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New York questions industry and advocacy groups over fake net neutrality comments – CNET

FCC Chairman Ajit Pai wants to reboot the rules governing the internet. But critics say that will ju..

FCC Chairman Ajit Pai wants to reboot the rules governing the internet. But critics say that will just destroy the regulations protecting net neutrality.

CNET

The New York Attorney General's office has expanded its investigation into the fake public comments filed with the Federal Communications Commission last year on its proposal to roll back net neutrality rules to include several telecom trade groups and DC-based advocacy organizations both for and against the issue.

Barbara Underwood, who became the attorney general in New York earlier this year when Eric Schneiderman stepped down, has sent subpoenas to at least a dozen groups on Tuesday. She wants to know if these groups had anything to do with the 22 million fraudulent letters that flooded the FCC's electronic comment system in 2017 when the FCC was considering repealing the net neutrality rules.

Groups such as the industry-funded Broadband for America, which opposes net neutrality, were subpoenaed as well as pro-net neutrality groups such as Free Press and Fight for the Future.

A large number of comments were filed using temporary or duplicate email addresses. And millions of letters repeated verbatim the same script. A study released earlier this month from Stanford University found that 800,000 of the messages were unique, and of those about 99.7 percent were in support of keeping the FCC's net neutrality rules.

The Attorney General's office has already determined that millions of the comments submitted en masse fraudulently used real people's names, according to the New York Times. Some comments used the names of dead people. Investigators "estimate that almost half of all of the comments — more than nine million — used stolen identities," according to the New York Times.

Representatives from Free Press and Fight for the Future each said they are happy to cooperate with the New York Attorney General's request.

"We welcome this investigation," Sarah Roth-Gaudette, executive director for Fight for the Future said in a statement. She added that her group was "one of the first groups to help uncover the flood of fraudulent comments that were submitted to the FCC, and to call for a thorough investigation."

The group also reached out to the FCC and asked that the agency remove the fraudulent comments from the docket regardless of whether they were pro or anti net neutrality. But the agency did not respond.

A representative from Broadband for America did not respond to comment.

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