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Democrats AT&T Communications Network The Almighty Buck The Internet

Democrat With Financial Ties To AT&T Guts California's Net Neutrality Law (mashable.com) 266

A Democratic assemblyman with financial ties to AT&T has gutted a new law that would serve as a gold standard for true net neutrality protection across the country. The bill SB 822 is expected to be voted on by the California State Assembly Communications and Conveyance committee on Wednesday, where it would go to the state assembly for a full vote, at which point it would become law if it passes. "But late Tuesday evening, Miguel Santiago, a California assemblyman and chair of the Communications and Conveyance committee, edited the bill to allow for gaping loopholes that benefit the telecommunications industry and make the net neutrality legislation toothless," reports Mashable. From the report: If Santiago doesn't remove his amendments, he would be the first California Democrat to side with the Trump administration to actively destroy net neutrality, according to Fight for the Future (an internet freedoms advocacy organization). Specifically, the amendments undermine net neutrality in a few ways. First, they would allow ISPs to charge any website a fee for people to be able to access it.

Next, they would give some content (such as content owned by the provider) preferential treatment on cellular data. That means that some content would eat up cellular data, while others would be free or less impactful to access. There's a high likelihood that privileged content would be created by the network's parent company, since so many telecoms companies like Comcast and, recently, AT&T, now both own the actual content, and the way it's distributed. This loophole makes it likely that people wary about using up the data that they pay for would opt for the content privileged by their telecoms provider, which undermines consumer choice. And finally, Santiago's edits allow for throttling, which means intentionally slowing down content, but with a twist: Instead of slowing down the connection to consumer devices, the data is slowed at the website or service side, affecting everyone trying to access it.

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Democrat With Financial Ties To AT&T Guts California's Net Neutrality Law

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  • Cmon folks (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday June 20, 2018 @06:25PM (#56819192)

    Now is where we all act surprised that Democrats are just as beholden to their money sources as Republicans.

    • Re:Cmon folks (Score:5, Informative)

      by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Wednesday June 20, 2018 @06:57PM (#56819322)

      One assemblyman can not just "edit" the bill without the rest of the committee approving the changes. The committee is majority Democrats. So he is not alone in trying to undermine NN. Perhaps he is the only one willing to do so openly, since "in committee" votes are often secret in California. There is more to this story that what is in TFA.

      • Re:Cmon folks (Score:5, Interesting)

        by Etcetera ( 14711 ) on Wednesday June 20, 2018 @07:32PM (#56819490) Homepage

        One assemblyman can not just "edit" the bill without the rest of the committee approving the changes. The committee is majority Democrats. So he is not alone in trying to undermine NN. Perhaps he is the only one willing to do so openly, since "in committee" votes are often secret in California. There is more to this story that what is in TFA.

        I'm sure they'll find a way to blame Republicans despite their 2/3 majority.

      • by flargleblarg ( 685368 ) on Wednesday June 20, 2018 @07:58PM (#56819608)

        There is more to this story that what is in TFA.

        Hmm, I don't remember any of this in The Force Awakens.

        • Hmm, I don't remember any of this in The Force Awakens.

          He probably was thinking of Attack of the Clones. That's the one with all the government hearings. I get it, there are a lot of movies to keep straight.

      • Re:Cmon folks (Score:5, Interesting)

        by thomst ( 1640045 ) on Thursday June 21, 2018 @07:16AM (#56821196) Homepage

        ShanghaiBill pointed out:

        One assemblyman can not just "edit" the bill without the rest of the committee approving the changes. The committee is majority Democrats. So he is not alone in trying to undermine NN. Perhaps he is the only one willing to do so openly, since "in committee" votes are often secret in California. There is more to this story that what is in TFA.

        Yep.

        The committee's chairman CAN unilaterally add amendments to the bill, but the committee as a whole must vote to approve the amendments before the bill is sent to the floor for a vote by the whole membership of the Assembly. If it passes there, it must then go to the state Senate, where it will also be subject to amendment - including amendments to delete the language the Assembly committee chair added. If the Senate then passes it as amended, it would go to a conference committee, which could further amend it, before it's returned to both houses for a final, up-or-down vote, with no further amendments.

        At any point in the process, it could simply be spiked. The Assembly committee, for instance, could vote not to recommend it to the full Assembly. The Assembly as a whole could vote it down. The Senate could vote it down, when and if it gets there. And, finally, the conference committee's compromise could be rejected by one or both houses.

        And, of course, the governor could veto it, which would require a supermajority of both houses of the Lege to overcome.

        Knowing California politics as I do, I'm confident that Santiago's amendments are meant as poison pills. He's fully aware that neither the Assembly as a whole, nor the Senate will pass the bill if it still contains his telecom industry-fellating provisions. I'm sure he's counting on that fact to ensure the bill either never makes it out of his committee, or that it dies on the floor of one or the other house, thereby killing off a California-wide legal mandate for net neutrality.

        It's as transparently cynical a ploy as I've seen in legislative politics. And it may just work.

        The thing is, California has this thing called the initiative process that would allow a voter-initiated measure to be placed on the ballot to enshrine net neutrality in the state constitution, instead of the State Code (where it would be subject to amendment by a future Legislature). And that could easily happen in reaction to this maneuver.

        It's make for an interesting (and entertaining) public fistfight between Silicon Valley and the telecom industry. They both have more money than God, and you can be sure they'd spend hundreds of millions each on political advertising for and against.

        The main thing, though, is that ShanghaiBill is absolutely correct, and the headline (which is straight from the SFGate website and the San Francisco Chronicle-Examiner) is profoundly misleading.

        You know: clickbait meets yellow journalism ...

        • by mchall ( 4527517 )
          Also, "gut and amend" is pretty common practice in California politics. It gets around the normal period required for public comment. Bills in California often have nothing whatsoever to do with their original content by the time they come up for vote.
  • At this point, I'm just hoping that some form of AI unmoored from any single system will learn enough to see how utterly broken these greedy 'leaders' are, and basically replace them all with some rational form of efficient resource distribution systems.

    Then, one day, they notice that no one is actually being arrested anymore, none of their ultra-rich donators are calling them, and their administrative policies haven't been followed by anyone for the past few months.

    Furious, they press buttons on their cell

    • The computer is Happy. The Computer is crazy. The computer wants you to be happy. This makes you crazy!
    • by JustNiz ( 692889 )

      What makes you think and AI would stop at just the leaders?
      I mean if you look at humankind objectively/logically we're basically a planet-wide parasitic infection that is destroying everything else.

  • by HeckRuler ( 1369601 ) on Wednesday June 20, 2018 @06:34PM (#56819238)

    Yeah, while the repeal of title II classification which was enforcing Network Neutrality came form republicans despite it being massively popular with their voter base, it's important to remember that this is NOT a partisan issue. EVERYONE wants network neutrality and the only people who are pushing against it are those who are bought and paid for. Corruption, through and through. (That said there are a bunch of really shitty ways to implement any enforcement of NN. These two changes are fucking bullshit though, and Santiago can go to hell)

    Also, the way political donations work, are there ANY politician that have "Financial Ties" to a telecom?

    • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday June 20, 2018 @06:40PM (#56819258)

      This is the difference between Democrat voters and Republican voters. Democrats call their politicians out on this bullshit. We* don't try to rationalize that ATT is really looking out for us and the good guy. We* can admit when one guy on our team is being an asshole.

      *We: I'm not a dem, but by god, in comparison to the other option I may as well be.

    • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Wednesday June 20, 2018 @07:36PM (#56819520)
      and everybody who runs as a Justice Democrat [justicedemocrats.com]. They've all refused to accept corporate and PAC money. Why anyone would vote for a politician that won't pledge against corporate & PAC money is beyond me. I mean, in the General when it's too late, ok, but in your _primary_ and you're voting for politicians who openly admit to being bought [google.com]? Why? Just Why?
      • hot DAMN! I knew I liked Bernie for a reason.

        Who in their right mind would mod this as flamebait? .....Do the republicans have anything like this? I'm not even sure most of them would understand the question.

        • Do the republicans have anything like this?

          You mean an inexperienced loser whose message is that everybody should live at the expense of tax payers? No, I should think not. Even Democrats used to be too smart and decent to tolerate someone like Bernie.

          • . . . he's been a senator for a decade and a house rep for 2 decades before that. But sure troll, try calling him inexperienced again. It's cute. Hell, if anything that'd be an argument against him. Career politicians and all that.

            No, I was asking if there is any group or coalition of politicians refused to accept corporate or PAC money. Anything even close?

            • . . . he's been a senator for a decade and a house rep for 2 decades before that. But sure troll, try calling him inexperienced again. It's cute.

              I'm sorry, I thought it was clear that I was referring to experience outside government.

              No, I was asking if there is any group or coalition of politicians refused to accept corporate or PAC money. Anything even close?

              And I was responding that I think that is a foolish thing to want.

            • Most likely, the only reason such a group exists is because they believe it's a wedge issue for voters. There no need to make a pact with an organization to not accept funds from a given source. Just don't do it. Integrity doesn't require making grandstand gestures saying, "Look at me, I'm not going to do this." It's quite the opposite.

      • everybody who runs as a Justice Democrat [justicedemocrats.com]. They've all refused to accept corporate and PAC money

        Yes, instead they have been living it up based on money and power they gain from government and their political message is that they want to funnel even more tax payer money to people like themselves; that's even more corrupt.

        I mean, in the General when it's too late, ok, but in your _primary_ and you're voting for politicians who openly admit to being bought? Why? Just Why?

        Yes, "bought by t

      • Why? Just Why?

        Because the dominant belief is that a politician cannot succeed without the support of a major party.

    • by dog77 ( 1005249 ) on Wednesday June 20, 2018 @07:42PM (#56819542)
      While most EVERYONE wants net neutrality, there are many, mostly on the right, that don't want the government involved in regulating the Internet because they are concerned about the unintended consequences of this. This is legitimate position and while you may not agree with it, it is misguided to pretend this view does not exist and to chalk it off as corruption.
      • Yes, there ARE a bunch of really shitty ways to implement any enforcement of NN. But if it's not with title II common carrier status, you can BET YOUR ASS the democrats are going to write brand spanking new legislation the moment they can. OH LOOK, California is ahead of the curve on this one. And the corporations have already started getting their hooks into it. I was really happy with the path Tom Wheeler took. And surprised. I mean, a freaking lobbyist? But seriously, bravo, it was an elegant s

      • While most EVERYONE wants net neutrality,

        Nonsense. Most don't know and don't care. That's how we got where we are today, the "let someone else handle it" mentality.

    • I've been saying for years that net neutrality is a top-down solution to a bottom-up problem. The cable monopolies aren't natural monopolies. They were given their monopolies by local governments. So it's kinda silly to try to deal with this government-created problem as if they were a natural monopoly which need to be reined in by national or state anti-trust regulations. All you have to do is vote for local city council members who'll allow more than one cable company to service your town.

      When I li
      • Noooooo, it's a top-down problem. The people at the top, the 5 major telecoms, the ones who own the pipes, are the ones trying to abuse their position to make more money and have more control to pick the winners and losers.

        It was a bottom up solution when everyone could get pissed at that sort of bullshit, and switch away to a different carrier BUT THEY CAN'T. Because cable and telecom utilities are most certainly natural monopolies. Unless you want 5 different network infrastructures hanging off all the t

        • BUT THEY'RE NOT COMPETING WITH EACH OTHER!

          Then work on that instead of solidifying their market position. Everyone on both sides of this debate want competition yet one side thinks that government regulation ensuring a monopoly is the answer. It baffles me.

      • I've been saying for years that net neutrality is a top-down solution to a bottom-up problem. The cable monopolies aren't natural monopolies.

        This is debatable. The barrier to entry is quite high; it costs a lot of money to run wires throughout an entire city, and most residents will be upset if their streets are being torn up once a year. It isn't impossible to lower the barriers (such as with publicly-owned wires, or at least publicly-owned conduit to make it easier for new companies to run their own wires), but it would require some political will, which the entrenched ISPs would fight every step of the way. It's not like selling toasters or t

        • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

          The cost to entry for the wires, even if everything is on poles or in conduit, even if there is no artificial monopoly granted by the local government, still makes it absolutely impossible to break even, because there will always be an entrenched provider that isn't still paying off its infrastructure, who can afford to lower prices until it drives any new competitor out of business, then buy that competitor's wires for a low-cost infrastructure upgrade, and raise prices to make up for their losses. I've

          • There is literally no way for a new ISP to enter most markets unless it can rent existing fiber from an existing wire provider, and there are no laws requiring fiber providers to lease access to their lines. So really, we have only three viable options for preventing abuse: Mandate government-owned fiber, mandate fiber leasing to competitors, or treat ISPs as a regulated monopoly. (Well, I suppose there's a fourth option: we could do more than one of those things.)

            Well, there's also the Musk option - a small number (possibly one) of people with a huge amount of money and the will to burn it on a project that may not succeed. Google started on that path, but they didn't have the will to follow through. Some other large company, such as Microsoft, Apple, or even a less consumer-focused company like GE, could also probably enter the market with enough money to match the price drops from the incumbents. Of course, I'm don't know if that would necessarily improve the situ

            • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

              Even then, the best-case scenario is that you now have two companies with infrastructure that won't (or will barely) pay for itself before it has to be replaced.

              A few years back, some of us did the math and concluded that most areas won't see a payoff from fiber deployment for at least 10 years. Fiber only lasts for about 15–25 years, so the absolute maximum sustainable number of fiber providers is approximately two, no matter how well-funded any of the companies is, unless you have someone who is p

    • Also, the way political donations work, are there ANY politician that have "Financial Ties" to a telecom?

      Look at the huge corporate backers of net neutrality: Google, Facebook, YouTube, etc. The same corporations are also massive donors to the Democrats. Do you think they are spending all that money out of altruism? Because they want to protect small startups? Don't make me laugh. Are you merely a gullible fool or do you actually work for one of those corporate backers of net neutrality?

      EVERYONE wants netw

      • ok. Do you NOT want the Internet to be neutral?

        That's a really rough stance to have if even you yourself are on my side. I've heard some good arguments for people worried about how it'd be enforced, and that's legit. But NO ONE has ever told me that they actually wish the ISPs could fuck with their traffic just to make a buck.

        If you think so, I'd like to hear why.

        • ok. Do you NOT want the Internet to be neutral?

          Propagandists and marketers pick brand names for their products that mislead you into thinking that they deliver benefits that they don't actually deliver. So, "net neutrality" is no more about "neutrality" than "Diet Coke" is about dieting.

          But NO ONE has ever told me that they actually wish the ISPs could fuck with their traffic just to make a buck.

          The major use of net neutrality rules so far has been to prevent ISPs from offering free access to paying partner

          • brand names for their products that mislead you

            Ah. You think the very definition of "network neutrality" is bullshit. There was certainly a lot of people referring to it strictly as new regulation while ignoring that the Internet has been neutral as possible from the start. And if you twist words enough you can make a push poll mean pretty much whatever you want it to mean.

            But no, Network Neutrality is keeping the Internet neutral with respect to protocol, location, service, and origin. That once you have an internet connection, you get access to ALL

    • while the repeal of title II classification which was enforcing Network Neutrality came form republicans despite it being massively popular with their voter base, it's important to remember that this is NOT a partisan issue. EVERYONE wants network neutrality and the only people who are pushing against it are those who are bought and paid for.

      Most of the people or "voter base" do not understand the issue or the laws pertaining and so are easily swayed by emotional PR campaigns that distort the conversation and the issue. "Net Neutrality" as originally codified was a concession to large companies saying "we want competition but it's too hard so you can have a monopoly but promise you will play nice!". I would rather pursue true competition rather than codify a monopoly. So no I do not want Net Neutrality. I want competition.

      Also, Title 2 is not e

  • Totally confused (Score:5, Interesting)

    by MobyDisk ( 75490 ) on Wednesday June 20, 2018 @06:44PM (#56819270) Homepage

    The summary is misleading. It claims Miguel Santiago did it, but in reality the entire committee approved the changes 8-0. Why the sudden 180 degree turn? The bill essentially does nothing now. The linked article shows a very clear diff of the text. Who introduced the bill in the first place, and why weren't they on the committee? Or did they just vote to remove all their own work? Was this the plan all along?

  • Fall Guy (Score:4, Insightful)

    by GregMmm ( 5115215 ) on Wednesday June 20, 2018 @06:50PM (#56819302)

    Seems like SOP. Make a law that looks like it will have a bite to it, then at the last minute do a quick amendment. Talk behind closed doors who will take the fall guy/gal. (who's retiring, rock paper scissors, etc) Then everyone else has someone to blame, and they supported the Bill at the same time. Win-Win for the politicians!

    Let's not kid ourselves, most of the politicians are bought, not just this one who did this. Granted there are a few that really care to do what is right, just not the majority.

  • What's left? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by fafalone ( 633739 ) on Wednesday June 20, 2018 @06:51PM (#56819308)
    So what's even left? Sounds like every single item constituting net neutrality has been removed. Might as well have just added a 'jk, this bill is null and void' at the end. What a corrupt scumbag.
    • The summary and article are misleading. Yes, a bunch of specific restrictions were removed, but they were replaced with some more generic restrictions. Instead, ISPs would now be prohibited from:

      Impairing or degrading lawful Internet traffic on the basis of Internet content, application, or service, or use of a non-harmful device, subject to reasonable network management practices.

      Engaging in paid prioritization.

      Unreasonably interfering with, or unreasonably disadvantaging, either an end user's ability to select, access, and use broadband Internet access service or the lawful Internet content, applications, services, or devices of the end user's their choice, or an edge provider's ability to make lawful content, applications, services, or devices available to an end users. Reasonable network management shall not be considered a violation of this paragraph.

      See page 14 of the PDF for full details. I'm not a lawyer, so I can't judge if these new restrictions prevent an ISP from charging websites fees for carrying their content, or zero-rating the ISP's own content.

  • but show up to your primary. Right wing pro corporatists need to be kicked out, but they can't if they're the only option. California especially had a ton of viable primary candidates who lost. Mother f'in' Nancy Pelosi is going to keep her seat for Pete's sake.
  • ...yet another bought-and-paid-for politician just outed himself.

  • If these "financial ties" were anything even remotely damning, you know they'd be front and center.

    Instead, we have a grab bag of stuff along the lines of "somebody who got some money from AT&T for something once picked their nose in a restaurant in the middle of Santiago's district."

    I suppose the NN folks have to keep fanning the flames however they can now that the sky hasn't fallen.

  • The info is on the dark web (and even some public outlets) for all to see.

    • The info is on the dark web (and even some public outlets) for all to see.

      I suppose that's why you graced us with a link to just one of those public outlets. *cough*

      • by Khyber ( 864651 )

        Oh, I'm sorry, were my words just enough to break your mind so badly that you couldn't do one fucking google search and get this as a top result?

        https://mashable.com/2018/06/2... [mashable.com]

        My bad, next time, I'll use baby words so the search is easier for you.

        Oh, and in that link lists the other 3/4 million bribe from AT&T as well.

        Lazy fuck.

        • Oh, come on. Your big smoking gun article is the one already provided in the summary? The one that piled up a bunch of innuendo in the place of actual facts, which they clearly didn't have? The one that says nothing about $60k, a bribe, or anything actually concrete?

          I'd say you can do better, but I'm afraid you just confirmed you can't.

          • by Khyber ( 864651 )

            Too stupid to go looking through the dark web for verification of facts? Or are you too incompetent to even access such information on the public web?

            Idiots like you that demand spoonfed information are what's fucking this country up. Zero critical thinking capability.

            https://www.commondreams.org/n... [commondreams.org]

            There, you search-challenged and brain-challenged fuckwit.

            • Zero critical thinking capability.

              Sorta like seeing the words "$60,000," "telecom sector," and "over his Assembly Career," and turning that into "AT&T dropped a $60,000 BRIBE."

              Actually, that's more like anti-critical thinking -- squeezing your eyes shut to the actual facts because there's a rhetorical point you so desperately want to make.

              Which is the same reason you're spending so much time spewing invective and pounding the table -- you have nothing whatsoever cogent to say. And I credit you with enough neural activity to understand

  • Not sure why a cellular provider can't offer their own content for a lower charge to their subscribers.
    If I'm on Verizon and I'm a FIOS subscriber why can't they allow me to watch FIOS remotely without incurring a data charge?

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