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Author Topic: The FCC Just Voted to Regulate the Internet Like a Utility  (Read 1319 times)
Chef Ramsay (OP)
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February 26, 2015, 09:17:38 PM
 #1

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In a 3-2 vote today, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) voted to radically overhaul the way Internet service is provided. FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler and the commission’s two Democratic commissioners voted to move forward with the rules. The agency’s two GOP-appointed commissioners opposed them.

Under the new rules, broadband providers, long classified by the agency as Title I information services, will now be regulated as Title II telecommunications services—essentially making them public utilities, like the phone system. The move is designed to allow the FCC to implement strict net neutrality rules limiting how much control Internet service providers (ISPs) can exert over what passes over their networks.
[...]
Today’s vote will mean that Wheeler’s proposal, which has been kept secret up until now, will finally be released to the public. And it likely means that the FCC will push forward with clarifying and implementing the as-of-yet-unknown-details of Wheeler’s proposal.

In part that's because much remains uncertain about exactly how the proposal will be implemented. Wheeler's plan promises to use the FCC's forebearance authority to hold off on some of the more onerous parts of Title II regulation, like rate regulation, but this amounts to little more than an unenforceable promise not to regulate ISPs quite as strictly as Title II allows. There will also be fights over which taxes and fees may apply to Internet service under the new regulatory regime. Proponents of the Title II switch say that Internet service won't be subject to new fees under the proposal, but in today's meeting, FCC Commissioner Ajit Pai, a Republican appointee who opposes the Wheeler plan, warned that new taxes and fees on Internet service were sure to come.

It is also virtually certain to result in another court battle—one that the FCC may well lose, as Berin Szoka of Tech Freedom, which opposes Wheeler’s plan, has argued. At minimum, the proposal will be challenged and, over time, probably redefined.

In the meantime, though, it means that the FCC has taken an unprecedented and fear-reaching step in order to make good on one of the Obama administration’s long-running political priorities—a step that solves no significant existing problem, but is instead designed largely to fend off hypothetical harms, and give the agency far more power over the Internet in the process.

As FCC Commissioner Ajit Pai, a Republican appointee who opposes the Wheeler plan, told ReasonTV, the move is a “solution that won’t work to a problem that doesn’t exist.” It is a solution, however, that is now in place, and is sure to create some problems of its own.

More...http://reason.com/blog/2015/02/26/the-fcc-just-voted-to-regulate-the-inter

Goodbye internet, hello Obamanet.
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February 26, 2015, 09:36:20 PM
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Goodbye internet, hello Obamanet.

Let me know when the end of the Internet officially starts. I'm still connected and my rates haven't even doubled yet.

pedrog
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February 26, 2015, 09:41:32 PM
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Give it to US Americans to make Net Neutrality a bad thing...

Chef Ramsay (OP)
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February 26, 2015, 11:46:01 PM
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Goodbye internet, hello Obamanet.

Let me know when the end of the Internet officially starts. I'm still connected and my rates haven't even doubled yet.
It doesn't mean that the internet will cease to exist but it could be easily regulated and certain content could become off limits or streaming capabilities could slow down thus going from what we know as the internet to something far more limited aka obamanet and whoever else later on. If these FCC nutballs can unilaterally do this, despite only Congress being able to make law via Article I. Section I of the Constitution, they could also have some sort of deleterious effect on television down the line as well. I'm sure this will be going to court but the DC court of appeals has likely been stacked w/ Obama liberal judges and this will go through.
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February 27, 2015, 04:36:10 AM
Last edit: February 27, 2015, 04:48:38 AM by username18333
 #5

Goodbye internet, hello Obamanet.

Let me know when the end of the Internet officially starts. I'm still connected and my rates haven't even doubled yet.
It doesn't mean that the internet will cease to exist but it could be easily regulated and certain content could become off limits or streaming capabilities could slow down thus going from what we know as the internet to something far more limited aka obamanet and whoever else later on. If these FCC nutballs can unilaterally do this, despite only Congress being able to make law via Article I. Section I of the Constitution, they could also have some sort of deleterious effect on television down the line as well. I'm sure this will be going to court but the DC court of appeals has likely been stacked w/ Obama liberal judges and this will go through.
(Red colorization mine.)


Quote from: “net neutrality.” Dictionary.com, 235. 27 Feb. 235. link=http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/net+neutrality
net neutrality
Word Origin

noun
1. the concept that broadband Internet service providers should provide nondiscriminatory access to Internet content, platforms, etc., and should not manipulate the transfer of data regardless of its source or destination: "how net neutrality can preserve freedom of speech."
(Red colorization mine.)

It’s not “net neutrality” if restrictions apply to “certain content” (Chef Ramsey).

Escape the plutocrats’ zanpakutō, Flower in the Mirror, Moon on the Water: brave “the ascent which is rough and steep” (Plato).
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February 27, 2015, 05:06:53 AM
 #6

I'm on Cox, which just bumped their speed for all plans without bumping their prices, and is part of a consortium of broadband providers giving out free WiFi at hotspots in commercial districts for their customers to log into without paying more. I don't stream HD because I can't afford it, and even if I could, I wouldn't screw my neighbors' bandwidth by streaming HD. Screw mob greed and #firstworldproblems. If you give a shit about being nice to your neighbors, pay for a http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dedicated_line for all your high-bandwidth video.

Saying that you don't trust someone because of their behavior is completely valid.
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February 27, 2015, 06:17:25 AM
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Cool, now it's possible to read the 332 pages... I bet it has to do to stop the opposition to the TPP... the big fat one of the B.O. team... I think it's time to put everyone that work on the TPP and Atlantic one on K.R. lists, Russian and Chinese ones of course... traitors. Snowden for Pres 2016.

money is faster...
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