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FCC Chairman Admits Russia Meddled In Net Neutrality Debate (engadget.com)

FCC Chairman Ajit Pai has admitted that around 500,000 comments submitted during the net neutrality public comment period were linked to Russia email addresses. "Pai noted in a court filing that most of the comments were in favor of net neutrality, which the FCC repealed last December," reports Engadget. From the report: The New York Times and BuzzFeed News have filed freedom of information requests in the hopes of uncovering the extent of fraudulent comments and Russian influence in the net neutrality process. Pai's filing was part of an FCC memorandum that addressed the requests, and the agency has argued that releasing the data could expose the U.S. to cyberattacks.

Pai's concession underscores how Russia's influence on U.S. democracy extends beyond headline-grabbing election interference and fake news peddling, and it also reflects the litany of issues the FCC faced during the net neutrality comment period. Over half of the almost 22 million comments came from phony, temporary or duplicate email addresses, according to a study, and reportedly only 17.4 percent of the comments were unique.

171 comments

  1. Take that in Slashdot, you are siding with Russia by SuperKendall · · Score: 0, Troll

    Pai noted in a court filing that most of the comments were in favor of net neutrality

    Most of you here on Slashdot are supporting a side Russia is strongly supporting. Doesn't that tell you anything about how wrong it is to support Net Neutrality as the FCC had it?

    Again I am all in favor of real net neutrality, of the concepts behind it - but you have all been lied to if you think the 30 page monstrosity the FCC originally had was anything like what you want. We are all better off being rid of it, being rid of something that Russia fully backed because they knew how it would screw up our internet in the long run.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  2. Lock Him Up! by Aighearach · · Score: 1

    emails!

    3.14 years solitary confinement.

  3. Shocker by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    'only 17.4 percent of the comments were unique.'

    I truly wonder what % of responses were exact copies of what John Oliver told viewers to submit on Last Week tonight.

    1. Re:Shocker by Narcocide · · Score: 1

      Yea, I kinda want that corrected-for too.

  4. i smell some bullshit. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    that number has to be much, much higher than a mere half-million. what about all the ones submitted by russian-funded bots but used non-russian email addresses and/or identities?

  5. Bears don't meddle... by wolfheart111 · · Score: 1

    THEY MAUL. :) lol

    --
    [($)]
  6. In favor of net neutrality? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I mean I remember reading that most of the duplicate comments were actually in favor of repealing net neutrality, one done in my name and in the metropolitan area even. Unfortunately my actual post is nowhere to be found, which was in favor of net neutrality and was not a template or copy paste comment. I find it hard to believe "most" of the Russian posts were in favor of net neutrality. I was going to read what Pai actually said since, surely he meant that most of the (real) posts were in favor of net neutrality, but unfortunately, the link is dead:
    https://docs.fcc.gov/public/attachments/FCC-18-156A2.pdf

    Oh well. We'll just have to vote the sons of bitches out!

    1. Re: In favor of net neutrality? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are soooo funny!

  7. Why should anyone believe this claim? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Theyve lied already. Now trying to paint support for net neutrality as russian interference.

    1. Re: Why should anyone believe this claim? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Exactly. Pai is a lying piece of shit.

  8. Re:Take that in Slashdot, you are siding with Russ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

    How do you feel about Trump since the Russians backed him?

  9. Russia meddled with the climate too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So did Iran and North Korea
    and Syrian Electric Orchestra

  10. Still won't change a thing by rsilvergun · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Net Neutrality dies in 10 days. If you want it back you'll have to vote the bums out. And that means _all_ of them. You'll need to give a super majority of NN supporters the House, Senate and then a NN supporter the presidency. Otherwise whichever chamber they hold onto (Senate probably) will just keep blocking it and eventually you'll forget about it and move on with your lives; one more freedom shot down, one more victory lost.

    --
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    1. Re:Still won't change a thing by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 1

      Or sue them. If the process used to change the regulations failed to follow proper change processes, the decision can be overturned by the courts. A good portion of the EPAs actions have been successfully challenged in this way.

      --
      Your ad here. Ask me how!
    2. Re:Still won't change a thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You Libertarian idiots are soft in the head.

    3. Re:Still won't change a thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      No, you're a retard who thinks Conservatism is still viable and alive, it's not. You're a Libertarian idiot. Nobody is forcing AT&T to be an ISP. You want to be ISP, you play by ISP rules. Just like gas stations play by gas station rules.

      Don't like it? Go open a gas station at the bottom of the ocean, or out in the middle of the desert somewhere. Well, so long, get going Libertarian idiot who thinks laws don't apply and we don't need protections.

      Fuck right off.

    4. Re:Still won't change a thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All regulations tell businesses how to run their business. This isn't lord of the flies you don't just get to do whatever. That doesn't make it fascism though.

    5. Re:Still won't change a thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The less laws you have regulating business the better for everyone. Fuck look at the Democrats trying to do Government healthcare. That fucking imploded. Good job Government! Good job retarded Democrats.

    6. Re:Still won't change a thing by meglon · · Score: 0

      That's because you're a fucking idiot that doesn't understand what fascism is. The government granted these businesses license to use public assets... they sure as fuck have the right to regulate when it comes to protecting people against the missuses of those assets.

      --
      Fascism: An authoritarian and nationalistic right-wing system of government and social organization. See also: NAZI's
    7. Re:Still won't change a thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah that's why the Republicans can't replace it, repeal it, get the courts to strike, voters to overturn it, or even get their OWN members to get rid of it. John McCain knows you dishonest faggots aren't worth shit.

      Your pretense doesn't affect reality, faggot Republicans. We're throwing you bums out. People DO want health care WITH support for pre-existing conditions. Yes, even Republicans do.

      That's why you're fucked, and when Trump gets carted off to prison along with his bitch traitor sons, they can LITERALLY get fucked too. Enjoy.

    8. Re:Still won't change a thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not the OP you're responding to, but what fucking public assets does the cable company use? Or my local FTTP provider? The utility poles? The ones installed by the local power COMPANY (not private). You might have a point if you're talking about a wireless ISP that is using radio waves, but for every other type of internet connection, there are no public assets left in it. This isn't the 1970s and it isn't ARPAnet anymore, dimwit.

    9. Re:Still won't change a thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      THE INTERNET IS PUBLIC DOMAIN, MORONS. Why you think you can carve off pieces of public domain and christen them Comcast is your OWN DELUSION. We will cure you, one way or another bitches.

    10. Re:Still won't change a thing by melted · · Score: 1

      Vote _who_ out? The FCC is not an elected body.

    11. Re:Still won't change a thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What is like being so god damn stupid?
      The FCC commissioners are all appointed by the president with the advice and consent of the senate.

    12. Re:Still won't change a thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      but what fucking public assets does the cable company use? Or my local FTTP provider? The utility poles? The ones installed by the local power COMPANY (not private).

      All of those rely on public assets. Also known as a right-of-way easement on private property (those poles are all on privately owned real estate).

      Its the same reason power companies are regulated. You knew power companies were highly regulated, right? Dimwit.

    13. Re:Still won't change a thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, you're a retard who thinks Conservatism is still viable and alive, it's not.

      Conservatism is alive and well, but as the Republicans got hijacked by extremists all conservatives left.
      The Democrats are split in conservatives like Hillary and progressives like Bernie.

      You're a Libertarian idiot.

      This we can probably agree on.

      Those who call themselves libertarian usually don't have a clue about the events that led to current regulations.
      Regulations typically aren't put in place until someone abuses their freedom.
      In any capitalistic system the nature of companies is to do whatever they can get away with for profit, either legally or by violating unenforced laws.
      If you want capitalism to work you need strong regulations because any loophole will be abused to the fullest extent.

    14. Re:Still won't change a thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not the OP you're responding to, but what fucking public assets does the cable company use?

      Tax money and land.

      They got $400 billion of tax money that was supposed to go to infrastructure but that they pocketed as profit.
      There is also the thing where they don't own the land their cables go through.

      We can also go into the whole easement procedure where it doesn't matter that you own land.
      If the cable company wants to put down a cable they have the legal right to do so without your consent.
      Even if you don't want their services they will dig through your lawn to get to the neighbor.

    15. Re:Still won't change a thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They are politically appointed.

      There is also a very clear divide between the parties when it comes to net neutrality.

    16. Re:Still won't change a thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I suppose you have a problem with not being allowed to discriminate against minorities as well.

    17. Re:Still won't change a thing by jeff4747 · · Score: 2

      The less laws you have regulating business the better for everyone.

      The quality of life in Somalia would seem to indicate otherwise.

      Fuck look at the Democrats trying to do Government healthcare

      It should be noted that the Democrats passed Bob Dole's plan for healthcare reform. Obama and company figured if they used a Republican plan, they could get a couple Republican votes. Didn't quite work out that way.

      That fucking imploded

      [Citation Required]

      Despite being a poorly-designed clusterfuck (as all Heritage Foundation plans are), the ACA has reduced the rate at which health care expenses are rising. But "Hurray! We brought down the second derivative" doesn't sell all that well politically.

    18. Re:Still won't change a thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At this point, it's time for the states that want it to override implement it.

    19. Re:Still won't change a thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      NN or weak America. In fact, just getting Dems back won't ensure NN again, so it might be NoNN+StrongUSA versus NoNN+WeakUSA. I'll take StrongUSA for a few more years before switching back please.

      captcha: redneck. Really, /.?

  11. Re:Take that in Slashdot, you are siding with Russ by msauve · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Most of you here on Slashdot are supporting a side Russia is strongly supporting. Doesn't that tell you anything about how wrong it is to support Net Neutrality as the FCC had it?"

    Huh? Why? Are you unable to think for yourself, so you just have a knee-jerk reaction that anything the Russians might be for, for any reason, you're against?

    --
    "National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
  12. Re:Take that in Slashdot, you are siding with Russ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He subscribes to the Trump theory of argument.

  13. hard to predict by bussdriver · · Score: 3, Interesting

    When it was done in such an easy to detect way one has to question the motives. If it was a state based attack, they are capable of doing a much better job than illustrating how the FCC didn't filter it's comments for duplicate emails...

    If they want to be caught on 1 level, it can undermine the side they are supporting by lowering the credibility of that side as a bunch of hackers and not REAL people. On another level it can look like the SuperKendall thinks it does because they assume you think they really are that sloppy.

    Helping the telcos only makes people upset and stand up more against the corruption; Russian tactics are the opposite. They want you to feel powerless and cynical as hell. So helping telcos cheat can do that to some degree but past a certain point it does good long term; as reforms can happen. The goal is to make reform so pointless people won't bother. Killing grassroots reform by undermining it does far more damage; getting the culture to discourage all traits that keep things functioning.

    Like having provocateurs throwing rocks at cops in a peaceful protest; encouraging the fools and nutcase fringe to unknowingly harm their side by empowering them; otherwise, they'd be largely ignored by their own side. This way protesters and cops get divided even more despite it becoming public later that only 2 people involved; or even if 1 of the two was fake.

    1. Re:hard to predict by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1, Interesting

      The goal was to create chaos and undermine democracy in the US. The fact that it was easily detected just makes it easier to prove that Pai and the FCC must have known but covered it up because it produced the result they wanted.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
  14. Ajit Pai Must Go! by BrendaEM · · Score: 1

    The United States of America must not be governed by company installed sycophants.

    --
    https://www.youtube.com/c/BrendaEM
    1. Re:Ajit Pai Must Go! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget there's a huge swath of the nation that wants this and likes what happening myself included.. He's doing a great job at the FCC and keeping government bureaucracy out of private business. We don't want the government running our lives. What your rooting for is actually a type of soft fascism where the government gets to dictate to private business what to do. Businesses can't innovate if being handicapped. If they can't innovate they can't create jobs. When you have government control over private enterprise you have stagnation and the economy does not grow. It comes down to this. With ISP's if you are purchasing a crappy product (and ISP that throttles). You have every right to vote with your pocket book. If you can't find another ISP then the blame is purely on your local municipality/government for not allowing competition at the local level (last mile) and endorsing monopolies. You should be protesting and raising holy hell at your local town council meetings and get them to allow competition into your local markets. The federal government should not be even involved in this quagmire.

    2. Re:Ajit Pai Must Go! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope, you're just another Libertarian pseudo-chatbot without an actual human brain. You can live at the bottom of the ocean and run your own internet, moron. Here? We have laws and regulations. Don't like it? Here's your snorkel bitch.

    3. Re:Ajit Pai Must Go! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can't even debate intelligibly. All you can do is name call and speak in a degrading manner. You can't win arguments or followers that way.

    4. Re:Ajit Pai Must Go! by meglon · · Score: 1, Troll

      That's because you're a fucking idiot. You want all the rights and privileges of living in this country, without having any of the responsibilities. You want to empower corporations and businesses OVER the rights of the people. THAT is Mussolini's fascism.... but i guess you're too fucking stupid to understand that.

      --
      Fascism: An authoritarian and nationalistic right-wing system of government and social organization. See also: NAZI's
    5. Re:Ajit Pai Must Go! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      You don't quite understand what fascism is then. Your getting your terms confused. When you have complete government control over private industry that's fascism. So corporations are arms of the government you could say. FCC Net neutrality is government imposed control over private industry. I am calling it a type of soft fascism. Corporations certainly don't have power over the rights of the people because in a Capitalist society buying a product is a completely voluntary transaction. What injustice or freedom was taken away when you purchased Internet access or bought a burger at McDonalds?

    6. Re:Ajit Pai Must Go! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't need you to follow, Mr. Nazi faggot traitor apologist. I need you to die.

    7. Re:Ajit Pai Must Go! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "FCC Net neutrality is government imposed control over private industry" No, YOU are confused. The internet isn't private industry, it's public domain. Taxes funded it, WE own it. Go fuck yourself Libertarian shitheads.

      Comcast's dick isn't going to suck itself, you thirsty retards. AND GET THE FUCK OFF _OUR_ HIGHWAYS TOO, THEY'RE SOCIALISM.

    8. Re: Ajit Pai Must Go! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The internet is a cooperative mesh of many different networks. The predominant way of connecting is paying a a private company for access. This is called private industry. Someone spent the time and effort to make a product to sell. It's up to you if you think that product is worth your labor to buy. If you don't think its worth your labor you don't buy it. The public domain has nothing to do with this part.

    9. Re:Ajit Pai Must Go! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Fascism is a corporate-backed response to marxism. Instead of the state controlling corporations (communism), the state is controlled by the corporations. Its why guys like Henry Ford (of Ford Motor Co) loved fascism.

      Mussolini himself said "Fascism is therefore opposed to Socialism"

      And in case you forgot, Neimoller's famous poem, the first line was:

      First they came for the socialists

    10. Re: Ajit Pai Must Go! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IT WAS STARTED by the taxpayer, maybe you're too young/ignorant to know that, and the rights are owned by the taxpayer/government because of that. That's why we call it a commons, derp. WE OWN IT. If Comcast invented a faster sub-internet of their own with completely new pipes they owned all the way, they could charge whatever they want for that service, but if it goes over the existing ad-hoc public internet then it needs to follow the rules and be traffic agnostic and respect competition from competitors who have traffic that people want to pay for.

      "Someone spent the time and effort to make a product to sell. " = the most simplistic retard level understanding of the public internet anyone could possibly come up with.

    11. Re:Ajit Pai Must Go! by noodler · · Score: 1

      Holy crap are you dim..
      In this capitalist world, if we didn't have government putting down some rules we'd all be raped by profit-hungry enterprises.
      Tell me, (just as an example) how many deaths are you willing to put up with because companies replace nutrients with cheaper carcinogenics?

      Businesses will act immoraly if there is nothing stopping them.
      And you want them to have free reign.
      What kind of idiot are you? No really. Have you thought this over?

      You want to pay companies your hard earned money so they can screw you out of even more money.

      No innovation when rules apply, you say? Now i KNOW you're an idiot.
      Ever heared the expression "necessity is the mother of all invention"?
      Innovation, true innovation, is fueled by limitations. Always has.
      In a rule-less economy the only motivation to innovate is to make more money. That's it. So the only innovation is going to be to head off the competition, sell you less and make you pay more.

      With rules in place you will make them innovate along lines so that society at least gets a little better.
      This is why this system works. This is why you americans are still alive and not contracted into slavery.
      The rules protect you from an otherwise massive rapeage by entities much larger and much more powerfull than anything you can hope to bring into the game.
      Good luck with no rules.

      "You have every right to vote with your pocket book. "
      Won't help you much if you die because you got cancer because some company thought that spraying some shit on your food will make them more money overall.
      And without rules they won't give a shit about you or your life, or the life of anyone you hold dear.

      I mean, if you want a rule-less society that bad, i actually think you should try it. See how long you can stay alive against a company (any company) that has billions in funds set aside especially for the purpose of screwing you over.

    12. Re:Ajit Pai Must Go! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your so brainwashed

    13. Re: Ajit Pai Must Go! by Killall+-9+Bash · · Score: 1

      There is no public internet anymore. You're thinking of the old ARPANET backbone AOL was shamelessly leaching off of in the 90s. It's all private now. 100%.

      --
      "Prediction: within 10 years, Windows will be a Linux distribution." Me, 7-6-2016
    14. Re:Ajit Pai Must Go! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your

      I'm normally not a grammar nazi. But damn! The stereotype of magats not knowing how to spell "you're" is ridiculously on point.

    15. Re:Ajit Pai Must Go! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fascism and communism are two sides of the same coin. Under fascism, private ownership of business is permitted, but if a business goes against the will of the party, it is reined in FAST. The owners are out on the street (or worse) and party hacks take over. The idea that fascism and communism are polar opposites was first advanced by the (Franklin) Roosevelt administration, which needed a simple excuse for why the US was backing one murderous collectivist madman in his dispute with another murderous collectivist madman. Communists and fascists fought in the streets of Europe not for ideology, but for raw power. The original poster was right. Net Neutrality IS "soft fascism." Private ownership of the networks is maintained, but the policies are set by government bureaucrats. It's not even a law. It's a regulation.

    16. Re:Ajit Pai Must Go! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Immoral people will act immorally, whether they're in business or government.

    17. Re:Ajit Pai Must Go! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The idea that fascism and communism are polar opposites was first advanced by the (Franklin) Roosevelt administration

      Yeah, you know what? I'm gonna take Mussolini's word over yours. You might have heard of Mussolini, the father of fascism? Sorry, not sorry that it conflicts with your right-wing delusions.

  15. Re:Take that in Slashdot, you are siding with Russ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    MOD UP

  16. Re:Take that in Slashdot, you are siding with Russ by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Ridiculous.

    According to the very study cited, while most of the emails might not have been legit, of the ones that WERE, fully 99.7 of them supported Net Neutrality.

    And there are a lot of VERY damned good reasons for that, too.

  17. Why would he care either way by HalAtWork · · Score: 5, Interesting

    What I don't get is why he was featured in propaganda: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=...

    Why would he want to placate people in such a transparent way and taunt people and take sides instead of taking a diligent role in objectively looking into the issues of concern, or why he would refuse to help investigate the comments.

    This truly shows how out of touch and ineffective he is.

    1. Re:Why would he care either way by meglon · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Because he's a hyper-partisan piece of shit that doesn't want to govern... he just wants power.

      --
      Fascism: An authoritarian and nationalistic right-wing system of government and social organization. See also: NAZI's
    2. Re:Why would he care either way by waibati · · Score: 1

      Correction: Obviously in touch with and effective for his once and future paymasters. FTFY!

  18. Re:Take that in Slashdot, you are siding with Russ by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 4, Informative

    Just in case that needs clarifying:

    Of the approximately 3,828,000 legitimate email comments received by FCC:

    3,816,516 were in favor of Net Neutrality.

    Only 11,484 were not.

    Obviously the numbers are subject to rounding error. But rounding error is pretty irrelevant when the majority is that overwhelming.

  19. Re: Take that in Slashdot, you are siding with Rus by Midnight+Thunder · · Score: 4, Funny

    And here is a wookie. The defence rests your honour.

    --
    Jumpstart the tartan drive.
  20. Idiot Progressives by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, net neutrality died a long time ago. Obama's CALEA takeover didn't do anything that you think you want with net neutrality, it just increased the paperwork burden of demonstrating that traffic shaping wasn't in a prohibited category.

    And no, idiots, comments on proposed rulemaking aren't a numbers game. Each unique comment must be responded to, the 300,000 copies of one idiotic leftist comment and 300,000 copies of some right-wing comment don't have any impact beyond vaguely irritating the soulless bureaucrat who gets to sort through them.

    1. Re:Idiot Progressives by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's entirely falsehoods from start to finish.

  21. I don't think lawsuits will work by rsilvergun · · Score: 3, Informative

    the courts have been packed with pro-corporate judges for 30,40 years. They'll throw in with the side of property on this one. The EPA stuff is a bit easier to grasp since the ones that have been challenged have pretty immediate implications for the water table. NN doesn't really affect them. Worst case it doubles their cable bill but that'll be more than offset by the stock they own in AT&T and Comcast going up in value.

    --
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    1. Re:I don't think lawsuits will work by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 1

      The courts aren't overturning the decisions because they were bad. They were overturning the decisions because the EPA failed at filling out paperwork/following procedures. It's a very easy ruling for a judge; you failed to follow checklist X. There is now a possibility the FCC failed to follow the right checklist.

      I'm not saying the judges don't have a bias towards corporations, but this is a pretty black-and-white procedural issue.

      The end result would probably be the FCC doing it under the correct rules, but we could delay the shitstorm a bit. That said, Pei is a lawyer (and knows too consult experts in the right types of law), so he probably got the procedures right.

      --
      Your ad here. Ask me how!
    2. Re:I don't think lawsuits will work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fruity G, aka Rudy Guiliani is also a lawyer. And yet he says and does some of the stupid legal shit. And he married his cousin (google it if you don't believe me). So just because Idjit Pie is a lawyer doesn't mean he knows how to follow the rules.

  22. FCC Chairman Ajit Pai has ALLEGED by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    FCC Chairman Ajit Pai has alleged evil Russians were involved, so as to distract you from the fact 99% of legitimate responses were in fact in favour of keeping net neutrality.

    1. Re:FCC Chairman Ajit Pai has ALLEGED by SillyBrit · · Score: 1

      Quite! Think I'd prefer to see an independant assessment of the data, rather than relying upon a statement from someone who has a record or misrepresenting the facts.

      --
      --- To save space, would readers please insert their own witty comment -here-
    2. Re:FCC Chairman Ajit Pai has ALLEGED by rtb61 · · Score: 1

      Well, do you get it, it's his excuse see. Those nasty Russians tricked him, that 1% confused him because it was all the Russians, see it was all Russia's fault, they ended net neutrality in the US, not him.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    3. Re:FCC Chairman Ajit Pai has ALLEGED by Archimonde · · Score: 1

      Yes, and that's the whole point of his manouver. Allege that there might be [some] russian votes in it. That way you poison the well/pool or whatever and as a consequence you destroy the weight behind the votes making them null and void. Good manouver, but absolutely transparent, worthless and dishonest.

      --
      Trolls are like broken clocks. They show the truth two times a day. The rest of the day they talk nonsense.
  23. Re: Take that in Slashdot, you are siding with Rus by wonkavader · · Score: 1

    I find your argument compelling.

  24. Re:Take that in Slashdot, you are siding with Russ by h33t+l4x0r · · Score: 1

    Maybe they just want us to have fast internet. For when they finally release the pee tape.

  25. Re:Take that in Slashdot, you are siding with Russ by meglon · · Score: 0

    He's a Trump sucker, so this is just his inner hypocrite coming out.

    --
    Fascism: An authoritarian and nationalistic right-wing system of government and social organization. See also: NAZI's
  26. Net Neutrality supporters are aligned with Russia by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Step 1: Find out the name of a net neutrality supporter

    Step 2: Note that named person is aligned with Russia on Net Neutrality
    '
    Michael F. Doyle is getting support from and aligned with Russia.

    Keith Ellison is getting support from and aligned with Russia

    Nancy Pelosi is getting support from and aligned with Russia

  27. Re: Take that in Slashdot, you are siding with Rus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Listen to yourself - am I to believe youâ(TM)re on the moral high ground?

  28. NN was a rule for a while by AHuxley · · Score: 1

    Did the internet improve under the new federal NN rules?

    The same approved and NN ready paper insulated wireline kept the monopoly net slow for many.
    Federal NN rules protected a set of monopoly telcos from new competition.
    Remove the federal rules and let communities innovate as they need.
    Why should every wealthy community be held back under standardized federal NN rules?

    Think of what communities can create if an existing monopoly telco will not upgrade.
    A wealthy community can ask for its own community broadband now they are free of federal rules. Free of a federally protected existing approved NN monopoly telco.
    Innovate and let advanced new networks get planned for wealthy communities that can pay for their very own community broadband upgrades.

    More federal NN rules will not build new networks.
    An existing monopoly telco might upgrade its protected network one day.
    Bring in new community broadband free of complex federal NN rules and enjoy advanced internet now.

    --
    Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
    1. Re:NN was a rule for a while by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, look, it's AHuxley checking in with his usual SLAVERY IS FREEDOM bullshit...

    2. Re:NN was a rule for a while by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're linking two entirely unrelated issues.

      There are other countries in the world that have both NN and monopolies, and NN and no monopolies but still leave the US in the dust in terms of speed.

      NN does not in anyway prevent investment, incompetence and corruption prevent investment, and that's the US' real problem. In fact, the countries with the fastest internet speeds are often the most ardent supporters of NN.

    3. Re:NN was a rule for a while by Thelaststraw · · Score: 1

      Hey brother, you got some more of that you're smoking? Must be some good shit. Because monopolies allow competition to flourish? They don't buy them out? They don't buy law makers out? They don't lower prices to drive potential competitions out of business? I want to live in the fantasy land you live in. It must be quite a happy place.

      --
      Nothing to see here, move along please.
    4. Re:NN was a rule for a while by jeff4747 · · Score: 2

      Did the internet improve under the new federal NN rules?

      Yes

      The same approved and NN ready paper insulated wireline kept the monopoly net slow for many.

      That monopoly is why you need net neutrality. Internet service can not be an efficient market because of the natural monopoly by the incumbents.

      Federal NN rules protected a set of monopoly telcos from new competition.

      [Citation Required]

      Also, two new Internet providers (AT&T and Google) started providing service to my house under Net Neutrality rules. How'd that happen if net neutrality forbade new competition?

      (Btw, they did that because their pockets are deep enough to be able to pay for the rollout despite the natural monopoly of my cable company. But you'll note Google has stopped rolling out fiber to new cities, largely due to problems caused by the incumbent's natural monopolies)

      A wealthy community can ask for its own community broadband now they are free of federal rules.

      Net Neutrality never required ISPs to serve poor areas, nor did it forbid wealthy areas from installing their own community broadband. You're thinking of the laws passed by Republicans in several states to forbid community broadband.

    5. Re:NN was a rule for a while by AHuxley · · Score: 1

      How'd that happen if net neutrality forbade new competition?
      Only two big brands AC?

      --
      Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
    6. Re:NN was a rule for a while by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      Only two big brands AC?

      Competition is competition. Your claim is Net Neutrality forbade competition.

      So, if Net Neutrality forbade competition, how'd they manage to compete?

      And again, if you want to complain about that competition not being municipal broadband, you'll need to take that up with my state's legislature, since they're the ones who forbade municipal broadband.

    7. Re:NN was a rule for a while by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      go to hell you lying god damn russian paid troll

  29. Re:Take that in Slashdot, you are siding with Russ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You should be hung for treason.

  30. Re: Take that in Slashdot, you are siding with Rus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And yet, they are. You want to complain about crude language, TRUMP supporter? That's an interesting addition to your retarded attempts at reality-treason. Get fucked traitor, Mueller is coming. Grab your ankles prisoner.

  31. Your lies have no power here, retards. Begone. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    By the way, REPUBLICAN CONGRESS passed "government healthcare" which was MODELED OFF ROMNEY'S VERSION IN MA. So you made it, you bought it, you passed it, now stfu you petulant faggot liars lol.

    Your lies have no power here, retards. Begone.

  32. I wonder the breakdown of comments by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 1

    Of non-mass spammed comments, the hugely vast majority (99.7%) were in favor of NN. So, if none of the Russian emails were in favor of NN, it would drop to only 99.2% of people were in favor. If half a percent (0.5%) of the Russian comments were anti-NN, that would leave it at 100% in favor.

    That said, the non-mass spammed numbers came from this. I hope those numbers were correct.

    --
    Your ad here. Ask me how!
    1. Re:I wonder the breakdown of comments by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the Russians were indeed behind the mass spanning of anti-NN emails, why did it take Chairman Pai a year and a half to publicly admit that. They have blocked every effort to get to the truth here. I highly doubt the bad actors he's protecting are Russian. Most likely they are from his old industry.

  33. muh Russia narrative by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's ludicrous to think Russia (the government) benefits in anyway from getting involved in the net neutrality debate.

    More than likely these are either bot accounts or just dummy emails controlled by a small number of spammers paid to post comments.

    Of course, some Russians on a personal business might post a comment as well. Maybe they are invested in one the companies, or they want net neutrality themselves. It is possible.

    1. Re:muh Russia narrative by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's ludicrous to think Russia (the government) benefits in anyway from getting involved in the net neutrality debate.

      Putin is trying to stir up the pot, not jump into it himself, fool.

    2. Re:muh Russia narrative by AHuxley · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Its great for think tanks, political NGO and the deep state news to play up all sides of Russian fiction.

      Consider the pro NN rule side with extra big government rules.
      Russia support NN rules so big federal gov monopoly can keep control over US. US POTS network stay under federal NN rule for generations.
      NN keeps the network slow for everyone equally and the NN approved cell phone voice quality stay extra robotic.
      One approved politically connected telco company supports their federally approved NN network. No community broadband competition ever.

      Think about the removing of complex federal NN rules.
      Russian support removing complex NN rules so only wealthy parts of US get good new broadband. Further divided USA as only wealthy can pay to get new telco investment as NN rules are removed.
      With protective NN removed poor areas miss out on education and computer related skills.
      Wealthy gated communities offer new non NN networks that grant access to the amazing new educational software.
      Russian created deep educational gap in USA by inducing removing of protective federal NN rules.

      The very best US think tank talking point would be that:
      Russian artists make top quality memes that support both NN and no NN at same time so USA sink quicker further in domestic partisan political debate.

      "Russia" anything is publication magic for US think tanks and political NGO's.

      --
      Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
    3. Re:muh Russia narrative by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      One approved politically connected telco company supports their federally approved NN network. No community broadband competition ever.

      Why?

      Net Neutrality has nothing to do with community broadband. Community broadband is forbidden by laws passed in several states. Not the FCC.

  34. You don't understand by melted · · Score: 1

    You don't understand. Pai is there to lay the groundwork for removal of some of the regulatory functions of the FCC and moving them to the Congress where they belong. He's there as a vivid demonstration that unelected bodies are unsuitable for regulation of what amounts to constitutional rights (speech). Shit, even elected bodies are barely suitable. They'd much rather you didn't have any of those pesky amendments, especially the first few, but thankfully for us the founding fathers foresaw that, and implemented a bear of a procedure to change anything in the Constitution.

    1. Re:You don't understand by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      You don't understand. Pai is there to lay the groundwork for removal of some of the regulatory functions of the FCC and moving them to the Congress where they belong.

      Uh....they already belong to Congress. Congress decided the way to implement these regulatory functions was to create the FCC. That's why Congress passed several laws to do so.

  35. Ha! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Jokes on them! The FCC didnâ(TM)t read *any* of the public comments regarding net neutrality!

  36. Re:Take that in Slashdot, you are siding with Russ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    3,816,516 were in favor of Net Neutrality. Only 11,484 were not.

    The chairmen of course isn't that stupid. He was just throwing out anything he could to justify his decision. Also, do not forget, Russia wasn't a Trump fan initially. That seemed to have come later. No they were just going for chaos, disruption, an inflaming tensions. In short they were doing what they could to cause us to self destruct, which, come to think of it, is likely why they became a Trump fan. The Net neutrality thing may have just been them thinking it would make it easier to keep their poison flowing with it in place. That doesn't make Net Neutrality bad, any more than a road is bad because it exists. Roads have more good uses than bad uses.

    We need to get NN back. All this crap where you get certain services without a bandwidth cap, but not others needs to go. Keep packet delivery neutral, unless the end user requests shaping, but you can't charge less money for a shaped service than a non shaped one.

  37. Re:Take that in Slashdot, you are siding with Russ by Zontar+The+Mindless · · Score: 2

    This is the best that you can come up with for the new party line? "Net neutrality is a Russian plot to destroy the Internet"? That's not even clever.

    --
    Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
  38. Re:Take that in Slashdot, you are siding with Russ by kenwd0elq · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The Russians don't back Trump, and never did. All they're trying to is stir up hate and discontent, which is exactly what you're helping to do.

    Comrade.

  39. Re:You DO realize he's going to prison for colludi by kenwd0elq · · Score: 1

    Didn't happen and won't happen. Mueller has nothing; otherwise, he would bring something other than process crime charges.

  40. Re: Take that in Slashdot, you are siding with Rus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We don't live in a democracy.Tyranny of the majority is not welcome.

  41. "were linked to Russia email addresses" by fustakrakich · · Score: 2
    --
    “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    1. Re:"were linked to Russia email addresses" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Does a random blog count as a reference nowadays?

    2. Re:"were linked to Russia email addresses" by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      If it proves a point, who cares where it comes from? Sorry to rain on your constant "RussiaGate" conspiracy theories.

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
  42. just figured out comments were linked to emails? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From: vlad@poccna.ru
    To: comments@fcc.gov
    Hello I am citizen. I am havink comment on Democratically elected process. Please Obey.

    Vlad

  43. Re:You DO realize he's going to prison for colludi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    s/process crime charges/fraud/

    There, ftfy.

  44. The real new: there was a debate by houghi · · Score: 1

    I never knew there was a debate and I understand the difference to a discussion. So the real news here was that there was a debate.
    No, he just said: i do it. He never listend to anybody and showed the world that in the US you can buy anything and anybody.

    --
    Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
  45. NN Was the Rule From the Start by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    The internet was created under defacto net neutrality. It was only after the 2005 Brand X lawsuit that net neutrality was killed. Scalia, of all people, thought the ruling in Brand X was bad law.

    So anytime anyone asks if NN was a good thing, the answer is FUCK YES, without NN the Internet would not exist, it would have just been a bunch of walled gardens AOL style.

  46. Re:Take that in Slashdot, you are siding with Russ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Either way we will never be able to have a reasonable discussion and move forward until Putin is dead.

  47. Re:Take that in Slashdot, you are siding with Russ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Also, do not forget, Russia wasn't a Trump fan initially. That seemed to have come later.

    Any source for not supporting him from the start? It doesn't go along with what I remember.

    Trump have been in owned by the Russians since he got in debt there in the 90's.
    During the 00's to 10's they used him for money laundering.

    It was probably not even his own choice to run for president.

  48. What's the difference between Putin and Telcos? by Required+Snark · · Score: 1
    Nothing.

    They both want unlimited power.

    --
    Why is Snark Required?
  49. What? by Thelaststraw · · Score: 1

    How dare the peasants speak up for themselves. They must not have, so it must be the big bad boogey man, Russia in the closet that did it. We have the peasants sufficiently cowed to do anything as brave as speak up for their freedoms. *Trying to false flag the people's will doesn't legitimize it or make it any more right.*

    --
    Nothing to see here, move along please.
  50. Re:You DO realize he's going to prison for colludi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All totally unrelated to any actual involvement with the alleged collusion.

  51. Re:Take that in Slashdot, you are siding with Russ by dwillden · · Score: 1

    Or perhaps the comments weren't "meddling" but rather were Russians in the Tech sector who actually supported the concept of Net Neutrality and commented even though they are not US Citizens. And while the FCC implementation was not perfect, as the latest iteration of neutrality rules they'd been trying to implement since the early 00's, it was far better than the nothing we have now.

    --
    I'm too lazy to compose a creative sig.
  52. www.vox.com/world/2018/9/12/17764132/ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    https://www.vox.com/world/2018/9/12/17764132/trump-russia-business-ties-mafia-putin-craig-unger

    1. Re:www.vox.com/world/2018/9/12/17764132/ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OK, that doesn't really support the idea that Russia initially was against Trump

  53. "Meddling". LOL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And the cattle suck this crap up. Where are the comments? Why are we NEVER shown any of the comments that the 'evil' Russians wrote when they "meddled" in the election of President Trump? Because obviously the fact that Trump had four to five times as many people turn up at all of his campaign speeches as Hillary did, doesn't tell us that MOST people support Trump, of course...
    This is more JEWISH bullshit, because they didn't get THEIR candidate into office.

  54. Smeller is the feller by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, Pai is a far greater "threat to democracy" than any dozen foreign states will ever be.

  55. Re:Take that in Slashdot, you are siding with Russ by Maritz · · Score: 1

    Most of you here on Slashdot are supporting a side Russia is strongly supporting. Doesn't that tell you anything about how wrong it is to support Net Neutrality as the FCC had it?

    You believe Pai's comments on this? lol. You are a stupid cunt, mate.

    --
    I do not want your cheap brainburning drugs. They are useless for work. And I am a working man today.
  56. Re:Take that in Slashdot, you are siding with Russ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Having a definite enemy you can blame for a lot of things is probably more useful for authoritarians than actual allies (given that their own country is already strong enough to support itself).
    What Trump does gives Putin the needed leverage to justify the pulling of a lot more crap in the eyes of his sympathizers and those who don't staunchly oppose him. It may even convert some of those who hate him to support him because "us vs. them" (Russia vs. America) is a way more powerful emotion than Putin opposing Russians vs. Putin.

    And no, people are not too stupid to look at China or the EU just because they're also looking at Russia. You just appear to selectively ignore all the topics about China.

  57. Re:Take that in Slashdot, you are siding with Russ by Maritz · · Score: 0

    I'll let you know when he stops antagonizing Russia.

    lol. He refuses to pull his tongue out of Putin's arsehole. Pee pee tape? Helping Trump win the election? As I said... You are an amazingly stupid cunt.

    --
    I do not want your cheap brainburning drugs. They are useless for work. And I am a working man today.
  58. Re:You DO realize he's going to prison for colludi by Cmdln+Daco · · Score: 2

    Why do people get trolled by this mediocre crapflooder?

    I'm stealing your bait, and snagging your hook in that sunken log over there.

    Have fun.

  59. Re:Take that in Slashdot, you are siding with Russ by Cmdln+Daco · · Score: 1

    Can't you be more vulgar and scatological? You're not pulling your weight, bro.

  60. Re:You DO realize he's going to prison for colludi by bobbied · · Score: 2, Informative

    Trump is about to face charges for ... (snip)

    Assuming you are talking about Trump Sr, you do realize that this is totally wrong. You CANNOT charge a sitting president with ANYTHING. DOJ regulations forbid this.

    So... If Trump Sr is about to face charges, real ones, he's going to either need to be impeached and convicted or resign office first. I don't think either of these situations is remotely possible, both politically and by Trump's personality traits. The Republicans in the Senate won't vote to convict Trump in sufficient numbers to get a conviction and Trump doesn't seem likely to resign, even under such pressure.

    Maybe, if he loses in 2020, you can charge him at 12:01 PM on January 20, 2021, or should he win reelection you will be waiting until January 20, 2025.

    So no, Trump isn't "about to face charges" (real criminal charges that is) regardless of what you believe he did. By law Mueller simply cannot bring criminal charges on a sitting president. Even if he did, the charges would be quashed by the courts, or at the very least, deferred until Trump left office. There would be no arrest, no perp walk nothing. And Mueller would be rightly chastised for doing it.

    --
    "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
  61. Re:Take that in Slashdot, you are siding with Russ by bobbied · · Score: 1

    The Russians don't back Trump, and never did. All they're trying to is stir up hate and discontent, which is exactly what you're helping to do.

    Comrade.

    Which is EXACTLY what Rosenstine's statement when he announced Mueller charging the Russian companies way back when actually SAID and if you read the charges what the Russians where accused of actually doing.

    The whole Russian effort here was to undermine the American citizen's faith in their elections and foster division among us. Why? Because a divided America is weaker and less of a threat to Russia and it's interests.

    Putin's meager investment has paid off. He hit the jackpot with Trump's election and the Democrat's scorched earth tactics in reaction to it.

    --
    "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
  62. obScooby by cascadingstylesheet · · Score: 1

    And it would have worked too, if it weren't for you meddling Russians!

  63. Re:You DO realize he's going to prison for colludi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You are right! Trump will never go to prison. Trump has broken so many wildly varying crimes that when Mueller brings his charges the Senate will simply pick one that means nothing and impeach him on that.
    "It's the only one we thought we could get everyone to agree on," they will say and smile for the cameras.
    Meanwhile, EVERYONE around el-Trump-o will either vanish back under the rocks from which they crawled or be fitted for orange jumpsuits.
    This is all a joke and even the Democrats know it. Pop the corn, pull up a chair. It's the Washington Show, folks. Free admission with citizenship.

  64. I don't believe... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    One word that $#@! head says. It wasn't Russian meddling... It was the FCC meddling trying to blame Russia.

  65. Non-unique doesn't mean invalid... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The EFF, and probably other organizations, had a form letter that one could submit (and which I, and countless others, did submit). Just because we used a form letter does not make our submissions invalid.

  66. Re:You DO realize he's going to prison for colludi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The US house of representatives certainly can investigate and bring charges of (snip) on a sitting president for the purposes of impeachment, the constitution says so.

  67. Re:Take that in Slashdot, you are siding with Russ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's funny how Russian your grammar looks. And it's also funny how you immediately pull the same strawman (people aren't really blaming Russia for everything bad, but I'm sure from your end it must look that way) and deflect attention to someone else.

  68. Re:You DO realize he's going to prison for colludi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    as we've seen from republican control of the House, investigation and charges against the sitting president don't have to have any basis in law and can be completely political in nature. According to the recent republican examples of investigation, the standard of investigation and allegation seems to be anything that benefits my party.

  69. This is as fake as it gets by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Russians" like net neutrality? For which reason, precisely? Come on. They should be in favor because it hurts USA in the long term.

  70. Re:Take that in Slashdot, you are siding with Russ by ZombieCatInABox · · Score: 0

    I'll let you know when he stops antagonizing Russia.

    Of course he does. Remember Helsinki ? He only started apparently antagonising Russia since all the criticism he received after Helsinki. Before that, he was truly Putin's little bitch. And still is. What better way to have a disfunctionnal U.S. than to have the most disfunctionnal man in the oval office ? And of course, a disfunctionnal, polarized and divided U.S. is no longer a threat to Putin's ambitions of resurecting the U.S.S.R. You can take the director out of the KGB, but you can't take the KGB out of the ex-director.

  71. Re:You DO realize he's going to prison for colludi by bobbied · · Score: 1

    The US house of representatives certainly can investigate and bring charges of (snip) on a sitting president for the purposes of impeachment, the constitution says so.

    Impeachment charges are NOT criminal charges. But you already knew that. Impeachment is by it's very nature a political action and has nothing but a passing relationship to criminal charges.

    But tis telling that you don't argue my assertion that there is exactly zero chance of a conviction in the Senate should the house actually make the stupid mistake and impeach.

    To paraphrase Dirty Harry "Go ahead punk, make my day, impeach!" It worked out so horribly well for the Republicans when they tried it during Clinton's second term, and they had him dead to rights for lying under oath.... Especially given that in this case, it's arguable that there is pretty much nothing but rumor and the vague implication that some a non-specific crime was committed by the target of your scorn. Crimes, I might add, are utterly impossible to commit because they don't exist in law (collusion) or are so specific in law that they'd be impossible to hide the proof (treason) and involve activities which are nearly impossible to obscure.

    IF it went badly for Republicans trying this with Clinton, what do you suppose will happen to Democrats? PLEASE try it, pretty please....

    --
    "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
  72. Re:You DO realize he's going to prison for colludi by bobbied · · Score: 1

    as we've seen from republican control of the House, investigation and charges against the sitting president don't have to have any basis in law and can be completely political in nature. According to the recent republican examples of investigation, the standard of investigation and allegation seems to be anything that benefits my party.

    Oh sure... They can do that.

    The House can even impeach the president because they don't like how he ties his shoes if they like.

    Impeachment is not a legal process, it's a political one and for the next two years, nay the next two election cycles at a minimum, there is nearly zero chance for an actual conviction in the Senate for Trump. Nobody votes to convict a president from their party, at least they haven't in recent history and who here thinks an impeachment will induce Trump to resign? No, he's in office for the duration. IF the Democrats impeach the duration likely becomes until January 20, 2025 because Trump will go into instant campaign mode and start ripping apart any Democrat who's head rises above the fray like he destroyed Jeb and Cruz. If you are a 2020 hopeful, you DON'T want to give Trump 2 years of running you though the media shredder and the Democrats would be well advised to not let Trump pick his opponent by doing this.

    --
    "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
  73. Re:You DO realize he's going to prison for colludi by greythax · · Score: 1

    Assuming you are talking about Trump Sr, you do realize that this is totally wrong. You CANNOT charge a sitting president with ANYTHING. DOJ regulations forbid this.

    Maybe, but the state attorneys general are fully within their rights to charge a sitting president, if such crimes were committed within their jurisdictions. The question of presidential immunity is still hotly debated, but only for crimes committed while IN office. Not those committed before taking the oath.

    Additionally, the congress has the power to indict all on it's own, and while I don't hold much hope that the repubs will do the right thing if credible allegations come out, there are a fair number of them that would love to see him out of office, and might pressure him to resign anyway, threatening impeachment.

  74. WTF by oh_my_080980980 · · Score: 2

    So out of 22 million public comments, 500,000 came from "Russian" email addresses. Seriously? How the fuck is this news.

  75. Re:Take that in Slashdot, you are siding with Russ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The RNC Platform Change committee would disagree with you...

  76. Re:Take that in Slashdot, you are siding with Russ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    dog whistles, used to distract you from the fact that the majority of fake comments during said period were against net neutrality and organized from within the borders of the US.

    I am so glad that most people can see this for what it is, FUD to distract from the fact that a regulator tried to use a fake campaign against net neutrality to kill the rules that the people always wanted so that he could advance his station within his own echo chamber.

  77. True, but that's pointless without change by rsilvergun · · Score: 1

    unless we stop voting for folks who take corporate money we're only delaying the inevitable. Heck, we're probably not really delaying it. The companies can flaunt a rule they know is on the way out the door since they can expect no enforcement.

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
  78. Re:You DO realize he's going to prison for colludi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Conspiracy to defraud the American people absolutely is a crime. Only Republican talking heads are still pushing that collusion is not a crime when that specific word isn't what anybody is actually talking about. Trump has been implicated is a whole host of actual crimes such as tax evasion, money laundering, and campaign finance violations which might just be civil unless it rises to the level of criminal. Until we hear from Mueller we won't know the extent so we can't speculate. That is on top of obstruction of justice. He hasn't testified under oath yet because that is a "perjury trap." Of course the assertion is ridiculous but so are most of the things that come out of the mouths of his lawyers especially Mr 9/11 himself. Rudy arguing that truth isn't truth is another gem.

  79. Re:Wrong, US intelligence says Trump colluded by walterbyrd · · Score: 1

    Faggot? Is that supposed to be an insult?

    Leftists are so hypocritical.

  80. Re:You DO realize he's going to prison for colludi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This happened to Nixon, you might not think that is recent history however. There was a time when Republicans actually had integrity. Modern times are so far showing that to be a thing of the past. That is why Democrats are losing, they have too much integrity and so they cast out Al Franken on allegations of minor sexual impropriety. They did that to have the high road, except it gained them nothing. As long as the American people don't vote for integrity we'll continue to see more and more politicians without it.

  81. Re:You DO realize he's going to prison for colludi by bobbied · · Score: 1

    Charge away... As I recall, Clinton very nearly escaped having to participate in discovery in a civil suit and very clearly was going to be able to defer action on a civil suit. A criminal charge of a president is even MORE likely to be legally squashed. Even when they had WJC dead to rights on perjury, the criminal action on the charge had to wait until he left office. Trump will be no different.

    Also, The Federal courts are likely to table any actual charges from any state or locality while the president is in office. The legal principle is pretty clear, the Federal Courts often override individual state court decisions and if this one hits the Supreme Court, they will, at a minimum, squash the charges until he leaves office. In short, you will have to Impeach him or wait.

    Also, if you want to light a fire under the opposition for very little actual gain, PLEASE have some stupid state or locality file charges. It will be tied up in the courts longer than Trump will stay in office and pretty much guarantee he is re-elected in 2020 (which is a near historical certainty even now.)

    --
    "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
  82. Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It is internal US problem, it concerns American consumers and doesn't affect Russia in any way. Also, if it was actual meddling attempt - why Russian email addresses?

  83. Re:Take that in Slashdot, you are siding with Russ by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1

    Most of you here on Slashdot are supporting a side Russia is strongly supporting. Doesn't that tell you anything about how wrong it is to support Net Neutrality as the FCC had it?

    Pai's highly questionable claim, and yours, tell me that opponents of net neutrality are so desperate that they're going to the same "Russia did it!" nonsense that Clintonists adopted when they lost.

    --
    Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
    You cannot wash away blood with blood
  84. Re:Take that in Slashdot, you are siding with Russ by Shaitan · · Score: 1

    This isn't a troll.. well it might have started as one the headline is trollish but there is a legitimate point in there. As it stood we had a policy that declared the absence of net neutrality to be net neutrality. This is no different than the law that was supposed to reign in the already illegal warrantless activity of the NSA that instead gave it legitimacy.

    He is hardly the first or the only one but the later Obama years were particularly egregious in this kind of behavior where the public would be upset about something and he'd support legislation with a title and spin as if it resolved the issue when the actual content reinforced and legitimized the thing people didn't want.

    The "net neutrality" the FCC had before basically legalized anything the ISPs wanted to do, no matter how not neutral it was, as long as they buried in somewhere in fine print. That isn't net neutrality. Not that Ajit Pai has any interest in actual net neutrality, but what we had wasn't net neutrality just a smokescreen that legalized the opposite.

  85. Re:Take that in Slashdot, you are siding with Russ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And Trump gladly accepted all the help they could give, including holding back the RNC email hack.

    So many dishonest social media manipulators on reddit doing the bidding of Republicans, really sickening.

  86. Re:You DO realize he's going to prison for colludi by bobbied · · Score: 1

    Politicians with actual principles?

    I'm sorry to say that BOTH sides of the isle have their issues with ethics and morals but there is a reason for this. It's a sad fact that you pretty much MUST lie, or at the very least be misleading, to get elected. With the country deeply divided and entrenched in their political perspectives, lying is the only thing that makes you electable. Well, it's one WAY to get elected I suppose, the easy way...

    Politicians who are skilled in the art of getting elected are skilled at reading the crowd and have a set of phrases that when you parse are meaningless but are focus group tested to make you THINK you heard what you want to hear (regardless of your position on the issue being discussed) or at the vary least the undecided don't here what they DON'T what to hear on the issue. It's not about how the candidate actually would vote on the question, but how they can attract the most folks by saying stuff that sounds good but not committing to a position.

    This was VERY true for the Beto v Cruz Senate race, at least for Beto. Beto had some pretty slick campaigning and tightly controlled stump speeches that where chuck full of these political speak sayings. He ran a very misleading campaign, trying to run in the middle, but when questioned off the cuff or hard pressed during a debate the "truth" often slipped out that blew the mystique behind his misleading focus group tested façade. Cruz isn't the media darling that Beto was, so such slips got largely unreported, but I saw them happen when coverage was live and unfiltered.

    By the way, just so you understand, this is EXACTLY why Trump won over Clinton. Trump isn't a skilled focus group tested speaker with political experience in blowing pleasant smelling smoke at the undecided. He's a brash plain talker who says what he's thinking, right or wrong, out loud for all to hear (Or read should you follow him on Twitter.) Some folks are tired of being lied to, or being mislead by less than upfront politicians who speak in riddles or use platitudes that don't parse to actual positions unless you want them to. Clinton was (among other things) seen as too sleazy, having flip flopped too many times on some major policy questions to be trusted to DO what she claimed. Also, IF Trump is reelected, it will be because he actually tried to DO what he campaigned on and although his mouth has not always voiced the truth, he's truly trying to fulfill his promises, in as far as he's able.

    --
    "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
  87. Re:Take that in Slashdot, you are siding with Russ by slack_justyb · · Score: 1

    Most of you here on Slashdot are supporting a side Russia is strongly supporting. Doesn't that tell you anything about how wrong it is to support Net Neutrality as the FCC had it?

    Here let me explain why that's getting you flagged Troll here. Your argument lacks any amount of depth outside of of "hey let me scare you and back that up with nothing". But wait there's more to your comment here...

    but you have all been lied to if you think the 30 page monstrosity the FCC originally had was anything like what you want

    Again, let me make a statement that has nothing in the sense of actual substance. Really? Can you please cite any single page thereof that you'd like to argue? Making statements like "your ideas suck because bad guy likes them" is pretty much akin to getting into a real debate and then just tossing out "yo mama".

    We are all better off being rid of it, being rid of something that Russia fully backed because they knew how it would screw up our internet in the long run

    This shouldn't surprise you when the obvious question that comes from that statement is "why?". And the reason why? Oh it's that boogeyman argument again. Perhaps you should try an argument with more meat and potatoes instead of "thoughts and prayers"?

    Now on to the point here. The FCC created a set of rules to abide by and the ISPs continually filed suit, really fucking long story short, these cases basically said you need the authority to enforce those rules and considering everything you have currently, Title II is it. What really needed to happen was Congress pass legislation that allowed additional enforcement authority, BUT SURPRISE Congress did nothing. So considering that Congress was content with sitting on its fat ass and doing nothing, the FCC went ahead with Title II and then moved to enforce their rules on NN. ISPs got butt hurt and began to earworm their way into the FCC's chairman to remove Title II change things so that FTC would handle the matters (which they won't since there's a long legal story there as to why they're not really going to be able to stand well in court should they challenge NN conventions in court and gosh ISPs know that), and the FCC would mostly stick to a purely service level enforcement (you have Internet or you don't but how well that Internet functions is no longer their beef).

    Blah, blah, blah. This whole thing is longer than I really care to reiterate, we have an Internet go read for yourself. But point being Congress needs to step up, they aren't go to (surprised - no one), we're fucked, the end. This, "Oh look Russia supports it, so that should blah blah blah" is a stupid comment, but considering the source of the comment, no one on this site is surprised.

    You should stick to global warming/climate change arguments, you put more effort into those. This feels like a McDonald's level of gratification for trolly comments you put out. Yeah, I get to laugh at how dense the comment is, but I feel so empty since it's such a cheaply put together argument. And "No" I don't really care to (big air quotes here)debate(/big air quotes here) NN with you in particular, because honestly it means nothing and you sure as shit aren't changing your mind about anything any time this century. So why even begin? I write my Congressional rep all the time about it, I write my shitlord Senators about it (once per month), and ultimately that's about all I can do short of breaking out pitchforks and torches, which in turn I'm saving for topics that I care a lot more about than NN. But just in case you were wondering why you were getting modded troll, which I'm pretty sure, you are not, but in the off chance you were, there you go. ;-) Cheers!

  88. Of course by McFortner · · Score: 1

    Because it would never be the US ISPs spamming the FCC with fake emails from spoofed internet addresses. Yep, never could happen. They are as clean as the newly driven snow.
    |


    Or is that the newly plowed slush?

    --
    Beware of Sales Reps bearing gifts.
  89. Re:You DO realize he's going to prison for colludi by bobbied · · Score: 1

    So, you insist on moving the goal posts AGAIN? First it was collusion, now it's something more? come on...

    What was Mueller supposed to be investigating? As I recall (and just goggled) Mueller is tasked with investigating any relationships between Russians and the Trump campaign (and any crimes uncovered during the investigation). So what is this new crime you speak of?

    Your "conspiracy to defraud the American people" means exactly what in this context? And which law are you thinking is involved? When did it happen and who did it?

    By the way, your complaint about the president not testifying under oath is premature. First, there is a lot of precedent that says the president cannot be forced to personally testify in any legal proceeding. He can do it willingly, but it's doubtful you can force it. And the "perjury" trap argument is a valid reason to not agree to answer questions under oath in person, most lawyers would agree it's a dangerous thing to do. I lived though the Clinton thing, I remember all this getting debated but unresolved way back then.

    Also, the president HAS provided any requested documentation or materials and HAS provided written answers to Mueller's questions, the latter willingly. He could have chosen to fight having to give answers and tied this up for months as the legal question of forcing a sitting president to testify under oath is far from settled law. However, he has cooperated with Mueller's investigation and provided written answers, I believe before Thanksgiving.

    This Mueller thing is about over and it's very possible he found NOTHING of import that implicates Trump in any illegal activity. I don't know, but I'm curious what you are going to do if that's what Mueller reports? Invent some new crime to investigate? Move the goal posts more? Scream at the sky? What?

    --
    "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
  90. Re:You DO realize he's going to prison for colludi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You CANNOT charge a sitting president with ANYTHING. DOJ regulations forbid this.

    Oh no, not DOJ regulations! Everyone knows that the hierarchy of laws in this country goes:

    1. DOJ regulations
    2. The Constitution
    3. Actual Legislation

    Which is why the executive branch of government is considered to be the ruling branch, with the legislative and judiciary subordinate branches.

  91. Re: Take that in Slashdot, you are siding with Rus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    His employers most likely paid a Russian astroturfing firm.

  92. Evidence by manu0601 · · Score: 1

    Russian e-mail address is poor evidence, it is so easy to sign up at big mail services either in rRussia or in US.

  93. Russians, right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Comrades Comcastki and ATanTishka.