arstechnica.com— The Comcast P2P saga has come to its final chapter as a majority of FCC commissioners today voted to sanction the company. The FCC's Internet Policy Statement now sports some unexpectedly sharp teeth.
Jul 26, 2008View in Crawl 4
I cast love to f**k with there customers. I love to f**k with them when I was living in Florida I was using my *cough moto sb5100 you know eating up there bandwidth... oh that was fun for me.comc**k, c**kcast,c**kmast? wow sure love c**ks around here. asscast there you c**k and ass to finish it off. :P
I had met Mr. Martin, personally, last week in Pittsburgh when he, and his fellow commisioners were there for a public forum discussing the issue. AT&T were there, too, but no Comcast. We met during the interval between panelists. He was picking bits and peices off cookies, and talking to a reporter that was there, and I was able to ask him a quick question before he joined his friends. I had asked him what he, personally, would do against Comcast if the commission voted to sanction Comcast. While some of what he said wasn't exactly what I wanted (I wanted criminal charges leveled against Comcast's illegal, and unfair packet resets), most of it was good. He seemed like a good man, and definately worthy of the fight against the big-box cable, and carriors, like AT&T, Verizon, and Comcast. It seems that we have a good crusader fighting for us in making sure Net Nuetrality comes into place, and stays in place.
A noteworthy bit from the article:"If those are important principles to you, why not drop a quick note to one or more of the commissioners? As public servants, they often spend more time listening to nonprofits, broadcasters, telcos, lobbyists, and cable companies than to the people; those who do contact them are usually 1) upset or 2) seeking a favor. In this case, a simple "thank you" might be more appropriate."<a class="user" href="http://www.fcc.gov/contacts.html">http://www.fcc.gov/contacts.html</a> --- The three voting against Comcast are Copps, Adelstein, and Martin
The FCC has already been created. It's just doing it's job here, and it turns out for once they helped the consumer, so essentially it finally did it's job correctly. Although I see your point about government regulation, it's the lesser evil to corporative bullying and monopolizing.
wtf00Jul 26, 2008
I cast love to f**k with there customers. I love to f**k with them when I was living in Florida I was using my *cough moto sb5100 you know eating up there bandwidth... oh that was fun for me.comc**k, c**kcast,c**kmast? wow sure love c**ks around here. asscast there you c**k and ass to finish it off. :P
thehayzeJul 26, 2008
I had met Mr. Martin, personally, last week in Pittsburgh when he, and his fellow commisioners were there for a public forum discussing the issue. AT&T were there, too, but no Comcast. We met during the interval between panelists. He was picking bits and peices off cookies, and talking to a reporter that was there, and I was able to ask him a quick question before he joined his friends. I had asked him what he, personally, would do against Comcast if the commission voted to sanction Comcast. While some of what he said wasn't exactly what I wanted (I wanted criminal charges leveled against Comcast's illegal, and unfair packet resets), most of it was good. He seemed like a good man, and definately worthy of the fight against the big-box cable, and carriors, like AT&T, Verizon, and Comcast. It seems that we have a good crusader fighting for us in making sure Net Nuetrality comes into place, and stays in place.
Closed AccountJul 26, 2008
hmmm
gargenJul 26, 2008
A noteworthy bit from the article:"If those are important principles to you, why not drop a quick note to one or more of the commissioners? As public servants, they often spend more time listening to nonprofits, broadcasters, telcos, lobbyists, and cable companies than to the people; those who do contact them are usually 1) upset or 2) seeking a favor. In this case, a simple "thank you" might be more appropriate."<a class="user" href="http://www.fcc.gov/contacts.html">http://www.fcc.gov/contacts.html</a> --- The three voting against Comcast are Copps, Adelstein, and Martin
compu73rg33kJul 27, 2008
The FCC has already been created. It's just doing it's job here, and it turns out for once they helped the consumer, so essentially it finally did it's job correctly. Although I see your point about government regulation, it's the lesser evil to corporative bullying and monopolizing.