The Open Society Institute(Soros), the far far left Ford Foundation, and the far left Macarthur Foundation. However This is where it gets good:
http://www.publicknowledge.org/about/who/advisors
Tim Wu, Professor of Law, Columbia Law School
Follow the Soros money, and you will find the father of Net Neutrality.
To: abb; antiRepublicrat
Soros money at Public Knowledge, Soros money at Free Press.
BTW, Wu is a chair person over at Free Press. And is now over at the FCC making decisions.
No no! They're all just coincedences! *sarcasm*
This guy is so dirty.
2 posted on
06/09/2011 5:32:17 PM PDT by
Halfmanhalfamazing
( The liberal media is more ideologically pure than Barack Obama)
To: Halfmanhalfamazing
5 posted on
06/09/2011 7:22:40 PM PDT by
PieterCasparzen
(If you are a Patriotic Conservative Christian Capitalist, I invite you to visit my Profile)
To: Halfmanhalfamazing
"Our issues":
- 3D Printing: Bits to Atoms
- AllVid
- AT&T/T-Mobile Merger
- Comcast-NBCU Merger
- Rogue Websites Legislation
- Broadband Authority
- Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement
- Network Neutrality
- Text Message Petition
- National Broadband Plan
- Selectable Output Control
- Broadband
- Comcast Complaint
- Copyright
- Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA)
- IP Enforcement
- Open Access to Research
- Opening the White Space
- Orphan Works
- Patent Reform
- Public Airwaves
- Trademark
- WiFi Municipal Services
- WIPO Broadcasters Treaty
Contrary to your statement it is not a net neutrality group. It covers many issues, one of which is net neutrality. By your logic, I am now supposed to love the DMCA, be against patent reform, and support the unconstitutional abuse of copyrights because those are issues this group works on.
It is also not an astroturf group. Just because you disagree with an organization doesn't make it astroturf. They state the big sponsors and the purpose right up front in your link. Astroturf is what the telco industry did, silently paying PR firms to create fake groups that claimed to be of the people and for the consumers (the very people the telcos were looking to screw).
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