why we got tTrump? Because a lot of people got sick of the "deep-state" "two-headed singl- party" "swamp" and he was the biggest monkey wrench they could grab to throw into the machine.

    Didn't work the way they, or you, wanted it to? So what else is new? Unintended consequences are the nature of government power.

    --
    Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
  13. Competition by Karmashock · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The issue is not NN but competition. We have an issue with monopolies because the government... local and state mostly grants exclusive franchise licenses to run cable to no more than two companies typically.

    that people presume to be surprised when abusive and monopolistic behavior occurs when you grant companies monopolies is baffling.

    You do not have the right to such ignorance. Grant right of way access to poles and conduits for third party last mile ISPs and all this NN stuff becomes irrelevant.

    Google is having a hard time running cable. That is how bad and how corrupt these franchise agreements are right now. And if google with all its resources is having a hard time then what chance does anyone else stand?

    Open up right of way or shut up. Nothing is going to liberate consumers and users and citizens and people from the oppression of monopolistic forces unless you break the monopolies at their heart. And that heart is the exclusive franchise agreements.

    Here some fool will say that such agreements are illegal. De Jura they are... De facto they're the law of the land. Try to run cable and see what I mean. You can't. Only former Bell Companies and TV Cable companies are running last mile cable. This isn't because other people don't want to run cable or can't afford to run cable or because there isn't a market. It is because if you try... you are denied.

    --
    I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
  14. Re:Good. by stealth_finger · · Score: 3

    So much for the "free market" which only works when you have informed consumers.

    Also helps if you have an actual market instead of a single vendor.

    --
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    https://www.redbubble.com/people/stealthfinger/shop?asc=u
  15. 2018 isn't a done deal by duke_cheetah2003 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Here's an idea: when the Democrats inevitably win

    If. A very big if. Roy Moore is a really big deal. If republicans can stomach a pedophile in their midst, they've obviously tossed the moral compass out the window. This could be a problem. It shows how desperate republicans and their supporters are. Dunno if you watch the news, but actual voters are saying to news folks, they literally would rather have Roy Moore despite his shortcomings over -any- democrat. This casting aside of morals is pretty alarming, and they're taking very effective tactics from Trump's campaign: Wage war against the media. Make it "US vs. THEM!" It's extremely unhealthy for our republic. And unfortunately, it's plucking just the right strings for the right. They could very well use these plays effectively in 2018 to crush the democrats again. We'll see, but after 2016, nothing is inevitable anymore. Nothing is for sure, not even outrage of this level.

    Roy Moore is a very important character to watch. If he picks up the seat in Alabama, we're in for a bumpy 2018. And nothing will be for sure until the fat lady sings at the end of the elections in Nov 2018. If Roy loses to Doug, it's a good sign that the left is organized and getting out the vote. They'll need to keep that organization and zest alive for a whole year. Meanwhile, Trump is making all of us very very tired.

  16. Re:I'd like to take thism moment to ask... by silentcoder · · Score: 5, Informative

    Let's say you're right. That doesn't change that on this issue at least a democratic wave would be a win for society. Now you can argue that this is only because dems are corrupted out to corporations whose interests in this regard happen to allign with our own - you may even be right, but you're STILL wrong to claim changing the majority party can't fix this issue completely.

    Even all that aside, if you believe that both parties are equally corrupt - you really, really WANT a system where the opposition party controls at least one house on the hill, the best way to stem corruption (especially in this hyperpartisan era) is to make it so it's absolutely impossible to pass any law without a significant number of opposition politicians actually agreeing with it.

    That was how Washington used to work - in fact as recently as 2010 it's how things worked. Reagan passed his tax reform as a bipartisan effort that took two years of cross-party negotiation.
    Obamacare took two years of negotiation with loads of input and ammendments, public hearings, things added and removed by republicans - and quite a few republican votes in the end.

    Then came the "lets make him a one-term president by actively blocking ANYTHING he wants to do - even if it's something we wanted to do ourselves for years" thing (it had sort of begun with Obama's election but only really picked up steam after the republicans 2010 midterm gains allowed them actually behave that way).

    Now I chose those two examples quite deliberately. They came from opposite sides of the spectrum, based on completely opposite ideas of how things should be done - but in both cases they were done slowly, deliberately, in a negotiation process that ultimately got most of the opposition on-board.

    Thus far this year, both those topics have been up again. Healthcare and taxes. In both cases republicans have tried to fly-by-night the legislation, keep it secret until the last possible moment, done all in their power to avoid any public debate or any chance for even their OWN politicians to know what's in the law before the vote. This is what happens when a party has full control of the government and no longer gives a damn.

    What's worse - their approach seems to be that they think they'll be forgiven any horrible thing they do, just so long as they "fuck the liberals". No need to govern the COUNTRY, no need to try and make decisions that benefit their districts, their voters or even their base - their base will be happy as long as they fuck those annoying liberals over.

    Somehow, since 2010 - being willing to negotiate a decent compromise bill and acknowledge you're there to serve the ENTIRE country went from "how the good politicians do things" to "an act of treason we will not tolerate in a republican", somehow liberals, democrats, progressives and whatever else you want to lump in there on the left went from "fellow Americans I disagree with" to "an enemy that must be destroyed by any means necessary" , somehow they aren't "real Americans" anymore, and any negotiation with them, any attempt to consider their views is seen as giving aid and comfort to the enemy.

    That's a recipe for a government that is not only wholly disfunctional but utterly incapable and uninterested in ever doing anything for the people that elected them - as long as you promise to fuck the liberals over, your seat will be safe after all.

    So yes, this is a terribly bad situation and one-of-a-kind one that America has never seen before. It is absolutely crucial for the survival of America that Washington be taught that this is not behavior the electorate will tolerate or reward, that democrats win by a fucking landslide in 2018 - to teach republicans that this approach to governance is bad for their own careers.

    Yes, a major victory by the other side WILL fix the single biggest problem in American politics today - which has fuckall to do with corruption. Sure corruption is bad - but it's teenaged acne next to the cancer of "the opposition are the enemy" that republicans embrace today.

    --
    Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
  17. Re:WHAT DO YOU EXPECT FROM AJIT PAI? by kilfarsnar · · Score: 4, Informative

    This is what happens when you a shitty smelly indo-chimp in charge of the FCC. Eliminate H-1B visas and send Ajit Pai back to the (literal) shithole he came from.

    No, this is what happens when you elect Republicans. And Pai was born in America, but I'm sure that's neither here nor there for you.

    --
    "What the American public doesn't know is what makes them the American public." -Ray Zalinsky (Tommy Boy)
  18. Re:Two-word answer (was Re: Here it comes...) by postbigbang · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Admit seemingly innocuous protocol-- billed at the lowest rate-- to an IP that is happy to re-assemble it all back into something useful if taxed by the ISP or its minions.

    The teachings of ways to get around the Great Firewall of China have taught people many meaningful dodges. It's a game of Whack-a-Mole at best, where the amount of rules changes becomes so administratively expensive-- even with software defined routing-- that it's not worth their while to do so.

    If the ISPs were interested in conserving their traffic, they'd have null-routed all of the botnets of their customers long ago. This isn't about altruism. This is about shareholder profits, and once those profits decline because of overly-complex servicing algorithms, they'll throw them out. Nothing is foolproof, because fools are so ingenious, is the salient aphorism.

    --
    ---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
  19. Re: I'd like to take thism moment to ask... by silentcoder · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Your accusation actually makes no sense. How can you accuse the democrats of being unwilling to compromise and negotiate when the entire legislative approach of republicans have been to preclude the possibility? How do you negotiate on a bill when they won't let you read it? How do you offer ammendments or debate when the bills are secret until hours before the vote? Forget 2 years of negotiating major bills, Republicans refuse to offer 2 hours. Even most fellow Republicans don't get to know what they will be asked to vote on!

    --
    Unicode killed the ASCII-art *