Anonymous ID: 0e342e Feb. 5, 2018, 4:06 p.m. No.279360   🗄️.is 🔗kun

BAKERS, please get this into some bread ASAP so the twatters don't mix the message…..

 

RE:

 

>>257923

 

Look Anon, you and other Anons trying to get us to push this internet bill of rights are just way off with this shit. Q never asked us to push this or advocated us pushing this. if you would do some research you would find that it is actually ATT that is pushing this bullshit. Since we got rid of NN they are just looking for another form of rights reductions for the every day idiot. STOP pushing this bullshit, you are being played…..

 

Links:

 

FEBRUARY 1, 2018

 

> https:// www.eff.org/deeplinks/2018/01/hypocrisy-atts-internet-bill-rights

 

"Last week AT&T has decided it’s good business to advocate for an “Internet Bill of Rights.” Of course, that catchy name doesn’t in any way mean that what AT&T wants is a codified list of rights for Internet users. No, what AT&T wants is to keep a firm hold on the gains it has made in the last year at the expense of its customers’ rights.

 

There is nothing in the history—the very recent history—of AT&T to make anyone believe that it has anyone’s actual best interests at heart. Let’s take a look at how this company has traditionally felt about privacy and network neutrality"

 

From then horses mouth, so enough of this shit…

 

> Consumers Need an Internet Bill of Rights

 

Jan 24, 2018

 

http:// about.att.com/story/consumers_need_an_internet_bill_of_rights.html

 

"Government rules for the internet have been debated for nearly as long as the internet has existed, even before a professor coined the term “net neutrality” 15 years ago.

 

The internet has changed our lives and grown beyond what anyone could have imagined. And it’s done so, for the most part, with very few—but often changing—rules. Regulators under four different presidents have taken four different approaches. Courts have overturned regulatory decisions. Regulators have reversed their predecessors. And because the internet is so critical to everyone, it’s understandably confusing and a bit concerning when you hear the rules have recently changed, yet again."