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Last week, the Sixth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled against the FCC,
rejecting its authority to classify broadband as a Title II “telecommunications service.”

In doing so, the court removed net neutrality protections for all Americans
and  took away the FCC’s ability to meaningfully regulate internet service providers.

This ruling fundamentally gets wrong the reality of internet service we all live with every day.
Nearly 80% of Americans view broadband access to be as important as water and electricity.
It is no longer an extra, non-necessary “information service,” as it was seen 40 years ago,
but it is a vital medium of communication in everyday life.

Business, health services, education, entertainment, our social lives, and more have increasingly moved online.
By ruling that broadband “information service” and not a “telecommunications service”
this court is saying that the ISPs that control your broadband access will continue to face little to no oversight for their actions.
This is intolerable.
Net neutrality is the principle that ISPs treat all data that travels over their network equally,
without improper discrimination in favor of particular apps, sites, or services.
At its core, net neutrality is a principle of equity and protector of innovation
—that, at least online, large monopolistic ISPs don’t get to determine winners and losers.
Net neutrality ensures that users determine their online experience, not ISPs.
As such, it is fundamental to user choice, access to information, and free expression online.

By removing protections against actions like #blocking, #throttling, and #paid #prioritization,
the court gives those willing and able to pay ISPs an advantage over those who are not.
It privileges large legacy corporations that have partnerships with the big ISPs,
and it means that newer, smaller, or niche services will have trouble competing, even if they offer a superior service.
It means that ISPs can throttle your service
–or that of, say, a fire department fighting the largest wildfire in state history.
They can block a service they don’t like.
In addition to charging you for access to the internet, they can charge services and websites for access to you, -- artificially driving up costs.
And where most Americans have little choice in home broadband providers, i
t means these ISPs will be able to exercise their #monopoly power not just on the price you pay for access, but how you access and engage with information as well.
Moving forward, now more than ever it becomes important for individual states to pass their own net neutrality laws,
or defend the ones they have on the books.
#California passed a gold standard net neutrality law in 2018 that has survivedjudicial scrutiny.
It is up to us to ensure it remains in place.
#Congress can also end this endless whiplash of reclassification and decide, once and for all, by passing a law classifying broadband internet services firmly under Title II.
Such proposals have been introduced before;
they ought to be introduced again.

eff.org/deeplinks/2025/01/sixt

Electronic Frontier Foundation · Sixth Circuit Rules Against Net Neutrality; EFF Will Continue to FightLast week, the Sixth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled against the FCC, rejecting its authority to classify broadband as a Title II “telecommunications service.” In doing so, the court removed net neutrality protections for all Americans and took away the FCC’s ability to meaningfully regulate...

Cuando pensamos en problemas de diseño de los Macbooks de la segunda mitad de los 2010 pensamos mucho en la pérdida de puertos y en el teclado. Pero lo del por calor del Pro con el Intel Core i9 es algo para denunciar también.

Quién me mandaría a mí comprarme esta máquina pensando que precisamente iba a funcionar un poco mejor. Y el dineral que me costó. 😓

Interesting post on the @briar #messenger by @Adam - watch the #video linked from the post.

#Briar is a quite resilient, secure messenger that is useful when #internet is only intermittently available (e.g., #disasters, #war zones, oppressive #throttling). It's capable of falling back even on #bluetooth. It supports forums and private groups.

Downsides: #synchronous communications only (so far); quite some battery drain; images compressed to 32KB, to save bandwidth.

pocketnow.com/how-keep-communi

PocketnowHow to keep communicating when your internet is disruptedBriar is the king of secure messaging and privacy even without internet access.

chaos.social is closing #registrations / #signups and #invites permanently:

"We are here to provide an online living room to ourselves, our friends, their friends, and their friends’ friends and so on. We’re willing to do unpleasant work for it –and we wouldn’t be willing to do the same work for a bigger, more professional, more general instance."

One of the first prominent #Mastodon #instances going from #throttling to expressly saying "enough". Respect for @ordnung

blog.chaos.social/2022/11/29/c

chaos.social blogRule changes, closed sign-ups, and moreInsights of chaos.social