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Comcast Kisses-Up To Obama, Publicly Agrees On Net Neutrality 258

MojoKid writes Comcast is one of two companies to have earned Consumerist's "Worst Company in America" title on more than one occasion and it looks like they're lobbying for a third title. That is, unless there's another explanation as to how the cable giant can claim (with straight face) that it's in agreement with President Barack Obama for a free and open Internet. Comcast issued a statement of its own saying they back the exact same things, it just doesn't want to go the utility route. Comcast went on to list specific bullet points that they're supposedly in wholehearted agreement with, such as: Free and open Internet. We agree — and that is our practice. No blocking. We agree — and that is our practice. No throttling. We agree — and that is our practice. Increased transparency. We agree — and that is our practice. No paid prioritization. We agree — and that is our practice. Really? Comcast conveniently fails to address the giant elephant in the room whose name is Netflix. Earlier this year, Netflix begrudgingly inked a multi-year deal with Comcast in which the streaming service agreed to pay a toll to ensure faster delivery into the homes of Comcast subscribers, who prior to the deal had been complaining of frequent buffering and video degradation when watching content on Netflix. Comcast would undoubtedly argue that it's not a paid fast lane, but it's hard to see the deal as anything other than that.
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Comcast Kisses-Up To Obama, Publicly Agrees On Net Neutrality

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  • will now come from Comcast.
    • by Thanshin ( 1188877 ) on Saturday November 15, 2014 @09:35AM (#48391415)

      Executive Orders will now come from Comcast.

      We agree — and that is our practice.

  • Window Dressing. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by damn_registrars ( 1103043 ) <damn.registrars@gmail.com> on Saturday November 15, 2014 @09:33AM (#48391403) Homepage Journal
    This is just Comcast trying to get some good PR before they force their agenda through. There is no purpose in companies kissing up to President Barack "Lawnchair" Obama, as he has consistently caved to the demands of conservatives and big businesses every time it was important to do otherwise during his administration.

    Every. Single. Time.

    Remember how he said he was going to stand up to insurance companies, and offer a single-payer option for health care? Remember how that was going to be his crowning achievement as president? Did we get any of that? No.

    Remember how he said he was going to help the middle class instead of helping wall street fat cats? Remember how that worked out?

    Comcast is just waiting for the attention to blow over. Eventually public attention will wane and then Comcast will kill off the net neutrality proposals and get their way.
    • Re:Window Dressing. (Score:4, Interesting)

      by Thanshin ( 1188877 ) on Saturday November 15, 2014 @10:07AM (#48391557)

      Of course they will, because corporations have infinite memory and infinite patience.

      However, corporations just have a winning strategy for the present game. But this game can never be completely won until humanity extinguishes. Nobody wins forever.

      It's time for a messiah of the fight of the productive force against the non-human corporations.

      Not one who explains why it is a problem and how much worse it will get. We've had several of those in the last century. We now need one who actually finds a solution and has the charisma to put it in practice.

      And I say charisma because, fortunately, power is still based on human beings. Thus, change will only come from someone who finds the solution and manages to convince enough people to apply it.

      I wonder how much money do corporations spend in finding those guides to the next system and silencing them.

      I suspect they spend nothing, because such person does not exist. Because enough people is too much people, and "too much people" is a very stupid beast.

    • by Tengoo ( 446300 )

      In fairness to the president, there was no way single payer could have made it through the Senate.

    • I would like you, and everyone else, to remember something about the office of the president. This is very important:

      The president does not write laws.

      So when someone running for the office of president says, "I will do X," you need to ask yourself if the president is really capable of doing that.

      Yes; the president can have some influence on how laws are written and which ones to write, but laws must be passed by congress first, and then approved by the president. That's how it is supposed to work. So next

    • This is just Comcast trying to get some good PR before they force their agenda through. There is no purpose in companies kissing up to President Barack "Lawnchair" Obama, as he has consistently caved to the demands of conservatives and big businesses every time it was important to do otherwise during his administration. Every. Single. Time. Remember how he said he was going to stand up to insurance companies, and offer a single-payer option for health care? Remember how that was going to be his crowning achievement as president? Did we get any of that? No.

      Ah yes, Obamacare. How many Republican votes did it get? How many chances did Republicans get to put in their $0.02 in conference? How is this a cave to the Republicans when they were locked out of the entire process and the entire thing passed with zero Republican support?

  • Bullshit (Score:5, Informative)

    by jsepeta ( 412566 ) on Saturday November 15, 2014 @09:48AM (#48391471) Homepage

    Comcast throttled me. Fuck them.

  • What is it? (Score:2, Insightful)

    by jamesl ( 106902 )

    The term "net neutrality" is bounced around over and over and now even our technically challenged president is for it. But what exactly is "net neutrality?" What does it prevent from happening. What is required to happen?

    I'll bet that three different people will have five different definitions.

    • by sjames ( 1099 )

      Simple. A packet is a packet is a packet. It matters not where it came from or where it's going, just forward it on and be happy.

      If you support QOS bits, honor them without regard to source and destination and without regard to the application you think generated it.

      Finally, keep your capacity adequate.

    • The term "net neutrality" is bounced around over and over and now even our technically challenged president is for it. But what exactly is "net neutrality?" What does it prevent from happening. What is required to happen?

      I'll bet that three different people will have five different definitions.

      perhaps you're right about the opinions. My unsolicited one boils down to "dumb pipes providing unrestricted IP (v4 and v6) connectivity. Full stop."

  • But rather the packets aren't getting bogged down by people using Tor or Bittorrent or Silk Road or some other network service known for trafficking in illicit content? For those of you who have had the experience of driving on an L.A. freeway during rush hour (which means pretty much any time of the day), you have no doubt seen the effects of a motorcycle squeezing between the lanes. People driving in cars end up slowing down out of fear of hitting one of those. Technically, the motorcycles' activity is

  • We agree — and that is our practice. No blocking. We agree — and that is our practice. No throttling. We agree — and that is our practice. Increased transparency. We agree — and that is our practice. No paid prioritization. We agree — and that is our practice. Really? Comcast conveniently fails to address the giant elephant in the room whose name is Netflix.

    ...is all of those "that is our practice" are because they are legally obligated to as part of their consent agreement f

  • Could the honesty and accuracy of Comcast's public statements be a by-product of letting their support channel formulate the answers?
  • A president who leans socialist and Comcast are trying to sell the American public on something, telling us that it will result in "a free and open internet". We better take a real close look at this, because it reminds me of a certain group who presented another with a large wooden horse.

    • A president who leans socialist

      Very funny. Or did you not mean it as a joke? Then perhaps you need to look up the word socialist.

      Obama doesn't "lean socialist", he just doesn't lean quite so far to the right as many US politicians.

      • Perhaps we both should look up the word. While we're at it, let's look up Obama's preferred policy, "single payer". Wouldn't it be interesting if the two terms were synonymous.

        When we look up socialism, I suspect we'll find it has something to do with the government's role in the economy. Let's look up the change in the extent of the government's role in the economy over the last six years.

    • You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means.

      Obama is a center-right politician as are most Democrats serving in national office in the US. Dennis Kucinich was about as far left (well, since Bella Abzug left Congress) as it got in recent times. There are a few still in congress who are center-left, but most Democrats in office today would have been considered moderate Republicans even twenty-five years ago.

      • but most Democrats in office today would have been considered moderate Republicans even twenty-five years ago.

        Yes, the Koch brothers and others have been successful in moving the center of US politics way to the right. The Tea Party is one of the strategies that they have used to achieve this.

    • I have a hard time taking ANYONE seriously after they've called Obama a socialist. I don't think you know what that word means... I don't think you know what a LOT of words mean....
      • When we look up socialism, I suspect we'll find it has something to do with the government's role in the economy. Let's look up the change in the extent of the government's role in the economy over the last six years.

        Perhaps we both should look up the word. While we're at it, let's look up Obama's preferred policy, "single payer". Wouldn't it be interesting if the two terms were synonymous.

  • but that doesn't mean they have it wrong. I don't agree with this whole "Open Internet" concept. It's like everyone (and every business) paying a flat rate for highway access. It becomes simple to understand: you and I will be paying for maintaining roads that we hardly use (compared to truckers, taxis, commuters and the like).

    Or water: flat rate for every city or town water user? I don't think so: the jerk next door with the sprinklers running 24 hours a day, the car wash up the street, paying the sa

    • You, apparently don't understand the concept of marginal cost [wikipedia.org] and how it applies to network bandwidth.. I suggest you educate yourself or you just make yourself appear to be uninformed and uneducated.

      I'm not trying to insult you here. If I was trying to insult you, I would succeed and there would be no ambiguity. This is constructive criticism.

    • It becomes simple to understand: you and I will be paying for maintaining roads that we hardly use (compared to truckers, taxis, commuters and the like).

      It becomes simple to understand: by paying for the roads to be available for everyone, we derive benefit even when we're not using them, for example when we purchase goods brought to the store by truck. And even if we used trains, we'd still need to do that, because the trains won't go everywhere.

      If everyone pays according to their usage, it makes a LOT more sense, is a lot fairer, etc.

      Well no, not really. Everyone has to pay for their bandwidth, because just providing the peak bandwidth costs money even though it's often unused. And in fact, actually sending data down the pipe (once it's establi

      • by paying for the roads to be available for everyone, we derive benefit even when we're not using them, for example when we purchase goods brought to the store by truck.

        A user fee libertarian might argue that if trucks wear the road more, the road's owner (state DOT or a private toll road) should charge higher road use fees (plates, tolls, etc.) for such vehicles. (The rule of thumb is the fourth power of axle weight.) This would be passed on to trucking companies, to retailers who receive goods by truck, and ultimately to shoppers who benefit from the goods' having been brought by truck.

  • by kheldan ( 1460303 ) on Saturday November 15, 2014 @12:01PM (#48392149) Journal
    If, through one means or another, Comcast becomes the de-facto Internet in the U.S., it won't matter what they 'agree to publicly', they will be able at that point to do whatever the hell they want with it, and it'll take an 'act of God'-level effort to dislodge them.
    • Comcast's main problem is that they can't find trustworthy installers, who intentionally cause reasons to be called back. That doubles their truck rolls, and therefore doubles their pay. They really should move to a circuit/appeals model where somebody else gets to fix their mistakes.

  • What would Obama have to offer? Antitrust maybe?

  • Know what to kiss and when.
    • Know what to kiss and when.

      Consider that two wrongs never make a right, but that three do.
      Wherever possible, put people on hold.
      Be comforted that in the face of all aridity and disillusionment,
      and despite the changing fortunes of time,
      There is always a big future in computer maintenance.

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