Headlining at Verizon Headquarters, FCC Chair Ajit Pai Dismisses Net Neutrality Defenders as 'Desperate'
Net neutrality advocates geared up for protests as Federal Communications Commission (FCC) head Ajit Pai headed to Verizon’s headquarters in Washington D.C. on Tuesday to speak at an telecommunications policy event, days before a planned vote on net neutrality protections that’s expected to benefit Verizon—Pai’s former employer—and other internet service providers (ISPs).
“This is the kind of corruption that turns your stomach,” said Evan Greer, campaign director for Fight for the Future, of Pai’s plan to speak at Verizon as he ignored his opponents’ arguments. “Ajit Pai is an embarassment to his own party and under his leadership the FCC has made a mockery of our democratic process. With a rogue FCC commissioner blatantly captured by the industry he is supposed to provide oversight for, Congress must do their job and take action to stop the FCC vote on December 14.”
The City of New York joined with internet freedom and consumer protection groups to send a letter (pdf) to Pai on Monday, urging him to delay the vote until after a pending court case regarding AT&T’s throttling of their customers’ mobile Internet connections.
“Rushing to a vote before the Ninth Circuit resolves this decision cavalierly risks the purported safeguards that you and other supporters of the Draft Order have repeatedly declared will protect consumers from abusive or anti-competitive practices,” read the letter.
Pai dismissed the concerns of the signers, releasing a statement calling the letter “evidence that supporters of heavy-handed Internet regulations are becoming more desperate by the day…The vote will proceed as scheduled on December 14.”
In response, Harold Feld, senior vice president for the advocacy group Public Knowledge, said Pai’s dismissal of the letter speaks volumes about whose interests the chairman is serving. “The FCC’s official response is name calling,” Feld told Ars Technica. “This tells anyone interested who is ‘fear mongering’ and who really has the interests of consumers at heart.”
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