FCC is Hurting Consumers To Help Corporations, Mignon Clyburn Says On Exit (arstechnica.com) 100
Former Commissioner Mignon Clyburn, who left the agency this month, has taken aim at it in an interview, saying the agency has abandoned its mission to safeguard consumers and protect their privacy and speech. From her interview with ArsTechnica: "I'm an old Trekkie," Clyburn told Ars in a phone interview, while comparing the FCC's responsibility to the Star Trek fictional universe's Prime Directive. "I go back to my core, my prime directive of putting consumers first." If the FCC doesn't do all it can to bring affordable communications services to everyone in the US, "our mission will not be realized," she said. The FCC's top priority, as set out by the Communications Act, is to make sure all Americans have "affordable, efficient, and effective" access to communications services, Clyburn said. But too often, the FCC's Republican majority led by Chairman Ajit Pai is prioritizing the desires of corporations over consumers, Clyburn said. "I don't believe it's accidental that we are called regulators," she said. "Some people at the federal level try to shy away from that title. I embrace it."
Clyburn said that deregulation isn't bad in markets with robust competition, because competition itself can protect consumers. But "that is just not the case" in broadband, she said. "Let's just face it, [Internet service providers] are last-mile monopolies," she told Ars. "In an ideal world, we wouldn't need regulation. We don't live in an ideal world, all markets are not competitive, and when that is the case, that is why agencies like the FCC were constructed. We are here as a substitute for competition." Broadband regulators should strike a balance that protects consumers and promotes investment from large and small companies, she said. "If you don't regulate appropriately, things go too far one way or the other, and we either have prices that are too high or an insufficient amount of resources or applications or services to meet the needs of Americans," Clyburn said.
Clyburn said that deregulation isn't bad in markets with robust competition, because competition itself can protect consumers. But "that is just not the case" in broadband, she said. "Let's just face it, [Internet service providers] are last-mile monopolies," she told Ars. "In an ideal world, we wouldn't need regulation. We don't live in an ideal world, all markets are not competitive, and when that is the case, that is why agencies like the FCC were constructed. We are here as a substitute for competition." Broadband regulators should strike a balance that protects consumers and promotes investment from large and small companies, she said. "If you don't regulate appropriately, things go too far one way or the other, and we either have prices that are too high or an insufficient amount of resources or applications or services to meet the needs of Americans," Clyburn said.
Re:He is full of crap (Score:4, Insightful)
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Obviously not a Monty Python fan.
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I don't tolerate lying scumbag traitors like Trump or his worthless inbred supporters, that's true. Once you cross that line and get in bed with Putin you're no longer an American as far as I'm concerned. Trump deserves a firing squad. Literally. I swore an oath to support and defend the Constitution against enemies foreign and domestic, and the only line Trump blurs is foreign and domestic there.
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Oh, you meant Obama...remember he chided Romney for his foreign policy, saying that the 80s called and wants it back. Then, he was caught on open mic with Medvedev. So, yeah, if Trump colluded (still waiting on Mueller to show some evidence), by all means give him hell. But, don't pretend that it's all one sided...where did that dossier come from that the DNC bought?
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So, yeah, if Trump colluded (still waiting on Mueller to show some evidence), by all means give him hell. But, don't pretend that it's all one sided...where did that dossier come from that the DNC bought?
Had the 2016 Trump Tower meeting resulted in the confirmed handing over of any documentation originally proffered, collusion would have already been proven, at least for the 3 folks in attendance. If you doubt that Trump wouldn't have used such information, well, we have a little over 2 years worth of history to show he'd use anything factual and quite a few manufactured in attempting to harm, slander, libel, or otherwise damage others. So the only question on collusion is whether any was successful. The ju
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Re:He is full of crap (Score:4, Insightful)
Actually that's horseshit, given the makeup of the panel Obama was securing a conservative to keep it equal per the norm. Trump does not appoint anyone but Trump sycophants. That's a huge difference. Trump is a traitor.
Pai is a moron.
Is it your position that Obama's selection of the "conservative moron" Pai to keep it equal per the norm is in any way a defensible selection?
"Our side can do no wrong" is but the stance of a zealous parrot who lacks the funds to pay attention.
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The reason Democrats have lost so many seats is that they try to keep the norms while the Republicans are always pushing to the right. Reagan's policies would be denounced as a communist plot by today's Republican Party.
And that was before they rallied around a multiple divorced cheating degenerate gambler narcissist egomaniac. I can't vote Republican anymore.
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Please don't feed the AC trolls. They're probably Russians.
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Why would you think that's his position? It's an absurd position. It's a strawman. His position -- obviously -- is that Obama had no practical choice in the matter, what with considering himself bound by the norms of political convention that characterised all presidencies bar the current shitshow (plus the reality that his appointee needed approval by the Senate).
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Obama was required to appoint a Republican (Score:5, Insightful)
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Who? (Score:2)
I think it's just time to face facts, the Republican party is completely, totally pro-Corporate. There's a few who are at least indifferent to workers (John McCain comes to mind) but when a decision is made they
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The rest of that, cheers, I agree completely.
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So you wish it, so it must be so. Sorry.
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When the Republican majority senate wouldn't even consider an Obama appointee for the Supreme Court I don't think "clearing the Senate is a low bar". You have to remember that the main Republican strategy for the 8 years of the Obama administration was - oppose anything the president wants.
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I'd argue that it could have made a difference who he appointed. He had to appoint a Republican, not a former Verizon lawyer.
You never know what you'll get. Tom Wheeler was a lobbyist for the telecom industry, enough that he faced some pretty stiff opposition to being appointed FCC chair. Yet he ended up advancing policies that the telecoms hated. It's hard to tell if someone has been "captured," or if they still have independent will.
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...one side of the aisle is more to blame than the other...
Well, that's an odd way to run a country.
You can this set of wealthy oligarchs, or that set over there.
Come on America, get yourself a better system of Government.
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And this is what we get when we allow lobbyists to run the government, because "corporations are people too".
You may be surprised to hear that statement from a fiscal conservative, but that's just me.
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And this is what we get when we allow lobbyists to run the government, because "corporations are people too".
Famous Romney quote, but he didn't mean that a company as an entity is an actual human being. A company is just a collection of people. The Citizen's United case decided that groups of people do not lose their collective free speech rights because they incorporate.
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Groups of people are groups of individuals, all of who individually have the rights to free speech, which is not at all negated by incorporation. However, the fact is that this "right" that CU granted corporations is in fact impeding the rights of individuals to be equally heard, because individuals can't compete when it comes to getting access to our politicians...fact.
I saw the Romney speech, and know that the context you mention is correct. And, in spite of having voted for him, this is one subject whe
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because individuals can't compete when it comes to getting access to our politicians...fact.
You could extend that easily to rich vs poor as well, the rich have far FAR more access when it comes to access to politicians than poor people do, on par with corporations. I don't know if it's a problem with "corporate people" so much as it is wealth = access. There are few things that you could do to corporations to fix this problem that you wouldn't also have to apply to wealthy individuals.
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If you have participated in even one of the FCC threads before, you have h
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While that is true, it is a misrepresentation by omission. Obama was required to appoint someone acceptable to the Republicans. He had little choice in the matter.
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Your link reads like somebody trying to sell you something. Oh wait, they are!
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I guess your net assertion is that Obama is an Kenyan mechanoid full of child crap.
Guess what? Fat Basterd just called: he want's his baby back, baby back, baby back bib back—it's his personal talk-radio good luck charm. Between Fat Basterd and his mechanical diaper dog, they lick the platter clean.
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You have some examples? (Score:2)
The article you link to just say that Obama was bad because the FCC regulated the info ISPs could gather but that it's mostly Facebook abusing your privacy and Obama didn't do jack about that. You're basically saying Obama didn't go far enough, which is fair. He never did. If he did, we'd have single payer healthcare and a fully
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The new FCC is the one aiming to protect privacy [attpublicpolicy.com].
Oh lord, yes, let's take our cues from AT&T, they're a neutral in this argument.
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You do realize that Clyburn is a she, right? Even says so in the second sentence of the summary.
And the rest of your comment goes downhill from there. You're linking to the public policy page of a wolf who is lauding the current shepherd while condemning the previous one as "proof" that the current shepherd's policies are in the best interests of the sheep. I was about to say "never mind that the wolf has ulterior motives", but there's nothing ulterior about this wolf's motivations.
So under Ajit Pai, (Score:1)
The FCC is a shill for ISPs... pretty much as we suspected.
Well, there's always regime change to look forward to.
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I don't know why everyone unloads on the Federal government when the your local government is the source of the problem. Local imposed monopolies of the last mile. Lift that restriction and bam you have a free market. I would complain to your local city council your local township boards etc... Blaming the federal government for making government smaller is complete irony.
In other news... (Score:2)
Re:More and more regs (Score:4, Informative)
Less regulation will be better (Score:2)
Get rid of all the current regulation and simply force the companies to split in to wholesale and retail and regulate the price of wholesale.
You'll then get healthy competition in the retail market due to a low entry barrier.
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When one part of a city can afford a new network it won't be allowed to design a new network.
"Affordable" - every part of the city has to pay the same low cost for any new network plan.
"Efficient" - everyone all over a city gets the new network investment at a lower cost.
"Effective" - poor areas of the city get new network investment even if the network costs will never be recovered.
The result is everyone stays on the sa
Re:Less regulation will be better (Score:5, Interesting)
This started in New Zealand with the government forcing the incumbent telco to provide price regulated wholesale broadband to retail ISP's over their copper network - They either had to sell services to ISP's or allow the ISP's to install their own DSLAM's in their exchanges so they could run their own DSL services over the existing copper.
The incumbent then got split in to two separate companies providing wholesale network services in one and retail services in the other.
We now have the choice of dozens of different ISP's, all offering their own benefits and low cost of switching between companies.
Infrastructure investment hasn't stopped either. By 2022 87% of the population will have fibre to their home.
Over 40% of people who have fibre available have already switched and the rollout is running ahead of schedule.
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Affordable communications? (Score:1)
Let different parts of the USA who are innovative design their own community broadband and escape federal NN rules.
Why should every part of the USA be held back by federal NN rules when amazing new community networks could be funded?
Why is the USA getting held back for decades on affordable, efficient, and effective wireline?
What not let local communities build their own affordable, efficient and fast new networks? Attract new investment with
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I suppose someone should tell you: NN has nothing to do with when you can or cannot upgrade your network.
And we are powerless to stop it (Score:3, Insightful)
Remember that. It doesn't matter if the "Democrats" or "Republicans" are in charge, they have not represented the average American citizen for a long while.
Vote Justice Democrats (Score:3)
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And here I am unable to give you the "Funny" mod you so richly deserve...
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it does matter is you are not a god-botherer.
if you consider yourself a 'believer', then the R party is probably more to your liking.
if you insist that others follow your views on religion, you are most definitely an R person.
other than that, yeah, both parties are similar in that they don't care about you and me and only want to enrichen and empower themselves.
personally, I hate religion, so the R's are the enemy. and the R's seem to almost have a violent hatred for the middle class and poor, and all clas
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Under Obama NN laws were put in place. Under Trump, they were removed. On the issue of NN, it's hard to imagine a bigger example of different philosophies.
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It was a regulatory action, in response to a directive from the Supreme Court saying that the FCC could enact Title II regulations under the existing law.
deduct 10 points (Score:4, Insightful)
I am an old trekkie
blatent pandering to the slashdot crowd, deduct 10 points for misappropriation of star trek
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blatent pandering to the slashdot crowd, deduct 10 points for misappropriation of star trek
Yeah but he doesn't like the FCC so at this point he could see a Kirk vs Picard battle and say his favourite was Skywalker and he'd still be in my good books.
The needs of the many... (Score:3)
outweigh the needs of the few.
I really had hope this would work out.
But...
Trump and his ilk have sold America to the highest bidder.
We exist now to feed the profits of the few; is it so mysterious that the suicide rate is thru the roof, and opiate drugs are sweeping the land?
Birth rates are down, because what sane creature would bring a life into this world to be so exploited?
Trump is a symptom of the rotten core of what used to be America; I'm just waiting for all the kids to take themselves out, then who will they have?
Welcome to Trump's America. You earned it.
politics 101 (Score:3)
Good quote (Score:2)
Clyburn said that deregulation isn't bad in markets with robust competition, because competition itself can protect consumers. But "that is just not the case" in broadband, she said. "Let's just face it, [Internet service providers] are last-mile monopolies," she told Ars. "In an ideal world, we wouldn't need regulation. We don't live in an ideal world, not all markets are competitive, and when that is the case, that is why agencies like the FCC were constructed. We are here as a substitute for competition."
This guy gets it. Neither is an absolute, what's necessary is a balance. It's still difficult to agree on where to draw that line though.