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Comment Re:Don't forget this petition, its alot further al (Score 1) 217

If that's a real question: I created this petition because I thought one was needed. I have since seen the other and signed it, but frankly, and I realize I'm biased here, I think mine is better. The other petition lacks specificity - all it's asking for is "true neutrality," which the FCC and the ISPs can (and have) defined to mean whatever they want. There's also some weird language about an invading military... I don't know what that guy was thinking there.

There's no reason you can't sign both though, and you should. Here's another one that another poster in this thread mentioned:

https://petitions.whitehouse.g...

Comment Re:Be Specific (Score 1) 217

The FCC does not serve at the pleasure of the executive branch. It's an independent agency. I know that I pushed a Whitehouse.gov petition, and I do think that's important, but the congress is the only group that can control the FCC directly, through legislation, and there are midterm elections coming up. This is not hopeless.

Comment Re:Here is something suitable (Score 1) 217

This is exactly what Comcast wants to hear. "Can't you just back off and let us abuse our monopoly in peace? Where's all this laissez-faire business that we were promised?"

YOU'RE NOT HELPING. Maybe the GP is right, maybe we need to a simpler explanation for some people, sum it up in a couple sentences, but what you're suggesting is the death of the open internet.

Comment Re:Be Specific (Score 4, Informative) 217

What, you've forgotten about SOPA already? Things do happen when you spread the word widely enough.

That study about the US being an oligarchy basically comes down to the Citizen's United decision paving the way for deep and widespread corruption. And that's a huge problem, no question, bigger than net neutrality for sure. But SOPA happened just last year, well after Citizen's United was passed. The Oligarchs don't control everything, just most of it.

You are certainly right to be outraged, maybe even despondent, but your fatalism isn't going to help anything. If you're upset about the oligarchy study you have two options: find a way to leave the country - Canada is nice, and apparently they have the richest middle class in the world now. Or you can volunteer for a campaign finance amendment which would overturn the Citizen's United decision.

Don't underestimate that second option. At the very least it would be a good life experience. Maybe you'd learn something, maybe you'd accomplish something, but at the very least you'd be contributing and doing something a little different with your time.

Comment Re:What we need is more of what ails us! (Score 1) 217

What we need to fix this lack of regulation is - PROPER REGULATION!

There, I fixed it. It's easy to see where ISP regulation went wrong in this country, the first point was in 2002 when providers were deregulated and, with nothing forcing them to sell wholesale, all the competition went away and the country was divided up into local monopolies. The second point was in 2005 when the FCC went the bullshit "third option" route, instead of just classifying ISPs as what they are: common carriers.

In other words, it's lack of regulation that has caused this problem and it's deregulation that keeps us from finding a market solution to the problem. You can't vote with your wallet when there's no where else to turn.

Comment Be Specific (Score 4, Informative) 217

I should have included this in the summary: when you write to the FCC or your congressmen be specific - we need to reclassify Internet providers as common carriers. If you just say you're in favor of net neutrality they'll weasel around it again. They've already tried to redefine net neutrality as whatever it is that they're doing at the moment.

Submission + - How the FCC Plans to Save the Internet By Destroying It (medium.com)

dislikes_corruption writes: Stopping the recently announced plan by the FCC to end net neutrality is going to require a significant outcry by the public at large, a public that isn't particularly well versed on the issue or why they should care. Ryan Singel, a former editor at wired, has written a thorough and fairly easy to understand primer on the FCC's plan, the history behind it, and how it will impact the Internet should it come to pass. Suitable for you neophyte parent, spouse, or sibling. In the meantime, the FCC has opened a new inbox for public comments on the decision, there's a petition to sign at whitehouse.gov, and you can (and should) contact your congressmen.

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