If Net Neutrality Dies, Comcast Can Just Block A Protest Site Instead Of Sending A Bogus Cease-And-Desist
from the comcastic dept
It appears that a vendor working for Comcast sent a totally bullshit cease-and-desist letter regarding a pro-net neutrality site: Comcastroturf.com, created by our friends over at Fight for the Future. The Comcastroturf website was set up as a tool to see if someone filed bogus FCC comments in your name. As you probably recall, there is a bot that has been flooding the FCC comment site with bogus anti-net neutrality comments, filed in alphabetical order. Reporters contacted some of the individuals whose names appear on these comments, and they had no idea what it was about. People are still trying to track down who is actually responsible for the bogus comments, but Fight for the Future set up this neat site to let you check if your name was used by whoever is behind it.
And, of course, the name "Comcastroturf" is pretty damn clever, given the topic. Kudos to Fight for the Future for coming up with that one. It is, of course, totally legal to use the domain name of a company that you're protesting in your own domain. There are numerous cases on this issue, normally discussed as the so-called "Sucks Sites." There's clearly no legal issue with Comcastroturf, and any reasonably informed human being would know that. Unfortunately, it would appear that Comcast hired a company that employs some non-reasonably informed humans.
The cease-and-desist letter was sent by a company called "Looking Glass Cyber Solutions" (no, really), which used to be called "Cyveillance" (only marginally less bad). We've written about Cyveillance twice before -- and both times they were about totally bogus takedown requests from Cyveillance that caused serious problems. The most recent was the time that Cyveillance, working for Qualcomm, filed a bogus DMCA notice that took down Qualcomm's own Github repository. Nice move. The earlier story, however was in 2013, and involved Cyveillance -- again representing Comcast -- sending a threatening takedown demand to some more of our friends over at TorrentFreak, claiming (ridiculously) that public court filings were Comcast's copyright-covered material, and threatening serious legal consequences if it wasn't taken down. Eventually, Comcast stepped in and admitted the cease-and-desist was "sent in error." You'd think that maybe this would have caused Comcast to think twice about using Cyveillance for such things. But, nope.
The rebranded Looking Glass Cyber Solutions has told Fight for the Future that "Comcastroturf" violates Comcast's "valuable intellectual property rights" and that failure to take down the site may lead to further legal action around cybersquatting and trademark violations. (Update: Turns out it wasn't a "rebranding" but Looking Glass bought Cyveillance...).
Of course, there's no way that Comcast would actually move forward with any legal action here. In fact, I'm pretty sure it already regrets the fact that the numbskulls at this vendor they hired to police their brand online just caused (yet another) massive headache for their brand online. Maybe, this time, Comcast will finally let Cyveillance/Looking Glass Cyber go, and find partners who don't fuck up so badly. Meanwhile, the fact that Looking Glass Cyber can't even figure out that Comcastroturf is a perfectly legal protest site makes the company's website -- which is chock full of idiotic buzzwords about "threat mitigation" and "threat intelligence" -- look that much more ridiculous. The only "threat" here is Looking Glass/Cyveillance and their silly cluelessness sending out censorious threats based on what appears to be little actual research.
Of course, without true net neutrality, if Comcast really wanted to silence Comcastroturf, it would just block everyone from accessing the site...
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Filed Under: cease and desist, comcastroturf, cybersquatting, net neutrality, takedown
Companies: comcast, cyveillance, fight for the future, looking glass cyber solutions
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Proof of a better world through online $29 Incorporate-Your-Own-Business kits. Just add Cyber!
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Fun searching for submissions -
https://www.fcc.gov/ecfs/filing/1051157755251
(and needs to update his home address)
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Valuable intellectual property rights... really, one might thing Comcast would just rebrand, like someone else did, and let everyone play with their thoroughly muddy name until they forgot where the word originally came from. In ten or fifteen years people could write short articles explaining to the younger crowd that the root word "comcast" was actually the trademark of a real corporation.
Of course their new name would be equally recognized as attached to a horrorshow of bad service in short order, but rebranding apparently works to confuse enough people enough of the time.
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DNS
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They could have picked a different domain name
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Re:
If only there were some way to know for sure.
Oh right, there totally is:
https://web.archive.org/web/20170517212808/https://www.comcastroturf.com/
Well would you look at that. Comcast said something that isn't true.
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Re:
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Comcast could theoretically block access to a particular site and/or domain, however - that would be limited to their customers. I imagine that collusion among ISPs is already common so they would just develop a black list for all to block. This would heralded among the internet illiterate as the best thing since Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission. Eventually this corruption and abuse of monopoly power would make its way through the court system and possibly end up in SCOTUS where the light of day may .... nah, they will enshrine it and make everyone kneel.
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Wouldn't be surprised if it was an automatic C&D sent by a bot that just looks for "comcast" in recently-registered domains.
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Re: DNS
Assuming they stay on the North side of the ethics boundary (so no DNS poisoning or anything nefarious like that), they could block the IP addresses of those servers. While it wouldn't be perfect they would still be very successful.
Comcast wouldn't be able to stop everybody, but they would be able to prevent ~24 million people from using their service to access sites they don't like.
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No worries
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You are talking about Comcast, the black hole of the ethical universe. You could get fired for even thinking about the outside of the event horizon.
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You see disaster. I see retribution.
But go on and hide my messages. It won't be long before Shiva takes your entire pirate cesspool down, and I'll be laughing long and loud.
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Re: You see disaster. I see retribution.
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Re: No worries
I can't tell if you're some new form of sarcastic, or just oblivious, but the Title 2 classification that makes internet service like telephone service is part of what the new FCC boss is trying to roll back.
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Re: No worries
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The first capture of the site was at 9:30 PM. So it's entirely possible that the site was empty earlier in the day when the C&D was sent.
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A pretty basic fact slipped past you.
That would be true if Comcast had been indicated as the source of the comments. So they aren't actually protesting Comcast with that site.
And honestly, it doesn't make any sense to implement an astroturfing campaign in such an absurdly obvious way unless it's a false flag.
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"Block a protest site"?
You apparently have a lack of imagination regarding worst-case scenarios without net neutrality.
"Oh, you haven't been able to sign up to Google Fiber on the Internet? Because its site is dead-slow and only intermittedly available if at all? Well, sounds like you are lucky to have noticed in time before ditching your Comcast service."
This is going to become one cesspool of competition.
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Re: You see disaster. I see retribution.
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Re: Re: You see disaster. I see retribution.
Your constant attempts to portray My_Name_Here as some sort of martyr are sad. Really sad.
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Re: Re: No worries
It would be an illegal or unfair business practice.
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Re: Re: No worries
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Re: Re: Re: No worries
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Re: Re: DNS
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Re: "Block a protest site"?
No, it just means that this is the subject of this particular article. There's hundreds of other articles if you want to read them - enough to warrant a special tab at the top of the page.
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Waste of Money
Really? Why? Comcast is packed to the ceiling with non-reasonably informed humans already. Why would they bother outsourcing this when they could just have everyone pick a number or draw straws and save a boatload of money?
I mean, I guess if you're Comcast you have money to blow, but still. So wasteful!
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It would be easier for side with Fight for the Future...
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what idiots do it business in the usa
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Re: You see disaster. I see retribution.
Sorry guys, it's won't work out. It does however make you look petty.
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Re: It would be easier for side with Fight for the Future...
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Why else would they relocate employees accused of rape and murder?
A few dozen paedophile engineers later, and blam! they CREATED that list of criminals....
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Re: Re: Re: No worries
Not if they fail to prosecute (cough..banksters..cough)
Not if they create a new law removing the old law
...
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Re: Re: You see disaster. I see retribution.
too late
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"Cyber" is actually mid-80s. A story named "Cyberpunk" was published in 1983, and Gibson's stories a few years later. By 1991 it was getting ironic.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: No worries
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Nearly everyone in positions of power in America, for example.
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Re: You see disaster. I see retribution.
The possibility does exist that “pirate sites”—however you define that nebulous term—could be blocked by ISPs if Net Neutrality were to be dismantled. But that is not the only possible consequence.
If Net Neutrality is dismantled, ISPs could…
In other words: Comcast could block you from ever seeing Techdirt on the basis that it disagrees with everything Techdirt has ever written about the company, which means all your trolling would be stopped unless you paid extra to access the “unfiltered” Internet—if Comcast even offered that as an option, that is.
…huh. Maybe we should rethink that whole Net Neutrality thing…
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Re: Re: You see disaster. I see retribution.
Each of the actions you list would be anti competitive especially with a monopoly or a duopoly. Quite simply it would be an illegal business practice.
So before you go off consider that the US has more than 1 law and 1 set of rules.
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Re: Re: You see disaster. I see retribution.
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Re: Re: Re: You see disaster. I see retribution.
Yes, and? The major ISPs could argue that, since they all compete with each other on a national level, none of their actions would technically be illegal—even though lots of places in the United States are served only by a single ISP. Those corporations also have shitloads of lawyers on hand to make arguments such as those in front of judges and juries and (most importantly) politicians.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: You see disaster. I see retribution.
None of the major companies would be stupid enough that might lead to anti trust issues and potential forced breakup or network sharing.
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Many Re's: You see disaster. I see retribution.
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Private censorship
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Re: Private censorship
Several major, fundamental differences. Firstly, a blog is a single platform for publishing content, that provides a method to comment. If the owner of the blog decides to remove the ability to comment, you are still able to view the blog you've simply been asked to not participate in the comments. You're free to discuss elsewhere, even if the platform owner has asked you not to do so on their premises. You have many, many other blogs to choose from, and other ways of communicating., Furthermore, the ability of a blog owner to decide to remove toxic participants from a conversation is as much an aspect of free speech as the ability for the troll to comment in the first place. They have as much ability to remove bad actors from their site as a coffee house does to reject people causing trouble on their premises.
The ISP provides you access to millions of such services. Them having specific control over which ones you can access gives them a greater control over your speech than any single blog owner can do. Not happy with that? Well, many Americans don't have a choice so cannot move to a more acceptable competitor. They will also be able to restrict access to competitors' content, something that I believe many site owners wish they could do, but none can.
"The time has come to call BS on private censorship. It violates free speech no less than government censorship."
Absolutely incorrect. But, even if you buy that, then surely you must wholeheartedly approve of net neutrality? That's the mechanism to prevent carriers from censoring you, after all.
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Comcast seems to be blocking archive.org already.
I wish I could get another ISP.
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