Feds Plan Investigation Into Fraudulent FCC Comments
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Read the last paragraph closely and tell me that this is really going somewhere productive.
The U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) announced that it will formally investigate the submission of fake comments on the FCC website during the public hearing period for the net neutrality repeal decision.
Recall that in the lead up to the December 14 vote that ended net neutrality, there were multiple calls, such as that from New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman, accusing the FCC of relying on fake comments to support its case to repeal. In a letter to Congressman Pallone, the GAO stated that it had accepted his and nine other Democrats request to investigate the fake comments. The personnel required for the investigation are currently unavailable, so it wont begin for another five months.
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Congressmen Gregory W. Meeks (NY-05), Elijah E. Cummings (MD-07), and Frank Pallone, Jr. (NJ-06) led six other Democrats in sending a letter to the Government Accountability Office (GAO) requesting that it investigate and issue a report that uncovers the extent that outside groups were using false identities during the Federal Communications Commissions (FCC) recent net neutrality rulemaking process.
However, the GAOs response only addresses fraud and misuses of American identities and doesnt explicitly address fake comments or the influence of said comments on the repeal decision. We hope this isnt careful wording that avoids investigating the broader issue. Although stolen identities were used to submit a huge amount of comments, bot-generated comments with fake emails contributed too. Ars Technica recently reported on a study which revealed that only 17.4% of the comments were unique. The majority of the total comments were anti-net neutrality, but the majority of identified real comments were pro-net neutrality.
http://www.tomshardware.com/news/feds-plan-investigation-fcc-fake-comments,36396.html
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