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posted by cmn32480 on Friday June 19 2015, @05:01AM   Printer-friendly
from the a-lawyer-you-may-like dept.

El Reg reports

America's broadband watchdog the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has named its first net neutrality ombudsperson--and she'll be your first point of call when your ISP breaks the new rules.

Parul Desai has been the FCC's director of consumer engagement for the past eight months, and before that she worked in the FCC's media bureau for two years.

In her new role, she will have two basic duties: first, to help Joe Sixpack and businesses navigate the FCC's complaints process; and second, to carry out investigations and analyses of both open internet complaints and the broader market and report to the commission on her findings. She won't be allowed to act as an advocate, or an officer of the FCC with a right of approval.

[...] the FCC outlines the "open internet" structure as: "Broadband service providers cannot block or deliberately slow speeds for Internet services or apps, create special 'fast lanes' for content, or engage in other practices that harm Internet openness."

So if you feel your broadband provider is blocking access to particular websites or applications, throttling your traffic or prioritizing traffic from specific sources, or if you feel they are more generally up to no good, then you can head over to the ombudsperson to find out how and where to complain. Hint: go to consumercomplaints.fcc.gov.

What may be more interesting, however, is that broadband providers are also required to provide "sufficient information" about speed, price, and network management to enable citizens to make an informed choice. Cable companies are notorious for playing fast and loose with prices and speeds to get as much out of consumers as they can--something that has contributed to them being the most disliked and complained-about companies in the United States today.

If Desai decides to take on that issue as part of her role, she has her work cut out for her. The FCC declined our request to interview Desai.


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  • (Score: 1, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Friday June 19 2015, @09:30PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday June 19 2015, @09:30PM (#198440)

    That 100M fine slapped on AT&T

    That represents what portion of their profits over the time they were in violation?
    When the fine is GREATER THAN the profits they gleaned, -then- we can -start- to talk about effectiveness.

    Now, until the regulators start dragging corporate execs into court and subsequently sent them to prison, "teeth" is a bad analogy.

    GP was on-point about Wheeler, I'm afraid.

    republican[s] ... have an even softer spot that the dems for corporations

    Have a little time?
    This is the best thing I have read in a long, long, long time.
    Chris Hedges is a brilliant writer and speaker.
    Here he itemizes how one of the most prescient thinkers of his age--well over a century ago--described the final stages of Capitalism. [commondreams.org]
    See how many mile markers you recognize.

    -- gewg_

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