Websites Throttle FCC Staffers to Protest Gutting of Net Neutrality

Various companies and organizations have recently added some code to their websites that kicks in whenever there's a visit from someone who works at FCC. While everyone else is enjoying these websites at ordinary broadband speeds, the code ensures that FCC staffers can only view them at dial-up speeds reminiscent of the 1990s.
Image DrAfter123Getty
Global CommunicationImage: DrAfter123/Getty

People worry that new rules proposed by the Federal Communications Commission will allow internet service providers like Comcast or Time Warner to throttle download speeds for the next YouTube or Netflix. And some are actively pushing back against the FCC through the press and political channels.

But that's not the only way to protest the commission's new rules. Various companies and organizations have added code to their websites that kicks in whenever there's a visit from someone who works at the FCC. While everyone else is enjoying these websites at ordinary broadband speeds, this code ensures that FCC staffers view them at dial-up speeds reminiscent of the 1990s.

The online protest is the brainchild of Kyle Drake, a Portland-based software developer. "If it bothers you that I'm doing this, I want to point out that everyone is going to be doing crap like this after the FCC rips apart Net Neutrality," Drake wrote on his blog.

>'If it bothers you that I'm doing this, I want to point out that everyone is going to be doing crap like this after the FCC rips apart net neutrality.'

He posted the code to his website on May 9, saying he would throttle the FCC's bandwidth until the agency paid him $1,000 per year to get what he calls his "Ferengi plan," a tip of the hat to the unscrupulous money-grubbing Star Trek aliens. Now countless others are using his code.

Drake's code works with the popular Nginx web server, and now there's a version for Apache, too. The software doesn't actually slow the FCC's internet. It merely serves webpages to the agency much more slowly, after checking a visitor's IP address against a list of known FCC addresses.

Earlier this week, MaxCDN, a web service provider, rolled Drake's code into its web management console, so any of its customers can throttle the FCC with the click of a button. So far, more than 130 have done so, says Justin Dorfman, the company's director of developer relations. "We could have written a 'me too' blog post saying 'MaxCDN supports Net Neutrality -- blah, blah, blah,'" he explains. "But we decided this was a way to raise awareness of this issue, not only to our customers but anyone with an Nginx server who wanted to do the same."

Despite an internet-sized protest, the FCC went ahead yesterday and proposed new rules that some say spell doom for the internet. The rules make it legal for consumer internet service providers to cut special deals with companies such as Netflix and Google to make sure, for example, that their movies and videos are delivered in a speedier fashion to home viewers--free of choppiness and frozen frames.

The FCC's vocal critics worry these deals will turn the big U.S. networks into pay-to-play arenas, where the small startup with the brilliant idea will suddenly be cut out of the action. Groups such as Moveon.org were quick to condemn the FCC's decision to move forward with its plan. Moveon said the new rules "could destroy the internet as we know it." How? Drake's protest at least gives you an idea of what many believe the internet is doomed to become.