Anonymous ID: 4f1688 Feb. 22, 2020, 12:28 p.m. No.8218777   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8803 >>8805 >>8843 >>8940

Q posted about the Internet Bill of Rights but until that happens we have a chance to restore the Net Neutrality Act. The courts have forced the FCC to review it's decision and take public comments. We should let them know we want our NNA back.

 

https://www.theregister.co.uk/2018/08/20/mozilla_fcc_neutrality_lawsuit/

The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is asking the U.S. public to tell it if its decision in 2017 to scrap net neutrality regulations was dumb or not.

 

"In a striking piece of irony – and one that the FCC is distinctly unhappy about – the watchdog is legally obliged to seek public comment on three issues: how its decision has threatened public safety, damaged broadband infrastructure rollout, and prevented poor people from getting access to fast internet access."

 

In a reminder of just how petty federal telecoms regulation has become, the FCC can’t even take this implicit rebuke professionally. And so it attempted to hide the reality of the situation by flooding its announcements website on Wednesday with suddenly important news and describing the public comment period in the most obscure terms possible."

 

https://www.fcc.gov/document/wcb-seeks-comment-discrete-issues-arising-mozilla-decision

"Rosenworcel On FCC Seeking Public Comment On Net Neutrality Remand

 

Full Title: Statement Of Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel On FCC Seeking Public Comment On Net Neutrality Remand

Document Type(s): Statement

Bureau(s): Office of Commissioner Rosenworcel

 

STATEMENT OF COMMISSIONER JESSICA ROSENWORCEL ON

FCC SEEKING PUBLIC COMMENT ON NET NEUTRALITY REMAND

 

WASHINGTON, February 19, 2020: On October 1, 2019 the DC Circuit Court remanded key elements of the FCC’s rollback of net neutrality. In particular, the court decision took the agency to task for disregarding its duty to consider how the FCC’s decision threatened public safety, Lifeline service, and broadband infrastructure. Today, the agency is seeking comment on these issues. In response, Commissioner Rosenworcel released the following statement:

 

“The FCC got it wrong when it repealed net neutrality. The decision put the agency on the wrong side of history, the American public, and the law. And the courts agreed. That’s why they sent back to this agency key pieces regarding how the rollback of net neutrality protections impacted public safety, low income Americans, and broadband infrastructure. Today, the FCC is seeking comment on how best to move forward. My advice? The American public should raise their voices and let Washington know how important an open internet is for every piece of our civic and commercial lives. The agency wrongfully gave broadband providers the power to block websites, throttle services, and censor online content. The fight for an open internet is not over. It’s time to make noise.”

 

https://www.theregister.co.uk/2020/02/21/fcc_net_neutrality/

 

https://www.fcc.gov/document/rosenworcel-fcc-seeking-public-comment-net-neutrality-remand