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posted by chromas on Friday March 30 2018, @06:44PM   Printer-friendly
from the ownership-models dept.

Common Dreams reports

A new report details how local officials can create publicly owned internet programs that not only protect free speech and privacy, but also are accessible and affordable

In response to Republicans' recent attacks on net neutrality and digital privacy protections at the behest of giant telecommunications companies, the ACLU is calling on local government leaders to establish municipal broadband systems.

"States, cities, towns, and counties should take matters into their own hands by creating publicly owned services that do honor those values and can help ensure an open internet." —ACLU report

"Net neutrality and privacy protections are essential for the open internet that has transformed our society. With the Trump administration and for-profit companies abandoning those values, what we're seeing around the country is that local governments can protect them and provide access for all", said Jay Stanley, a senior policy analyst with the ACLU Speech, Privacy, and Technology Project, and the principal author of an ACLU report released [March 29].

The report, entitled The Public Internet Option, [1] describes the internet as "a necessity, like traditional utilities such as water and power"; denounces moves by the Republican-controlled FCC and Congress to roll back measures meant to protect consumers from privately-owned internet service providers, or ISPs; and encourages local officials to invest in publicly owned internet infrastructure. It emphasizes the need for internet options that not only protect free speech and privacy, but also are accessible and affordable.

[...] Outlining the many options available for ensuring internet freedom at the local level, the report explains: "Communities can go all the way and provide high-speed fiber connections directly to their residents' homes, along with internet services to go along with them. Or they can leverage their ownership of crucial assets such as conduits (tubes, pipes, tiles, and other casings for cables) to require private-sector providers using those assets to respect free-internet principles. Or any strategy in between."

Acknowledging concerns "that government-run broadband service will be bureaucratic an inefficient", the report points out that "cable and television internet service providers are among the industries most hated by consumers", while the public internet service in Chattanooga, Tennessee "was rated in 2017 as the nation's top ISP in terms of consumer satisfaction."

[...] cities and counties are fighting [the incumbents' "misinformation" campaigns]. In November, for example, the city of Fort Collins, Colorado approved [2] a ballot measure to invest $150 million in a city-owned broadband utility, despite a well-funded effort by the telecom lobby to sway the vote. The Institute for Local Self-Reliance (ILSR), which reviewed the ACLU report, has developed an interactive map [3] for tracking local broadband initiatives nationwide.

The ACLU sent its report to more than 100 mayors in 30 states who have spoken out against the federal rollback of net neutrality protections. For those who are interested in advocating for implementing publicly owned broadband systems in their areas, the ACLU suggested starting with the Community Connectivity Toolkit, a resource developed by ILSR.

Also at Vice.

[1] Page points to PDF.
[2] Dup'd link in TFA.
[3] JavaScript required.


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 30 2018, @06:58PM (23 children)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 30 2018, @06:58PM (#660474)

    We must terminate their command, with extreme prejudice.

    Elections coming in November. If you don't take the chance and vote out all incumbents, you will get nowhere.

    • (Score: 0, Touché) by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 30 2018, @07:04PM (22 children)

      by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 30 2018, @07:04PM (#660476)

      The monopoly ISPs you so hate were mostly granted their status by Government.

      And, Government is itself the worst kind of monopoly: Government came to power not through being good at providing a service, but rather through violent imposition.

      You guys are nuts.

      • (Score: 1, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 30 2018, @07:14PM (6 children)

        by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 30 2018, @07:14PM (#660479)

        That's ridiculous. Government came into being because the alternative was even worse.

        If government sucks, it's purely because idiots like you refuse to do anything to make it better. As long as people continue to vote for anti-government nutters we're going to have a government that sucks. It's not because governments are bad, it's because there's a sizable number of people that are too ignorant to vote for their self interests because they find intelligence to be threatening.

        • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 30 2018, @07:21PM (2 children)

          by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 30 2018, @07:21PM (#660485)

          Even if the alternative were worse, it's true that Government is a monopoly on various aspects of society, and it's true that Government arose to that monopoly through violent imposition rather than through being good at providing a service (voluntarily, by imposition).

          So, you're not disagreeing.

          • Whether Government is a necessary evil is beside the point.

          • People are still requesting that one Monopoly be replaced with another Monopoly, the latter Monopoly of which is explicitly based on violent imposition. Strange.

          • (Score: 1, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 30 2018, @07:43PM (1 child)

            by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 30 2018, @07:43PM (#660498)

            I'm arguing no such thing.

            I'm arguing that we're stuck with some sort of a government as the alternative isn't acceptable. And that if we want the government to be one that works for our benefit, we need to actually vote for people that are pushing policies that would make that so.

            What's strange here is that you are being so purposefully obtuse about this. The issue isn't that there is a monopoly, the issue is that there's no mechanism for when the source of the service makes decisions that aren't good for society at large. Without either competitors willing to do the right thing or the option of voting the bums out of office, we wind up with the current situation where the service sucks, but we don't have a meaningful say about whether or not to participate as more and more essential government functions are only available online.

            • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 30 2018, @08:43PM

              by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 30 2018, @08:43PM (#660523)
              • "Everything in the State. Nothing outside the State." That (or the like) was the description of Fascism, according to its founder, Mussolini.

                Here's what I say: If Government provides a service, then you are not only forced to pay for that service but you are forced to pay a particular provider of that service (namely, Government). However, if anybody else can provide that service (not including the Government at all), then you at least have choices. Therefore, anybody who wants to live in a free society must try very hard to put as much of society as possible into the hands of organizations that are not the Government.

                To flip Mussolini around: "As much as possible outside the State. As little as possible in the State; ideally, nothing in the State."

                Where do you draw the line? What is your philosophy? Mussolini is precise; I'm precise. How about you?

              • If the government's resources are increasingly available only online, then the government should supply ways for every citizen to access those resources.

                Oh, wait! It does!

                Public libraries provide Internet access (though the wastrels use it to wack off to porn, or bitch in forums about how they deserve more handouts), and there is public transit, subsidized for the poor, to get to those libraries.

                Public welfare should NOT be convenient; falling into the safety net should not be an enjoyable alternative to crossing the damn tight rope that everyone else has to cross.

        • (Score: 2) by edIII on Friday March 30 2018, @07:50PM (2 children)

          by edIII (791) on Friday March 30 2018, @07:50PM (#660504)

          Go. To. Fuck.

          If government sucks, it's purely because idiots like you refuse to do anything to make it better. As long as people continue to vote for anti-government nutters we're going to have a government that sucks. It's not because governments are bad, it's because there's a sizable number of people that are too ignorant to vote for their self interests because they find intelligence to be threatening.

          What about the millions of people who voted for Obama? A "sizable number of people" were so desperate for change, and Obama offered Hope AND Change, so they voted for him. Did they find intelligence to be threatening? Which by the way, sounds like a swipe at religious Republicans.

          The system itself is broken, and no amount of voting will fix it. Only revolution, war, and bringing the Elites to their knees (makes it easier to cut off the head) will help.

          --
          Technically, lunchtime is at any moment. It's just a wave function.
          • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 30 2018, @08:40PM (1 child)

            by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 30 2018, @08:40PM (#660520)

            It's definitely fixable without revolution, the problem is that there's a bunch of morons that keep voting to prevent gays from having abortions.

            Obama was the best option for the Presidency and at the time he was first elected, he was the only candidate that had a plan for dealing with the impending economic crisis.

            As far as the system goes, perhaps if people would stop voting for corporatists and rightwingers we might have some change. When all is said and done, there's a sizable number of people that purposefully vote for people that aren't even pretending like what they're doing is going to be good for the country. If they aren't even promising better and they still get votes, why on earth would anybody expect better?

            This year we've got people actually primarying their fellow party members in much larger numbers than usual. We've finally got somebody running against that horrible Pelosi that's an actual liberal. It shocks me a bit that nobody has tried that before as she clearly isn't representing her constituents.

            • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 31 2018, @03:09AM

              by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 31 2018, @03:09AM (#660699)

              Obama [...] was the only candidate that had a plan for dealing with the impending economic crisis

              I see that you aren't timid about revealing your towering ignorance.

              Ralph Nader was on the ballot in 2008. [wikipedia.org]
              If you scroll down to 2008[1], you'll see not only Ralph (no single declared party that time), you'll see Cynthia McKinney (Green Party; former Georgia congresswoman) and Gloria La Riva (who is getting to be a Peace and Freedom Party perennial).

              Jerry White (not listed on that page) was on the Socialist Equality Party ticket that year.

              Any of those had an economic plan that was at least the equal of O'Bummer's bailouts of failed Capitalists (criminals, at that).
              A little reminder here that the S&L crooks of the 1980s were imprisoned in the 1990s--not bailed out at taxpayer expense.

              [1] Someone who is signed up with Wikipedia needs to add all of those headings to the top of the page so that folks can use a #FragmentIdentifier to index the page to the pertinent part.

              -- OriginalOwner_ [soylentnews.org]

      • (Score: 2) by meustrus on Friday March 30 2018, @07:26PM (5 children)

        by meustrus (4961) on Friday March 30 2018, @07:26PM (#660487)

        Come on now straw libertarian AC. Surely even you can tell there’s nothing that makes a violently imposed monopoly administered by the guys holding the guns any worse than a violently administered monopoly administered by a a profit-maximizing corporation.

        In many ways, the latter strategy is the worst of both worlds. It’s still violently imposed, but if they screw the peasants bad enough that they revolt, the corporation can just evaporate while the guys holding the guns get to say “sorry that didn’t work out, here’s a new administrator that totally isn’t just the same guys as before under a new name”.

        --
        If there isn't at least one reference or primary source, it's not +1 Informative. Maybe the underused +1 Interesting?
        • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 30 2018, @07:39PM (4 children)

          by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 30 2018, @07:39PM (#660495)

          At the very least, I can choose not to use the Internet, or I can connive with my buddies to do something wild to access the Internet without using a particular corporation, if only for shits and giggles.

          Yet, that's not possible if the Government provides an ISP. The government WILL force me to fund its activities by one means or another.

          That's the difference. That's what indisputably makes the Government a violently imposed monopoly.

          Surely, even a bootlicker like you can perceive that difference.

          • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 30 2018, @10:34PM

            by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 30 2018, @10:34PM (#660571)

            I'll take accusations of bootlicking any day over being a naive fuckwit.

          • (Score: 2) by c0lo on Saturday March 31 2018, @12:20AM (1 child)

            by c0lo (156) Subscriber Badge on Saturday March 31 2018, @12:20AM (#660631) Journal

            At the very least, I can choose not to use the Internet, or I can connive with my buddies to do something wild to access the Internet without using a particular corporation, if only for shits and giggles.

            Are you saying that the existence of a municipal ISP will force you to use the Internet?

            --
            https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aoFiw2jMy-0 https://soylentnews.org/~MichaelDavidCrawford
            • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 31 2018, @09:56AM

              by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 31 2018, @09:56AM (#660790)

              You know that's not what the AC means.

          • (Score: 2) by meustrus on Monday April 02 2018, @02:51PM

            by meustrus (4961) on Monday April 02 2018, @02:51PM (#661496)

            But the government already forces you to fund the ISPs. Your taxes pay for rural broadband incentive packages and other infrastructure rollout funds. Funds which the ISPs often manage to avoid spending on rolling out infrastructure like they are supposed to, but that's beside the point.

            The point is that the current ISP system is already a violently imposed monopoly. You cannot choose not to pay for it.

            It would be different if the ISP market looked more like the old dial-up market. What made that more free was that anybody could buy a small set of equipment and broadcast over the existing infrastructure. Nobody had a violently-imposed competitive advantage over anyone else.

            The only way to make that kind of system work for broadband is to dissociate the infrastructure from its commercial applications. Whomever owns the infrastructure has a competitive advantage, so don't let them compete. Then the ISPs can be a free market layer on top of that infrastructure.

            Even then, the infrastructure itself is still a monopoly problem. No one has yet come up with a way to maintain singleton infrastructure without the government ultimately being in control. Whether the public or private sector administers it is irrelevant to the fact that the government is still taking your tax money to build and maintain it.

            --
            If there isn't at least one reference or primary source, it's not +1 Informative. Maybe the underused +1 Interesting?
      • (Score: 3, Insightful) by c0lo on Friday March 30 2018, @10:51PM (6 children)

        by c0lo (156) Subscriber Badge on Friday March 30 2018, @10:51PM (#660584) Journal

        And, Government is itself the worst kind of monopoly: Government came to power not through being good at providing a service,

        And now, when the call is for the govt to actually provide a service, you object.
        Even more, it would be the local hovts to replace a monopoly granted by the federal govt with many utility-like services. Is that an aggravating factor to you?

        --
        https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aoFiw2jMy-0 https://soylentnews.org/~MichaelDavidCrawford
        • (Score: 4, Informative) by bzipitidoo on Friday March 30 2018, @11:48PM (5 children)

          by bzipitidoo (4388) on Friday March 30 2018, @11:48PM (#660617) Journal

          I suspect this AC of being a telecoms shill. Advances a spurious argument "but, but GOVERNMENT!!", while turning a blind eye to the very real abuses of the monopolistic telecoms-- the price gouging, the indifference to providing any service at all if you live in a backwater, the eagerness to destroy net neutrality, the urge to censor and spy upon us, and force more advertising on us. About the only good thing I have to say for the telecoms is that they have at the least not cooperated with the copyright extremists in ratting us out, identifying us for the MAFIAAs lawyers.

          The problem is power. Power corrupts. Doesn't matter if that power is concentrated in government or private hands. However, at the least a democratic government is accountable to the voters. Sure, private corporations are still accountable to market forces, but we've all seen how that can be subverted, for instance via gaining a monopoly.

          A good cure is competition. Banning the government from competing at all reduces competition. There's a little to that bit about the government having an unfair advantage, but it's not near as much as the established private corporations would have us believe. FedEx, UPS, and other parcel delivery services managed to prosper in spite of a late start and competition from the US Post Office.

          The US Post Office doesn't exist only to provide reliable, low cost mail delivery. Communication was quite rightly viewed as an essential ingredient for a democracy, and it was feared that if left solely to private corporations, those companies could obtain so much power that they could hold the nation to ransom. The existence government operated Post Office service forestalls that. The Internet has become the most important communication network in the world, surpassing what we now scornfully call "snail mail", and also rendering obsolete the "landline" phone service with such things as VoIP. Therefore, there ought to be a government option for this network. If anything, the lack of such an option is irresponsible.

          • (Score: -1, Troll) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 31 2018, @12:06AM

            by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 31 2018, @12:06AM (#660625)

            A government is a special organization; it is an organization that declares its income at the point of a gun.

            It's not competition but rather distortion when a government participates in the market—the competing private organizations are forced to fund their opponents, the government. Also, consumers are given a very irritating choice: Either pay the government for its service, or pay both the government for its service and some other competing company... stupid.

            With regard to the US Postal Service, I urge you to read about Lysander Spooner.

            Inherent in your view of a government communications service is the notion that the government is inherently more angelic than "private" organizations. Yet, how can that be? Both kinds of organization are staffed by Men, who are not angels. Worse for government, though, is the fact that government can declare its income regardless of its performance, and when government commandeers an industry, it does so as a violently imposed monopoly where—BY YOUR OWN ARGUMENT—it is in danger of corruption through lack of competition (especially given the incompetence that necessary comes along with taking over an industry rather than growing the industry through continuously profitable activities).

          • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 31 2018, @12:17AM

            by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 31 2018, @12:17AM (#660629)

            The problem is power. Power corrupts.

            Absolute power corrupts absolutely.
            Atomic power corrupts... atomically?

          • (Score: 1, Interesting) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 31 2018, @03:25AM (1 child)

            by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 31 2018, @03:25AM (#660704)

            a democratic government is accountable to the voters

            That's the hypothesis.
            Now, add a Reactionary Supreme Court that repeatedly says "It's fine with us if rich folks want to buy elections."

            What was needed from the start were publicly-financed election campaigns.
            To get there now will take a constitutional amendment.
            We've got the numbers, but, again, they've got the cash.
            It's going to be an uphill climb.

            -- OriginalOwner_ [soylentnews.org]

            • (Score: 1) by fustakrakich on Sunday April 01 2018, @07:13PM

              by fustakrakich (6150) on Sunday April 01 2018, @07:13PM (#661204) Journal

              "It's fine with us if rich folks want to buy elections."

              It's fine with me too! If you have a problem with that.. direct your ire at the people who sell their votes to the corrupt politician. They do so to get their own little piece of that pie. So don't blame the winners for following the will of the voters.

              --
              La politica e i criminali sono la stessa cosa..
          • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 31 2018, @09:58AM

            by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 31 2018, @09:58AM (#660791)

            A government is a special organization; it is an organization that declares its income at the point of a gun.

            It's not competition but rather distortion when a government participates in the market—the competing private organizations are forced to fund their opponents, the government. Also, consumers are given a very irritating choice: Either pay the government for its service, or pay both the government for its service and some other competing company... stupid.

            With regard to the US Postal Service, I urge you to read about Lysander Spooner.

            Inherent in your view of a government communications service is the notion that the government is inherently more angelic than "private" organizations. Yet, how can that be? Both kinds of organization are staffed by Men, who are not angels. Worse for government, though, is the fact that government can declare its income regardless of its performance, and when government commandeers an industry, it does so as a violently imposed monopoly where—BY YOUR OWN ARGUMENT—it is in danger of corruption through lack of competition (especially given the incompetence that necessary comes along with taking over an industry rather than growing the industry through continuously profitable activities).

      • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 31 2018, @02:34AM

        by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 31 2018, @02:34AM (#660685)

        Because NOBODY . . . EXPECTS . . . the . . . VIOLENT IMPOSITION!!! Or rather, those that DO expect it, like our love-lorn AC here, well, they kind of want it, because it shows everyone what they were going on about! "Did you SEE that? This is what I'm on about! Help! Help! I'm being violently imposed upon!! Eeeeek!!Flummmshlobble!!! Gaaark!!!!"

      • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 31 2018, @07:46AM

        by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 31 2018, @07:46AM (#660764)

        Government came to power not through being good at providing a service, but rather through violent imposition.

        Oh, stop with the melodrama! You can still vote them out... Nobody forces you to reelect anybody.

  • (Score: 2) by kazzie on Friday March 30 2018, @06:59PM (15 children)

    by kazzie (5309) Subscriber Badge on Friday March 30 2018, @06:59PM (#660475)

    I know some people say it's a trick to get us to read TFA, but neither the summary nor the article bother to state who or what ACLU is.

    (My brain tried playing anagrams and got UCLA, but that's not it.)

    Two links deep, it turns out they're the American Civil Liberties Union (aclu.org).

    • (Score: -1, Troll) by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 30 2018, @07:06PM (7 children)

      by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 30 2018, @07:06PM (#660477)

      "Come on, comrade! Pay your fair share!"

      • (Score: -1, Offtopic) by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 30 2018, @07:15PM (6 children)

        by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 30 2018, @07:15PM (#660480)

        In California some years ago, the local ACLU branch defend the right of parents to cut up the penises of completely healthy children.

        So, according to the ACLU, you don't have civil right to your own penis, but you do have a civil right to cut up someone else's penis—the individual is not what matters; instead, authority is what matters.

        Weird organization. I think it's mostly the legal wing of the wider leftist movement.

        • (Score: 2) by DannyB on Friday March 30 2018, @07:27PM (5 children)

          by DannyB (5839) Subscriber Badge on Friday March 30 2018, @07:27PM (#660488) Journal

          Sign on rabbi's door:

          Today's special: circumcision.
          Today only: half off!

          --
          When trying to solve a problem don't ask who suffers from the problem, ask who profits from the problem.
          • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 30 2018, @07:42PM (4 children)

            by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 30 2018, @07:42PM (#660496)

            You wouldn't joke about female circumcision.

            • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 30 2018, @07:48PM (3 children)

              by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 30 2018, @07:48PM (#660502)

              Before anybody says "That's totally different!", you should note that local, national, and international law declares it to be "genital mutilation" if you merely prick a girl's labia with a pin just to draw a symbolic drop of blood.

              In contrast, you are free to throw a party, complete with bagels, if you surgically strip away half a boy's shaft tissue, much of which is specialized for protection and sexual pleasure, both in terms of stimuli and mechanical functionality.

              Come on, folks. You know there's a double standard.

              • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 30 2018, @08:03PM (2 children)

                by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 30 2018, @08:03PM (#660510)

                I think what's especially interesting about the internalized misandry people like the logged in guy have up there is that they're usually not even well informed about female genital mutilation.

                There have been incidents here and there of sewing the vaginal opening shut or amputating the clitoris and labia. Those are not what we're talking about, any more than we're talking about men whose entire penis must be removed because of malpractice.

                However, the traditional method of female genital mutilation is clitoral slicing or clitoral pinpricking. The American Academy of Pediatrics, the same organization that recommends routine infant male genital mutilation to protect women from cervical cancer, also recommends that hospitals in the USA perform clitoral pinpicks.

                However, the biggest fact that those who hate men (many of whom are men with internalized misandry) always miss: it's by and large women who are performing and promoting female circumcision (in places of the world where it's practiced). Men have nothing to do with the practice.

                • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 30 2018, @08:47PM (1 child)

                  by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 30 2018, @08:47PM (#660526)

                  However, it looks like the American Academy of Pediatrics tried to recommend pricking clitorises in lieu of other cutting, but were lambasted so badly for promoting "genital mutilation" that they retracted that recommendation and removed all traces of it from their website.

                  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 30 2018, @08:55PM

                    by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 30 2018, @08:55PM (#660530)

                    Well, we can still find evidence [medscape.com] of what they did, and how quickly they folded after the feminist establishment got upset.

    • (Score: 2) by Freeman on Friday March 30 2018, @07:12PM (1 child)

      by Freeman (732) on Friday March 30 2018, @07:12PM (#660478) Journal

      ACLU is a fairly recognizable acronym and the organization has been posted about here a number of times. While it's good to explain the first use of an Acronym, SN isn't a "professional" shop. They do a great job, though. Minor nitpicks are minor.

      --
      Joshua 1:9 "Be strong and of a good courage; be not afraid, neither be thou dismayed: for the Lord thy God is with thee"
      • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 30 2018, @08:25PM

        by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 30 2018, @08:25PM (#660518)

        Yeah. When I went to close the page of TFA after I had submitted, I finally noticed that deficit in it.

        These guys have a page that I stumbled onto later.
        ACLU report proves community broadband networks are capable of challenging the Telecom monopoly [thinkprogress.org]

        the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) is releasing new guidelines highlighting an additional step activists can take to prevent corporations like Comcast, Verizon and AT&T from monopolizing the internet: building their own broadband networks.

        ...and if you can't -pronounce- it as a word, "acronym" isn't the proper descriptor. [soylentnews.org]
        In this case, perhaps "abbreviation" or "initialism" would be apt.
        (I've never heard anyone say "Akloo" when they weren't sneezing.)

        -- OriginalOwner_ [soylentnews.org]

    • (Score: 2) by julian on Friday March 30 2018, @07:15PM

      by julian (6003) Subscriber Badge on Friday March 30 2018, @07:15PM (#660481)

      I don't think it's that exotic of an acronym for most politically aware Americans; and this is an American-centric website.

      I might be biased since I donate $20 to them every month.

    • (Score: 4, Funny) by DannyB on Friday March 30 2018, @07:32PM

      by DannyB (5839) Subscriber Badge on Friday March 30 2018, @07:32PM (#660491) Journal

      ACLU is an initialism for an association of four telecom companies:
      AT&T
      Comcast
      Logicworks
      Ultra Mobile

      See? They are working hard to protect net neutrality!

      --
      When trying to solve a problem don't ask who suffers from the problem, ask who profits from the problem.
    • (Score: 2) by stretch611 on Saturday March 31 2018, @12:52AM (1 child)

      by stretch611 (6199) on Saturday March 31 2018, @12:52AM (#660640)

      If you were actually serious about this, a single search would turn up the information. Through DuckDuckGo, every single result except one was a link to the main site or a local chapter. (The exception was a paid ad.. it went to a lawyer's website.) DuckDuckGo even provided a proper summary from the ACLU wikipedia page.

      So you are either trying to be a troll, or too ignorant to know how to search the internet.

      --
      Now with 5 covid vaccine shots/boosters altering my DNA :P
      • (Score: 2) by kazzie on Saturday March 31 2018, @07:55AM

        by kazzie (5309) Subscriber Badge on Saturday March 31 2018, @07:55AM (#660768)

        I did search after reading the article. (I even used DuckDuckGo!) I then revisited the article to check if I'd got the right organisation, and found that one of the links off TFA led to a page on the aclu.org website. Then I posted here to inform anyone else that didn't recognise the initialisation.

          So given that I did indeed search the internet, I suppose I must have been inadvertently trolling you. Sorry. I'll try to be less helpful in the future.

    • (Score: 2) by hendrikboom on Saturday March 31 2018, @01:19AM

      by hendrikboom (1125) Subscriber Badge on Saturday March 31 2018, @01:19AM (#660648) Homepage Journal

      For a straight answer:

      American Civil Liberties Union

  • (Score: 4, Insightful) by Freeman on Friday March 30 2018, @07:18PM (3 children)

    by Freeman (732) on Friday March 30 2018, @07:18PM (#660483) Journal

    While AT&T et al are screwing the customer. At least they're not the Government. We need internet privacy laws that take into account the freedoms we were granted from the founding of the United States. We don't Want a Government controlled ISP Monopoly. What we do want is to stop being screwed with.

    #1 Real Punishment for Stupid IT mistakes that leak Hundreds of Millions of people's account information.
    #2 Decent Competition and Decent Pricing

    --
    Joshua 1:9 "Be strong and of a good courage; be not afraid, neither be thou dismayed: for the Lord thy God is with thee"
    • (Score: 3, Interesting) by meustrus on Friday March 30 2018, @07:28PM (1 child)

      by meustrus (4961) on Friday March 30 2018, @07:28PM (#660490)

      You can bet the courts would give us #1 if it was run by the government. AT&T et al are not bound by the constitution.

      --
      If there isn't at least one reference or primary source, it's not +1 Informative. Maybe the underused +1 Interesting?
      • (Score: 2) by Freeman on Monday April 02 2018, @01:18PM

        by Freeman (732) on Monday April 02 2018, @01:18PM (#661436) Journal

        My #1 wish wasn't necessarily an ISP issue. More food for thought regarding all things internet.

        --
        Joshua 1:9 "Be strong and of a good courage; be not afraid, neither be thou dismayed: for the Lord thy God is with thee"
    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 31 2018, @03:53AM

      by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 31 2018, @03:53AM (#660711)

      The people of Chattanooga are happy with what they have.
      Bunches more with it or working on getting public ISPs. [googleusercontent.com] (orig) [broadbandnow.com]
      See also the interactive map mentioned in TFS.

      ...and, at least in USA, ISTM you're going to be looking a long time before you find a customer of a for-profit ISP who is elated with the service and price paid.
      ...especially if they know what is available outside USA.

      ...and natural monopolies are where I would absolutely want public ownership.

      -- OriginalOwner_ [soylentnews.org]

  • (Score: 2) by archfeld on Friday March 30 2018, @08:22PM (1 child)

    by archfeld (4650) <treboreel@live.com> on Friday March 30 2018, @08:22PM (#660516) Journal

    Even with a municipal broadband, as soon as your signal leaves the local municipality it belongs to the large scale ISP's and their router system and they will harvest what they want, when they want, as well as classify and sort the traffic in any manner they see fit. The only way to combat that would be to have a state/regional level network, and a federal/interstate level network as well. The use of VPN and encryption seems much more secure but it will hardly help against traffic prioritization or such control.

    --
    For the NSA : Explosives, guns, assassination, conspiracy, primers, detonators, initiators, main charge, nuclear charge
    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 30 2018, @10:01PM

      by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 30 2018, @10:01PM (#660553)

      I don't think you understand how the system actually works.

  • (Score: 2) by AnonTechie on Friday March 30 2018, @08:50PM (1 child)

    by AnonTechie (2275) on Friday March 30 2018, @08:50PM (#660529) Journal

    LA Council Member Proposes Municipal Broadband Feasibility Study

    A Los Angeles councilmember has introduced a motion to study the feasibility of a municipal broadband network that would provide at-cost high-speed Internet to the city's local businesses and residents. In announcing the motion, Krekorian emphasized that providing at-cost access to high-speed Internet was increasingly important, citing developing factors such as a lack of competition among Internet service providers, as well as the Federal Communications Commission’s decision last year to repeal protections for net neutrality. Krekorian also noted that Los Angeles already owns a network of fiber-optic cable that runs through every part of the city, and his intention is to see if the local government can tap this to provide equitable access to fast Internet connections.

    http://www.govtech.com/network/LA-Councilmember-Proposes-Municipal-Broadband-Feasibility-Study.html [govtech.com]

    --
    Albert Einstein - "Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former."
    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 30 2018, @09:47PM

      by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 30 2018, @09:47PM (#660550)

      That place already has a publicly-owned Department of Water and Power.
      Seems like a natural expansion to do what Chattanooga's public electricity utility did providing broadband.

      -- OriginalOwner_ [soylentnews.org]

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 30 2018, @11:45PM (1 child)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 30 2018, @11:45PM (#660614)

    Municipal broadband is not the savior everyone makes it out to be. In some cases it will be an amazing success. In others, remember these are the same people who can not manage to find someone to fix a pot hole in the road for 2+ years. For example the city I currently live in has managed to squander well over 4 billion dollars in tearing up the interstates and 3 light rails that are only 1/3rd done over 15 years. Yet somehow magically they will get broadband right? In my state there is one city that has it done perfectly. They are even the poster child for it. But they were a small city and had a couple of dudes who really wanted it and did it right. In my city I expect the politicos to smell money in the water and waste it faster than it appears.

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 31 2018, @04:56AM

      by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 31 2018, @04:56AM (#660728)

      It depends how it's set up. Around here, the roads are more or less par for a 2nd world country and getting worse because the jackasses that are responsible are more interested in putting in street car tracks and bike lanes. But, the power grid is generally well taken care of and repaired promptly when it goes out because that's run by a different set of people. The people running the electric grid understand that they're there to make sure people have access to reliable affordable power not to force people to stop using electricity from the grid because it's no longer reliable.

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