🌎 Discussion: Online Piracy, AI, Net Neutrality, Killswitch, and Other Internet Issues II

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Ya it seems to work better on some days, I think a lot of people are using it since sometimes it's not as responsive. Also seems to work better if you do it in smaller chunks then before sending it check the preview option it has now.

Feels like pissing into the wind at this point but at least we are telling them what we think.
 
Republicans Finally Set a Date to Kill Net Neutrality



https://gizmodo.com/republicans-finally-set-a-date-to-kill-net-neutrality-1820645506

Seriously folks, call your representatives. Fax or email them. File a complaint with the FCC. If you're like me and too lazy to search to do all those things text the word "resist" to 504-09 and a script bot will do all the hard work for you. Now is the time to make your voice heard before we all get f***ed.

As you may know, the ex-General Counsel of Verizon -and current FCC head- Ajit Pai, is attempting to cover his ass with his efforts to get rid of Net Neutrality by opening public comments on the matter (on the FCC page). --But(!) he has hidden the comments section behind onerous and difficult-to-find links on the site.

Good ol' John Oliver of Comedy Central has naturally created a short-cut to take us directly to that section; it's named, appropriately, goFCCyourself.com.

Here's how to be heard on the issue, whether you're for it (ensuring ISPs continue to treat all data on the internet the same, and not block, throttle speeds, nor charge differently by user, content, viewpoint, platform, equipment type or manufacturer, etc), or against it (allowing ISPs to do so):

> Go to gofccyourself.com
> Click "Express" >(directs to https://www.fcc.gov/ecfs/filings/express)
> Fill out / Sign petition and/or comment whether you want to keep Net Neutrality as is or not.
> Click Preview and Submit


Pls share this info, and comment on/sign the FCC petition, too.
--And if you'd care to, let others know here on this thread that you've commented on the FCC page. As more people see others have signed, we'll hopefully create a larger wave that grows and grows.

If a fraction of the fanboys and girls of the Hype family make their position known, I have to believe we'll make a dent. We are Legion.

Thanks, all.
 
FCC Commissioner Blasts Her Own Agency for Withholding Evidence of Fraud

FCC Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel on Friday accused her agency of withholding evidence of fraud, further intensifying the ongoing battle over the future of net neutrality.

“To put it simply, there is evidence in the FCC’s files that fraud has occurred, and the FCC is telling law enforcement and victims of identity theft that it is not going to help,” Rosenworcel said in a statement to Gizmodo. “Moreover, the FCC refuses to look into how nearly half a million comments came from Russian sources. Failure to investigate this corrupted record undermines our process for seeking public input in the digital age.”

Rosenworcel’s heated comments come in response to a clash between the Federal Communications Commission and New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman over his office’s investigation into fraudulent comments submitted to the FCC regarding agency Chairman Ajit Pai’s plan to dismantle federal net neutrality rules.

On Thursday, Thomas Johnson, the FCC’s general counsel, sent a letter to Schneiderman. In it, he writes that the FCC has no intention of complying with requests for information that Schneiderman contends is critical to uncovering who sent the fake comments, which may have used the names and addresses of millions of American citizens without their consent.

At a joint press conference on Monday, where Rosenworcel also spoke, Schneiderman said the identities of as many as 50,000 New Yorkers may have been used without their permission in an effort to influence the outcome of Chairman Pai’s proposal to rollback net neutrality rules.

Under the Administrative Procedures Act, federal agencies are required to solicit and consider relevant comments from the public whenever issuing what’s called a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM). Pai’s NPRM would reverse rules passed in 2015 that reclassified internet service providers like Verizon and AT&T as “common carriers” under Title II of the Communications Act, putting them under the same regulatory classification as utility companies.

Under the rules that Chairman Pai and his fellow Republican commissioners intend to dismantle, ISPs are forbidden from introducing new pricing models that would charge customers different prices to access different kinds of online services. It further prevents them from blocking access or slowing down traffic to certain websites or online services while speeding up access to others.

The FCC will vote on Pai’s proposal on December 14th. It is almost certain to pass given the commission’s Republican majority.

Johnson’s letter touts the “unprecedented amount of public participation and transparency” in the FCC’s rulemaking process this year; he also says the FCC is refusing to turn over any technical information that might hint at the identities of those responsible for flooding the agency’s public comment system with stolen names and addresses. It attacks the New York Attorney General’s Office over what Johnson claims is a lack of jurisdiction and dismisses the notion that the FCC should confirm the identities of anyone who uses the system.

Johnson writes:

“As in many important rule makings, this proceeding carries the potential for advocates on either side to abuse the process to create an appearance of numerical advantage. But the Commission does not make policy decisions merely by tallying the comments on either side of a proposal to determine what position has greater support, nor does it attribute greater weight to comments based on the submitter’s identity. Accordingly, the Commission has never burdened commenters with providing identity verification or expended the massive amount of resources necessary to verify commenters’ identities. Rather than tweet on how accurately automated or form submissions reflect actual popular support, the Commission has instead focused on encouraging robust participation in its proceedings and ensuring that it has considered how the substance of submitted comments bear on the legal and public policy consequences of its actions.”​

It’s true, the number of comments for or against any proposed rule in no way influences the FCC’s decision. Only substantive comments are reviewed by the agency—voluminous papers submitted by authorities on the rules from academia to industry. Given Chairman Pai’s blanket dismissal of concerns over his plan, the only opinions he seemed interested in hearing this year came from the corporations that stand to profit most by his decision.

According to Rosenworcel, who is a Democrat, the FCC is abdicating its responsibility to uphold the legitimacy of the public-commenting process. And she did not mince words. In the statement to Gizmodo, she accused her own agency of withholding evidence of fraud:

“In a letter dated yesterday that was handed to press but is unavailable on the FCC’s website, the agency refuses to assist New York Attorney General Schneiderman’s investigation into the identity theft of a million consumers in the FCC’s net neutrality record. This letter shows the FCC’s sheer contempt for public input and unreasonable failure to support integrity in its process. To put it simply, there is evidence in the FCC’s files that fraud has occurred, and the FCC is telling law enforcement and victims of identity theft that it is not going to help. Moreover, the FCC refuses to look into how nearly half a million comments came from Russian sources. Failure to investigate this corrupted record undermines our process for seeking public input in the digital age.”​

“This is unacceptable,” added Rosenworcel. “Until we get to the bottom of this mess with a proper investigation, no vote should take place.”

Schneiderman’s press secretary, Amy Spitalnick, went further, accusing Pai and his team of obstructing a law enforcement investigation.

“It’s easy for the FCC to claim that there’s no problem with the process when they’re hiding the very information that would allow us to determine if there was a problem,” she said. “To be clear, impersonation is a violation of New York law. Thousands of people have already reported to us that their identities were stolen and used without their consent to submit comments to the FCC. The only privacy jeopardized by the FCC’s continued obstruction of this investigation is that of the perpetrators who impersonated real Americans.”

Added Spitalnick: “Everyone—especially the FCC—should want to get to the bottom of this before deciding vital public policy based on a corrupted process that seemingly involved illegal activity.”

https://gizmodo.com/fcc-commissioner-blasts-her-own-agency-for-withhold-evi-1821133018

This is just getting f***ing ridiculous at this point.
 
Ajit pai is only interested in representing the interest of ISPs like verizon he previously worked for he is yet another Bad Faith Actor nominated by Trump
 
Yeah, still not as bad as him getting mad at Twitter for removing the blue check mark from Nazis.
 
I swear... Being a smarmy ******* seems to be all that being a conservative today is about. Sorry, but that is how so very many come across. They all think they are their side's equivalent of Jon Stewart except lacking talent, humor, intelligence, empathy and morals.

No need to apologize. It's the truth. :o
 
We all know Pai is going to bend over the net neutrality rules and let Verizon and the other ISP's have their way with the internet to the detriment of the people he allegedly is meant to protect.
 
And it is official: The internet is ****ed by the ISP's and their lapdog, Pai.
 
How could this be allowed to happen? It's blatant corruption... it's not even hidden.
 
Look who is in the office of President (and Congress and the Senate). Hiding your corrupt and immoral behavior is unimportant.
 
Nobody cares anymore about hiding it. The Roy Moore thing is proof of that. We have become the Simpsons as far as their satires of society.
 
Nobody cares anymore about hiding it. The Roy Moore thing is proof of that. We have become the Simpsons as far as their satires of society.

We're just a few "Trump is going to build concentration camps of all people who aren't white" away from fulfilling Trump's campaign promise of "Make America Nazi Again." He will end his speech when that happens with "I hope I did you proud Mein Fuhrer"

:o
 
I'd say I was disappointed, but I expected this. Both this, and the republican tax bill weren't about democracy. US citizens spoke out, loudly, very loudly, against both. This was about pleasing their wealthy benefactors. Pushing a vote through in the dead of the night, so to speak, hoping people wouldn't notice. Otherwise this would have taken in more open debate, rather than ignore the debate that was there.

My only, only hope in this matter is that it turns into a short sighted matter. Since it was rushed, damn the consequences. That a democrat that actually cares about an open internet gets in after Trump. Then that ISP's abuse this ruling in stupid, headline grabbing ways. Forcing more permanent changes to prevent it from happening again.

Because the Trump WH is proving right now that so many things we hold dear, or think are safe, are easily yo-yo'd out of existence.
 
I'd say I was disappointed, but I expected this. Both this, and the republican tax bill weren't about democracy. US citizens spoke out, loudly, very loudly, against both. This was about pleasing their wealthy benefactors. Pushing a vote through in the dead of the night, so to speak, hoping people wouldn't notice. Otherwise this would have taken in more open debate, rather than ignore the debate that was there.

My only, only hope in this matter is that it turns into a short sighted matter. Since it was rushed, damn the consequences. That a democrat that actually cares about an open internet gets in after Trump. Then that ISP's abuse this ruling in stupid, headline grabbing ways. Forcing more permanent changes to prevent it from happening again.

Because the Trump WH is proving right now that so many things we hold dear, or think are safe, are easily yo-yo'd out of existence.

Simplest way to resolve this is not the whims of the next President, it's through Congress passing a law to protect it. Given that like 95% of the public on both sides of the political spectrum support this, you wouldnt think that would be too hard to do. But alas, many in our Congress are bought and paid for.
 
This isn't over yet guys. This is going to court and the NY attorney is suing. Donate.
 
Guys go look up the video about net neutrality by the channel Extremely Decent on YouTube, you'll see how ****ed we really are.
 
This isn't over yet guys. This is going to court and the NY attorney is suing. Donate.

Definitely don't panic. Even if they don't win, by the time the lawsuits are dealt with there is a very good chance the Democrats are back in charge again and will re-instate protections.
 
This is all part of Trump's master plan of Resurrecting Hitler and ruling alongside his boyhood hero as Co-Fuhrer's for the next 1,000 years.

:o
 
It would be great if the courts stop this, but either way, this needs be a central platform issue for the DNC in 2018. This is basically a giant Christmas present to them from Pai.
 

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