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99.7 Percent of Unique FCC Comments Favored Net Neutrality, Independent Analysis Finds (vice.com) 137

When a Stanford researcher removed all the duplicate and fake comments filed with the Federal Communications Commission last year, he found that 99.7 percent of public comments -- about 800,000 in all -- were pro-net neutrality. From a report: "With the fog of fraud and spam lifted from the comment corpus, lawmakers and their staff, journalists, interested citizens and policymakers can use these reports to better understand what Americans actually said about the repeal of net neutrality protections and why 800,000 Americans went further than just signing a petition for a redress of grievances by actually putting their concerns in their own words," Ryan Singel, a media and strategy fellow at Stanford University, wrote in a blog post Monday. Singel released a report [PDF] Monday that analyzed the unique comments -- as in, they weren't a copypasta of one or dozens of other letters -- filed last year ahead of the FCC's decision to repeal federal net neutrality protections. That's from the 22 million total comments filed, meaning that more than 21 million comments were fake, bots, or organized campaigns.
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99.7 Percent of Unique FCC Comments Favored Net Neutrality, Independent Analysis Finds

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  • by Arzaboa ( 2804779 ) on Monday October 15, 2018 @03:44PM (#57482048)

    It's terrible that they threw away all the results and claimed they were simply "fake." I'm glad someone has looked at this data. The entire process was a sham when we were told that our comments mattered.

    --
    Come on, Come all -- B. Bailey

    • by DeVilla ( 4563 )

      I'm still not heard. I'm not listed in my state under my name or zip code. I pull the zip file with all the pdfs. If I'm in any of them, then my name is misspelled. Some of my neighbors are there.

      I'm bummed. I gave it some thought instead of using a form letter campaign though I did mention the link of the one that got my attention. It was in favor of neutrality so I'm not accusing them of leaving out anti-neutrality posts. Maybe tl;dr? Still, my ego is dashed.

  • by ole_timer ( 4293573 ) on Monday October 15, 2018 @03:45PM (#57482064)
    on no issue, including net neutrality, is it believable that 99% were in favor...sounds wrong.
    • by 110010001000 ( 697113 ) on Monday October 15, 2018 @03:53PM (#57482104) Homepage Journal
      What consumer would consider net neutrality to be bad? There is literally no reason to want to get rid of it if you are a consumer. The only people for it are the ones that want to charge more.
      • by Anonymous Coward

        Quite literally, not just consumers, it is a free market protection as well. The companies as a whole support it.

        it is only the ISPs that are against it because they have monopoly control over it and they are also the media companies so they try and prevent too much about it hitting the air waves so the public doesn't really think or know about it.

      • I've met several people who supported the repeal and all of them for the same reason; the belief that internet access would be cheaper if ISP's didn't have the regulation to "bog them down". Not all of them were ignorant of technology either. It's for this reason I also suspect the 99% figure.

        • the belief that internet access would be cheaper if ISP's didn't have the regulation to "bog them down". Not all of them were ignorant of technology either.

          However, they were all hopelessly naive.

      • What consumer would consider net neutrality to be bad?

        Any consumer who understood that "zero rating" is a target of the pro-NN people and who was benefiting from an existing zero rating system. For example, I don't care if Flurble ISP throttles NetFlix because I don't subscribe to NetFlix, but I do make a lot of use of the Snorklewhack streaming audio service that is zero rated on Flurble's network. If NN means I have to pay more, then NN is bad, in my opinion.

        It is rare to find someone who is pro-NN and who also understands that zero rating is not a violati

        • like you said, it's opinion-based: in my undestanding, zero-rating infringes NN
          • like you said, it's opinion-based: in my undestanding, zero-rating infringes NN

            Whether NN is bad or good is an opinion. Whether zero-rating infringes NN or not no longer is. It is codified into the CA NN bill as infringing. It will now be the opinions of the court that matter.

        • What consumer would consider net neutrality to be bad?

          Any consumer who understood that "zero rating" is a target of the pro-NN people and who was benefiting from an existing zero rating system.

          The problem is, it's more nuanced than just "zero rating" is a violation of NN or not.

          As an entire type of service, "zero rating" isn't always a violation of NN. However, that just means some "zero rating" is a violation and others are not.

          Zero rating for an entire class of something, or available to all providers at no cost, or at the customers control without the third party provider needing to care are all perfectly find zero rating schemes that do not conflict with NN at all.

          Examples:
          All video from any

    • on no issue, including net neutrality, is it believable that 99% were in favor...sounds wrong.

      Elections in North Korea — and in Saddam Hussein's Iraq — were "won" with the winners getting not the measly 99%, but the nice and round 100% of the vote.

      But that's nothing compared to a feat Putin has once accomplished — winning 146% of the vote [gawker.com]...

      Simply put, as Stalin once said it, "those who vote do not matter — those who count the votes matter". If it is the Vice (or a "researcher" Vice

    • by SirSlud ( 67381 ) on Monday October 15, 2018 @04:01PM (#57482178) Homepage

      It doesn't mean 99% of all people were in favor of a certain side of an issue, just that 99% of the people who left a comment with the FCC felt about the issue. I don't think there were many citizens against net neutrality who were concerned that the repeal of net neutrality was not going to occur.

      • actually it was 99.7% of 4% after the all the 22 million so-called copypasta were removed. and of either number, how many were real people?
    • Even if the true figure were 90% or 80%, it is still pretty overwhelming.

      It really grinds that it becomes such a challenge in our Information Age to separate truth from truthiness.

    • Well, those who could be bothered to state an opinion either way are already a self-selecting group. If this were a randomized poll then I would agree with you, but for self-selected data points they can often be highly skewed. Ie, those pro-net-neutrality felt they needed to spend proactively 10 seconds clicking on buttons on the web, whereas those anti-net-neutrality just needed to passively do nothing and let the status quo remain.

      • actually you did agree with me...not only was the analysis self selecting the original data was too...
    • by Shaitan ( 22585 )

      True but you can end up with a screwed sample set like this a number of ways. It is definitely true that the public was overwhelmingly onesided at the time and maybe even 90% one sided. Today it wouldn't be 90+% but only because the issue has been politicized to dupe the public.

    • You're assuming those against would comment. People are lazy and need motivation. There's no motivation when it comes to the default.

  • In Fairness.... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Luthair ( 847766 ) on Monday October 15, 2018 @03:47PM (#57482070)
    Form letters have long been a popular method for political causes. Though I personally believe there were a significant number of fake submissions too.
    • A popular method, true. But is it an effective method?

    • And yet a good indicator of if you truly care about something is if you put the effort to voice your own opinion or just do the FCC equivalent of re-tweeting.

  • by smooth wombat ( 796938 ) on Monday October 15, 2018 @03:47PM (#57482072) Journal
    We already knew the public wanted to keep net neutrality, but it was the con artist and his cabal who went out of their way to use dead people [arstechnica.com] to prove otherwise.

    The FCC, headed by Ajit Pai, lied about having a meltdown because of "being under attack", lied about the number of people who were for repeal, and lied about the need to protect the people from the "scourge" of net neutrality.

    And yet, their supporters will simply shrug their shoulders and yell, "BUT HILLARY!!!!", because lying is all they have.
    • We already knew the public wanted to keep net neutrality

      Actually, no, we didn't. There never was a referendum. There were informal polls [morningconsult.com], but that's it.

      The FCC comments aren't binding — and for a good reason: they are open exactly to the kind of abuse you are complaining about. Non-citizen participation (and foreigners [wikipedia.org] openly campaigning [time.com]), multiple participation, simple ballot-stuffing...

      According to TFA, only 3.6% of the comments were "genuine", in the cited researcher's opinion... This would confirm

  • Copypasta (Score:5, Funny)

    by Kaenneth ( 82978 ) on Monday October 15, 2018 @04:10PM (#57482224) Journal

    So 'Copypasta' is a cromulent word now?

    • Copypasta isn't as old as enbiggen, but it might be older than cromulent.

      • Copypasta isn't as old as enbiggen, but it might be older than cromulent.

        Nope. "Cromulent" is from 1994. "Copypasta" might go as far back as 2006....

        • 96. Not 94.

          Don't spew dates from memory, either look them up, or preface your numbers with something like, "as far as I remember."

          Copypasta was in widespread use in the software developer community long before that. As soon as "copy/paste" was a widespread feature of editors, it was ripe for this one. So you can't give some late date and be sure of it. You certainly can't state one in a construction that appears to create an absolute limit.

          And to that end, I check and it was entered into the website urban d

  • by bobbied ( 2522392 ) on Monday October 15, 2018 @04:13PM (#57482240)

    A way to vote for something you want or don't want.

    The number of comments entered into the system has zero impact on the decision. Nobody at the FCC is counting them, nor should they. This isn't some official opinion poll being conducted here.

    The PURPOSE of the public comments at the FCC is to obtain INFORMATION from the public that the FCC may not already have. So unless you are providing a unique prospective or some unique facts about the question being considered that you entered some unique comment into the system your opinion of the question doesn't mean anything. If you are just voicing an opinion in your comment, figure it gets round filed and you just wasted your time and the time of the poor slob at the FCC who's job it is to read and classify all these comments.

    I'm sorry if you don't like this, but that's how the FCC works (actually not just the FCC, but other government "public comment" processes too). Most government processes don't care about doing opinion polls, that's the role of the political appointees anyway. So if you didn't like this result, or if you did, you need to vote accordingly.

  • or organized campaigns.

    I would hesitate to claim the anti-side wasn't often driven by organized campaigns, either, with many sites exhorting users to go file a letter.

    Which is fine, but it's hardly unorganized.

  • by ole_timer ( 4293573 ) on Monday October 15, 2018 @04:29PM (#57482348)
    net neutrality had nothing to do with what an isp charges you, it said isp's could not charge netflix more for using up all the bandwidth. rates charged you are set by the local government who signs an exclusive contract with the local isp. doh.https://tech.slashdot.org/story/18/10/15/2024241/997-percent-of-unique-fcc-comments-favored-net-neutrality-independent-analysis-finds#
    • net neutrality had nothing to do with what an isp charges you,

      Since the point of ending net neutrality is to charge consumers more, this is a lie.

      it said isp's could not charge netflix more for using up all the bandwidth

      This is lie number 2. Netflix's ISPs have peering agreements with your ISP. Those agreements can include financial compensation if Netflix actually "used up all the bandwith".

      The reason to end net neutrality was so that your ISP could get paid via peering agreements, and get paid again by charging you.

      rates charged you are set by the local government who signs an exclusive contract with the local isp

      This would be yet another lie. Local governments set up monopolies for cable TV service. ISPs are not cable TV service.

      • what did internet access cost when it was de-regulated in 1996? 2006? Today? was that due to regulation or de-regulation?
        • while you're at it - what year did fiber optics undergo a revolution, what was it, and what did that do to rates and supply?
          • Perhaps you could first try to explain why I should follow you off the rails when you try to distract from your lies?

        • what did internet access cost when it was de-regulated in 1996?

          Mine cost $15/mo.

          Also, what the hell are you talking about with "de-regulated in 1996"? Which specific act do you think "de-regulated" ISPs?

          2006?

          Around $30/mo, IIRC.

          Today?

          $50/mo

          was that due to regulation or de-regulation?

          Neither. It's due to the natural monopoly that is created when one utility has already installed coverage of an area. I'd be paying a lot less without that.

  • ...the American People are now all-in for big gov't and eventually the socialist then communist results of too much of that. Again, like a previous post on a different but similar thread concerning the death of freedom on the USA, I'm glad I'm 71 and either won't see it, or won't be enslaved for long or on my way to one of the resultant death camps from that 20th century ideology responsible for 100 million deaths worldwide. Of course that won't happen because they will have to try to collect up all the

    • Yeah, sure, Net Neutrality obviously leads to death camps. That's why Finland is the happiest country in the world [businessinsider.com], it's all the grinning skulls...

      Do you even read the stuff you write?

      • The country is heading for totalitarianism of the communist variety. There's the current effort by gov't agency people such as Jim Comey formerly of the FBI and others to overthrow the duly elected President of the United States, while getting support from the leftists who don't want freedom and democracy and seem to be on the ascendancy. Seems we're tired of freedom, and the struggles it brings, and want cradle-to-grave easy street no matter if the price is slavery and for some a quick death. Few seem

    • When you look around and see a world you do not like, remember one thing: You made it.

      We were the kids. You were the adults, making all the decisions. So that shit you see strewn all over the place? You and your generation put it there.

      So either pick up a shovel and help us clean it up, or get the fuck out of the way.

      • I did nothing to encourage bigger gov't, quite the opposite. I will however, do everything I can to oppose continuously at the ballot box, and physically when the time comes.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • I'm surprised they were able to separate all comments into simply "for" or "against". My comment was to say that I want to see a more nuanced rethink of the neutrality concept with measurement requirements rather than "saving" an unrealistic philosophical statement with vague exceptions that benefits lawyers more than consumers. I say this as someone involved with filtering backbone traffic for security reasons- both the "treat all traffic equally" and the "except if you're doing network security" are way
  • There's a lot of effort to add little meaningful information here. Politics, as usual.

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