Nov. 22nd, 2017

cellio: (Default)

There are still a few people posting only on LJ who I care about following, so I catch up there every now and then. When the (latest) DW migration started some people were still posting slightly different content on the two sites, so I followed those people in both places. I've recently done some cleanup on the LJ side. So if you got email saying I unsubscribed or unfriended or whatever they call it over there, it's just over there. I'm still reading you over here, and am just trying to eliminate some duplicates in my reading.

Apparently I can't remove deleted accounts from my "friends list" without accepting the TOS, but I can remove people who still have accounts. I assume that's a side-effect of something rather than a design choice, because that's pretty weird.

cellio: (Default)

The New York Attorney General is investigating fraud aimed at FCC commenting. The FCC refused to cooperate. According to this post, tens of thousands of New Yorkers, and many more people elsewhere in the US, had their names falsely and illegally used in fake feedback on net neutrality.

Successfully investigating this sort of illegal conduct requires the participation of the agency whose system was attacked. So in June 2017, we contacted the FCC to request certain records related to its public comment system that were necessary to investigate which bad actor or actors were behind the misconduct. We made our request for logs and other records at least 9 times over 5 months: in June, July, August, September, October (three times), and November.

We reached out for assistance to multiple top FCC officials, including you [Chairman Pai], three successive acting FCC General Counsels, and the FCC’s Inspector General. We offered to keep the requested records confidential, as we had done when my office and the FCC shared information and documents as part of past investigative work.

Yet we have received no substantive response to our investigative requests. None.

Net neutrality is important. The integrity of the public record is even more important, as it is used to support policy changes (not just this one). And right now it looks like we've lost both.

You can use this site to look for fake comments using your name and, if you find them, file a complaint. With, um, somebody -- I didn't find any under my name, so I haven't gone down that path.

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