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The FCC Received 22 Million Comments on the Year of Vote to Repeal Net Neutrality Nearly 18 Million Were Fake, Says New York s Attorney General

The FCC Received 22 Million Comments on the Year of Vote to Repeal Net Neutrality. Nearly 18 Million Were Fake, Says New York’s Attorney General. Adam Klasfeld © Provided by Law & Crime New York Attorney General Letitia James On the year former President Trump’s Federal Communications Commission voted to repeal net neutrality, the regulator was inundated with more than 22 million comments. Nearly 18 million of them were fake, and some 40 percent of those came from an influence campaign by the broadband industry, New York Attorney General Letitia James found in a 39-page report released on Thursday. Some 8.5 million of the fake comments used the names and personal information of real people without their knowledge or consent, she added.

Biden s broadband plan would waste $100 billion

Joe BidenJoe Biden s surprising presidencyThe Hill s Morning Report - Biden, McConnell agree on vaccines, clash over infrastructureRepublican battle with MLB intensifiesMORE wants Americans to have broadband in the worst way. His $2.3 trillion American Jobs Plan which isn’t a jobs plan, but that’s another topic includes $100 billion for broadband using the worst plan imaginable: He wants broadband provided by the government institutions that bring us the U.S. Postal Service, Amtrak and our failing transportation, water and other infrastructures. What could go wrong? The president wants us to think that his plan will “reimagine and rebuild a new economy” that will “reach 100 percent high-speed broadband coverage.” But we don’t have to reimagine anything to know that the plan will fail to deliver: America and other countries have tried everything that the president proposes, and the strategies don’t work. Get ready for another spending spree that buys nothing of va

Justice Thomas Suggests Regulating Tech Platforms Like Utilities

There is a fair argument that some digital platforms are sufficiently akin to common carriers or places of accommodation to be regulated in this manner, Thomas wrote. Regulating online platforms like utilities would require fundamental changes to how tech platforms operate. Depending on the specific contours of such regulation, social media sites could be forced to alter or do away with many of the moderation standards they use to keep harassment, hate speech and nudity off their platforms. That s the opposite of what many Democrats have been fighting for, which is more liability for platforms that host certain types of objectionable or illegal content.

Justice Department drops challenge to California net neutrality rules

Justice Department drops challenge to California net neutrality rules Makena Kelly © Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge The Justice Department dropped its 2018 lawsuit challenging California’s state net neutrality rules on Monday, removing one of the law’s major roadblocks preventing it from going into effect. In 2017, the Trump Federal Communications Commission voted to repeal the Obama-era internet regulations banning internet service providers, like AT&T and Verizon, from throttling or blocking traffic and implementing paid fast lanes. The following year, California passed its own law instituting net neutrality rules at the state level. That law was quickly challenged by the Trump-led Justice Department, which argued that California’s law was preempted by the FCC’s 2017 repeal.

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