The Mercury News

FCC process ‘corrupted’ by fake comments

Critics say submission­s may have impersonat­ed New York residents

- By Brian Fung

As the Federal Communicat­ions Commission prepares to dismantle its net neutrality rules for internet providers, a mounting backlash from agency critics is zeroing in on what they say are thousands of fake or automated comments submitted to the FCC that unfairly skewed the policymaki­ng process.

Allegation­s about anomalies in the record are quickly becoming a central component of a campaign by online activists and some government officials to discredit the FCC’s plan.

“The process the FCC has employed,” wrote New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderm­an this week in a letter to the FCC, “has been corrupted by the fraudulent use of Americans’ identities .”

For the past six months, Schneiderm­an continued, the New York attorney general’s office has

been reviewing the comments filed at the FCC on net neutrality. It found that “hundreds of thousands” of submission­s may have impersonat­ed New York residents — a potential violation of state law. But, he said, the FCC has declined to provide further evidence that could help move the investigat­ion forward, such as data logs and other informatio­n.

Some consumers have complained that their own names or addresses have been hijacked and used to submit false comments to the FCC that they did not support. Others have pointed to the bizarre appearance

of comments submitted by people who are deceased. Public comments play an important role at the FCC, which typically solicits feedback from Americans before it votes to make significan­t policy changes.

Brian Hart, an FCC spokesman, said the agency lacks the resources to investigat­e every comment. Supporters of the net neutrality rules are not blameless either, he added, pointing to 7.5 million comments filed in favor of the regulation­s that appeared to come from 45,000 distinct email addresses, “all generated by a single fake e-mail generator website.” Some 400,000 comments backing the rules, he said, appeared to originate from an email address based in Russia.

The comments targeted

by Internet activists largely back the FCC’s decision to repeal Obama-era regulation­s aimed at ensuring all websites, large and small, are treated equally by internet providers. Consumer groups fear that without the rules, internet providers could begin charging some websites or services more to reach their customers — regular internet users, who may ultimately bear the cost of the new fees. They also say internet providers could artificial­ly speed up services they own or have special relationsh­ips with, to the detriment of startups and small businesses. For their part, internet providers have promised not to block or slow down content that they do not like.

But internet providers have also spent significan­t

time and money lobbying for the regulation­s to be reversed. And some of the public comments, critics say, bear a striking resemblanc­e to industry talking points.

“It was particular­ly chilling to see these spam comments all in one place, as they are exactly the type of policy arguments and language you expect to see in industry comments on the proposed repeal,” wrote Jeff Kao, a data scientist who published a study of the pro-repeal comments Thursday, in a blog post.

Like Schneiderm­an, Kao performed his own analysis of the net neutrality comment record. Using an algorithm to sort out duplicate entries, Kao said he was then able to apply another algorithm to identify the remaining comments

that could be considered “unique.” Further analysis revealed that even some of the unique submission­s shared common language and syntax, suggesting they weren’t unique at all but perhaps written by a computer program in ways that made each submission appear slightly different.

For example, one submission read “Citizens, as opposed to Washington bureaucrat­s, should be empowered to buy whatever products they prefer.” Another retained much the same format but with certain words rearranged: “Individual citizens, as opposed to Washington bureaucrat­s, should be able to select whichever services they desire.”

While it is common for advocacy campaigns to recruit

people to sign and submit form letters to the FCC, Kao said that those who supported keeping the rules were far more likely to write personal, heartfelt messages. Despite the polarizing nature of the policy fight, few commenters who supported the repeal were moved to develop their own, original messages - an indication to Kao that many in the pro-repeal camp may have been bots, or spam.

“It’s scary to think that organic, authentic voices in the public debate are being drowned out by a chorus of spambots,” Kao wrote.

FCC Chairman Ajit Pai has said repeatedly that when it comes to the comments on net neutrality, the agency’s rulemaking process would favor quality over quantity.

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