Categories: NewsTechnology

Netflix Tweet Hints at FCC Lawsuit

Late last year, the United States Federal Communications Commission voted 3-2 in favor of dismantling Obama-era regulations that prohibited ISPs from privileging content. This was a huge defeat for internet rights activists and consumers everywhere. However, while the case seems shut to many, there is still a resistance ongoing – with some rather large companies in its ranks.

Netflix tweets litigative threats at the FCC

While I find it truly amazing that our world today has tech giants, government agencies, and influential people all duking it out 280 characters at a time, a tweet from Netflix demonstrates just how willing the company is to defend net neutrality.

 

Related Post

The tweet reads: “In 2018, the Internet is united in defense of #NetNeutrality. As for the FCC, we will see you in court.” I imagine that many of us expected to see these kinds of lawsuits begin to crop up in the wake of an absolute perfect storm of a vote, where voices were muffled and decisions made with poor information. (My opinion is that the vote should have been delayed to at least get everything properly laid out so that the decision could be made properly. I’d be less wary of the same outcome if the process had been better executed.)

What happens next with these sorts of lawsuits is anyone’s guess, but it will definitely be interesting to follow, especially for any law junkies in our readership. The implications of these sorts of lawsuits and decisions will be massive.

My prediction is that these court cases will be dramatic, with content creators and ISPs vying for both the blessing and support of the United States government. At the end of the day, even though companies like Netflix and Google are currently aligned with the majority of the American public, they likely are more closely aligned with their bottom lines.

Who should guarantee your rights?

Largely, my issue with the repeal, and what worries me about large companies suing the FCC over it, is the question of who should guarantee your rights. Clearly the FCC has interests with a certain group and has marginalized the digital rights of US citizens, but I don’t know that we should all be ready to jump into bed with big businesses. After all, they are beholden to their shareholders, not the public. While companies like Netflix and Google may be useful in (maybe) clawing back the digital rights guaranteed by the UN Human Rights Council – not to mention the US Constitution’s First Amendment – we should still be very skeptical of their motives if net neutrality does get saved at the last minute or reinstated later as a result. Giant corporations’ interests can align – and do quite often, in fact – with the best interests of citizens, but not often enough that they should be who we look to for help – unless we hold shares in them.

Dariusz

Dariusz has been closely following the world of cryptocurrencies since 2014. He has been somewhat of a crypto-evangelist, trying to educate more people on the exciting realm of cryptocurrency.

Share
Published by
Dariusz

Recent Posts

Step Finance Hit By Major Treasury Breach

Shockwaves moved through the Solana ecosystem after DeFi dashboard and portfolio platform Step Finance confirmed…

8 hours ago

Tether Caps A Record Year With Explosive Profit Growth

Tether has released its Q4 2025 quarterly attestation, and the numbers confirm what much of…

8 hours ago

Lighter EVM Marks A Major Shift From Trading Engine To Full-Stack DeFi Platform

Lighter is officially stepping beyond its roots as a high-performance perpetual DEX with the launch…

8 hours ago

Vitalik Buterin Deploys 16,384 ETH Toward Privacy And Open Infrastructure

Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin is once again channeling personal capital into the long-term foundations of…

24 hours ago

Lido V3 Launches on Ethereum Mainnet With Game-Changing stVaults

Lido Finance has officially activated Lido V3 on the Ethereum mainnet, introducing a powerful new…

1 day ago

Bitcoin Slips To $83,500 As Liquidations Rock The Market

Bitcoin tumbled to around $83,500, marking its lowest level in over a month and triggering…

2 days ago