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What Happens When States Have Their Own Net Neutrality Rules? (bloomberg.com)

Last month FCC Chairman Ajit Pai dismantled Obama-era rules on net neutrality. A handful of lawmakers in liberal-leaning U.S. states plan to spend this year building them back up. FCC anticipated the move -- the commission's rules include language forbidding states from doing this, warning against an unwieldy patchwork of regulations. But lawmakers in New York and California aren't aiming to be exceptions to the national rules; they're looking to, in effect, create their own. From a report: In New York, Assemblywoman Patricia Fahy introduced a bill that would make it a requirement for internet providers to adhere to the principles of net neutrality as a requirement for landing state contracts. This would mean they couldn't block or slow down certain web traffic, and couldn't offer faster speeds to companies who pay them directly. Fahy said the restrictions on contractors would apply even if the behaviors in question took place outside New York. She acknowledged that the approach could run afoul of limits on states attempting to regulate interstate commerce, but thought the bill could "thread the needle." Even supporters of state legislation on net neutrality think this may go too far. California State Senator Scott Wiener introduced a bill this week that would only apply to behavior within the state, saying any other approach would be too vulnerable to legal challenge.

But this wouldn't be the first time a large state threw around its weight in ways that reverberate beyond its borders. The texbook industry, for instance, has long accommodated the standards of California and Texas. [...] The internet doesn't lend itself cleanly to state lines. It could be difficult for Comcast or Verizon to accept money from services seeking preferential treatment in one state, then make sure that its network didn't reflect those relationships in places where state lawmakers forbade them, said Geoffrey Manne, executive director of the International Center for Law & Economics, a research group.

179 comments

  1. Textbooks? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wrong! The textbook industry has only paid attention to Texas. They are always wanting to "teach the controversy" or some ludicrous thing. If California had any control that crap wouldn't be happening.

  2. 8======D~~ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thatâ(TM)s what happens lol

  3. States' Rights by DatbeDank · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Good! If the citizens of California and New York feel these rules are necessary and important they should be able to dictate such rules as they see fit.

    That was, once upon a time, the magic of America, applying bottom up legislation allows for what works in specific areas to be applied and for other areas to not be applied.

    It's time to go back to an anti-federalist interpretation of the federal government.

    1. Re:States' Rights by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Good! If the citizens of California and New York feel these rules are necessary and important they should be able to dictate such rules as they see fit.

      That was, once upon a time, the magic of America, applying bottom up legislation allows for what works in specific areas to be applied and for other areas to not be applied.

      It's time to go back to an anti-federalist interpretation of the federal government.

      You forgot that people are only anti-federalist when the feds do something they don't like, but all for the Feds to exert their power to prevent states form doing something they don't like.

      --
      I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
    2. Re:States' Rights by mi · · Score: 0

      If the citizens of California and New York feel these rules are necessary and important they should be able to dictate such rules as they see fit.

      And if a local home-owner association feels it necessary and important to ban unsightly antennas, they should also be able to dictate such rules as they see fit, should they not be?

      It's time to go back to an anti-federalist interpretation of the federal government.

      2018, when Illiberals learned to stop worrying and love State Rights.

      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    3. Re:States' Rights by CanHasDIY · · Score: 3, Funny

      Republicans are for states rights, unless the states pass laws they don't like.

      Democrats are for states rights, unless the states pass laws they don't like.

      --
      An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
    4. Re:States' Rights by jellomizer · · Score: 1

      Being each State has a different set of demographics and needs, for the most part there should be more state rights. While this doesn't exclude federal powers that should be over reaching. A lot of these federal powers would probably be better served, if they took the money from a lot of the federal taxes and applied it back to the states based on some combination of land area and population for the amount for them to do with as they please. Because some states wouldn't have enough tax revenue for them to function, however with this external money they could be optimized for the states needs.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    5. Re:States' Rights by Comboman · · Score: 1

      Since when is a home-owners association equivalent to a democratically elected state legislature?

      --
      Support Right To Repair Legislation.
    6. Re:States' Rights by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not applicable.

      Home owners association is NOT a governmental/regulatory entity...

    7. Re:States' Rights by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      That was, once upon a time, the magic of America, applying bottom up legislation allows for what works in specific areas to be applied and for other areas to not be applied.

      Yeah, I seem to remember that approach didn't work out so well in the 1860s.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    8. Re:States' Rights by bjdevil66 · · Score: 1

      That would tear the country apart. It didn't work with the Articles of Confederation. It didn't work pre-Civil War. It won't work now.

      The real problem isn't states right or a need for a new interpretation. It's the money and corruption flowing into Washington, and the Citizens United SCOTUS decision that allowed it to happen. That needs to be overturned with Congressional action, ASAP. Of course, that's asking the paid off men to cut off their own bread and butter, so...

    9. Re:States' Rights by rogoshen1 · · Score: 1

      how in the fuck would that work with NN? "we won't interfere with your packets until they cross state lines"?

    10. Re:States' Rights by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Republicans are pretty much always for states rights.

      Now you have the pot thing yesterday, which I found funny. A Colorado Senator was complaining that the Executive branch has NO RIGHT to enforce laws legally passed by Congress. He is going to refuse to work with the DOJ for the rest of his term. He is too stupid, or high, to realize HE WRITES THE LAWS. If only he had some way to pass a new law making it so the DOJ wouldn't enforce laws his Congress already passed.

      I think people are starting to get a lesson that ignoring everything because a president you like is ignoring the laws to do what you want doesn't work out long term. Pass a damn law if you want it. Congress passed a law banning Net Neutrality, Trump is FOLLOWING THE FUCKING LAW as written and people are upset. Its as simple as changing the law and suddenly the Executive branch can't do anything about it.

      But we rather have a dictatorship because WORKING WITH THE REST OF THE COUNTRY is unacceptable for some reason. Perhaps if you weren't complete assholes all the time in CA and NY, some other people might work with you. But until you realize EVERYONE should have a say, don't expect us to go along with your bat shit crazy stuff.

    11. Re:States' Rights by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      2018, when Illiberals learned to stop worrying and love State Rights.

      You obviously felt awkward writing that, but you couldn't quite put your finger on the mistake, huh? It's ok. But I do have the answer for you.

      "Conservatives" is the word you were looking for.

      2018 (actually 2017) is when most of the people who fucking hate Republicans, realized that the reason they hate Republicans, is that their own personal political opinions are more conservative than the crazy radical-left politics practiced by today's Republicans.

    12. Re:States' Rights by Smidge204 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, Jim Crow laws worked great in some states but not in others, so it should be up to each state to decide which US citizens deserve to be treated like citizens and which do not.

      So how would any state and its citizenry be better served by allowing ISPs to block/snarl competitive services or charge said competitors extortion fees for access to their users?
      =Smidge=

    13. Re:States' Rights by MobyDisk · · Score: 1

      It has never been an issue for a state to issue more restrictive regulations than the feds do. It's only an issue when it is the other way around. So it need not be anti-federalist.

    14. Re:States' Rights by mi · · Score: 0

      Since when is a home-owners association equivalent to a democratically elected state legislature?

      Distinction without difference. Name one argument, that justifies State legislatures imposing rules, that would not also apply to Home Owner Associations (which, BTW, also have elected leaders). The OP's original argument, regarding "applying bottom up legislation" certainly works equally in both cases...

      But hey, if you want to stick to local governments, why would you oppose a State's right to decide, how certain races are treated within its borders? Remember the earlier claim: Everybody knows states’ rights mean the right of Southern states to resist integration. ?

      You can't be supporting a principle in one application and oppose it another — not without being a hypocrite. But, as I said: 2018 is when Illiberals learned to love State Rights. (Just after learning to love the FBI in 2017, I might add!)

      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    15. Re:States' Rights by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Everybody who modded this up is a fucking moron.

    16. Re: States' Rights by alvinrod · · Score: 1

      Perhaps we should just let it go to extremes and allow for some states that have vastly different rules and let people vote with their feet. Donâ(TM)t like the socialist state of Delaware? Move to the unfettered free market state of Kansas. Sure you likely end up with some horrible idiocy like religious or ethnicity-based states (i.e., no whites or no blacks or Mormons only) but that population would be self-selecting and then you wouldnâ(TM)t need to have those crazies as neighbors as they would have moved years ago. Everyone is welcome to as much ideological misery of their own choosing as they care to have and if they grow to dislike it they can move.

      I like the idea mostly from a scientific perspective as it lets us test these different kinds of ideas out and to study them and prevents powerful interests from shoving a one size benefits them type of policy down the throats of everyone in the country. It probably has a lot of problems beyond the obvious, but it might be worth trying none the less.

    17. Re:States' Rights by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry, that's plum retarded. The internet is specifically an inter-connected and inter-dependent web, a confederation defacto. To run it like server kingdoms is antithetical.

      You've smoked too much pseudo-Libertarianism dust, it's made you think one solution applies everywhere the same.

      I agree that bottom-up legislation makes sense "generally" but this is a Federal concern if ever there was. Just like interstates or any other interconnected system we all depend on as a 50-state nation and in fact, as a planet.

    18. Re:States' Rights by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since some city and county courts got lazy and stopped looking at HMO issues and just rubberstamping HMO choices. I do not see this as strange, but corrupt, because judges are just the sort people who show up for HMO meetings and get elected.

    19. Re:States' Rights by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know what? I would actually be all for States' rights to collude with multinational corporations to fuck over their citizens, if tax dollars didn't keep leaving my state to subsidize dumbfuckistan. Lincoln should have just let the stupid motherfuckers secede.

    20. Re:States' Rights by fish_in_the_c · · Score: 1

      I would guess you could have two separate companies a ( in state network) and and out of state network owned by different companies one that follows the rules and one that doesn't. as the state laws can't have any influence on companies that don't do business in the state.

      Both companies could of coarse be owned by the same parent. Something like what happens with the insurance companies in Florida, after the state passed laws regulating what they could charge. So there is no 'state farm' insurance of Florida, however there is 'State Farm of Florida' insurance company that shares branding and is owned by state farm. So 'State Farm of Florida' can comply with Florida laws and charge all of their customers a similar price, that is different then the prices and regulations followed by 'State Farm' the company.

      --
      âoeTolerance applies only to persons, but never to truth. Intolerance applies only to truth, but never to persons.
    21. Re:States' Rights by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow. We got ourselves a real badass here.

    22. Re:States' Rights by rogoshen1 · · Score: 1

      great, you'd get a few ms of reprieve until the fuckering happens!

      if CA/NY implemented these rules all that would happen is that data centers would get moved out of state.

    23. Re:States' Rights by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the citizens of California and New York feel these rules are necessary and important they should be able to dictate such rules as they see fit.

      And if a local home-owner association feels it necessary and important to ban unsightly antennas, they should also be able to dictate such rules as they see fit, should they not be?

      It's time to go back to an anti-federalist interpretation of the federal government.

      2018, when Illiberals learned to stop worrying and love State Rights.

      "States rights" is often used by the GOP as a dog-whistle for systemic discrimination and curbing of human rights.

      As in "states should have the right to marginalize gays, blacks, or anyone who doesn't fit the demographics of our base".

      So, yeah, from that standpoint liberals are going to be against that.

    24. Re:States' Rights by greenwow · · Score: 1

      I disagree strongly. States making-up stupid and different rules just to be different is a huge barrier to entry, and it really helps the large companies like AT&T and Comcast prevent competition. The states are killing competition.

    25. Re:States' Rights by michael_cain · · Score: 3, Informative

      The preemption doctrine has been around for a long time, and has been consistently upheld by the Supreme Court: once the feds decide to regulate, states may also regulate only to the extent and in ways that Congress specifies. With the default case being, if Congress doesn't specify, the states can't regulate.

      For example, the Clean Air Act explicitly gives California authority to set tougher-than-federal emission standards for some things (cars in particular) -- it's right there in the statute. Other states are given authority to choose between the federal standard or the California standard where they are different, but no other state can make up its own standard.

    26. Re: States' Rights by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Actually, it is the other states that are imposing their own form of bat-shit craziness on New York and California, which are merely the targets of your ire because you fully embrace the flawed agenda of the faux-conservative right-wing Republicans. It was the same with same-sex marriage. States like Alabama and Kansas went out of their way to attack liberals, declaring they would not recognize the actions, even the Civil Unions of other states. A serious violation of the Constitution. They even sought to use California's public referendum to achieve such discrimination. Which said success should tell you something, as well as their failures in courts.

      It's actually the Republicans who refuse to work with those who don't toe the party line. And they have nothing to offer, notice how they spent years declaiming for an ACA repeal, but never got around to offering an alternative. They couldn't even stand to hold meetings and discussions on it, let alone have a debate. Same with their tax cuts.

      And let's really recognize the truth, the Republican members of state legislatures across the country have been in big Telecom's pocket, doing everything they can to prevent municipal ISPs, opposing accountability for big corporations, and handing them even more tax dollars for nothing.

      Sorry, but it's the truth, and any declarations otherwise are as false as Trump's Voter Integrity Commission.

      It's OK though, as long as rampant gerrymandering and voter discrimination is allowed, the GOP can screw America.

    27. Re:States' Rights by mschuyler · · Score: 1

      It certainly is, as anyone who has run afoul of these organizations can attest. Officials elected by the populace impose rules on everyone that, when violated, result in sanctions. That's what governments do, and HMOs have officials who are "democratically elected," but wind up as an elite group that hangs onto power just like Washington, D.C. Put up a flag they don't like, you must take it down. Don't pay your homeowners dues (taxes) you get a lien on your property. These rules have been upheld by the courts. There's really no difference. It's just a matter of scale. Been there; done that. If you ever find yourself wanting a house or piece of property within an HMO, think twice before buying or kiss your rights goodbye. They can be little fiefdoms and dictatorships that can make your life miserable if you don't conform exactly to what the power structure wants.

      --
      How about a moderation of -1 pedantic.
    28. Re: States' Rights by drew_kime · · Score: 2

      Perhaps we should just let it go to extremes and allow for some states that have vastly different rules and let people vote with their feet. Don't like the socialist state of Delaware? Move to the unfettered free market state of Kansas.

      Those most likely to be on the wrong end of those extremes are least likely to have the resources to move.

      --
      Nope, no sig
    29. Re:States' Rights by Green+Mountain+Bot · · Score: 2

      Something along the lines of: Businesses who choose to violate net neutrality will not be granted license to do business in the state of California. Want to do business there? Follow the rules they have.

    30. Re:States' Rights by nine-times · · Score: 1

      Good! If the citizens of California and New York feel these rules are necessary and important they should be able to dictate such rules as they see fit.

      That's nice in theory, and it may be what needs to happen if the Federal government abdicates its responsibilities. BUT there's also a problem with this setup: Instead of having one Federal law to abide by, any company whose operations cross state lines will need to juggle different regulations for each state. They need to parse the laws in each state, change their rules and processes in each state, and possibly contend with different lawsuits/penalties in each state.

      That sort of thing costs a bunch of money and creates a bunch of inefficiencies. It makes it harder to run a business.

    31. Re:States' Rights by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, I seem to remember that approach didn't work out so well in the 1860s.

      Worked out fine. Secession was legal. Shooting at Federal property, in both that age and current times, is a good way to get your ass handed to you, however.

    32. Re:States' Rights by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Since when is a home-owners association equivalent to a democratically elected state legislature?

      Distinction without difference. Name one argument, that justifies State legislatures imposing rules, that would not also apply to Home Owner Associations (which, BTW, also have elected leaders).

      Greater scope of authority as duly granted by the sovereignty of the people. Ouch, zing, mi, you lost in one.

      The OP's original argument, regarding "applying bottom up legislation" certainly works equally in both cases...

      Yes, a Homeowner's Association setting up its own ISP structure would be a valid option.

      But hey, if you want to stick to local governments, why would you oppose a State's right to decide, how certain races are treated within its borders?

      Ah, that's a different discussion, and the ultimate reason is that...any decision by any form of authority, is subject to peril, and the fact, is, it's been quite obvious that most people can't be trusted to make decisions based on race. Sorry.

      Remember the earlier claim: Everybody knows states’ rights mean the right of Southern states to resist integration. ?

      Sad, but true, isn't it? It was also the case when it was tariffs, and the treatment of Indian Tribes, and even Westward expansion. States' Rights is forever tainted by association in the United States.

      You can't be supporting a principle in one application and oppose it another — not without being a hypocrite.

      Actually, you can. That's the whole point of discernment, to distinguish between one thing and another, rather than rely on flawed, overly simplistic absolutes.

      I know, mi, you're just a shit-spewing troll, but you're really not going to play very far with this one, any grade-school philosophy class could spot your facetious level of argumentation as fundamentally groundless.

      But, as I said: 2018 is when Illiberals learned to love State Rights. (Just after learning to love the FBI in 2017, I might add!)

      Actually, we did that 20 years ago, when it was same-sex marriage and marijuana legalization. Con-Conservatives, as usual, however, went all tantrum about it, and decided to go anti-states' rights.

      Guess you didn't notice. Was your head too far up your own ass?

    33. Re: States' Rights by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      When you have little, it's _easy_ to move.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    34. Re:States' Rights by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 0

      Of course they are necessary and important to New York and California. The Porn Subsidy Act of 2018 is hear!

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    35. Re:States' Rights by MobyDisk · · Score: 1

      Thanks, good to know!

    36. Re:States' Rights by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, because complying with 50 versions of complicated rules is a much better world to live in than having to comply with one complicated rule. And states never make the exact same mistakes that the federal government does. *eyeroll*

    37. Re:States' Rights by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That sort of thing costs a bunch of money and creates a bunch of inefficiencies. It makes it harder to run a business.

      That's a shame, boo hoo. But maybe that's the part of the cost of BEING FUCKING HUGE.

      Companies already face this issue, if they operate at the international level. Talk to Twitter or Telegram about Germany or Iran, and you might find out that your horrific hypothesis is already someone's reality.

      Just kidding; you don't really need to go up to the international level for examples. Turns out we already have a patchwork of differing state laws. And then there's interesting hacks like the Uniform Commercial Code for trying to make it suck less; and we balance states' right to differ from one another, against our desire to minimize complexity. It's an old problem, and people just deal with it.

      I guess what I'm saying is that you're right at it's inefficient, but there is a fuckton of history and precedent for us all being ok with that. Freedom is inefficient, but we don't regret that as much as we love freedom.

    38. Re:States' Rights by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      Shooting at Federal property, in both that age and current times, is a good way to get your ass handed to you, however.

      That's true. Also, owning people and making them work for free was kind of a bad look.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    39. Re: States' Rights by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Reality does not agree with you. Refugees from completely devastated places are still a minuscule percentage relative to total population. Most people hunker down and wait for whatever emergency to blow over.

    40. Re:States' Rights by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Butt-hurt detected.

    41. Re:States' Rights by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "That was, once upon a time, the magic of America, applying bottom up legislation allows for what works in specific areas to be applied and for other areas to not be applied."\

      Why would want to do that exactly? Those governments, if they ever supposedly existed as you imagine them, sucked. States competed to be the bottom of the barrel, to do everything as cheap as possible with little regard to fellow citizens.

      One upon a time, eh? So even you admit it was a fairy tale. Magic? Yeah, pure fantasy.

      Or you'd get something like CARB, which I have no problem with, but I often see people from so-called red states complaining about, wrt how a conglomerate of blue states conspire against red states because they have more people and buying power. And they get all pissed that a state has that power...

      "It's time to go back to an anti-federalist interpretation of the federal government." ...and then the red state people vote in conservative lawmakers who go to Washington and try to enact laws or regulations undercutting state rights.

      The Internet is one area where common rules promoting fairness is good. Not just to help the small guy compete with the established companies, but not make everything a toll, which to big guys means they pass on the cust to the buyers (usually little guys) anyways. Blue states are going to lead the charge once again.. One of the great beneficiaries to common carrier status were red states, which were getting internet lines to less populated areas.

      Why you think states should lead the charge to the exception of other states is baffling when we are talking about a large neutral communication medium to begin with. There is a federal government for a reason, and it's for the good of the nation, not just for national defense.

      When red states complain, sometimes justifiably, of red state economic conditions and not being able to compete and about unfairness of distribution and lack of growth, I sometimes think they like this talk. It's politically convenient. Because when there are rules that fix those discrepancies, conservatives tear them down.

      People can pretend to be all about pulling themselves up by their own boot straps, but then when there are no regulations, and it all remains the same for decades (circa 1993 to 2013) versus you get lines with fair rules and regulations (circa 2014 or so), why are you then anti-regulation when you didn't make it happen on your own and complained fo ryears, when there were none before but got what you wanted after there were fair regs in place?

      You act all you can stand on your own, then get jealous when others pass you by. You talk all apart market self-regulation and all pro-capitalism and laissez-fiare, but when larger populations keep less of their money because they essentially pay state welfare money to to your state and yet those cities do more with it you get all jealous how come they have nice things and you don't.

      There are sound arguments for state rights. Yours is not one of them. This issue is not one of them. Keep being anti-federalist. You want have a federal soon anyways, because there will once again be nothing holding the states together or enforcing fair rules amongst them.

    42. Re:States' Rights by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Republicans are for states rights, unless the states pass laws they don't like.

      Democrats are for states rights, unless the states pass laws they don't like.

      Republicans seem more about the rights of rich people and big business and well most anything that helps them get their way.

      We need to get rid of the electoral college and bring back 1 person 1 vote, at least for president. Republicans will say it isn't fair to changes things so that the small states don't get a larger say than their population dictates. They are of course lying.

      Hypocrisy abounds. I've seen a lot more of it on the republican side in the last couple of decades. States having NN rules is fair game, like it or not. They have their own laws for road travel don't they? Admittedly they are all pretty close, but the laws do vary..

    43. Re:States' Rights by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You forgot that people are only anti-federalist when the feds do something they don't like, but all for the Feds to exert their power to prevent states form doing something they don't like.

      You say people, but do you actually have any examples of that which weren't from Republicans trying to take the war on drugs back to the way it was in the 80's?

    44. Re: States' Rights by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That idiocy seems to be a constant meme here. What exactly is "the resources to move"? If you have feet (or wheels if you don't have feet) you can move. Might it be inconvenient or require you endure some relatively inconsequential suffering to move? Yes, but that's life. During the Great Depression people with effectively no resources moved across the country in an age when travel was even more expensive and difficult than it is now.
      Heck in the present day people from nations which have standards of living drastically below any American still manage to enter the United States illegally many undergoing real hardships and we're suppose to feel sorry for people who despise living in California or Texas and won't move because they're unable to come up with money for a moving van or might have to do without a cell phone for a couple of months?

    45. Re:States' Rights by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So this should apply to same-sex marriage then as well? I'm all for States rights, but sometimes they can't pick and choose.

    46. Re:States' Rights by mi · · Score: 1

      Greater scope of authority as duly granted by the sovereignty of the people.

      Utterly irrelevant to the point at hand. Like I said, there is not argument for States to regulate communications, that would not also apply to HOAs.

      Ouch, zing, mi, you lost in one.

      I won. You had a chance to offer a counter-example, and failed it — demonstrating your hypocrisy.

      Ah, that's a different discussion, and the ultimate reason is that...

      Sure, the typical hypocritical explanation: "its complicated".

      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    47. Re:States' Rights by DulcetTone · · Score: 1

      The issue for me is not whether an idea originates locally or federally. The issue is that the better idea should prevail.

      Liking good things is not a position that should be marginalized on account of political jurisdiction.

      --
      tone
    48. Re:States' Rights by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 1

      The issue for me is not whether an idea originates locally or federally. The issue is that the better idea should prevail.

      Liking good things is not a position that should be marginalized on account of political jurisdiction.

      However, one person's good idea is a bad idea to another; and in the US the Federal law trumps state or local laws. Thus, teh tension between Federal supremacy and states' rights.

      --
      I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
  4. They get sued by the FCC. by Kenja · · Score: 1

    Part of the repeal, was that they forbade states from making their own rules.

    --

    "Have you ever thought about just turning off the TV, sitting down with your kids, and hitting them?"
    1. Re:They get sued by the FCC. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now the states just need to make a rule saying that the fed can't make rules that limit their ability to make rules.

    2. Re:They get sued by the FCC. by Midnight+Thunder · · Score: 2

      Part of the repeal, was that they forbade states from making their own rules.

      But are they really legally allowed to do that? This wording sounds like only congress could put into law. Just on this wording alone I can see states suing the FCC.

      --
      Jumpstart the tartan drive.
    3. Re:They get sued by the FCC. by tsqr · · Score: 1

      Part of the repeal, was that they forbade states from making their own rules.

      But are they really legally allowed to do that? This wording sounds like only congress could put into law. Just on this wording alone I can see states suing the FCC.

      The principal of Federal law taking precedence over State law applies to, well, laws. Does it apply to Federal regulations as well? Should make for some interesting litigation.

    4. Re:They get sued by the FCC. by H3lldr0p · · Score: 2

      This is, or was, being sorted out in a lawsuit between AT&T and the FCC over the FCC's overriding the anti-muni broadband laws in Tennessee. The FCC lost the first round in federal court, with the court saying the FCC's regulations didn't carry the same precedence as federal laws do. See Ars' coverage: https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2016/08/in-blow-to-muni-broadband-fcc-loses-bid-to-overturn-state-laws/

      With that in hand, it should be a pretty easy time for the states to argue that the FCC can't limit their ability to give the ISPs additional rules to go by within the state's borders. In fact that was the regulatory scheme for years and why the credit card companies fought to get themselves declared to be regulated by the federal government only.

    5. Re:They get sued by the FCC. by Shotgun · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The ability of the states to implement taxes is not abridged, though.

      Notwithstanding anything recorded in the Federal Registry, any person, collection of persons, or legal entity providing internet protocol communication services within the borders of Californian shall be taxed yearly for the market value of any equipment the the Attorney General determines is being used to throttle packet rates based upon the packets origin.

      --
      Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
      Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
    6. Re:They get sued by the FCC. by Kenja · · Score: 1

      That's up to the courts, which are currently stacked towards "yes they can".

      --

      "Have you ever thought about just turning off the TV, sitting down with your kids, and hitting them?"
    7. Re:They get sued by the FCC. by Green+Mountain+Bot · · Score: 1

      But there is no federal law forbidding states from implementing their own net neutrality rules. That was conjured from whole cloth by Pai et all.

    8. Re: They get sued by the FCC. by PoopJuggler · · Score: 1

      Thanks for regurgitating the information that was already in TFS

    9. Re: They get sued by the FCC. by PoopJuggler · · Score: 1

      I like it! And to prevent cheating they should also require ISPs to sign an affidavit stating they do not throttle, so that when it's discovered they do then somebody goes to jail.

  5. Nothing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because the peers get to decide what net neutrality means, not ISPs.

    1. Re:Nothing by HiThere · · Score: 1

      That may well depend. What if the laws are taxes on throttled traffic. If they challenge taxes in court the decision might not be what your are predicting. Governments are known to seize property for non-payment of taxes before the court case has been decided. Also check out eminent domain...I don't think that they want to go there, either of them.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    2. Re:Nothing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      History didn't begin with the Internet. State and municipal taxation of communication systems and companies is subject to the federal government generally and the FCC in particular where no end of precedent has been set via radio, television and telephone cases over the past 100 years. The Federal government and its regulatory agency have consistently prevailed in these cases. CA et al. aren't going to resurrect Obama's NN with clever taxes. Further, there is a whole interstate commerce can of worms that will strangle this in the cradle. Eminent domain is a prerogative of the Federal government as well; it is derived from the powers enumerated in the US constitution.

      You're grasping at straws. The sooner you stop it and seek feasible approaches the better. I'm actually on your side; I want the common carrier model to prevail and I want ISPs to compete for subscribers based on performance, not rent seek content providers. But we won't get their playing regulatory games or futilely devolving into 50 sovereign Internets. The people on this side of the argument need to grow the fuck up and win in Congress, with laws.

  6. English as a foreign language? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But lawmakers in New York and California aren't aiming to be exceptions to the national rules; they're looking to, in effect, create their own.

    They're explicitly "aiming to be exceptions" if they "create their own".

  7. Well, Mr. Regulator... by CRB9000 · · Score: 1

    Well, Mr. Washington State Regulator, as you see by these logs, we have not traffic restrictions within the State of Washington. That is the extent of your jurisdiction? Yes, it is. Oh, you want to know what happens once it crosses your State line? That is no matter of yours. Oh, you want to sue us? We'll see you in court, you have no right to tell us how the signal flows once it exits your State.

    1. Re:Well, Mr. Regulator... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And if all 50 states implement the conditions after the first set of court cases sort out Federal vs. State rights?

      Once one state puts the rules in place and they stand, most states will probably follow CA and NY example.

    2. Re:Well, Mr. Regulator... by HiThere · · Score: 1

      Welllll....yes and no. All states will probably put in regulations of that type...but they'll all be different.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    3. Re:Well, Mr. Regulator... by Dragonslicer · · Score: 1

      Well, Mr. Washington State Regulator, as you see by these logs, we have not traffic restrictions within the State of Washington. That is the extent of your jurisdiction? Yes, it is. Oh, you want to know what happens once it crosses your State line? That is no matter of yours. Oh, you want to sue us?

      "Nope, we don't want to sue you. Contract bid rejected."

  8. Re:celebration by DickBreath · · Score: 1

    You are correct in suggesting that a celebration results from some states having net neutrality regulations to protect their citizens. Especially when it affects other states.

    --

    I'll see your senator, and I'll raise you two judges.
  9. "certain" by SuperKendall · · Score: 0

    "This would mean they couldn't block or slow down certain web traffic"

    If we're really talking about Net Neutrality, why the word certain instead of having the phrase cover all web traffic?

    I'lll tell you why, it's because "certain other" websites would be REQUIRED to be blocked.

    That is simply the inevitable result of government regulations of internet content (see: Germany).

    Enjoy your censored internet, brought to you in the name of "net neutrality".

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:"certain" by Smidge204 · · Score: 2

      "Certain web traffic" because the concern - well founded by historical behavior, I might add - is that ISPs will selectively slow or block access to services in order to either extort more money or to put up barriers to competition.

      For example, your startup video streaming service competes with Verizon's video on demand? Well your traffic will count towards Verizon's data caps while their own traffic does not (letting them charge more from their customers) and *your* traffic in particular will be throttled or interrupted unless you pay extra.

      See: Portugal's tiered internet structure, various lawsuits against Comcast, Verizon, AT&T and others over the past decade.

      It has nothing to do with the potential for government censorship - that can happen any time for any reason with or without Net Neutrality rules. Instead, by opposing Net Neutrality, you are advocating that corporations be allowed to censor whenever it benefits them.
      =Smidge=

    2. Re:"certain" by Obfuscant · · Score: 1

      For example, your startup video streaming service competes with Verizon's video on demand?

      You are paying for Verizon's VOD as part of your Verizon bill. You aren't paying for Netflix data as part of your Verizon bill. That service requires bandwidth, and thus to provide the service you have paid Verizon for, they can't count that bandwidth against you. You aren't paying Verizon for the Netflix service, so the data that happens does count against your data service cap.

      and *your* traffic in particular will be throttled or interrupted unless you pay extra.

      Sorry, but a data cap doesn't automatically mean your data is interrupted. Only after you reach the cap. But you got all the data you paid for.

      This is the counter to your argument.

      Instead, by opposing Net Neutrality, you are advocating that corporations be allowed to censor whenever it benefits them.

      Explain how a NN law in California stops Comcast of Iowa from not letting packets from an Iowa company on the net, thus effectively blocking subscribers to Comcast of California from getting access to them. Here's the secret you might not know. Comcast is already split up into separate companies to deal with state regulation.

      This is why NN is an interstate issue and needs to be dealt with at that level.

      It's also a bit disingenuous to claim that a federal agency is supposed to deal with this and then demand that states do it instead. Pick one.

    3. Re:"certain" by Smidge204 · · Score: 1

      You are paying for Verizon's VOD as part of your Verizon bill.

      That's one way to look at it, I suppose. Another way to look at it is Verizon is giving their own service a free ride. FiOS does not (currently) have data caps or throttling that I've encountered, so there is no argument to be made here that they're trying to save costs on bandwidth or justifying offering free VoD to FiOS customers because it's part of a package. There is no distinction between traffic used to stream video from Verizon's service or Netflix's service, other than Verizon could increase their profits if something were to make Netflix less competitive.

      In a fair and neutral internet, the cost to watch a streamed movie would cover the cost of the bandwidth - you pay a Netflix service fee, and that fee covers the cost of their bandwidth (and other expenses). I pay my ISP service fee and that covers the cost of bandwidth with Verizon on my end. Without network neutrality, Netflix stands to become much less reliable and also more expensive because Verizon can abuse their position as ISP to stifle their competition... and VoD will suddenly not be free anymore.

      Reminds me of how the major selling point of Cable TV was that it was commercial free. Then it was mostly commercial free with some premium channels (extra cost above base service costs) being commercial free. Now even the premium channels you're paying extra for run ads...

      Sorry, but a data cap doesn't automatically mean your data is interrupted.

      Never said anything about data caps. "Zero rating" if data is another issue that becomes a problem without NN but I'm speaking to quality of service in that quote.

      Explain how a NN law in California stops Comcast of Iowa from not letting packets from an Iowa company on the net, thus effectively blocking subscribers to Comcast of California from getting access to them.

      It doesn't, and that's kind of the problem with the state-level approach. We seem to agree on this point, at least.
      =Smidge=

    4. Re:"certain" by Obfuscant · · Score: 1

      That's one way to look at it, I suppose.

      That's the way it is, so that's a reasonable way to look at it. You're buying a service. Just like buying a bus ticket to Las Vegas is buying a service, and you expect the bus to go all the way to the destination. A data cap on the Verizon VoD service would be like a bus ticket that includes only a limited amount of gas for the bus. The gas required to get there is part of the service you bought from the bus company.

      Contrast that with buying a hypothetical "bus pass" that includes a set number of miles but no set destination. You get on the bus to Las Vegas but oops, you run out of miles before you get there. That's what buying a service from Netflix for video but only data service (with a cap) from Verizon is like.

      I pay my ISP service fee and that covers the cost of bandwidth with Verizon on my end.

      That's right. With a cap. And you pay Netflix for the service of streaming video, which does not include the data from Verizon to get it to you. You've paid Verizon for a limited amount of bandwidth.

      and VoD will suddenly not be free anymore.

      It never was free. You either pay Verizon for the service, or you pay Netflix for the service. How can it "not be free anymore" when it has never been free?

      Reminds me of how the major selling point of Cable TV was that it was commercial free.

      This fucking nonsense again. No, cable TV was never sold as "commercial free". Cable TV began life as and has always included the retransmission of OTA broadcast services, which contain commercials. (The only OTA that has ever promised "no commercials" was PBS, and they now carry a lot of them.) Very few specific and limited cable-delivered networks (such as HBO) could promise "commercial free" because they controlled the content. The local cable company does not control the content of the cable networks it carries. If that content provider has commercials, you get commercials. What do you expect the cable company to do when a content provider inserts a commercial, go to black for four minutes or more? Really?

      Please, stop spreading this nonsense.

      Never said anything about data caps.

      You said:

      Well your traffic will count towards Verizon's data caps

      That's not referring to data caps?

  10. State level is sufficient. by Gravis+Zero · · Score: 1

    The problem isn't random parts of the internet being slowed down, it's your local ISP slowing you down. Regulation on intrastate traffic is sufficient to get basic net neutrality. ISPs would really have to go out of their way to screw you over which is just asking for trouble.

    --
    Anons need not reply. Questions end with a question mark.
    1. Re:State level is sufficient. by Obfuscant · · Score: 1

      it's your local ISP slowing you down. Regulation on intrastate traffic is sufficient to get basic net neutrality.

      I just did a traceroute on netflix.com. Packets travel from a network in my state to a network in a neighboring state before icmp is blocked. If the network in my neighboring state decides to throttle netflix packets, then yes, indeed, they will be throttled in my state too, even if my "local ISP" isn't doing anything to cause it.

      ISPs would really have to go out of their way to screw you over which is just asking for trouble.

      If by "going out of their way" you mean "operate the border gateway in a state with lax NN laws", I agree. Maybe throw in the already existing "corporate structuring so that your local ISP isn't the same company as the one that runs the border gateway, so any laws covering your local ISP don't actually mean anything".

  11. Liberal Leaning? by jellomizer · · Score: 1

    Granted you just need 51% to be leaning. But New York has about 1/3 of its representatives as Republican, and it is nearly 50/50 split for the Local government elected officials. Outside of the City there is a good red streak in upstate. California isn't that much different.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    1. Re:Liberal Leaning? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A government of the patches of dirt, by the patches of dirt, and for the patches of dirt

  12. Is that a problem? by Okian+Warrior · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You forgot that people are only anti-federalist when the feds do something they don't like, but all for the Feds to exert their power to prevent states form doing something they don't like.

    Is that a problem?

    I was under the impression that the governments (both federal and local) should work for the benefit of the people, and that a big problem with governments as they are now is: that they don't.

    Why is it bad that the people always favor things that they would like?

    (Yes, there are corner cases like slavery and discrimination, but these only get changed when a majority wants them to change. We only gave women the vote in 1920 when a majority thought it was appropriate. Net Neutrality is not one of those corner cases.)

    1. Re:Is that a problem? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fun fact: women in New Jersey could vote back before the 1800s.

    2. Re:Is that a problem? by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      Well, I agree that there should be a MAJOR reform over the way the feds have abused the Interstate Commerce clause to expand their powers where they frankly should not be....

      I think fights against things like the federal prohibition against marijuana and such, for example...should be overturned. I mean, we had to get a constitutional amemdment to prohibit alcohol, and another one to legalize it again....yet, the stroke of a pen created the drug schedule and pot is on the top level?

      How does that work?

      I'd love to see states band together and fight this one, especially if they can show the product is grown ONLY for their state legally...

      However, while I cheer the efforts for keeping Net Neutrality, I don't think the states can win it this way....the internet crosses state lines and so much commerce on it...I think federal regulation over it does fit the intent of the interstate commerce powers of the feds.

      I'd like to see federal overreach be addressed, but I think you gotta pick your battles on that.....

      States should get their congress critters to make Net Neutrality laws we want....and not have a bureaucracy dictate things that can be changed when the next political wind changes direction....

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    3. Re:Is that a problem? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is that a problem?

      Yes. It's a recipe for conflict. Surely you understand human nature enough to realize that?

      Why is it bad that the people always favor things that they would like?

      You should have asked "How" instead. As for that, try the history of slavery in the US(especially citizen abductions and the Fugitive Slave Act), as well as the abuses towards the Indian tribes, the nullification crisis, and more.

      Yes, there are corner cases like slavery and discrimination, but these only get changed when a majority wants them to change. We only gave women the vote in 1920 when a majority thought it was appropriate. Net Neutrality is not one of those corner cases.

      Indeed, the repeal of Net Neutrality is a blatant example of an oligarchic power changing the rules to suit its own gain, regardless of who gets hurt. Oddly similar to the actions of slave owners and proponents of discrimination.

      It isn't a majority case at all. The majority is being ignored.

    4. Re:Is that a problem? by ArhcAngel · · Score: 1

      But they still can't pump their own gas!

      --
      "A person is smart. People are dumb, panicky dangerous animals and you know it." - K
    5. Re: Is that a problem? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The 18th Amendment was about mandating prohibition, it was a constraint upon Congress and the States, rather than simply an empowerment. And its repeal nonetheless retained said power.

      It only removed the constraint, it did not negate the authority.

    6. Re: Is that a problem? by Immerman · · Score: 1

      21st Amendment
      Section 1. The eighteenth article of amendment to the Constitution of the United States is hereby repealed.

      That would seem to pretty well repeal any authority bestowed by it as well, would it not? That power was not actually relinquished is not surprising, but it no longer has a legal basis, as that authority came from

      18th Amendment
      Section 2. The Congress and the several States shall have concurrent power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation.

      --
      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
    7. Re:Is that a problem? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's a problem because if you support a loophole to ram through something you support, that loophole still exists for the other side to ram through something you hate.

      Loopholes don't care who is doing the ramming, the friggin whores. ;)

    8. Re:Is that a problem? by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      On the surface they're complaining about the method or process, but what they really mean is that they don't like the result.

      Not really hard to understand.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    9. Re:Is that a problem? by nine-times · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Why is it bad that the people always favor things that they would like?

      I think the point that "Registered Coward" was trying to make is that you have a bunch of "anti-federalists" who claim to object to actions by the Federal government on principle, but who will then happily endorse Federal action when it's in favor of their own pet politics. Basically, he's accusing people of hypocrisy.

      Like you have people who are pro-gun, who don't like the idea of the Federal government doing any gun control because it's "Federal overreach". They want gun regulations, if there are any, to be set by the state. They argue that it makes more sense because the culture around guns and the need for a gun in Wyoming may be very different than in Washington D.C., so the people in Washington shouldn't make rules for Wyoming. Ok. Fair enough. I wouldn't necessarily say that's the end of the discussion, but it's a valid point.

      But then those same people will propose a Federal law mandating that a gun permit from any state should be honored in all states. Basically, if Wyoming allows any random idiot without training to carry a concealed weapon, they want the Federal government to intervene and tell every other state to allow those same idiots to carry a concealed weapon. It's still the Federal government trying to override the state's decisions on gun control, but when the Federal government is overriding the states in a way they like, they're fine with it. Ergo, the objection to "Federal overreach" is not based on any principle. It's really just that they don't like what the federal government is doing, so they're making up fake "principles" for rhetorical purposes.

      Not that there aren't genuine libertarians and anti-federalists, but a lot of the "libertarians" aren't libertarians, and the "anti-federalists" aren't opposed to federal action. A lot of them are a bunch of crybabies who are making up nonsense because they aren't getting their way.

    10. Re: Is that a problem? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      21st Amendment

      Has three sections, the second of which retained said authority, even by some interpretations expanded it. Well, you might wriggle around with the manufacturing (and technically exportation was left off...but that's covered under treaty now anyway), but it in no way abnegated the lawmaking authority vis-a-vis intoxicants.

      Even Clarence Thomas wouldn't make an argument about that.

    11. Re:Is that a problem? by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 0

      Net neutrality *can* be thought of as one of those corner cases, since it subsidizes pornography, which is a form of slavery.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    12. Re:Is that a problem? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why is it bad that the people always favor things that they would like?

      I think the point that "Registered Coward" was trying to make is that you have a bunch of "anti-federalists" who claim to object to actions by the Federal government on principle, but who will then happily endorse Federal action when it's in favor of their own pet politics. Basically, he's accusing people of hypocrisy.

      Like you have people who are pro-gun, who don't like the idea of the Federal government doing any gun control because it's "Federal overreach". They want gun regulations, if there are any, to be set by the state. They argue that it makes more sense because the culture around guns and the need for a gun in Wyoming may be very different than in Washington D.C., so the people in Washington shouldn't make rules for Wyoming. Ok. Fair enough. I wouldn't necessarily say that's the end of the discussion, but it's a valid point.

      But then those same people will propose a Federal law mandating that a gun permit from any state should be honored in all states. Basically, if Wyoming allows any random idiot without training to carry a concealed weapon, they want the Federal government to intervene and tell every other state to allow those same idiots to carry a concealed weapon. It's still the Federal government trying to override the state's decisions on gun control, but when the Federal government is overriding the states in a way they like, they're fine with it. Ergo, the objection to "Federal overreach" is not based on any principle. It's really just that they don't like what the federal government is doing, so they're making up fake "principles" for rhetorical purposes.

      Not that there aren't genuine libertarians and anti-federalists, but a lot of the "libertarians" aren't libertarians, and the "anti-federalists" aren't opposed to federal action. A lot of them are a bunch of crybabies who are making up nonsense because they aren't getting their way.

      Totally agree with you but accusing humans of hypocrisy is like calling the desert dry. While there is the occasional outlier it's essentially a truism at this point.

    13. Re: Is that a problem? by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      Only if you think that marijuana and heroin are "intoxicating liquors", which is what the Eighteenth and Twenty-First addressed.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    14. Re: Is that a problem? by Immerman · · Score: 1

      You mean:
      Section 2: The transportation or importation into any State, Territory, or possession of the United States for delivery or use therein of intoxicating liquors, in violation of the laws thereof, is hereby prohibited.

      Yeah I saw that, pretty close to section 1 of the 18th Amendment.
      After one year from the ratification of this article the manufacture, sale, or transportation of intoxicating liquors within, the importation thereof into, or the exportation thereof from the United States and all territory subject to the jurisdiction thereof for beverage purposes is hereby prohibited.

      What I do not see is any analog to 18.2, which would give them the authority to *enforce* that prohibition.

      --
      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
    15. Re: Is that a problem? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What I do not see is any analog to 18.2, which would give them the authority to *enforce* that prohibition.

      That's not a problem that the Supreme Court has, in fact, the implication is that such statement is not necessary since the power to enforce said laws is not removed by the mere repeal of the 18th. So in effect, a lack of restatement serves as well.

      In any case, you cannot argue that the 21st removed the power by express provisions.

    16. Re: Is that a problem? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope, no need for that quandary, the question is a matter of authority for such regulation which is clearly not rescinded but rather acknowledged by the 21st Amendment.

      It isn't even presented as empowerment, but rather implied to exist already.

    17. Re:Is that a problem? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First amendment says the right to bare arms. Any other further discussion is just letting evil shoot itself in the foot. If you will accept nonsense then take it straight up the ass @nine-times. That is just how humanity deals with speculative bean counters whom cannot see the larger picture. We push you down where you want to be and route around you. There is a saying most popular on Slashdot that needs mentioning time and again. If you take guns away then only criminals will have guns.

    18. Re: Is that a problem? by Immerman · · Score: 1

      How exactly do you figure that the power is not removed by the repeal of the amendment that granted the power?

      --
      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
    19. Re: Is that a problem? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So it is that easy? I keep telling people that certain pesky amendments need to be re-amended...

    20. Re: Is that a problem? by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      And that was applied to "intoxicating liquors" in specific. I don't see anywhere in the Constitution that gives the Feds the authority to regulate drugs in general, only their interstate commerce (which covers a lot of the illegal drug market, but not all).

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
  13. Stop this nonsense... No it's not by TFlan91 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "The internet doesn't lend itself cleanly to state lines. It could be difficult for Comcast or Verizon to accept money from services seeking preferential treatment in one state, then make sure that its network didn't reflect those relationships in places where state lawmakers forbade them, said Geoffrey Manne, executive director of the International Center for Law & Economics, a research group."

    No. It's not "difficult" for Comcast, Verizon, etc to know where their property is and under what jurisdiction it is. It's not "difficult" at all.

    You can't have your cake (we don't know what going on on our networks) and eat it too (we know exactly who is using our networks, pay up).

    1. Re:Stop this nonsense... No it's not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Indeed. While the details of transmissions require very intentional packet inspection to make sense of, every regional switch under any ISP can easily log aggregate packet routing, down to source IP and destination IP.
      More relevantly to the "concern" you quoted, there is no reason a major ISP could not add network infrastructure for "fast lane" agreements that only connects to states and counties which agreed to allow service-side prioritization deals. There is already a lot of decision making in packet routing, having one switch added to regions that allow a fastlane that just does a lookup on a destination table to decide whether to use the T8 line or the WiFi mesh for that transmission is trivial compared to the rest of the routing stages. Having one at the other end to decide if the return packets get to use the enormous fiber-optic bundle or have to use the DSL grid (based on customer location) still adds effectively nothing to the costs or overhead.

    2. Re:Stop this nonsense... No it's not by HiThere · · Score: 1

      This all depends on the precise wording of the laws...plural.

      OTOH, the Supreme Court, IIRC, once decided that a farmer growing marijuana on his own land for personal use came under the interstate commerce clause.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    3. Re:Stop this nonsense... No it's not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The interstate commerce clause was annihilated in Wickard v. Filburn. The interpretation they took in that case was that the commerce clause gave the federal government the ability to regulate anything that could affect interstate commerce, even in preventing it. So the farmer growing marijuana for his own use is thus not growing crops on that land, thus depriving the interstate market of crops that could be sold across state lines, thus allowing the fed to stop him.

    4. Re:Stop this nonsense... No it's not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Difficult is the wrong word. "Irrelevant" is more like it. All they need to do is a) throttle all ingress traffic or not have any ingress in states with net neutrality (this is neutral), b) provide interconnects in states that don't have net neutrality, and c) throttle only unpaid ingress on those interconnects. Once it's on their networks, it's easy to treat everything neutrally again. The effect of the non-neutral interconnects will reach states with net neutrality, but no net neutrality violations will happen within those states, so it won't matter.

    5. Re:Stop this nonsense... No it's not by Obfuscant · · Score: 1

      No. It's not "difficult" for Comcast, Verizon, etc to know where their property is and under what jurisdiction it is. It's not "difficult" at all.

      When the "property" being regulated is internet packets, yes, it is certainly hard to know what jurisdiction they fall under. I can be standing in the middle of Kansas and have an IP address from Mexico, for example. Are my outgoing packets subject to Kansas law regarding NN, and how do you tell just by looking at them? If I am providing a service you pay for and the ISP in Mexico throttles them, how do you tell the difference between the throttling being done in Mexico or by your local ISP? And how do your state laws on NN deal with Mexico? And how does Kansas deal with enforcing their NN laws against a company based in Mexico?

  14. Nothing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    None of them will actually create any net neutrality LAWS.

    At best they might have some suggested (we really mean it this time!) rules.

    And none of them will address the cable company monopolys either.

  15. -1, Troll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As a point of grammar, an unbound certain with an unbound they is intended to mean any.

  16. Re:Everyone loses. by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

    I am american and %100 opposed to job killing net neutrality.

    Hey! I am %100 american too, comrade! Za zdorovje!

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  17. Smuggling of internet will happen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just like cigarettes in low tax states get smuggled to high tax ones, there will be VPNs to neutral states and immigration to net neutral states by tech companies, geeks and freedom lovers. Some will want having a neutral net more than a gun or marijuana.

  18. Re:Everyone loses. by Midnight+Thunder · · Score: 1

    I am american and %100 opposed to job killing net neutrality. Anything that allows for job killing net neutrality to exist is bad for country.

    I'll bite: how does it kill jobs?

    --
    Jumpstart the tartan drive.
  19. Nothing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The ISPs will ignore the state laws while they litigate in Federal court and get these laws thrown out. Communication has been a Federal prerogative since forever and the FCC and these national communication companies aren't going to sit on their hands and let CA or any other la-la land invent it's own alternative FCC.

  20. This is great! by XxtraLarGe · · Score: 2

    I am 100% in favor of Net Neutrality, the Paris Accord, Common Core and a $15 Minimum Wage in New York & California. Let them lead the nation, and we'll see how well those policies work out. That's the idea behind federalism, where the states can be labs for democracy.

    --
    Taking guns away from the 99% gives the 1% 100% of the power.
    1. Re:This is great! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'll be in favor of a state level Paris Accord the day CO2 stops at state borders.

    2. Re:This is great! by Obfuscant · · Score: 1

      I'll be in favor of a state level Paris Accord the day CO2 stops at state borders.

      Are you in favor of a national level Paris Accord even though CO2 doesn't stop at national borders?

    3. Re:This is great! by Patent+Lover · · Score: 1

      It's not about where CO2 goes, it's where it comes from.

    4. Re:This is great! by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      Why wait? Just look at Europe.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
  21. Ajit Pai, public asshole #1 by TiggertheMad · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Big business has shoved these changes through, despite the wishes of the end users. Now as a result, they aren't going to have to deal with one set of regulations, they will have to deal with 50 sets of differing regulations and the resulting lawsuits when they screw up.

    It couldn't happen to a nicer bunch of guys.

    --

    HA! I just wasted some of your bandwidth with a frivolous sig!
    1. Re:Ajit Pai, public asshole #1 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Much as I want you to be right, wouldn't this just mean that after successfully bribing, whoops, I mean lobbying the big players in DC they now just have to focus on more numerous but smaller time players who won't cost as much? And once they buy enough of them off, what, they've won?

    2. Re:Ajit Pai, public asshole #1 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Both left and right can 'probably' agree that the US is all about structured market competition...
      The Feds (motivated by campaign money) have been excellent at creating environments that grow monopolies in almost ever sector.

      This is the reason why there are only one or two ISP providers in each region instead of 10 or 12.

      Is there an IRC Channel for this topic? If not then someone should create one.

  22. No problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It could be difficult for Comcast or Verizon to accept money from services seeking preferential treatment in one state, then make sure that its network didn't reflect those relationships in places where state lawmakers forbade them

    That's a massive over-exaggeration and it's hard to believe that whoever wrote that, was being sincere.

    It would be incredibly easy for Comcast or Verizon to do that. Suppose Kansas was anarchist heaven, where ISPs were allowed to do whatever they want, but California had a law they would have to obey. Once super-easy thing that Comcast could trivially do, would be to immediately cease all business in California. Simply close, because obeying the law would be too hard. Sell their assets to someone willing to take Californians' money legally. Refund their existing customers. Just. Get. Out.

    It's that easy. What would prevent them from being able to that?

    1. Re:No problem by HiThere · · Score: 1

      But who would care if they did? There used to be lots of local ISPs, and it worked fine. Actually, better than it does with a few megaopolies. But the current group have worked hard to become universal only choices. They aren't going to give that up easily.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    2. Re:No problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It could be difficult for Comcast or Verizon to accept money from services seeking preferential treatment in one state, then make sure that its network didn't reflect those relationships in places where state lawmakers forbade them

      That's a massive over-exaggeration and it's hard to believe that whoever wrote that, was being sincere.

      It would be incredibly easy for Comcast or Verizon to do that. Suppose Kansas was anarchist heaven, where ISPs were allowed to do whatever they want, but California had a law they would have to obey. Once super-easy thing that Comcast could trivially do, would be to immediately cease all business in California. Simply close, because obeying the law would be too hard. Sell their assets to someone willing to take Californians' money legally. Refund their existing customers. Just. Get. Out.

      It's that easy. What would prevent them from being able to that?

      Without doing research I can't say anything for sure would legally prevent that but they could have long standing contacts and deals with customers, cities, business, and even the state that they can't violate. Also, they are publicly traded companies which ultimately means the board and shareholders get final say and I hope you can imagine how severely that would hurt stock prices. These companies don't JUST provide Internet. They have lots of other revenue streams, many you (and I) probably don't even know about.

      But assuming nothing above stopped it, I think you grossly underestimate the difficultly of closing a business the size of an ISP in random states. Verizon had a hell of a time sell just part of their business in a few states and they had a buyer. I would assume that if any big ISP was going to leave they all would so finding a buyer would be hard. It's not like going to the store. Do something like you're talking about is a HUGE undertaking for a company the size of Comcast or Verizon with many, many boxes to check and hoops to jump through.

  23. What Happends? by jellomizer · · Score: 1

    Well exactly what I expected would happen. Net Neutrality was a relativity simple set of rules to follow, but the ISP lobbied to get rid of them so they can make a ton of money charging fees for premium packets. However this benefit is now hampered because the ISP will need to follow different rules for each state, making it difficult for them to follow one set of rules, so it will rise their cost of business.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    1. Re:What Happends? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't worry, they'll just pass that cost on to their customers, plus a few extras fees, just in case.

  24. Here's the way US law works by Zontar_Thing_From_Ve · · Score: 1

    Federal law -> state law -> local law For example, this is why North Carolina passed its infamous "bathroom bill". Charlotte passed a non-discrimination law the state government didn't like, so the way to overcome that local law is to pass a state law. State net neutrality laws will only work if there is no overriding federal law on the subject. Someone pointed out that the FCC ruling stated that states can't pass their own net neutrality laws to get around new federal policy. It may take a court to rule on that, but basically states can't win if a court finds that the FCC decision is the equivalent of a federal law.

    1. Re:Here's the way US law works by pr0t0 · · Score: 2

      Federal law -> state law -> local law

      Yes, but only if the higher level of government has the legal authority to enact such laws over the lower level, and while the FCC is a federal agency, it does not have specific legal authority to overturn state laws. This lack of authority was unanimously upheld in the US Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit in August of 2016.

      At that time Tom Wheeler was chair and was trying to block states and municipalities from enacting local laws that prevented the growth of municipal broadband. All of the ISPs and their congress-critter shills rushed to the defense of states' rights at that time.

      In fact, Section 2 of a bill introduced to amend section 706 of the Telecommunications Act of 1996 stated: It is the sense of Congress that the Federal Communications Commission does not have the authority under section 706 of the Telecommunications Act of 1996 (47 U.S.C. 1302) to prevent any State from implementing any law of such State with respect to the provision of broadband Internet access service (as defined in section 8.11 of title 47, Code of Federal Regulations) by such State or a municipality or other political subdivision of such State.

      That was written by Rep. Marsha Blackburn(R-Tenn) who, I'll point out, has telecom services as one of her top-10 industry contributors. At that time, ISPs were desperate to try to frame this as a political issue to gain support, but 3/4 of all municipal broadband projects at that time where voted into action by communities that voted Republican. That's because whether you ride a donkey or an elephant, we all want fast internet and if the ISPs aren't going to provide it where we live, we should be able to do it ourselves. It was a serious issue for rural America, where ISPs do not want to invest. But rural America is also largely right-leaning, so those citizens weren't having it and demanding muni-broadband.

      In the end though, Wheeler and rural America lost. The ISPs were able to make the case that the FCC did not have the right to stop the states...maybe rightly so. The citizens of a state can always vote to enact or repeal state laws they feel do not serve their interests.

      So here we are again. The ISPs are once-again trying to frame this as political issue, with more success this time I might add. Only now, they are against the states' rights they so gleefully endorsed two years ago. Judging from the rhetoric I've seen, most of those against the principles of Net Neutrality do not actually understand Net Neutrality, and simply regurgitate the talking points they hear on Fox News. So it's not inconceivable that the states will lose here, despite the massive flip-flop and obvious hypocrisy.

      --
      I'm sorry, but your opinion seems to be wrong.
    2. Re:Here's the way US law works by PPH · · Score: 1

      Nobody is being told that they _have_ to comply with anything. It's just a precondition for receiving a contract from the state.

      --
      Have gnu, will travel.
  25. Ajit loses by fyngyrz · · Score: 1

    I am american and %100 opposed to job killing net neutrality. Anything that allows for job killing net neutrality to exist is bad for country.

    It's okay, Ajit, it won't kill your job. It'll just slow down the passage of fragrant grease to you and yours. You'll still have your phoney-balony job
    .

    --
    I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
  26. Re:Everyone loses. by rogoshen1 · · Score: 1

    You know, somewhere a lobbyist out there has a hungry Benz to feed, a trophy wife to clothe in Chanel, and a nose that needs constant powdering. Please, think of the lobbyists. Without these unsung heroes our nation would grind to a halt. For who else would write the legislation that keeps things humming along?

    Whenever a lobbyist loses his job, an angel loses his wings? (Fucking grammar Nazi's)

    (PS: Obduction was not a fun game. so much wasted potential.)

  27. What happens? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Courts and lawyers get busy, that's what.

  28. Bring it on by Kludge · · Score: 5, Interesting

    States and cities make decisions about which businesses get to run cables on property owned by those states and cities. There are many requirements that businesses must meet to run such cables. Why not make net neutrality such a requirement? The city or state is not regulating that business. That business is free to choose not to run their cable in the right-of-way and shit on net neutrality. But, if they want that contract, they have to meet the standards of the property owners.

    Stick that in your FCC.

  29. irony by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    lol, isn't this the kind of thing that wouldn't be permissible under net neutrality?

  30. Constitution by Tablizer · · Score: 1

    It may end up a Constitutional issue. The Constitution gives the Federal Gov't power over "interstate commerce", but not intra-state commerce. If there's a reasonable way to determine the boundaries, such as physical address of ISP subscriber, then in theory the states can enforce state-wide net-neutrality and privacy laws.

    But the Supreme Court leans Republican, meaning they may kiss up to corporations out of dogma and/or their pocketbook.

    1. Re:Constitution by sabri · · Score: 0

      It may end up a Constitutional issue.

      It is a constitutional issue. The 4th amendment protects against unreasonable seizures. Net Neutrality rules effectively seize operational control of privately owned computer networks. The government did not pay for the capex and does not pay for the opex, thus shall not have any voice in dictating how these networks shall be operated.

      --
      I'm not a complete idiot... Some parts are missing.
    2. Re:Constitution by Dragonslicer · · Score: 1

      It is a constitutional issue. The 4th amendment protects against unreasonable seizures. Net Neutrality rules effectively seize operational control of privately owned computer networks.

      Can you cite any court precedent that ruled that government regulations violate the Fourth Amendment? If that were true, the courts would have disbanded nearly every federal agency.

    3. Re:Constitution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Technically, believe it is under the fifth, as the term is "regulatory taking" is applied, though it would be a poor choice in this particu case.

    4. Re:Constitution by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      The 4th amendment protects against unreasonable seizures. Net Neutrality rules effectively seize operational control of privately owned computer networks.

      Corporations were not people and didn't have people's rights UNTIL Republicans and the like got their fingers into the law. Corporate-personhood is STILL not in the Constitution, and is only a (right-influenced) interpretation of it.

      Plus there are anti-trust issues if a consumer can only choose from say 2 ISP's: consumers are then pretty much stuck with forced bundling and other typical oligopoly evils.

      If there were say 7 or more actual choices, then the issues surrounding NN would probably take care of themselves via market forces. But the "last mile" problem mucks up entry into the field. It's economically and environmentally wasteful to have 7 different duplicate networks in each town.

      One solution would be to have a gov't or public utility wire "the last mile", and ANY provider could then hook up into the regional "nodes", and point your single connection to their network. That way providers don't need to lay gillion wires to get into the ISP and content business. That's how Vulcans would do it. Now if we can just boot the Ferengis currently in charge.

    5. Re:Constitution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the issue is that the supremacy clause of the constitution applies to LAWS not regulations made by bureaucracies.

      That is Fed Law > State Law > Fed Regulations.

    6. Re:Constitution by sabri · · Score: 1

      Plus there are anti-trust issues if a consumer can only choose from say 2 ISP's: consumers are then pretty much stuck with forced bundling and other typical oligopoly evils.

      If there were say 7 or more actual choices, then the issues surrounding NN would probably take care of themselves via market forces. But the "last mile" problem mucks up entry into the field. It's economically and environmentally wasteful to have 7 different duplicate networks in each town.

      One solution would be to have a gov't or public utility wire "the last mile", and ANY provider could then hook up into the regional "nodes", and point your single connection to their network. That way providers don't need to lay gillion wires to get into the ISP and content business.

      On this, we totally and unanimously agree, just check my other posts regarding NN here on /., where I effectively advocate the same.

      My point is: NN is bad, competition is good.

      --
      I'm not a complete idiot... Some parts are missing.
    7. Re:Constitution by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      On this [opening up competition], we totally and unanimously agree...My point is: NN is bad, competition is good.

      How about a rank:

      1. Competition with many providers
      2. Net neutrality
      3. Oligopolies running the show (limiting choices & bleeping over consumers)

      Given that it doesn't look like #1 is popular with politicians and cities for whatever reason, #2 is a better alternative than #3.

      We have 2 effective ISP choices in my well-populated city, and they both suck. One of their telemarketers once broke out in rare honestly when pressured with facts, and eventually admitted they suck, but claimed they suck less than the other guy. "We only kick you in ONE nut".

      Microsoft, pre-MS IBM, pre-Japan Detroit cars, airlines in small towns, and other oligopolies of history repeatedly prove how bad oligopolies suck. Pushers of #3 deserve Ford Pintos.

    8. Re:Constitution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is just not true. Corporations have always had people's rights. It's one of the reasons corporations exist. It's all about contracts, debts and so on. If a corporation isn't a legal person than how can it enter into a contract? If a corporation owes me money and it's not a legal person who do I go after? The corporation officers? What about if the officers at the time the corporation incurred my debt are no longer corporate officers? Am I just out of luck? No I'm not because the corporation has legal personhood independent of it's officers.
      The Supreme Court in 1886 in Santa Clara Country vs. Southern Pacific Railroad recognized the legal personhood of corporations. Pretending that Citizens United somehow created the concept of corporations having personhood rights in law is disingenuous, wrong and nothing but a left wing talking point. All that case did was attest to a corporations right, under the First Amendment, to to inform the public about it's corporate opinion on someone who happened to be a candidate by supporting a film critical to said candidate. It actually had little to do with personhood, other than to attest that a corporation had First Amendment rights, something the 1886 Santa Clara decision had already done over a hundred years before.

    9. Re:Constitution by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      If a corporation isn't a legal person than how can it enter into a contract?

      Why does it have to be a legal person to enter into a contract?

      The Supreme Court in 1886 in Santa Clara Country vs. Southern Pacific Railroad recognized the legal personhood of corporations.

      "Recognize"? You mean invented.

  31. Um... the Republican held House and Senate by rsilvergun · · Score: 0

    pass a law to override their laws. They're already working on it. They'll get a few of the 'blue dog' Democrats like Chuck Schumer & that Pelosi... thing... to sign on to it.

    If we want change, first, stop voting Republican. Time and again they've come out in favor of anti-consumer, pro-corporate policies like these. And we shouldn't even be surprised. The biggest part of their party platform is low taxes and little or no regulations. Next, go vote in the Dems primaries and kick the right wing Dems out. They're not bipartison, they're corporate sell-outs. There's a movement called "Justice Democrats" in the party right now to do just that.

    Or don't, but then stop complaining. You don't get to have it both ways. You can't have a functioning government with pro-consumer regulation where only the parts you care about are regulated. For one thing, People are too spiteful for that. If you take away the stuff that helps them they're not going to back you when you need it. Worse, they'll actively campaign against your issues since you weren't there when they needed it. We're all in this together and we all have to protect each other or we get picked apart. Like that picture of the snake you saw in grade school with the names of the 13 colonies.

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
  32. FCC will get a hard time. by Z00L00K · · Score: 1

    I think that the abolishing of the Net Neutrality has essentially caused the FCC to get a hard time trying to control the states trying to enforce the Net Neutrality by state.

    The end result may be that the FCC loses control completely and that the networks ends up being under state legislation instead.

    --
    If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
  33. Re:Everyone loses. by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

    I am american

    No you're not. No one actually believes you.

    --
    Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
  34. Cute - you think you live in a democracy by FeelGood314 · · Score: 1

    I'm going to define democracy as a means of people peacefully removing a group from power. In the USA you have only two groups and you have absolutely no way of removing both of them. New parties can't form and take power. Most of your house seats safe. Senate and presidential campaigns require an insane amount of money, organization and legal work and that's just to get a name on every ballot. The Dems and the Republicans have a complete strangle hold on probably 85% of the elected positions in the entire USA

    When was the last time a new party formed in the USA that was able to come in second in a national election?
    How equal are people's voices? Does a minimum wage worker have 1/100 the voice of Mark Zuckerberg or 1/10,000?
    Is gerrymandering legal?
    Can a politician vote on a bill that affects a friend or major donor?
    Does the USA support countries where the government changes by democratic processes more often than it opposes them for electing the "wrong" leaders?

    *Since the end of Reconstruction, there have been a total of 30 U.S. Senators, 111 U.S. Representatives, and 28 Governors that weren't affiliated with either major party. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

  35. It worked because of socioeconomic classes by H3lldr0p · · Score: 1

    It works because alcohol had always been something akin to a legal right for all classes before tea-totalers came along. Getting high off a plant, on the other hand, was looked down upon by the ruling class and mostly of the domain of the underclass. You don't need the same force of law to forbid that versus something that you know the upper classes partake of.

    1. Re: It worked because of socioeconomic classes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm a high class stoner you insensitive clod.

    2. Re:It worked because of socioeconomic classes by cayenne8 · · Score: 1

      It works because alcohol had always been something akin to a legal right for all classes before tea-totalers came along.

      Well, to be fair....pot was 100% legal up until basically Anslinger went on a rampage to try to make it illegal.

      One of his methods to try to scare people about pot and to give it a bad rap...was associating it with mexicans, and also saying it caused blacks to rape white women. But prior to his antics, I don't believe it was thought upon one way or another.

      You also had the Hearst interests in going against hemp as an industrial product that was a competitor for him.

      Pot was demonized, but only in somewhat recent history....but again, it is really no different than alcohol, so, if we had to go through constitutional amendments to prohibit and then re-legalize booze, why should it not require an amendment to prohibit pot (or most anything else for that matter) on a federal level.

      This definitely should be a states rights level legal decision.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
  36. And so what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Laws are laws. Simple as that.

  37. CalExit 2018 by liquid_schwartz · · Score: 1

    Lets just have CalExit and get it over with. Brown and crew would love nothing more than to be able to determine every facet of how Californians live without the pesky Feds.

  38. Re:Everyone loses. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When are you commies going to figure out that killing jobs is good? Jobs are bad things that drain wealth out of the economy, and technology is the cure. Scream all you want about the proletariat needing to seize the means of production, but the rest of us are working to have robots seize it faster because we don't share your dreams of central economic control and massive subsidies. Free markets are going to win.

  39. Simple answer by Chris+Mattern · · Score: 1

    They get taken to court by ISPs for attempting to regulate interstate commerce. The ISPS would probably win, too.

  40. Re:Everyone loses. by Oswald+McWeany · · Score: 1

    I am american and %100 opposed to job killing net neutrality. Anything that allows for job killing net neutrality to exist is bad for country.

    Prove it. Use all of the following words in one incoherent sentence:

    Guns,
    Trucks,
    Hell yeah,
    Burgers,
    Freedom,
    Carpet Bomb,
    Jesus,

    --
    "That's the way to do it" - Punch
  41. Democrats pretending fed laws do not apply not new by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In 1860 a new Republican, Abe Lincoln was elected and southern Democrats, outraged he might end their use of slaves, declared war attempting to split the nation in two. With the 2016 election of another Republican who threatened to cut off the supply of cheap minority labor, rich California Democrats began again talking of seceeding and they've been waging war of a sort on him.

    In the 1950s, Democrat governors pretended federal laws did not apply in their states as they kept black kids out of schools and made blacks use different restrooms and water fountains and bus seats and dining facilities etc. A Republican president named Eisenhower sent in the national guard to remind them that federal laws trump state laws when there are federal laws on a particular subject.

    Interestingly, Democrats recently pretended they believe in the supremacy of federal law because they were using it to push abortion and gay rights... but of course they blow that all apart when they turn back to their old ways on things like this net neutrality play.

    The 10th Amendment does NOT say state laws trump federal laws. It says that the federal government should only do what the consitution authorizes it to do and that everything ELSE goes to the states and the people themselves - there is no clause of the constitution that says states can override federal laws. The internet is very clearly "interstate commerce" and thus under the authority of the federal government. Governot "moonbeam" brown and his fellow circus members have no authority over the net.

  42. You can thank Bill Clinton for that by rsilvergun · · Score: 1

    he shifted the Dems right to forge an alliance that let him win the presidency. In order to maintain a separate brand the Republicans shifted right. The Dems followed suit with with candidates resulting in a country that's been moving hard right for 30 years. Roy Moore and Donald Trump are kind of the apex of all that, but Moore's sex scandal might have the kibosh on things. Here's hoping. I'd really like to join the rest of the civilized world in Single Payer health care, college and ending the wars (Drug and literal ones).

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
  43. too confusing to separate within States by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think this is getting out of hand. Neutrality setup on a per State basis means a complete mess for any ISP who operates in multiple states.

  44. Primaries by rsilvergun · · Score: 1

    vote in your primary. Almost nobody does. Next step is to allow primary voting across party lines. After that make sure every election has vote by mail. Finally make voting mandatory and decouple it from jury duty. Kill gerrymandering and switch to a parliamentary system if you want a cherry on your cake. Problem solved.

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
  45. The Empire Strikes Back! by PmanAce · · Score: 0

    The Empire State that is. ;)

    --
    Tired of my customary (Score:1)
  46. Re:Everyone loses. by Cajun+Hell · · Score: 1

    You had me at incoherent. You win, sir, this time...

    --
    "Believe me!" -- Donald Trump
  47. Those states won't have internet access anymore by naris · · Score: 1

    Then those states won't be able to use the major ISPs to connect to the internet and will have to either have their own connection or forego internet access.

  48. Re:celebration by Hemi+Roid · · Score: 1

    But the federal government doesn't need to pass laws restricting "state rights".
    Just do like they did with the drinking age...
    You want more permissive rights... then NO highway funds for you.

  49. Under 55? by rsilvergun · · Score: 1

    then say goodbye to Medicare and Social Security. Maybe you can get buy w/o SS. But when you're 65 nobody, and I mean nobody, is going to insure you. You're job will let you go if you haven't already retired to make way for somebody younger (and under a low-regulation gov't you can forget about suing for age discrimination).

    Maybe you're going to be a multi-millionaire who can buy care out of pocket. Don't count on deregulation making it cheap. It's life or death. They can charge what they want. That $2000 tax cut (which is near the maximum unless you're running a corporation) will cost you dearly in your old age.

    And when the hell did I defend Clinton and the DNC? They're a bunch of pro-choice Republicans who don't hate gay people. Did you completely miss the part about Justice Democrats? Those are the folks who will change the country for the better.

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
  50. Partisan Politics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When you go partisan, you reap partisan. Everybody suffers. How about reducing the effects of ideology and bribes from the federal regulations, talk rationally cross the relevant parties and go with the evidence? Better legal certainty leads to reduced costs and more economic activity.

  51. Ok, have fun with all that .... by King_TJ · · Score: 1

    Common Core is pretty terrible. I don't really think the Paris Accord ever meant much beyond nations stroking each other's egos and making feel-good promises they won't deliver on. Definitely not a fan of "min. wage" legislation, on the whole. (Just eliminate ALL laws trying to dictate what someone wants to offer for a particular job or task and let the chips fall where they may. If, indeed, it turns out like the naysayers sometimes warn, where everybody is reduced to earning 10 cents per hour? Ok -- that means deflation will occur when stores can't sell enough of even the most basic things because the sticker prices don't accurately reflect a realistic portion of a total wage for customers. Your $2.50 loaf of bread will become a 2 or 3 cent loaf of bread.) And net neutrality? It's a whole lot of hand-wringing about very little.

    But sure .... in most of these cases, I'd rather see individual states given the power to handle these options as they see fit. The biggest downside is that when they suffer economic failure - they tend to come crying back to the Federal govt. for financial assistance.

  52. Nothing new by argStyopa · · Score: 1

    Let's be frank: the patchwork of inapplicable neutrality rules over fifty different states is intrinsically NO DIFFERENT to the problems we face today of American congressmen or EU courts "insisting" on some Universalist application of a local law to the interwebs generally.

    Our jurisprudence and legislation do not yet comprehend the internet paradigm, not even close. This will be nothing new, and may in fact hasten recognition and contemplation of the problem.

    --
    -Styopa
  53. re: local ISPs by King_TJ · · Score: 1

    The death of the local ISP really came about only because broadband technology leapfrogged the cost of analog modems. It put all the small ISPs at an immediate disadvantage because none of them had the funds to just toss out their whole investment in 56K modem banks and analog lines, offering a high speed alternative they could deliver to people's doorsteps.

    I had personal friends who ran local ISPs out of their homes back in those days, and the only real "bridge" technology from the modem to broadband as we all know it today was ISDN service. (It still ran over existing copper wires and your ISP didn't have to make a huge investment in hardware to purchase ISDN adapters or modems that could link to one the customer purchased.)

    But almost as quickly as they could re-invest their savings or profits into ISDN gear, those 64K or 128K connection speeds were obsoleted by the big guys (cable companies, AT&T, Verizon, etc.) who started selling their FAR faster service alternatives that required their whole back-end infrastructure, lines, and other intermediate equipment to function. What was a "mom and pop" ISP really supposed to do? In some cases, they might be able to negotiate with one of the big providers to be some kind of reseller -- but then they were generally stuck charging more for service than what customers paid to bypass them as middle men.

    So they did the only thing that made any financial sense ... sold out to the big guys, who basically only bought them to take over their customer base.

  54. Not how it works - regional compacts the norm by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

    Look, I know how all of you think it's all swiss chees and a patchwork quilt, but it's really a set of Regional Compacts.

    We in the Free States - places like NY, TX, WA, OR, CA and whoever joins our 60 percent of GDP - create a basic legal framework which we all agree on.

    You in the deadender states - aka "the backwaters" - let the Feds ride roughshod over you.

    It's like how we do Renewables in the Free States that makes us more competitive than your subsidized fossil fuels, and how we do Carbon Taxes that allow us to recaptute the carbon taxes you in the deadender states already pay other countries when you buy or sell goods or services to them (they keep your carbon taxes, it's part of the transaction), while we in the Free States keep our carbon taxes and invest them locally, and pay less in carbon taxes to the other nations. Which, also, makes us more competitive than the deadender states.

    Think of it as the Hansardic League. Or the EU. You can either join and pay no taxes, or you can stay outside and pay lots of taxes to everyone else and get slower internet than we in the Free States do. We still pay less than you, and because you're not part of a Regional Compact you have no bargaining power.

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    -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
  55. It's all about the Benjamins by RogueWarrior65 · · Score: 1

    Somehow, somewhere, some government agency has a plan to tax people based on this. They're certainly not going to let an opportunity to cover their financial asses go to waste. One could argue that the price of net neutrality was eventually going to be a national sales tax. If the government controls it, the government can tax it.

  56. Re:celebration by dryeo · · Score: 1

    Why do Americans put up with that shit? I can see them setting a minimum like I believe it works here in Canada and will with marijuana (18 yrs) but here the Provinces decide on the actual age, 18 some places and 19 other places with various rules on minors drinking in the presence of their parents/guardians and such.

    --
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
  57. Oh the (unintentional) irony! by RockDoctor · · Score: 1

    But this wouldn't be the first time a large state threw around its weight in ways that reverberate beyond its borders.

    Coming from an American, complaining about the actions of other Americans!

    --
    Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
  58. Labs for democracy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm having a bit of trouble with "That's the idea behind federalism, where the states can be labs for democracy." You see, I don't think that was the idea behind federalism, at all.

    Under good circumstances this could certainly be true. However this is more like an idealized consequence. It's not really the justification for federalism.

    If I'm not mistaken, the justification for federalism are things like:

    1). Allowing local rules for local conditions;
    2). Government closer to the governed;
    3). Smaller government is usually more nimble and responsive government;
    4). Less dilution of voter desires due to smaller voter groups;
    5). A better focus by elected leaders on satisfying their constituents.

    None of this means that national government is automatically worse, or cannot do these things. However as a practical matter a very large national government certainly tends to do worse on these matters.