Law Upcoming vote on Net Neutrality laws - How many times do we need to strike this shit down?

FCC plans to vote to overturn U.S. net neutrality rules in December
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The head of the Federal Communications Commission is set to unveil plans next week for a final vote to reverse a landmark 2015 net neutrality order barring the blocking or slowing of web content, two people briefed on the plans said.

In May, the FCC voted 2-1 to advance Republican FCC Chairman Ajit Pai’s plan to withdraw the former Obama administration’s order reclassifying internet service providers as if they were utilities. Pai now plans to hold a final vote on the proposal at the FCC’s Dec. 14 meeting, the people said, and roll out details of the plans next week.

Pai asked in May for public comment on whether the FCC has authority or should keep any regulations limiting internet providers’ ability to block, throttle or offer “fast lanes” to some websites, known as “paid prioritization.” Several industry officials told Reuters they expect Pai to drop those specific legal requirements but retain some transparency requirements under the order.

An FCC spokesman declined to comment.

Internet providers including AT&T Inc, Comcast Corp and Verizon Communications Inc say ending the rules could spark billions in additional broadband investment and eliminate the possibility a future administration could regulate internet pricing.

Critics say the move could harm consumers, small businesses and access to the internet.

In July, a group representing major technology firms including Alphabet Inc and Facebook Inc urged Pai to drop plans to rescind the rules.

Advocacy group Free Press said Wednesday “we’ll learn the gory details in the next few days, but we know that Pai intends to dismantle the basic protections that have fueled the internet’s growth.”

Pai, who argues the Obama order was unnecessary and harms jobs and investment, has not committed to retaining any rules, but said he favors an “open internet.” The proposal to reverse the Obama rules reclassifying internet service has drawn more than 22 million comments.

Pai is mounting an aggressive deregulatory agenda since being named by President Donald Trump to head the FCC.

On Thursday the FCC will vote on Pai’s proposal to eliminate the 42-year-old ban on cross-ownership of a newspaper and TV station in a major market. The proposal would make it easier for media companies to buy additional TV stations in the same market.

Pai is also expected to call for an initial vote in December to rescind rules that say one company may not own stations serving more than 39 percent of U.S. television households, two people briefed on the matter said.
Oh, and Comcast is already lobbying.

I'm so sick of this shit, seriously. The FCC is whoring out for Comcast and AT&T instead of ensuring that American citizens have equal access to the internet.
 
”Following today's vote, American consumers will still be able to access the websites they want to visit”
”Your Internet Thursday afternoon will not change in any significant or substantial way... nor will it be different next week, nor will it be different on a Thursday a year from now”
There was no reason to repeal net neutrality unless you were planning on something that would have violated net neutrality regulations.
 
I need net neutrality because my cat meme images are JUST AS IMPORTANT as your netflix streaming packets! In college I read about equality and fairness and ALL PACKETS deserve to be treated fairly. LOW PRIORITY PACKET LIVES MATTER.
Optimizing at the network level as opposed to the content level is akin to mandating all books be published with extremely expensive leather covers.

Only the biggest publishers can afford that. It leaves us with fewer choices in the book department, but hey, at least they've all got some fancy ass leather covers!
 
There was no reason to repeal net neutrality unless you were planning on something that would have violated net neutrality regulations.

I'm sure there is stuff ISPS want that would violate net neutrality, obviously. That doesn't necessarily translate to higher fees or restricted websites, though. There are good reasons for this and I'm glad the FCC did the unpopular, but right thing. Someone has to be a man and stand up against blind silly nerd rage about some ideological "all packets are equal" shit.
 
I'm sure there is stuff ISPS want that would violate net neutrality, obviously. That doesn't necessarily translate to higher fees or restricted websites, though. There are good reasons for this and I'm glad the FCC did the unpopular, but right thing. Someone has to be a man and stand up against blind silly nerd rage about some ideological "all packets are equal" shit.

Go back to /pol/.
 
I'm sure there is stuff ISPS want that would violate net neutrality, obviously. That doesn't necessarily translate to higher fees or restricted websites, though. There are good reasons for this and I'm glad the FCC did the unpopular, but right thing. Someone has to be a man and stand up against blind silly nerd rage about some ideological "all packets are equal" shit.
If you're gonna shitpost at least be a good shitposter. Take a hint sped.
 
All these tards celebrating...

"WE JUST ERASED OBAMA'S LEGACY! IT'S LIKE HE NEVER EXISTED NOW!"

"FUNNY... MY INTERNET STILL WORKS! CHECKMATE LIBTARDS!"

God, what idiots.
The important thing to them is that they "won". It will be kinda funny when they notice what will happen in the future. FCC is not your friend, retards
 
Good, the fewer kids playing online games the better.

The funny thing is that these people think that internet was headed to some a la carte thing in 2015.
Such as what?

I have specifics, but I've been down this road and it doesn't matter. You'll just say, "I don't care about that at all" or "nuh uh, they won't do that sort of thing because that's not what I imagine an ISP doing!" So just mark my post as "dumb," feel better about yourself for a split second and going back to rabble rousing about how the internet was on the cusp of $500/month tiered packages because reddit's administrators told you so. Also, part of the problem is defining NN anyway, bandwidth, latency, blocking website, throttling, etc.

It is fun watching the impotent nerd rage though. Call me a sperg all you want, I'm not shedding that salt.
 
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