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Ajit Pai is Officially Out of the FCC (vice.com) 184

Ajit Pai, the man who killed net neutrality, enacted a series of industry-friendly deregulatory moves for big telecom, and drank from a gigantic mug, is no longer around to terrorize the internet. The FCC confirmed to Motherboard that Pai is officially gone: "Federal Communications Commission Chairman Ajit Pai today concluded his four years as Chairman, eight years as a Commissioner, and twelve years as an employee of the agency," the agency said. His official FCC Twitter account, where he antagonized people who criticized him, has been deleted.
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Ajit Pai is Officially Out of the FCC

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday January 20, 2021 @03:12PM (#60969556)

    Keep the good news coming, USA!

    • by huckamania ( 533052 ) on Wednesday January 20, 2021 @03:16PM (#60969600) Journal

      Maybe stop using the word terrorize when its not appropriate. Ajit Pai is an idjit of the highest order but probably not a terrorist.

      Bring back Net Neutrality, I don't care. It didn't destroy the webz, that work is being done daily by big tech.

      • by SirSlud ( 67381 )

        It's a colloquialism, moron. The context of its appearance here is in a clearly opinionated summary on a /. article - it's not an address to the United Nations you numskull.

      • Maybe stop using the word terrorize when its not appropriate.

        I'll allow it.

      • by Joce640k ( 829181 ) on Thursday January 21, 2021 @02:28AM (#60972306) Homepage

        Maybe stop using the word terrorize when its not appropriate. Ajit Pai is an idjit of the highest order but probably not a terrorist.

        English, do you speak it?

        It's perfectly possible to "terrorize" something without being a "terrorist".

        https://www.google.com/search?... [google.com]

        https://www.google.com/search?... [google.com]

      • by nagora ( 177841 )

        Maybe stop using the word terrorize when its not appropriate.

        Terrorise has a meaning separate from "terrorist". When some kids are "terrorizing the neighbourhood" they're probably not planting bombs.

        When your five-year-old is terrorizing the cat, s/he's probably not forcing it to swear allegiance to the dog in front of a flag.

    • by Z80a ( 971949 )

      Now is the part where he actually fixes the underlying problem by allowing the small ISPs to even exist, right?

    • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      Keep the good news coming, USA!

      Indeed! I'm having a deClownGasm today! It's messy, but not orange.

    • Indeed- good riddance to bad rubbish.

      Now comes the work of unscrewing all the shit he screwed up.

  • by MikeDataLink ( 536925 ) on Wednesday January 20, 2021 @03:15PM (#60969580) Homepage Journal

    On the way out the slamming door. Good riddance!

  • One of my least favourite network related politicos in the USA which was also serving as a shining guiding star to idiots over here. Nice. Open the bubbly and keep it that way.
  • I ask because I'm clueless. Did he leave his position because his term is up and now replaced by Biden's selection? Or did he get fired for something he did?
    • From what I've heard, he drank too much Reese's Peanut Butter Cups-flavoured coffee.

    • Many government jobs turn over on a day like this... Trump's republicans out, Biden's Democrats in.

      • Thanks for the info! I guessed it was something like this too but wasn't sure. I wasn't sure because I didn't think the positions at places like CDC, NIH, FCC, SEC would be in any way related to political party, but rather more into serving citizen interests. Guess I was wrong :)
        • The people that serve on the FCC top committee are all political appointees. That said they aren't automatically replaced when the Presidency shifts control. The committee is also made up of picks from the separate parties, the chairman is picked by the President from the committee members. So I'm fairly certain he could have stayed on and gone back to being a regular committee member but he chose to resign instead. He has an ego that paired well with Trump and it isn't surprising that he'd rather resign th

          • You know... for a long time, I tried to understand the whole situation regarding net neutrality but I never got it. Everything regarding this subject used multiple negatives in the language. I wasn't born in the US and English is not my native language. Althought I'd like to think that my English skill is at fluent level, but I never understood the whole neutrality thing at the competence level as I'd like to. Up until today, I still don't know what kind of people he pissed off and what other kind of people
          • Regarding his resignation ... it does seem that other people made announcement in advance too, in light of Biden's take over. The one other person that I know of is NASA. He said another person with more aligned point of view would serve the role better. I actually admired this reason. If you stayed in the role and not agree with your boss, resigning would be better for the country. To me I think it's a patriotic thing to do. The man gave up his highly ranked position in the name of better results.
    • He previously said he was resigning his position when Biden took power.
    • In the USA... (Score:3, Informative)

      by tiqui ( 1024021 )

      There are [basically] 3 types of people working in the federal government:

      1. A huge number of career employees doing the day-to-day tasks of their agencies (everything from lawyers, to park rangers, and astronauts etc). They are supposed to be hired purely based on government need and employee qualification and they are expected to be non-partisan and faithfully carry out the orders of the President (the person who happens to hold the office, not the individual personality) no matter his/her party. These pe

  • Net neutrality (Score:3, Interesting)

    by backslashdot ( 95548 ) on Wednesday January 20, 2021 @03:37PM (#60969738)

    Now the republicans will be squirming for net neutrality because even their beloved capitalists will deprioritize magaterrorist traffic. Oops. They forgot that could happen. Republicans will soon be the party of government regulation and statist intrusion.

    • Now the republicans will be squirming for net neutrality because even their beloved capitalists will deprioritize magaterrorist traffic. Oops. They forgot that could happen. Republicans will soon be the party of government regulation and statist intrusion.

      Wouldn't it be great if the legislature would actually pass a law to settle it once and for all?

  • POS Pai was nothing but a toadie for the communications lobby.

    Zero fucks given over his departure.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • I thought Google fiber was more or less killed by the legacy connection providers refusing to let them use existing utility poles?
      • Not really. They stopped expanding it to new cites because running the fiber backhaul is so expensive, and there's wireless backhaul techs that are very close to being viable.

        Their model shifted to running the fiber in a neighborhood, and then connecting that neighborhood to a CO via RF. They need the radio tech to become practical to do that, and it's not quite there yet.

  • by MrLint ( 519792 ) on Wednesday January 20, 2021 @03:46PM (#60969802) Journal

    If the twitter account was an 'Official' FCC one can it be legally deleted?

    • I do not believe so due to record keeping. It could be set to Inactive.
      • by Holi ( 250190 )
        As long as an archive of the comments made by the officials I see no legal issue with deleting the account.
    • They just have to store the posts in an official archive somewhere.

    • Twitter bears no responsibility for preserving anything for anyone unless it is stipulated in a contract with that other party. The government regulations requiring the preservation of government communications and records places the responsibility for keeping those archives with the government itself. This came up with Trump's Twitter account already.

  • Those past 3 years have been terrible. All those big tech companies shutting down people's speech. Now with the Democrats we will finally have the protection of free speech, no more mobs going after others because they don't want those people to express their views or wanting to send people to re-education camps.
  • about time..
  • What great irony to insist on 'neutrality of carriers' to content and yet Not insist on neutrality of server admins ( aka amazon) or even telecommunication companies like facebook! I support net neutrality, no company that I employ should have any business screening INSPECTING or having any knowledge of any of my communications beyond ensuring I am receiving what was paid for. They should completely stay out of the business of telling what I can and can not use the network for or what I say on it. !

  • The Dow Jones has just hit a new absolute peak, overtaking the previous one from when the markets opened last Thursday. I don't think the index had ever ever closed above 30 000 before Biden was declared to have won but it did that then and broke 31 200 a few minutes ago. Those two Senate seats in Georgia also triggered a rally and a new record.
    A lot of people are placing a lot of hope in this new administration.

  • Oh grow up msmash! (Score:2, Insightful)

    by kenh ( 9056 )

    Ajit Pai, the man who killed net neutrality, enacted a series of industry-friendly deregulatory moves for big telecom, and drank from a gigantic mug, is no longer around to terrorize the internet.

    Oddly, despite "killing" Net Neutrality (by rightly saying it belonged under the Federal TRADE Commission, not the Federal COMMUNICATIONS Commission) the Internet has somehow managed to carry on. What was the real impact ending Net Neutrality?

    And "terrorize the Internet"? Please define this terrorization? Was there really no better, less inflammatory word to describe Pai's influence on the Internet? When I think of people being "terrorized" I don't picture people fearing data caps or higher internet bills.

    P

  • Man if you like corporate control of the internet, it is a fantastic day as Biden personally mans the shovel to dig deeper moats for the large ISPs and cellular carriers to protect themselves against dreaded competition!

  • But you are missing one of Pai's other parting shots. It seems he rejected a petition to let one 5G provider build their network next to (too close to?) GPS frequencies.

    https://www.theregister.com/2021/01/20/fcc_ligado_petition/ [theregister.com]

    "But we need this to serve IoT devices. And we promise we'll keep a close eye on GPS interference." Yeah, right. Once several million defective IoT equipped cuddly stuffed animals have made it out of China, you are going to have a tough time prying them out of the hands of screami

  • Was it Ajit's fault that so much legal speech was getting squelched? Otherwise I didn't notice anything change on the internet in the last 4 years.
  • And just for good measure, he's no longer welcome on my WiFi!

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