7/28/2008 9:54:12 AM
Yes, that is how democracy works. If you cannot get your law through the legislature then just pretend you did and start enforcing it. Bravo. Now we live in a country where beurocrats can impose their will upon society without worrying about freedom or even elections. One wonders why we bother having elections.
7/28/2008 10:40:36 AM
If LoneSnark had it his way, big corp could kill millions of people so long as the ramifications of their actions eventually lead to the closing of their doors to better competition (that only killed hundreds of thousands)
7/28/2008 11:17:54 AM
oh i thought this was about the Sirius/XM merger
7/28/2008 11:18:01 AM
7/28/2008 11:28:18 AM
Way to fuck up again FCC. There is no guarantee of free and open access to the internet, sorry. If you want more competition than you need to force local markets to remove restrictions. Forcing a business who has broken no laws to submit to your whims is downright facist. Way to set a shitty precident.
7/28/2008 11:41:56 AM
someone explain to my stupid self how this is anything but good for the consumer
7/28/2008 11:42:57 AM
The issue (at least in relation to LoneSnark and Shaggy's disapproval) is not whether punishing Comcast is good for the consumer (in this case it is). The issue is that the FCC is circumventing the law and setting a precedent based on their view of the case, not on the rule of law.
7/28/2008 11:49:10 AM
Correct. If the legislature were to deem it illegal to deny access to certain parts of the internet then they should make a law and the executive branch should enforce it. Thats how this country works.Now the agrument over so called Net Nuetrality is something entirely different.The FCC doing this would be like if Bush decided to imprision all gays because he thought it was a good idea.[Edited on July 28, 2008 at 12:13 PM. Reason : .]
7/28/2008 12:12:37 PM
so, as it currently stands, ISPs have the legal right to block or restrict access to various web sites and/or services?and the FCC is saying "oh, sorry, we meant for net neutral to mean that you couldn't do this, so we're just going to go ahead and punish you for it"?
7/28/2008 12:24:57 PM
This is stupid, just another example of pandering to the public and trying to look good in the media.The FCC should work on opening more forms of communication (wireline and wireless) to commercial competition instead of playing referee for the duopoly we have now.
7/28/2008 1:14:28 PM
7/28/2008 4:07:05 PM