The FCC long epitomized "regulatory capture" - an agency whose leadership worked a revolving door with the industry it oversees; a crooked beat-cop who served as willing accomplice to decades of fraud, leaving Americans to struggle with overpriced, underperforming broadband.
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There have been many terrible FCC chairs and commissioners, but even in that crowded, manure-strewn field, one man stands out as the worst FCC chair in American history, @ajitpai, the former Verizon lawyer who became Trump's FCC chairman.
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Pai set many precedents, such as accepting millions of comments in support of his anti-Net Neutrality order even though they came from dead people, people whose identities had been stolen, and a series of random strings prepended to "@pornhub.com".
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Although he resigned last year, he continues to set precedent, refusing to surrender his official Twitter account after leaving office, and blocking his critics, Americans who are therefore excluded from the public records of his FCC activities.
The Rosenworcel hits keep coming! This month, she inaugurated an objective, data-driven survey of American broadband performance, calling on Americans to use and report speed-test apps that document their shitty, overpriced connectivity.
The FCC Speed Test App was first released in 2014 and has been under development ever since, but Ajit Pai studiously ignored these results in favor of the rosily juked stats the telecoms industry frauded up for the FCC's delectation.
The news that the FCC is using its own 7-year-old app to gather data on real-world broadband performance shouldn't be surprising and uplifting, but it is. It's a tribute to just how uniquely terrible Pai's run was, and what a great monster of history he turned out to be.
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After a year of lockdown when the American people relied on broadband to deliver employment, education, health, family life, civics, politics, as well as news and entertainment, the unforgivable nature of Pai's rule became undeniable.
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Pai was the worst, but he was carrying out a long tradition of official FCC forbearance for underinvestment, monopoly and price-gouging. We can't afford that any longer - and, it seems that with Rosenworcel, we won't be asked to.
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ETA - If you'd like an unrolled version of this thread to read or share, here's a link to it on pluralistic.net, my surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free blog:
If there's one thing we've learned during the lockdown, where the stock market soared even as economic activity (making and buying stuff) cratered, it's that the finance economy is totally decoupled from the real economy.
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Seen in that light, the Gamestop and other meme-stock/stonks bull runs were just more of the same: the movements of the market's fickle, questing line are based on random chance and manipulation, like the movement of the ball on a roulette wheel.
Did your data get breached by Facebook in its vast, ghastly, 500,000,000 person valdez? The lovely folks at @digitalrightsie are suing Facebook under the #GDPR for money damages and they'd like to sign you up to be part of the lawsuit.
You're eligible if you live in the EU and your data was leaked. And, thanks to the GDPR, your participation in the legal action could result in Facebook being on the hook for real cash damages.
A successful mass-action against Facebook with monetary damages will be a game-changer. That's because the data that Facebook gathers on us is very nearly worthless, and the company's vast profits depend on even more vast collection and cheap, reckless, sloppy data-handling.
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