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Enrique Dans

On the effects of technology and innovation on people, companies and society (writing in Spanish at since 2003)

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What happens when the telecoms operators break the law to end net neutrality? Nothing

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IMAGE: A kid with a baseball hat wearing an obviously fake mustache
IMAGE: Artur Skoniecki — Pixabay

Sometimes justice takes time, but it eventually comes. Other times, it doesn’t. When Donald Trump took over the White House in 2016, one of the first things he did was to carry out what he had previously agreed with the telecom lobby: he replaced the chairman of the with the extremely objectionable lobbyist , setting in motion plans to end net neutrality in the United States.

Since the decision was to be subjected to a public consultation period, with the public invited to leave their comments on a website, the telecoms operators hired social media companies, LCX Digital Media, and to find consumers willing to support the end of net neutrality. Instead, , which , making it or , even though thousands of people whose comments appeared on the site denied making them. There were comments made by deceased people, comments made by people who had never accessed the site, comments that were simply made up, and many, many duplications.

Enrique Dans
Enrique Dans

Published in Enrique Dans

On the effects of technology and innovation on people, companies and society (writing in Spanish at since 2003)

Enrique Dans
Enrique Dans

Written by Enrique Dans

Professor of Innovation at IE Business School and blogger (in English here and in Spanish at )

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