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FCC Emails Show Agency Spread Lies To Bolster Dubious DDoS Attack Claims: Gizmodo (gizmodo.com)

As the FCC was grappling with accusations of a fake cyberattack last spring, it intentionally misled several news organizations, choosing to feed journalists false information, while at the same time discouraging them from challenging the agency's official story, news outlet Gizmodo reported Tuesday. From the report: Internal emails reviewed by Gizmodo lay bare the agency's efforts to counter rife speculation that senior officials manufactured a cyberattack, allegedly to explain away technical problems plaguing the FCC's comment system amid its high-profile collection of public comments on a controversial and since-passed proposal to overturn federal net neutrality rules.

The FCC has been unwilling or unable to produce any evidence an attack occurred -- not to the reporters who've requested and even sued over it, and not to U.S. lawmakers who've demanded to see it. Instead, the agency conducted a quiet campaign to bolster its cyberattack story with the aid of friendly and easily duped reporters, chiefly by spreading word of an earlier cyberattack that its own security staff say never happened.

17 of 101 comments (clear)

  1. Standard Operating Procedure? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This was an administration openly elected to inflict cruelty on those that expected anything meaningful from shared governance.

    Fake information to support absurd lies is kind of their "thing".

    Outrage SHOULD be expected, but we're being trained to turn off all our mental alarms against everything important we used to care about.

    1. Re:Standard Operating Procedure? by HiThere · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Unfortunately, bad as the actions of the FCC are, they are minor in comparison to the actions of other government agencies. They may affect me more directly, but other improper actions have resulted in people dying. So attention is rightfully paid to other actions.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  2. A Weak and Dubious Attempt by MagnumChaos · · Score: 5, Insightful

    At covering up fraudulent activity. Ajit Pai and his regime is a group of criminals who are funded via ISP and telecom providers to give them precisely what they want, no matter how much it affects his constituents OR the world at large.

  3. We know who they mean by smooth+wombat · · Score: 4, Informative

    the agency conducted a quiet campaign to bolster its cyberattack story with the aid of friendly and easily duped reporters

    In other words, the Fox tabloid was complicit in this sham. What a surprise. This is the same group who is furiously backpedaling when they put out a picture of a Philadelphia Eagle's player kneeling, but used the picture for a story about players kneeling for the anthem. The player is a Christian and was doing a pre-game prayer. He even called them out for their propaganda.

    --
    We will bankrupt ourselves in the vain search for absolute security. -- Dwight D. Eisenhower
    1. Re:We know who they mean by Dragonslicer · · Score: 2

      Yup. Fox New actually apologized for their error on this one.

      They weren't sorry they did it, they were just sorry they got caught.

  4. Colons in headlines by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Once again, msmash, you're doing it wrong. The person saying the thing goes before the colon, and what they're saying goes after.

    1. Re:Colons in headlines by TimMD909 · · Score: 2

      Once again, msmash, you're doing it wrong. The person saying the thing goes before the colon, and what they're saying goes after.

      Pretty sure that msmash is a special needs or quota based hire. He/she/it has as much grasp of the English language as a man understands menstrual or birthing pains. For someone so inept at its job, I can't think of another explanation for not firing it.

  5. Holy Shit! by GerryGilmore · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The Trump administration and their Pravda - Fox News - spread stupid and easily disproven lies to advance their agenda. And me here without my heart pills handy...Damn!

    1. Re:Holy Shit! by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 2

      I wonder how many people in Russia actually voluntarily chose Pravda as their source of truth and used its content in arguments in others. Not people in power, just regular people.

      Well... You know their slogan: "Pravda: Overwhelmingly chosen as the source of Truth by regular people - who don't want to get shot by their Government."

      --
      It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
    2. Re:Holy Shit! by Gojira+Shipi-Taro · · Score: 3, Informative

      "Pravda and Izvestia, meant "the truth" and "the news" respectively, a popular saying was "there's no truth in Pravda and no news in Izvestia""

      from Wikipedia, but I learned that in Russian class in 1986 (I don't remember much else)

      --
      "Oh my God. This is terrible. This is the end of my Presidency. I'm fucked."; ~ Donald J. Trump
  6. More incompetence than conspiracy by imidan · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It seems to me that the issue is more a combination of incompetence and wishful thinking than it is an FCC conspiracy.

    John Oliver asks his viewers to go to the FCC site and post comments supporting net neutrality. To a less-competent sysadmin, that surge of traffic may look like a DDoS. He mentions the possibility and it percolates up to guys like Pai. Pai is thrilled that there is a malicious, technical explanation for this event, because it allows him to dismiss the notion that a significant proportion of people may support net neutrality. Public support for NN doesn't fit within Pai's pre-constructed worldview, so he's more comfortable not facing that possibility.

    Bots abuse the FCC comment API to manufacture millions of fake comments against NN. At the time the attack was ongoing, I happened to be looking at the FCC page, trying to make a comment of my own, and I watched the automated comments pouring in. They were coming in at multiple comments per second, all with identical text, and in alphabetical order by the name of the commentor. It was blindingly obvious that someone had just set up a script that created comments from a database of names and addresses. But Pai refuses to investigate, insisting that all of those comments are obviously legitimate. Of course all those comments are real, because they support his pre-constructed worldview. It just makes sense to him.

    And after all the incompetence and confirmation bias, after publicly stating a bunch of things that turned out to be bullshit, they don't want to investigate, they don't want anyone else to investigate, and they don't want to provide any information. Because the results will make them look either partisan or stupid. And we'll tolerate a certain amount of either of those things, but there's a chance this would go too far.

    1. Re:More incompetence than conspiracy by imidan · · Score: 2

      Again, can't it be both, and add on top of that a cover-up (conspiracy) etc to give the legal hounds something to really go after? I mean, Ajit Pai in jail would be true justice, given how hard he's trying to defraud the American people.

      Oh, certainly. It's my opinion that Ajit Pai and his pals are both partisan and stupid. (Which works okay if they do it secretly and have passable excuses.) Their behavior also makes them *look* partisan and stupid to an extent that may be beyond acceptable levels. I think they screwed this whole thing up pretty badly, perhaps in part because they underestimated the number of people who would care. They weren't expecting a John Oliver effect, they would likely never imagine that a few R senators would cross the aisle to vote in favor of NN, and they didn't think enough ordinary Americans would understand NN to make it into a midterm campaign issue.

      But have they committed a crime? I have absolutely no idea. If they have, then I think it should be investigated and we should throw the book at them. But from my naive perspective, it looks like they're just "being shitty" which isn't really a crime.

    2. Re:More incompetence than conspiracy by Gojira+Shipi-Taro · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I happen to believe that Conspiracy to Regulatory Capture of a Federal Agency should be a Capital Treason offense for all parties involved. Shame that law will never be passed.

      --
      "Oh my God. This is terrible. This is the end of my Presidency. I'm fucked."; ~ Donald J. Trump
    3. Re:More incompetence than conspiracy by Falconnan · · Score: 2

      It's going to sound odd, but incompetence can itself be conspiracy. This is a common result of appointing ideologues. Poor management breaks agencies when it is done purposefully. Give an agency a responsibility, then chip away at their enforcement powers and budget so their mission is impossible, then claim the money is wasted. Cut rules then claim this as the cause for more investment which was planned under the old rules. Fire competent people and replace with party-line soldiers who steer the boat into the reef. This is the way the game is played.

  7. Hasn't the country had enough of this shit? by Rick+Schumann · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Seriously, is there even one appointee that Trump made that is even halfway honest and above-board? Or are they all really corrupt and/or incompetent and/or have their own secret agenda that has nothing to do with protecting and serving the United States?

  8. Re:Serious breach of trust by drew_kime · · Score: 3, Funny

    First order of business: Is this report true? There need to be an unambiguous case of intentionally misleading the public, exposed by the E-mails and with no reasonable other explanation.

    But his emails!

    --
    Nope, no sig
  9. Re:Serious breach of trust by fafalone · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This is not specific to the current administration, and in fact there's a move afoot to remove, or "drain", the current situation, or "swamp", of people who abuse the system. Especially of people who abuse the system for political gain.

    Was having a bad day, needed that laugh. Trump draining the swamp, rofl, have you seen his appointees? ESPECIALLY of people who abuse it for political gain? You Trump supporters are really living in your own world.

    This is a serious breach of trust in government, and while I've generally been giving Ajit Pai a pass because of TDS, this is where we can reasonably be outraged and call for his removal.

    Really, this is what did it? The whole net neutrality thing, just TDS? The made up condition where people keep calling Trump on his bullshit instead of letting it go? Anyone who says 'Trump Derangement Syndrome' has no credibility and puts politics ahead of intellectual honesty.