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How A Lobbying Firm May Have Submitted Fake FCC Comments (gizmodo.com)

Remember when dozens of Americans said their names were used for fake comments sent to America's FCC opposing net neutrality?

Now Gizmodo's taken a hard look at their past interviews with Dan Germain, the CTO of a company that helps lobbyists construct digital "grassroots" campaigns -- and at the conservative nonprofit Center for Individual Freedom (CFIF). Attempting to confirm or disprove the alleged link between CQ and CFIF, Gizmodo initiated its own review of the API data logs last week, focusing on comments from dozens of people who claim they were impersonated online.... [T]imestamps contained in the API logs reveal an unmistakable correlation between the use of CQ's API key and numerous identical comments containing CFIF's text... By comparing the API logs to comment data that the FCC had already made publicly available, Gizmodo found more than a dozen comments containing CFIF's boilerplate language... In each successful case, the comments were received by the FCC while CQ's API key was in use, with the logs reflecting deviations in the timestamps roughly equivalent to the blink of an eye...

Prior to CQ becoming a subject of interest in an ongoing criminal investigation, Germain explained at length that his company had created a platform specifically to direct comments to the FCC and that it had been operational since at least 2016.... Whereas many of the groups responsible for uploading millions of comments requested only one or two API keys, logs show that CQ, over a period of several months, requested no fewer than 114.

The article notes that identical comments using language from CFIF "are now suspected of having been uploaded using CQ's software" -- and that they were submitted to the FCC "several hundred thousand times."

4 of 44 comments (clear)

  1. Oh goody, a Net Neutrality thread by rsilvergun · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I can trot out my usual question: is this gonna change how anyone votes? Seriously, is it? /. is an older audience, so statistically there's some folks who got behind the current administration who's both responsible for these policies and actively looking the other way. And /. is a fairly well educated bunch, so we also know that our voting choices got us here.

    So once again, is this gonna change how anyone vote? I haven't gotten a single "Yeah" to day....

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
    1. Re: Oh goody, a Net Neutrality thread by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      So many scandals from this administration and still blin support from Fox news and Republicans during the Cohen hearings. Don't think this one will change a trump loyalist mind

    2. Re: Oh goody, a Net Neutrality thread by HiThere · · Score: 1, Insightful

      How can you tell? Most (relatively honest) evaluation sites find most even mildly controversial statements by any politician of any stripe are lies. Some, admittedly, more blatant and unashamed than others.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    3. Re: Oh goody, a Net Neutrality thread by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      This political fact checker agrees that all politicians lie at least some of the time, but that a small number of politicians still tell the truth most of the time.

      Do you have a survey in mind that found that "most even mildly controversial statements by any politician of any stripe are lies"?