GK86

Member
Oct 25, 2017
18,928
Link.

The repeal of net neutrality rules will finally take effect on June 11, six months after the Federal Communications Commission voted to eliminate the rules that prohibit Internet service providers from blocking and throttling lawful Internet traffic.

The repeal will get rid of "unnecessary and harmful Internet regulations," and help spur investment in 5G and other broadband networks, FCC Chairman Ajit Pai said in a statementannouncing the effective date.

"For months, many politicians and special interests have tried to mislead the American people about the Restoring Internet Freedom Order," Pai said. "Now everyone will be able to see the truth for themselves."

"The OMB approved the transparency rule on May 2, and the FCC set June 11 as the effective date of the new framework to give providers time to comply with the transparency requirement," the FCC said today.

An official notice of the repeal's effective date will be published in the Federal Register tomorrow.

Pai has previously claimed that the net neutrality repeal is already spurring new broadband investment, but his evidence consisted mostly of deployments that were planned during the Obama administration or funded directly by the FCC before Pai was the chair. One day after the December repeal vote, Pai argued on Fox News that net neutrality supporters had been proven wrong by the fact that ISPs didn't start blocking and throttling websites immediately after the vote. He didn't mention that the rules were still in effect.

The repeal will eliminate the core net neutrality rules that prohibit blocking, throttling, and paid prioritization. It will also reclassify broadband as an information service, preventing the FCC from using its authority over common carriers to regulate broadband.

The Federal Trade Commission will take a bigger role in regulating broadband after the repeal, Pai said today. "The Federal Trade Commission will once again be empowered to target any unfair or deceptive business practices of Internet service providers and to protect Americans' broadband privacy," he said. "Armed with our strengthened transparency rule, we look forward to working closely with the FTC to safeguard a free and open Internet."

The FTC doesn't enforce actual net neutrality rules, but it could try to punish ISPs that promise to abide by net neutrality and then break those promises. ISPs could get around this simply by not making any promises or by scaling their promises back, as Comcast did last year when it deleted a "no paid prioritization" pledge from its net neutrality webpage.

FCC Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel, a Democrat who voted against repeal, blasted Pai's action today.

"This is profoundly disappointing," Rosenworcel said. "The agency failed to listen to the American public and gave short shrift to their deeply held belief that Internet openness should remain the law of the land. The agency turned a blind eye to serious problems in its process—from Russian intervention to fake comments to stolen identities in its files."


Senate Democrats are promoting a bill that would reverse the repeal and fully restore the net neutrality rules. The Senate will vote on the measure by June 12.
 

TrueSloth

Member
Oct 27, 2017
6,076
"For months, many politicians and special interests have tried to mislead the American people about the Restoring Internet Freedom Order," Pai said. "Now everyone will be able to see the truth for themselves."
This is what a movie villain would say. This is terrifying.
 

Plutone

Member
Oct 25, 2017
1,750
A victory for freedom and justice. Now, corporate special interests will no longer have an iron grip on the Internet and the American public will be more liberated than ever!

...What do you mean today's not opposite day?
 

Charpunk

Member
Oct 25, 2017
10,706
Just seeing a picture of that asshole with his smug expresssions makes me incredibly angry.
 

Deleted member 37687

User requested account closure
Banned
Jan 7, 2018
378
Will guess at&t got thete moneys worth.


Forgot any strump supporter wanna come and defend this shit probably not but im gonna keep posting this it keep track of how spinless they are.
 
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mreddie

Member
Oct 26, 2017
44,728
One day after the December repeal vote, Pai argued on Fox News that net neutrality supporters had been proven wrong by the fact that ISPs didn't start blocking and throttling websites immediately after the vote. He didn't mention that the rules were still in effect.

LOL this motherfucker tried to spin this as SEE THEY DIDN'T THROTTLE ANYTHING!*

*Not til Next Summer

UGGGGGGGGGGHHHHHHHH FUCK THIS TERM.
 

Lump

One Winged Slayer
Member
Oct 25, 2017
16,273
When net neutrality dies, the first change people will see from their ISPs (if they haven't already been affected, depending on location / ISP) is that data caps will begin to roll out. Expect a data cap push over the next 1-2 years. No more unlimited downloads for most of America. Canadians will probably say "welcome to the club."

Then of course, ISPs will "partner" with certain services that won't go against the monthly data cap. Think T-Mobile Binge-On, except for ISPs: https://www.t-mobile.com/offers/binge-on-streaming-video

4K streaming content will become more popular but data caps will barely budge. This will be by design. You better get your video from your ISP's partner or you'll run into regrettable overages.

The pieces for this future have been getting put into place for over 5 years to lead to this reality. Buckle in.
 

Tetra-Grammaton-Cleric

user requested ban
Banned
Oct 28, 2017
8,958
Can't these scumbag motherfuckers at the very least read from a different script?

The lie that deregulation is a boon for consumers has been disproven time and time again.

Just be honest: "We're going to fuck you over so some rich people get richer."
 

KadeYuy

Member
Oct 30, 2017
2,076
When net neutrality dies, the first change people will see from their ISPs (if they haven't already been affected, depending on location / ISP) is that data caps will begin to roll out. Expect a data cap push over the next 1-2 years. No more unlimited downloads for most of America. Canadians will probably say "welcome to the club."

Then of course, ISPs will "partner" with certain services that won't go against the monthly data cap. Think T-Mobile Binge-On, except for ISPs: https://www.t-mobile.com/offers/binge-on-streaming-video

4K streaming content will become more popular but data caps will barely budge. This will be by design. You better get your video from your ISP's partner or you'll run into regrettable overages.

The pieces for this future have been getting put into place for over 5 years to lead to this reality. Buckle in.

This is exactly where I see it going as well. People won't notice it either because it's not like that picture where you pay 5 bucks to use Facebook.
 

RDreamer

Member
Oct 25, 2017
14,115
It's amazing the right can crow about "special interests" without being laughed out of the fucking room. Walker rails against special interests all the time with his voice muffled up the Koch brothers' asses. Same shit here. Can't believe anyone at all buys it. Straight up 1984 doublespeak.
 

daveo42

Member
Oct 25, 2017
17,251
Ohio
The man argues hard when people attack his pocketbook. I mean his promised cushy Verzion job. Sorry, I mean his massive bonus related to dismantling Net Neutrality so it's easier for companies to screw over customers and companies that run on their networks. Shit...I actually meant his values.
 

VincentMatts

Attempted to circumvent ban with alt account
Banned
Oct 25, 2017
1,664
Canada
How such obvious corruption is allowed to happen in front of everyone's eyes is just such an embarrassment for that country
 

Fubar

Member
Oct 25, 2017
2,736
The only way the general public will learn and speak out is if/when they get their internet throttled and dismantled. And even then, half will just shrug and move on because we "rely on the internet too much anyway".
 

daveo42

Member
Oct 25, 2017
17,251
Ohio
The only way the general public will learn and speak out is if/when they get their internet throttled and dismantled. And even then, half will just shrug and move on because we "rely on the internet too much anyway".
Nah, I think people will be up in arms if they start to fuck with people's online media. You can't get people up in arms over the shit Trump does on a daily basis, but charge more for Facebook or porn? Expect murder in the streets.
 

Nokterian

Banned
Oct 25, 2017
2,528
Euroland
With net neutrality gone..it will not easy to be fixed when the next term is coming..like at all.

Also when they are going to vote next week even if it passes you still have the house and trump to deal with.
 

Cochese

Banned
Nov 14, 2017
6,960
When net neutrality dies, the first change people will see from their ISPs (if they haven't already been affected, depending on location / ISP) is that data caps will begin to roll out. Expect a data cap push over the next 1-2 years. No more unlimited downloads for most of America. Canadians will probably say "welcome to the club."

Then of course, ISPs will "partner" with certain services that won't go against the monthly data cap. Think T-Mobile Binge-On, except for ISPs: https://www.t-mobile.com/offers/binge-on-streaming-video

4K streaming content will become more popular but data caps will barely budge. This will be by design. You better get your video from your ISP's partner or you'll run into regrettable overages.

The pieces for this future have been getting put into place for over 5 years to lead to this reality. Buckle in.

You do realize Comcast and AT&T already have data caps, yes?
 

ErichWK

Member
Oct 25, 2017
3,594
Sandy Eggo
Pai argued on Fox News that net neutrality supporters had been proven wrong by the fact that ISPs didn't start blocking and throttling websites immediately after the vote. He didn't mention that the rules were still in effect.

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