Democrats Unveil New Bill to Fully Restore Net Neutrality

New proposal would enshrine the FCC’s 2015 rules into law, banning ISPs from behaving anti-competitively.

by Karl Bode, Mar 6 2019 | Original Motherboard article here.

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House and Senate Democrats Wednesday morning introduced a new three-page bill that would restore the FCC’s 2015 net neutrality rules. Dubbed the Save the Internet Act, the proposal would also restore FCC authority over internet service providers, stripped away in the wake of last year’s controversial repeal.

The original FCC rules prohibited ISPs from unfairly throttling or blocking websites or services they compete with. It also required that ISPs be entirely transparent with consumers about just what kind of broadband connection they’re buying.

“The Save the Internet Act would enact true net neutrality protections by codifying the FCC’s 2015 Open Internet Order as a new, free-standing section of law,” Congressman Mike Doyle told attendees of a morning press conference (you can view the video here).

“We are on the right side of history, and we will not give up this fight,” Senator Ed Markey noted. “It begins today, and this coalition will not stop until we win.”

A full markup of the bill and accompanying hearings are expected within the next several weeks.

ISPs have a rich history of trying to use their role as internet gatekeepers both to nickel and dime consumers—and to disadvantage competitors.

Rep. Doyle Unveils Bill to Restore Net Neutrality Protection

Mar 6, 2019 | Original Press Release here.

Doyle speaks at press conference announcing Net Neutrality bill

Washington, DC – U.S. Representative Mike Doyle (PA-18) unveiled legislation to restore Net Neutrality at a press conference this morning with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (CA-12), Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY), and Senator Ed Markey (D-MA).

Congressman Doyle said at the press conference.

“The Save the Internet Act would enact true net neutrality protections by codifying the FCC’s 2015 Open Internet Order, as a new free-standing section of law that would ensure the Internet remain an open platform for innovation and competition.”

The Save the Internet Act would do the following:

  • prohibit internet service providers from blocking, throttling, or engaging in paid prioritization;
  • close loopholes by empowering the FCC to stop unjust, unreasonable, and discriminatory practices;
  • foster innovation and competition by ensuring fair and equal access to broadband for start-ups, small businesses, and entrepreneurs; and
  • promote deployment and access to broadband for consumers and businesses in rural, suburban, and urban areas across America.

https://www.c-span.org/video/?458510-1/congressional-democratic-leaders-hold-news-conference-net-neutrality-legislation

Continue reading “Rep. Doyle Unveils Bill to Restore Net Neutrality Protection”

Democrat Net Neutrality Bill Would Restore 2015 FCC Rules

Democrats’ bill has good chance in House but faces tough odds in Senate.

By Jon Brodkin, Mar 6, 2019 | Original ARS Technica article here.


Pelosi-Schumer-Net Neutrality-Bill

WASHINGTON, DC – MAY 16: Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D-NY), with House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) looking on, speaks at a press conference at the Capitol Building on May 16, 2018 in Washington, DC. The Senate voted and passed a Resolution of Disapproval to undo President Trump and FCC Chairman Ajit Pai’s repeal of net neutrality rules.

Democrats in Congress today introduced a net neutrality bill that would fully restore the 2015 FCC rules that were repealed by the FCC’s current Republican majority.

The "Save the Internet Act" is just three pages long. Instead of writing a new set of net neutrality rules, the bill would nullify FCC Chairman Ajit Pai’s December 2017 repeal of the FCC order passed in February 2015 and forbid the FCC from repealing the rules in the future.

"A full 86 percent of Americans opposed the Trump assault on net neutrality, including 82 percent of Republicans. That’s hopeful," House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) said at a press conference announcing the bill today. "With the Save the Internet Act, the Democrats are honoring the will of the people."

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Danville Council Denies Permit for Hotly Debated Verizon CPMRA

Town Leaders Support Appeal from Residents Contesting Camino Tassajara Close Proximity Microwave Radiation Antenna

Adapted from an article by Ryan J. Degan, Mar 6, 2019 | Original Danville / San Ramon Times article here

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The proposed project would have consisted of the placement of panel antennas contained within a four-foot-tall cylinder on top of a six-foot extension of the utility pole and the mounting of related equipment on the lower portion of the pole.

The Danville Town Council voted 4-1 to deny a land-use permit for a Verizon Close Proximity Microwave Radiation Antenna (CPMRA) wireless facility on Camino Tassajara on Tuesday night, backing a resident group’s appeal in a decision that opens up the town to possible litigation from the telecommunications provider.

The decision to deny the permit was based on the council majority claiming that the proposed location was not the least intrusive site possible, that better alternative locations may exist and that the applicant had not adequately demonstrated the proposed facility would meet federal RF microwave radiation exposure guidelines — all of which went against the recommendation of town staff.

Mayor Robert Storer said while discussing the vote at Tuesday’s meeting.

"We’ve made a lot of difficult decisions over the years, and this one is right up there in my top three. But that is exactly why somebody elects us to do the right things. We’ve lost local control and this says: ‘You know what? We are sick of this and we’re not going to just sit here and be bulled over.’ We say no; we play our cards out. We’ve been in lawsuits before."

A land-use permit for the cell facility — owned by Verizon — was approved by the Danville Planning Commission at its regular meeting on Oct. 23. The project consisted of the placement of panel antennas contained within a four-foot-tall cylinder on top of a six-foot extension of the pole and the mounting of related equipment on the lower portion of the pole on Camino Tassajara, approximately 225 feet east of Gatetree Drive.

The installation’s original approval came over the objections of residents from Danville Citizens for Responsible Growth (DCRG), who on Nov. 2 filed the appeal challenging the decision.

The nearly five-hour meeting Tuesday was well-attended, just like last month’s lengthy public discussion on the issue, and just as hotly contested, with applause, yelling and even jeers thrown from those in attendance.

According to city attorney Robert Ewing, the installation of wireless cell facilities is heavily regulated by the federal and state government, which limit local government’s authority to install its own regulations, but that the town was not without options.

While proven health effects over the Radio-frequency Electromagnetic Microwave Radiation (RF-EMR) emitted from cell facilities were one of the most prevalent topics of conversation among residents during public comment, town officials maintained that due to Federal Communications Commission’s regulations, the town is not allowed to consider environmental effects of RF-EMR exposures when making a decision, as long as the exposures from all sources are below the absurdly high level of 10,000,000 µW/m². For context, in Sebastopol, peak RF-EMR exposures at 250 to 500 feet a cell Tower in Sebastopol has resulted in 24/7 peak RF-EMR exposures from 1,000,000µW/m² to 4,000,000 µW/m² (10-40% of the FCC RF-EMR exposure guideline) and has created a public health crisis (five deaths and a dozen serious illnesses).

Ewing said at the meeting

"While adverse health effects from RF microwave radiation exposures have been demonstrated, if that was the basis on which you were making a decision I would be fairly confident to tell you that you would lose, because that’s about as clear as the law can get. As much as I understand the evidence folks have about these adverse health effects, what I can tell you is that if you make a finding based on health impacts of RF-EMR exposures, then I will tell you that my opinion is you would lose."

Verizon’s legal representative, Paul Albritton, stressed that the proposed facility would be far below the FCC-mandated RF levels, and that a cellphone has the capacity to produce the same levels as the facility. But a cell phone is under the user’s control and its antennas can be turned off to lower RF-EMR exposures. The RF-EMR exposures from a cell tower that is on 24/7 for ten years or longer are vastly greater, as can be seen here.

In the end, the council found that:

  1. Verizon did not adequately prove that the site on Camino Tassajara was the least intrusive location for its equipment, and

  2. Verizon’s report on RF-EMR exposure levels for the proposed facility was inadequate, as it did not consider total RF-EMR exposure over time, as does this analysis.

While the council has denied the permit for this specific location, Storer acknowledged that through litigation it is still possible for Verizon to be granted access to the utility pole through a court decision.

The lone dissenting vote came from Vice Mayor Karen Stepper, who agreed with Verizon that it was the least intrusive site and worried about the precedent of moving the proposed sites from one house to another.

Stepper said.

"I don’t want the precedence to be that we’re going to move it from one neighbor to another neighbor … I’m a little concerned about that. I don’t want the precedence to be to just move it around and say OK this neighbor didn’t come so we will put it there. I am a strong proponent for having these in the right-of-way for utilities. I’m a strong proponent of the technology that underlies the economy of Danville, and I believe this is the least intrusive site because it is screened from view (and) not just visually."

Council members acknowledged that the decision to block this site does not mean that the town will stop all cell facilities from coming to Danville. Prior to the final vote, Councilman Newell Arnerich stated that this is just the beginning of the process and small cell facilities are coming to Danville.

Arnerich said

"We are going to end up right back here and we are going to approve a site. This is just a step to see if there is anything else we can grab, but we will have these sites in Danville. We will not stop these,"

The meeting closed with a plea from council members for residents to reach out to lawmakers and advocate for increased local controls over issues such as the instillation of cellular facilities in municipal borders.

Councilwoman Renee Morgan said

"What we need to do to make sure that we gain that local control. You cannot walk out of here and say we won by having this cell site moved somewhere else. The point is to go out there and talk to your state legislators, and make sure that they understand that we as the town of Danville, deserve to tell people where we want to put these things — not have the state or the FCC dictate that to us."

FCC Accounting Rules Are Frozen to the Year 2000 — Why?

Then, in Dec 2018, the FCC voted to extend this Accounting “FREEZE” until 2024 — without any audits or investigations. Again . . . we need to know why.

Adapted from an article by Bruce Kushnick, Feb 28, 2019 | Original Medium article here.


In the year 2000, before there was high-speed streaming or broadband on cell phones, the FCC, influenced by lobbyists from AT&T, Verizon and CenturyLink, froze the accounting rules that determine the percentage of expenses that each separate telecom line of business (POTS, DSL, Broadband, Special Access, Wireless and others) would pay for the use of the shared Wireline infrastructure (both copper and fiber optic wires).

Most do not know that there are still State Public Telecommunications Utility companies (SPTUs), such as Verizon-NY and AT&T-CA, or Centurylink-CO. Most, including our legislators and regulators, have been told that these SPTUs represent just the aging, switched, legacy copper lines, for Plain-Old-Telephone Service (POTS) or landlines.

But This Old, Tired Story is Simply Not True

In the state of New York, Verizon-NY also includes the fiber optic wires for “FiOS”, the fiber to the home service, the fiber for the backhaul used by Verizon Wireless (and other Wireless Carriers), and even the wires, copper and fiber, for Business Data Services — collectively, the Title II-regulated Wireline infrastructure.

  • In 2000, Local Service, the basic copper phone lines, brought in 65% of the revenues for Verizon-NY

  • In 2000, Local Service also paid 65% of the expenses of Verizon-NY

That made sense — back in the year 2000.

But, now let's fast-forward to 2017:

  • In 2017, Local Service brought in 21% of the revenues for Verizon-NY, about $1.1 billion in revenues

  • But, in 2017, Local Service paid 62% of the expenses of Verizon-NY Corporate Operations expenses, about $1.8 billion, to cover the costs of the lawyers, lobbyists, and executive pay. How can this be?

  • Answer: The FCC Accounting ‘FREEZE’. Local Service has paid 65% of all expenses for 19 years — irrespective of Local Service revenues, creating artificial losses and huge tax benefits for Telecom companies for nearly two decades.

Continue reading “FCC Accounting Rules Are Frozen to the Year 2000 — Why?”

5G Will Use the Same Frequencies as Pain-Inflicting Military Weapon

Feb 27, 2018 | Original article here

What do . . .

  • The installation of extreme density 4G and 5G Close Proximity Microwave
    Radiation Antennas
    on light poles, utility poles, and other street furniture in the public rights-of-way in our communities . . . and

  • A Radio-Frequency Electromagnetic Microwave Radiation (RF-EMR) weapon developed by the military

. . . have in common?

The Department of Defense has developed a RF-EMR crowd-control weapon called the Active Denial System (ADS). The ADS works by firing a high-powered beam of 95 GHz waves at people — that is, a millimeter wavelength weapon — similar to millimeter waves being used for new 5G installations:

The Panoply of RF-EMR Frequencies and Wavelengths in a 4G/5G World

  • 5G: 600 MHz = waves 20 inches long
  • 4G: 700 MHz = waves 17 inches long
  • 3G/4G: 800 MHz = waves 15 inches long
  • 3G/4G: 900 MHz = waves 13 inches long
  • 3G/4G: 1800 MHz = waves 7 inches long
  • 3G/4G: 2100 MHz = waves 6 inches long
  • Wi-Fi: 2450 MHz = waves 5 inches long (unlicensed)
  • 5G: 3100 MHz to 3550 MHz = waves 3.8 to 3.3 inches long
  • 5G: 3550 MHz to 3700 MHz = waves 3.3 to 3.2 inches long
  • 5G: 3700 MHz to 4200 MHz = waves 3.2 to 2.8 inches long
  • 5G: 4200 to 4900 MHz = waves 2.8 to 2.4 inches long
  • Wi-Fi: 5800 MHz = waves 2.0 inches long (unlicensed)
  • 5G: 24,250 to 24,450 MHz = waves 0.5 inch long
  • 5G: 25,050 to 25,250 MHz = waves 0.5 inch long
  • 5G: 25,250 to 27,500 MHz = waves 0.4 inch long
  • 5G: 27,500 to 29,500 MHz = waves 0.4 inch long
  • 5G: 31,800 to 33,400 MHz = waves 0.4 inch long
  • 5G: 37,000 to 40,000 MHz = waves 0.3 inch long
  • 5G: 42,000 to 42,500 MHz = waves 0.3 inch long
  • 5G: 57,000 to 64,500 MHz = waves 0.3 inch long (unlicensed)
  • 5G: 64,000 to 71,000 MHz = waves 0.2 inch long
  • 5G: 71,000 to 76,000 MHz = waves 0.2 inch long
  • 5G: 81,000 to 86,000 MHz = waves 0.1 inch long

Anyone caught in the RF-EMR beam will feel like their skin is intensely burning. The burning sensation stops once the target leaves the beam. This weapon operates on 95GHz waves and 5G will operate on the very similar frequencies (see above).

Continue reading “5G Will Use the Same Frequencies as Pain-Inflicting Military Weapon”

Microsoft Announced HoloLens 2

A Wireless Headworn Computer . . . what could go wrong?

Introducing Microsoft HoloLens 2

How About This: Trends in High Grade Glioma Brain Cancer?

Alasdair Philips then took the Swedish Cancer Registry data and divided the cases into two groups: those among ≥ 60 year-olds and those below 60. He plotted the trends for men and women separately:


Swedish Glioma

Source: Alasdair Philips for Microwave News

New Flaws in 4G and 5G Allow Attackers to Intercept Calls and Track Locations

By Zack Whittaker@zackwhittaker, Feb 24, 2019 | Original Techcrunch article here.

A group of academics have found three new security flaws in 4G and 5G, which they say can be used to intercept phone calls and track the locations of cell phone users.

The findings are said to be the first time vulnerabilities have affected both 4G and the incoming 5G standard, which promises faster speeds and better security, particularly against law enforcement use of cell site simulators, known as “stingrays.” But the researchers say that their new attacks can defeat newer protections that were believed to make it more difficult to snoop on phone users.

Syed Rafiul Hussain, Purdue University, one of the co-authors of the paper:

Any person with a little knowledge of cellular paging protocols can carry out this attack . . . such as phone call interception, location tracking, or targeted phishing attacks.

Continue reading “New Flaws in 4G and 5G Allow Attackers to Intercept Calls and Track Locations”

Mayors Understand the Broadband Needs of Their Cities’ Residents — Far Better than the FCC Does

By Blair Levin, Feb 22, 2019 | Original Brookings Institution article here.

Who would Americans trust to best understand the broadband-related interests of the residents of a city: its mayor, or the head of the Federal Communications Commission?

This is not just a theoretical debate. The mayor of San Jose, Calif., Sam Liccardo, and the FCC commissioner, Brendan Carr, have recently engaged in a heated debate over upgrading the city’s broadband service. In many ways, the situation in San Jose looks like much of America. Mayor Liccardo grew up in San Jose, worked there as a prosecutor, served on the City Council from 2005 to 2015, was elected mayor in 2015, and was just re-elected with 75 percent of the vote. With about twice as many Americans having a positive view of their local government than they do the federal government, it’s a near certainty that most city residents would trust Mayor Liccardo’s team to better determine broadband equity deployment issues than Commissioner Carr and his team inside the Beltway.


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Blair Levin

The development of new digital telecommunications capabilities combined with a persistent digital divide leaves the public sector with enormous responsibilities to promote network quality and deliver equitable access — but it can only do so by sensibly splitting regulatory responsibilities between the national and local levels. Unfortunately, news out of Washington, D.C. reveals the federal government has overstepped its appropriate role, constricting local governments’ abilities to craft locally tailored solutions.

Continue reading “Mayors Understand the Broadband Needs of Their Cities’ Residents — Far Better than the FCC Does”

Trump Wants 5G and Even 6G As Soon As Possible

Adapted from an article by Patrick Austin, Feb 22, 2019 | Original Time article here.

What is Trump Talking About? More Governing by Gut Tweet?

President Donald Trump on Thursday said he wants U.S. companies to more quickly implement what’s called 5G wireless technology, the latest and greatest tech when it comes to mobile broadband.

“I want 5G, and even 6G, technology in the United States as soon as possible,” tweeted Trump, who went on to imply the U.S. was falling behind due to policies preventing the adoption of wireless technology from companies abroad. While 6G doesn’t yet exist, 5G is just starting to be deployed around the U.S. and elsewhere.


I want 5G, and even 6G, technology in the United States as soon as possible. It is far more powerful, faster, and smarter than the current standard. American companies must step up their efforts, or get left behind. There is no reason that we should be lagging behind on………

— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) February 21, 2019


….something that is so obviously the future. I want the United States to win through competition, not by blocking out currently more advanced technologies. We must always be the leader in everything we do, especially when it comes to the very exciting world of technology!

— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) February 21, 2019

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