Broadband Companies Paid For 8.5 Million Fake Net Neutrality Comments, New York AG Reports (apnews.com) 25
The Office of the New York Attorney General said in a new report that a campaign funded by the broadband industry submitted millions of fake comments supporting the 2017 repeal of net neutrality. wiggles shares a report: The Federal Communications Commission's contentious 2017 repeal undid Obama-era rules that barred internet service providers from slowing or blocking websites and apps or charging companies more for faster speeds to consumers. The industry had sued to stop these rules during the Obama administration but lost. The proceeding generated a record-breaking number of comments -- more than 22 million -- and nearly 18 million were fake, the attorney general's office found. It has long been known that the tally included fake comments. One 19-year-old in California submitted more than 7.7 million pro-net neutrality comments. The attorney general's office did not identify the origins of another "distinct group" of more than 1.6 million pro-net neutrality comments, many of which used mailing addresses outside the U.S. A broadband industry group, called Broadband for America, spent $4.2 million generating more than 8.5 million of the fake FCC comments. Half a million fake letters were also sent to Congress.
Federal login? (Score:2)
Obviously this really calls for a need for gov divisions like the FCC to have some sort of registration authentication for US citizens as it seems like 80% of the comments were fake making the process effectively useless and as we see it can be used to effectively push bad regulations.
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Comment count is but one political tool for leveraging one side's position. Comment content is another tool. Beware those who use the count over the content.
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And furthermore, beware those who use the content, but ignore the continent.
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And furthermore, beware those who use the content, but ignore the continent.
Autocorrupt?
I posted a few ... (Score:4, Funny)
Prosecute for Fraud (Score:5, Insightful)
That is about 8.5 million counts of fraud they should be charged for.
Re:Prosecute for Fraud (Score:4, Insightful)
We investigated ourselves and found no wrongdoing.
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That is about 8.5 million counts of fraud they should be charged for.
Actually, that number should be 18 million, not 8.5 million.
The broadband ISPs contracted "lead generators" (companies that specialize in producing leads that result in consumer action) to drum up as many comments against net neutrality as they could, which included tactics such as more or less bribing consumers by giving away items and then asking if they'd write a comment against net neutrality. Some of those lead generators went a step further, however, and fabricated the comments altogether. Much of tha
Re:Prosecute for Fraud (Score:5, Insightful)
Prosecute the individuals, not the broadband companies. If the companies have to pay a fine it will be seen as part of the cost of business. If executives (and their managers all the way to the top) have to pay large fines and spend time in prison - then there is a chance that this will not happen again.
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Seems legit (Score:2)
8.5m fake comments from the broadband industry, 9.3m (7.7 + 1.6) fake comments from the pro-net neutrality crowd.
With both sides of the issue seeming to have been equally fraudulent, it seems unlikely that the outcome was affected.
Only that the final N-counts were overstated.
Re:Seems legit (Score:4, Informative)
With both sides of the issue seeming to have been equally fraudulent, it seems unlikely that the outcome was affected.
Disagree... The regulators are supposed to take comments into account regarding their proceeding, not merely "tally" them For and Against making a rule. The reasons, issues raised, and Arguments + Data provided in comments are supposed to provide inputs to the rulemaking process.
17 Million fake comments makes it that Much less likely that the actually legitimate comments might be read and taken account to modify the rules being considered --- the useful comments become more likely to get overlooked and just tabulated For/Against, and the Against comments are prone by regulators to get disregarded in such a situation (You can expect regulators will have a Bias towards proceeding as they planned when the responses are about 50/50, and there's so much noise in the comments that any meaningful input has gotten buried in 17 million Copypastas)...
Not surprising (Score:4, Interesting)
When you had a fake administration lying about fake issues, it's unsurprising companies would take advantage and produce fake comments.
I remember one person posting on Twitter asking Pai how his mother posted a comment against Net Neutrality when she had been dead for five years.
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i want to who what companies (Score:2)
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You can start down the "was my name used" path here:
https://www.comcastroturf.com/ [comcastroturf.com]
and then sleuth down the "who used my name". Let us know how the lawsuit is progressing.
Freedom of speech (Score:2)
How is this not illegal? (Score:4, Funny)
How is this not illegal?
Oh, because a corporation did it, I understand.
Carry on, nothing to see here, etc etc etc.
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Yep, the cool thing about being a corporation is never having to go to prison.
I commented (Score:2)