Telecom Lobbyists: Taking the Internets in Secret

The Austin American Statesman reports:

The House and Senate are preparing to vote on telecommunications legislation that could affect every American who surfs the Internet, watches cable TV or uses a phone.

But no one should waste much time watching the floor debates on C-SPAN. The lawmakers admit their goal is not to pass definitive legislation in public in the coming weeks.

Instead, they want to pass separate bills, regardless of how different they may be. The final version would be negotiated, largely in private, by about a dozen senators and representatives on a conference committee.

The Senate just needs to pass "anything to get us into conference," where the real decisions will be made, House telecommunications subcommittee chairman Fred Upton, R-Mich., said Tuesday at a telecom forum hosted by National Journal's Technology Daily.

The conference committee is where House and Senate bills are reconciled, and differences are ironed out.  What Upton is saying is that this process will be abused for the benefit of telecom interests.  Usually lawmakers keep that kind of stuff secret.  Pretty brazen, I have to say.



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Re: Telecom Lobbyists: Taking the Internets in Sec (none / 0)

Close up shop. We're done for.


by Matt Ortega on Mon May 08, 2006 at 09:55:07 AM EST

Re: Telecom Lobbyists: Taking the Internets in Sec (none / 0)

Furthermore, at least the Chinese get those little computer cops cartoon characters in the corner...


by Matt Ortega on Mon May 08, 2006 at 09:55:52 AM EST

Who sits on a conference committee (none / 0)

That would be the most senior members of the committees would it not?

House committee on energy and commerce

Senate commerce committee


by Alice Marshall on Mon May 08, 2006 at 10:38:26 AM EST

time to mobolize local blogs (none / 0)

 
Maybe we could mobolize local Democratic bloggers in the relevant jurisdictions.
by Alice Marshall on Mon May 08, 2006 at 10:40:39 AM EST

Re: Telecom Lobbyists: Censoring C-Span off Cable (3.00 / 1)

Is this happening in your part of the world?

The right-wing fascists at Time-Warner have censored   CSPAN2 and CSPAN3 off their cable feed.  Months ago, they canceled both, saying Cspan wanted to be put on pay-for-digital and taken off basic cable.

Cspan called them liars, and said they wanted to stay on T-W cable (actually they didn't use the word liar--they are Cspan, after all).  

Then T-W spun a new story saying they needed the bandwidth for pay-per-view channels.  But the channels they had used for Cspan are still snowy-blah: no programming on them at all.

Bottom line: T-W has gone to the extreme of cutting off access to Cspan so we can't even see the live Senate sessions.  This is what the big corporations want to do: keep us in the dark about everything going on in Washington, so they can get away with all kinds of congressional manipulation.

It's about more than cutting off the netroots: it's about taking total control of what Americans can access.  Big Brother is here.


Abigail, I'm sure if there is something out there looking down on us from somewhere else in the Universe, they're wise enough to stay away from us. --Grissom
by traveler on Mon May 08, 2006 at 11:26:02 AM EST

Re: Censoring C-Span off Cable: clarification (3.00 / 1)

Oops, forgot to mention: this happened in the greater Houston (Bush/DeLay country) metro area.  The Houston office refuses to respond to complaints.  If they can get away with this here, you're next!


Abigail, I'm sure if there is something out there looking down on us from somewhere else in the Universe, they're wise enough to stay away from us. --Grissom
by traveler on Mon May 08, 2006 at 11:29:30 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Nil desperandum! (none / 0)

A bit of sang-froid, s'il vous plaît!

So far as I can tell, the bull points for us - MS and Google's deep pockets; Sensenbrenner being adamant that COPE has to come to Judiciary before getting to the floor; and the pantechnicon nature of the Senate bill - are still good.

If all the Senate wanted was to get into conference, why load everything bar the kitchen sink into the Senate bill?

I'd say we're still very much in the game - so no excuse for letting attention lapse.


by skeptic06 on Mon May 08, 2006 at 01:27:46 PM EST


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